Ross Rounds have been around since the '50s or '60s and would save Speybee the mess of chopping and cutting.
The cassette
clips together lengthways and is one of nine in a box; in each hole sit
two white plastic rings and a sheet of extra thin foundation is laid the length of the centre of the cassette; starter strips can be used instead.
A strong colony or swarm is needed to get bees to go into the cassettes; best to remove all other supers on the main flow and cram in the bees. Sometimes they're nearly all filled, sometimes not, depending on the flow. Partly drawn and filled cassettes can be frozen and given back to the bees the following season. I would like to get RRs with pure ivy, but the flow would have to be strong at a time when colonies are winding down.
The individual rounds are removed from the cassette and sealed with two lids;
a label holds the lids together. Last year I sold them for £9 each, which isn't bad for 227g of honey; this year the price is going up; I describe them as an
edible calendar and it doesn't matter if there are different colour or crystallised honeys in there; it's good with blue cheese, and in Jewish culture a slice is eaten with sharp apple.
Youtube videos
here. Best book by far is Richard Taylor's
The Comb Honey Book. I would have liked to have met him; read this
story of his life; at the end of it you too will love Richard.