BEATERS 79 as blowings, filter-papers and thick papers required to bulk well, or they may be broad and blunt (f inch), as for strong rag papers, thin banks, etc- The basalt lava stone roll (Fig. 19) has no bars and does not cut the fibres. It is used chiefly on wood-pulp furnishes for making very \vet* and highly fibrillated stock for greaseproof and kraft papers. Immediately below the roll, in the floor of the beater trough, is a sunken box, or *den?, into which fits the bed-plate. This consists of a heavy baulk of timber or a cast iron tray into which is fitted a set of metal bars or knives, similar to the flybars of the roll. This bed-plate (Fig. 21) is fixed, and the knives in it are so arranged that the fly bars, meet them at a slight angle, in order that their action on the fibres may be a shearing or tearing process, and not a direct cut or chop. This is effected by placing the knives diagonally across the box, or, more frequently, by having diem bent into an elbow shape as shown in the illustration. This latter arrangement of the bars, besides giving a shearing action, also performs the important function of taking some of the fibres from the inside to the outside of the trough and so mixing them continuously, and thus pre- venting those on the inside from continually circulating round a much smaller area than those on the outside. It should be noted, in this connection, however, that the fact that the stuff near the midfeather makes a complete drculation more frequently than the stuff round the outside edge of the trough has the great advantage that all the fibres are not reduced to approximately the same length, and thus a much better and closer felted paper can be made- Just beyond the bed-plate is the 'backfall*, which is a continuation of the trough of the beater, carried up in the form of the arc of a circle, to correspond with the circumference of the roll, and close to it. The backfall should be about f*to I inch away from the roll when it is 'down*, and carried well up to about 3 inches above the centre of the shaft, tapering away from the roll at the top until it is about 2j or 3 inches away, thus leaving no pocket of dead stuff at the top. These dimensions are clearly shown in the accompanying illustration. These measurements give the best circulation and fibrillation of high-grade wood pulp and rag stock; if the distance between the roll and the top of the backfall is great, there will be a heavy pocket of stuff" lying dead and impeding the flow of stuff coming away from the roll. It is important that the backfall, should be close to the roll, in order that there may be as much friction and rubbings of the stuff as possible during its passage from the bed-plate to the top of the backfall, where it is thrown out into the trough again. The fact that the bed-plate bars wear down, however, makes it impossibk to have the roll always at the same distance from the backfall, unless the rdS is stationary and the bed-plates are hydraulic, so that the distance must be so