✨ Tariff Concessions
23 JUNE
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE
1003
Soaps, metallic—
Naphtone X90, X100, X110, X140, declared by a manufacturer for use by him only in making metallic soaps
Sodium cyclamate (sodium cyclohexylsulfamate, sucaryl sodium) declared by a manufacturer for use by him only for approved purposes
Approved—
For making diabetic foods
For making insecticides or fungicides for agricultural use
Sodium xanthate
Sorbic acid and its salts
Sorbitol
Sponges, potters’, in natural fibre, of approved qualities, declared by a manufacturer for use by him only at his works in making pottery
Sporting requisites—
Bends for hockey sticks, being pieces of rough sawn or rough hewn timber bent into the form of a crook
Binding or rubberised tape, consisting of strands of cotton moulded with rubber into the form of a flat tape and used in binding tennis racquet frames
Bolts, screwed, hinged, and sleeve bolts, for making racquet presses
Face pieces or inserts for golf club heads
Forgings and castings, steel, in the rough, specially suited for making golf club heads (Steel heads are to be regarded as in the rough if, after forging and casting, they are merely roughly ground to remove the fin produced between the half moulds in drop forgings or castings, or to remove the indentations of the hammer produced in hand forgings. The heads must not be further worked except that a pilot hole may be drilled in the shank, such hole to be reamed and the shank to be tapered in New Zealand. Heads in the rough but without pilot holes, being instead lightly ground or lightly turned on the shank, are to be admitted under the above decision)
Golf club heads, wooden, rough turned but not further manufactured
Overlays, being small pieces of timber shaped or bent to fit the throat portion of tennis and similar racquets
Rectangular sheets of pimpled rubber, backed or faced with sponge rubber, on declaration by a manufacturer for use by him only in making table tennis bats
Shafts of approved descriptions, also caps and ferrules of celluloid and similar material for such shafts, declared by a manufacturer (a) that they will be used by him only in making golf clubs, and (b) that in making such clubs the heads therefor will be fully manufactured in New Zealand or will be made from wooden shapes, rough turned but not further manufactured, or steel in the form of rough forgings or rough castings unworked
NOTE—The importer of the shafts need not be the manufacturer of the heads. He must, however, use heads which have been manufactured in New Zealand in accordance with the conditions set out in the decision
Approved—
Shafts of steel whether in the black, polished, plated, coated with casein, or otherwise surfaced, but without attachments of any kind
Shafts and piles, metal, unpolished and unplated, declared by a manufacturer for use by him only in making arrows
Shafts, metal, for ski sticks (whether in the black, polished plated or otherwise surfaced) and snowtips and collars for such shafts when declared by a manufacturer that they will be used by him only in making up ski sticks of which the other components will be made in New Zealand
Shafts, steel, in the rough, and ferrules, for making badminton and similar racquets, declared by a manufacturer (a) that the shafts and ferrules will be used by him only in making badminton and similar racquets and (b) that in making such racquets the frame therefor will be made in New Zealand from wood which will not be imported in a more advanced state than that of strips of timber not worked or bent to shape in any way
Timber, sawn or rent into strips, but otherwise unworked declared by a manufacturer for use by him, only in making bends or frames for tennis, badminton, and similar racquets (SPECIFIC KIND OF TIMBER MUST BE SHOWN ON APPLICATIONS)
Willow clefts or billets, being pieces of willow split from the log in lengths, each sufficient to make one cricket bat
Wooden billets, rough sawn but not otherwise worked, specially suited for making heads for golf clubs
Springs—
Bushes of the following kinds declared by a manufacturer for use by him only in making laminated undercarriage springs for motor vehicles—
(a) Steel and rubber
(b) Steel and bronze
(c) Wholly of steel, including split seam bushes
(d) Wholly of bronze, including split seam bushes
Starch, pregelatinised, in other than retail packages
Stock 983 (Bentone 34)
Stoves and ranges—
Adaptors, ring, for electric hot plates, formed and jointed but not otherwise worked
Bosses, diecast brass, for the manufacture of elements for electric ranges
Canopy pins, being shanks or pins for running into castings to form projecting pins
Domes, glass, for spinners of imitation coal fire electric radiators
Governors, gas pressure, for gas cookers, ranges, and heaters
Insets, cast in, for grid pillars of ranges
Knobs, door, for gas cookers, with special metal attachments to ensure tight closing
Radiants, earthenware, being “fuel” for gas fires
Stampings and handles, in the black, for making grill pans for gas cookers
Stampings, oven grid, in the black, and unassembled
The following materials declared by a manufacturer for use by him only in making (not repairing) articles in New Zealand
Cocks, griller
Cocks, jet, being a combination of low pressure metal cocks and adjustable jets, for gas cookers
Elements, electric, in which the resistance wire is embedded in refractory material, for electric cooking stoves and ranges only. Hotplates imported with spine bead insulators fitted are excluded from this decision.
Jets, burner, for gas cooking and heating appliances, including those which burn vaporised oil such as kerosene
Lampholders, of refractory materials, for B.C. or E.S. base oven lamps
Minute timers, clockwork operated
Nipples, union, regulating, for ranges
Pins, terminal, nickel chrome, for making radiant elements
Rails, tap, fitted with taps or jet cocks, for gas cookers
Resistor supports of fireclay or other refractory material, formed by moulding or baking, suited for making open type electric elements, for electric stoves and ranges only
Stampings in the rough, not built up in any way, for making gas heated radiators
Stampings, iron, in the black, plain or punched, but not otherwise worked, for making cookers or ranges
Stampings, iron or steel, in the rough, for making oil burning stoves
Stampings, non ferrous metal, in the rough, for making oil burning stoves
Valves or cocks (including air injectors) of brass or other copper alloy, for gas heated radiators
Straws, drinking—
Paper, declared by a manufacturer for use by him only for making drinking straws
Sulphite of lye (Lignin pitch)
Surgical—
Pulley blocks with eyebolts and metal fittings attached, declared for use only in making surgical suspension apparatus
Springs, truss
Synolide 960
SCHEDULE II
Soap making—
Perfumes in powder form on declaration by a manufacturer for use by him only in making soaps and soap powders
Pigments in aqueous dispersion declared by:
(a) A manufacturer for use by him only in colouring soap, or
(b) By an importer for sale by him only to manufacturers for use in colouring soap
Sodium benzoate declared by a manufacturer for use by him solely in making rennet
Sodium lauryl sarcosinate declared by a manufacturer for use by him only for making toothpaste
Sporting requisites—
Cane, squared, in long lengths, not bent to shape, for use in making tennis racquet frames
Fishing tackle—
Fishing rod blanks, unworked, being tapered rods of glass fibre reinforced plastic
Split cane rod in the rough, being sections of cane glued together
Dated at Wellington this 23rd day of June 1966.
J. F. CUMMINGS, Comptroller of Customs.
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VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 1966, No 38
NZLII —
NZ Gazette 1966, No 38
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🏭 Tariff Concessions for various products
🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry23 June 1966
Tariff concessions, imported goods, manufacturers, approved purposes, sporting requisites, musical instruments, medical equipment, industrial components
- J. F. Cummings, Comptroller of Customs