spaller

English

Etymology

spall + -er

Noun

spaller (plural spallers)

  1. A tool used to remove concrete.
    • 1982, Shippingport Atomic Power Station, Decommissioning:
      Concrete floors and walls can be mechanically decontaminated by removing the contaminated surface layer (1 to 2 inches) using surface grinders, spallers, or pneumatic drills.
    • 1982, Roy L. Campbell, A Review of Methods for Concrete Removal, page 49:
      The concrete spaller system contains a hydraulic power supply system and the spaller device. The spaller device, as shown in Figure 19, basically consists of a hydraulic cylinder, a push rod, and a bit.
    • 2012, K. L. Mittal, Surface Contamination: Genesis, Detection, and Control, page 451:
      The concrete spaller is a device which has been developed specifically for removing concrete surfaces by Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL).
  2. A person who breaks down stone into smaller pieces.
    • 1942, South Australian Industrial Reports, volume 16, page 369:
      In 1919, the weekly margin above the living wage for the "all others" item was 6s., though the spallers then received 9s. a week margin and the millhands only 3s.
    • 1997, Leigh Edmonds, The Vital Link: A History of Main Roads Western Australia: 1926-1996:
      After them came men called spallers, who broke the rock down into smaller lumps, generally about three inches across, with sledgehammers.
    • 2009, Lynne Mayers, Voices from the Dressing Floors 1773-1950:
      Many days have I spent watching the female spallers breaking the stones. In the year 1899 I started to work at Dolcoath but there were not many spallers there then as they had just put in crushers which were worked by steam.

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.