US1014360A - Mold for vaults. - Google Patents
Mold for vaults. Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US1014360A US1014360A US57490710A US1910574907A US1014360A US 1014360 A US1014360 A US 1014360A US 57490710 A US57490710 A US 57490710A US 1910574907 A US1910574907 A US 1910574907A US 1014360 A US1014360 A US 1014360A
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- US
- United States
- Prior art keywords
- members
- mold
- vaults
- cover
- bars
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Expired - Lifetime
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Classifications
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B28—WORKING CEMENT, CLAY, OR STONE
- B28B—SHAPING CLAY OR OTHER CERAMIC COMPOSITIONS; SHAPING SLAG; SHAPING MIXTURES CONTAINING CEMENTITIOUS MATERIAL, e.g. PLASTER
- B28B7/00—Moulds; Cores; Mandrels
- B28B7/16—Moulds for making shaped articles with cavities or holes open to the surface, e.g. with blind holes
- B28B7/168—Moulds for making shaped articles with cavities or holes open to the surface, e.g. with blind holes for holders or similar hollow articles, e.g. vaults, sewer pits
Definitions
- This invention relates to molds for vaults; it has for its object an improved mold ad apted to be arranged for the inn-er and outer surfaces of a vault manufactured from cement or artificial stone material. It coms prises the side and end forms for v-both the outside and the inside of the receptacle, the bottom surface, b oth t-he outside and the inside surfaces are made without molds other than the ioor upon which the outer forms rest, and the inner surfaces are made by simply troweling or striking off the cement.
- Figure 1 is a plan view
- Fig. 2 is a side elevation partly in sec.- tion
- Fig. 3 is a cross section
- Fig. 4 is a plan view of a corner joint on a larger scale
- Fig. 5 is a perspective showing the inner surface of a side form
- Fig. 6 is a perspective of an end of an end form
- Fig. 7 is a plan of a mold used to form a cover
- Fig. 8 is a cross section of a mold used to form the cover.
- the mold is set up on any flat surface, as a wooden floor, sho-wn at 1 in Fig. 2; it comprises two side pieces 3 and 3a, two end pieces 4 and 4a which are made from sheet metal secured to frame bars 5 of angle iron; the ends of side and end pieces are arranged to interlock and are provided with bolt holes through which holding bolts 6 are inserted.
- This part of the form being a rectangular bottomless boX, is easily assembled and disassembled when desired.
- the angle iron 3 which runs along the top edgeof the side member is provided with a notch 7b near each end in which notches engage the downturned ends 8, 8b of a cross bar 8, that is secured to the end piece of the inner form.
- the two ends 8 and 8b of the cross bar 8? are properly spaced to hold the inner form in its proper position.
- the inner form also consists of four members, 9, 9a, 10 and 10a, of which the members 9 and 9a form the sides of the mold and the members gage in a notch 12a that is cut on yan incline in the frame piece 13 of the side member 9 or 9a.
- the walls of the notch 12a are undercut to allow the head of the bolt 12 to engage in the undercut portion of the notch with the neck engaging 'through the notch itself.
- the frame member 13 terminates with its face 14 short of the outside plane of the end member 10 leaving a narrow space 14a; the inner face of the frame member is provided with a projecting rib 13a, that atthe extreme front edge or surface 14 of the frame member 13 projects beyond the general surface of the inner face of the frame member 13, (by inner face is meant thatface that lies toward the frame member 11 of the piece 10,) so that the two pieces 10 and 13 when in engagement are held spaced throughout the most part .of their adjacent faces and in contact only through a very narrow line bearing along the rib 13"JL and the turned in end of the sheet metal which forms the main surface of the end member.
- the adjacent parts are secured together in the assembled structure at the top of themold by a bolt 15 which engages through a suitable hole in the frame member 11 and in-a suitable threaded hole in the frame member 13.
- the slip joint made between the bolt 12 and the notch 12a and the screw joint made by the bolt 15 inserted in the threaded screw hole 15a form a coupling that is easily assembled and disassembled by the loosening of a single screw bolt.
- the bearing along the rib 13 allows' across under the inner member with their ends projecting into the space between the two parts of the form; they engage in notches QQcut into the side members of the inner form and are temporarily held in place by short pieces of wire 23 which engage through holes in the angle bars 2O and 2l and hang the bars to the frame.
- Tand 8 is made upon a form covered on that side which forms the under side of the cover by a sheet metal surface 26 between wooden bars 27 temporarily placed and held on the base 28.
- the cover is preferably reinforced with woven mesh 29 in which at proper spaces are inserted metal rings or loops 30; these loops project to the outside of the finishedk structure and furnish holding rings by which the cover may be handled.
- the edges 3l of the cover are inclined to the cross axis of the cover so that when the cover is in place, there remains an open groove between the cover and the body of the burial vault which open groove is filled with vcement in the final finishing of the struct-ure after the cover has been placed thereon.
- the parts are set up on a level surface with the outer form resting on the surfaces and the inner form hanging from the cross bars 8a; cement is then placed along the bottom and that surface of the bottom which is within the inner -form is smoothed over with a trowel, the
- IVhat I claim is l.
- a mold .for a burial vault having in combination, outer form members secured together at the corners, inner form members ofV which the side members are secured to the end members by a sliding pivot joint at the bottom and a bolt joint at the top, the end pieces of said inner form members being shorter than the longitudinal distance between the side members and the side members being provided with corner bearings adapted to engage against the outer inturned corners of the end members, substantially as described.
- a core member composed of a pair of side members and a pair of end members, the end portions of the side members being provided with inwardly extending corner bearings which terminate relatively pointedly, said side members being slightly shorter than the internal lengthwise measurement of the plastic article whose manufacture is intended, and the terminal portions of the end members being inturned for engagement against the pointed ends of the side members, and bolts engaging through the terminals of said end members and into the adjacent portions of said side members, substantially as described.
- a corner coupling for the inner member of said mold having in combination a slip joint connection at the bottom and a bolt connection at the top, the interlocking members being provided with bearing parts only near each vupper corner, the end members being shorter than the distance across between t-he side members at all parts except the bearing corners of the side members, and the side members being shorter than the distance between the inner surfaces of theY ends of the finished vault at all parts, substantially as described.
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Ceramic Engineering (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Forms Removed On Construction Sites Or Auxiliary Members Thereof (AREA)
Description
E. T. ALLEN'.l
' MOLD vFOB. VAULTS.
APPLIOATIOIFIILBD AUG. l, 1910.
1,014,360, n l Patented Jan. 9, 1912.
ZvSEEETS-SBBET 1.
h `Fig.3. l
u S ma Atinrnrgn CBLUMBIA PLANOGRAPH,CO..WASHINGTON. D. c.
E. T. ALLEN.
MOLD FOR VAULTS. APPLIOATION FILED AUG. 1', 1910.
Patented Ja11.9, 1912.
2 SHEETS-SHEETZ.
murmur mums-5v5 m Aitnrnrga COLUMBIA PLANOGRAPH Co.. WASHINGTON. D. c.
PA ENT union.
EDWIN T. ALLEN, 0F DETROIT, MICHIGAN.
MOLD Fon vAULTs.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented Jan. 9, 1912.
Application filed August 1, 1910. Serial No. 574,907.
To all whom 'it may concern:
Be it known that I, EDWIN T. ALLEN, a citizen of the United States, residing at Detroit, county of l/Vayne, State of Michigan, have invented a certain new and useful Improvement in Molds for Vaults, and declare the following to be a full, clear, and exact description of the same, such as will enable others skilled in the artl to which it pertains to make. and use the same, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, which form a part of this specification.
This invention relates to molds for vaults; it has for its object an improved mold ad apted to be arranged for the inn-er and outer surfaces of a vault manufactured from cement or artificial stone material. It coms prises the side and end forms for v-both the outside and the inside of the receptacle, the bottom surface, b oth t-he outside and the inside surfaces are made without molds other than the ioor upon which the outer forms rest, and the inner surfaces are made by simply troweling or striking off the cement.
In the drawings Figure 1, is a plan view, Fig. 2, is a side elevation partly in sec.- tion, Fig. 3, is a cross section, Fig. 4, is a plan view of a corner joint on a larger scale, Fig. 5, is a perspective showing the inner surface of a side form, Fig. 6, is a perspective of an end of an end form, Fig. 7, is a plan of a mold used to form a cover, and Fig. 8, is a cross section of a mold used to form the cover.
The mold is set up on any flat surface, as a wooden floor, sho-wn at 1 in Fig. 2; it comprises two side pieces 3 and 3a, two end pieces 4 and 4a which are made from sheet metal secured to frame bars 5 of angle iron; the ends of side and end pieces are arranged to interlock and are provided with bolt holes through which holding bolts 6 are inserted. This part of the form being a rectangular bottomless boX, is easily assembled and disassembled when desired.
The angle iron 3 which runs along the top edgeof the side member is provided with a notch 7b near each end in which notches engage the downturned ends 8, 8b of a cross bar 8, that is secured to the end piece of the inner form. The two ends 8 and 8b of the cross bar 8? are properly spaced to hold the inner form in its proper position. The inner form also consists of four members, 9, 9a, 10 and 10a, of which the members 9 and 9a form the sides of the mold and the members gage in a notch 12a that is cut on yan incline in the frame piece 13 of the side member 9 or 9a. The walls of the notch 12a are undercut to allow the head of the bolt 12 to engage in the undercut portion of the notch with the neck engaging 'through the notch itself.
The frame member 13 terminates with its face 14 short of the outside plane of the end member 10 leaving a narrow space 14a; the inner face of the frame member is provided with a projecting rib 13a, that atthe extreme front edge or surface 14 of the frame member 13 projects beyond the general surface of the inner face of the frame member 13, (by inner face is meant thatface that lies toward the frame member 11 of the piece 10,) so that the two pieces 10 and 13 when in engagement are held spaced throughout the most part .of their adjacent faces and in contact only through a very narrow line bearing along the rib 13"JL and the turned in end of the sheet metal which forms the main surface of the end member. The adjacent parts are secured together in the assembled structure at the top of themold by a bolt 15 which engages through a suitable hole in the frame member 11 and in-a suitable threaded hole in the frame member 13. The slip joint made between the bolt 12 and the notch 12a and the screw joint made by the bolt 15 inserted in the threaded screw hole 15a form a coupling that is easily assembled and disassembled by the loosening of a single screw bolt. The bearing along the rib 13 allows' across under the inner member with their ends projecting into the space between the two parts of the form; they engage in notches QQcut into the side members of the inner form and are temporarily held in place by short pieces of wire 23 which engage through holes in the angle bars 2O and 2l and hang the bars to the frame. By their engagement with the side pieces 9 and 10 of the frame while these are under strain, due to the presence of the plastic cement along their length, they serve to reinforce the side pieces against undesired bending,
though, as each vault box' is made, a new set of bars 20 and 21 must be furnished, since these bars are left in place in the iinished burial vault and are utilized as rests for the coiiin which rests upon them and is held above the floor of the stone structure, and they are also used for the purpose of handling the stone structure by means of hooks and cables or chains, of which the hooks engage through holes occupied by the wires 23. fooden bars 25 are secured along the upper edge of the inner member and are suitably shaped to produce in the finished structure a rabbet in which the cover engages; the cover shown in Figs. Tand 8, is made upon a form covered on that side which forms the under side of the cover by a sheet metal surface 26 between wooden bars 27 temporarily placed and held on the base 28. The cover is preferably reinforced with woven mesh 29 in which at proper spaces are inserted metal rings or loops 30; these loops project to the outside of the finishedk structure and furnish holding rings by which the cover may be handled. The edges 3l of the cover are inclined to the cross axis of the cover so that when the cover is in place, there remains an open groove between the cover and the body of the burial vault which open groove is filled with vcement in the final finishing of the struct-ure after the cover has been placed thereon. c
In using themold, the parts are set up on a level surface with the outer form resting on the surfaces and the inner form hanging from the cross bars 8a; cement is then placed along the bottom and that surface of the bottom which is within the inner -form is smoothed over with a trowel, the
- lmw side walls are built up between the parts of the form all at'the one operation.
IVhat I claim is l. A mold .for a burial vault having in combination, outer form members secured together at the corners, inner form members ofV which the side members are secured to the end members by a sliding pivot joint at the bottom and a bolt joint at the top, the end pieces of said inner form members being shorter than the longitudinal distance between the side members and the side members being provided with corner bearings adapted to engage against the outer inturned corners of the end members, substantially as described.
2. In a collapsible mold, a core member composed of a pair of side members and a pair of end members, the end portions of the side members being provided with inwardly extending corner bearings which terminate relatively pointedly, said side members being slightly shorter than the internal lengthwise measurement of the plastic article whose manufacture is intended, and the terminal portions of the end members being inturned for engagement against the pointed ends of the side members, and bolts engaging through the terminals of said end members and into the adjacent portions of said side members, substantially as described.
3. In a mold for burial vaults, a corner coupling for the inner member of said mold, having in combination a slip joint connection at the bottom and a bolt connection at the top, the interlocking members being provided with bearing parts only near each vupper corner, the end members being shorter than the distance across between t-he side members at all parts except the bearing corners of the side members, and the side members being shorter than the distance between the inner surfaces of theY ends of the finished vault at all parts, substantially as described.
In testimony whereof, I sign this specification in the presence of two witnesses.
EDVIN T. ALLEN.
Witnesses:
LOTTA LEE BRAY, CHARLES F. BURTON.
Copies of this patent may be obtained for ve cents each, by addressing the Commissioner of Patents,
washington, D. c.
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US57490710A US1014360A (en) | 1910-08-01 | 1910-08-01 | Mold for vaults. |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US57490710A US1014360A (en) | 1910-08-01 | 1910-08-01 | Mold for vaults. |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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US1014360A true US1014360A (en) | 1912-01-09 |
Family
ID=3082666
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US57490710A Expired - Lifetime US1014360A (en) | 1910-08-01 | 1910-08-01 | Mold for vaults. |
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Cited By (6)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2650411A (en) * | 1950-12-05 | 1953-09-01 | William E Mitchell | Mold for head wall construction |
US2650410A (en) * | 1952-01-18 | 1953-09-01 | William E Mitchell | Mold form |
US2936504A (en) * | 1955-10-03 | 1960-05-17 | Stormaster Tornado Shelter Co | Process for making a concrete shelter |
US3436051A (en) * | 1966-09-19 | 1969-04-01 | Tadao Nakahara | Form for concrete structures and particularly concrete catch basin units |
US5240223A (en) * | 1991-12-31 | 1993-08-31 | Apt, Inc. | Reuseable mold for forming a hollow aggregate filled thermoset article |
US5419529A (en) * | 1989-12-11 | 1995-05-30 | Apt, Inc. | Reusable mold for forming premolded pieces and a modular contained machine foundation |
-
1910
- 1910-08-01 US US57490710A patent/US1014360A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Cited By (6)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2650411A (en) * | 1950-12-05 | 1953-09-01 | William E Mitchell | Mold for head wall construction |
US2650410A (en) * | 1952-01-18 | 1953-09-01 | William E Mitchell | Mold form |
US2936504A (en) * | 1955-10-03 | 1960-05-17 | Stormaster Tornado Shelter Co | Process for making a concrete shelter |
US3436051A (en) * | 1966-09-19 | 1969-04-01 | Tadao Nakahara | Form for concrete structures and particularly concrete catch basin units |
US5419529A (en) * | 1989-12-11 | 1995-05-30 | Apt, Inc. | Reusable mold for forming premolded pieces and a modular contained machine foundation |
US5240223A (en) * | 1991-12-31 | 1993-08-31 | Apt, Inc. | Reuseable mold for forming a hollow aggregate filled thermoset article |
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