The present decade will pass down into history notorious for many things good and bad. It will be styled a time of improvement in many ways. It will be remembered as covering the period of the world's greatest war, but it will also be remembered among all trades appertaining in any way to engineering as the age of progress in the manufacture and manipulation of steel tubing.
Independent altogether of the stimulus given to the use of tubing for structural work by the advent and advance of aeronautics, the uses to which tubing of steel and other metals is put has increased considerably during the past few years. Much, of course, has been due to the large output of cycles and motor-cycles, but in addition an immense quantity of tubing is used in the construction of motorcars, and in a thousand other productions which it is unnecessary to particularise in this paper.