Hart & Hertel - 压力机 工业设计 - 复古木质雪茄模具





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Hart & Hertel 德国制造的老式木质雪茄模具,状态 excellent,高度56 cm,宽11 cm,深7 cm,20格容量,年代介于1920s–1940s。
卖家的描述
Vintage wooden cigar mold press,which was used in traditional tobacco manufacturing to shape and standardize hand-rolled cigars.
Manufacturer: Hart & Hertel,a prominent German manufacturer specializing in cigar-making machinery, molds, and tools.
Location: Schwetzingen,a town in Baden-Württemberg,Germany,known historically for its extensive tobacco production and manufacturing hubs.
Era: This stamp layout and numbering system typically date to the 1920s to 1940s.
Capacity: It features 20 individual slots to shape up to 20 cigars simultaneously in a single batch.
How It Works:
Rolling: A cigar maker would roll tobacco leaves together into a rough, semi-finished cylinder called a bunch.
Pressing: The bunches were placed inside the lower carved wooden grooves.
Molding: The top half of the block was placed over the bottom half. The guide pins on the corners aligned the two panels perfectly.
Clamping: The entire block was loaded into a large mechanical screw press to compress the tobacco tightly, locking the uniform round shape in place before the final outer wrapper leaf was applied
Vintage wooden cigar mold press,which was used in traditional tobacco manufacturing to shape and standardize hand-rolled cigars.
Manufacturer: Hart & Hertel,a prominent German manufacturer specializing in cigar-making machinery, molds, and tools.
Location: Schwetzingen,a town in Baden-Württemberg,Germany,known historically for its extensive tobacco production and manufacturing hubs.
Era: This stamp layout and numbering system typically date to the 1920s to 1940s.
Capacity: It features 20 individual slots to shape up to 20 cigars simultaneously in a single batch.
How It Works:
Rolling: A cigar maker would roll tobacco leaves together into a rough, semi-finished cylinder called a bunch.
Pressing: The bunches were placed inside the lower carved wooden grooves.
Molding: The top half of the block was placed over the bottom half. The guide pins on the corners aligned the two panels perfectly.
Clamping: The entire block was loaded into a large mechanical screw press to compress the tobacco tightly, locking the uniform round shape in place before the final outer wrapper leaf was applied

