US1128417A - Ship's log. - Google Patents

Ship's log. Download PDF

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US1128417A
US1128417A US42598808A US1908425988A US1128417A US 1128417 A US1128417 A US 1128417A US 42598808 A US42598808 A US 42598808A US 1908425988 A US1908425988 A US 1908425988A US 1128417 A US1128417 A US 1128417A
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driving
driven
disk
log
connection
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Henry H Cummings
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01PMEASURING LINEAR OR ANGULAR SPEED, ACCELERATION, DECELERATION, OR SHOCK; INDICATING PRESENCE, ABSENCE, OR DIRECTION, OF MOVEMENT
    • G01P5/00Measuring speed of fluids, e.g. of air stream; Measuring speed of bodies relative to fluids, e.g. of ship, of aircraft
    • G01P5/02Measuring speed of fluids, e.g. of air stream; Measuring speed of bodies relative to fluids, e.g. of ship, of aircraft by measuring forces exerted by the fluid on solid bodies, e.g. anemometer
    • G01P5/06Measuring speed of fluids, e.g. of air stream; Measuring speed of bodies relative to fluids, e.g. of ship, of aircraft by measuring forces exerted by the fluid on solid bodies, e.g. anemometer using rotation of vanes

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  • This invention pertains to ships logs; and is designed to provide improvements in construction and organization which shall render a log simple in its operating mechanism, extremely accurate and readily adjustable.
  • Figure 1 is a side elevation, partly broken away, on a line 1-1 of Fig. 2, of a ships log embodying this invention
  • Fig. 2 a plan view of the dials of the log shown in Fig. 1
  • Fig. 3 a vertical section on the line 3-3 of Fig. 1
  • Fig. 4 is a'horizontal section onA the line 4--4 of F ig. 1
  • Fig. 5 is a fragmentary end view, viewedrom the left in Fig. 1.
  • the log comprises a main casting 8, appropriately -trunnioned horizontally and pivoted vertically on a bracket 9 adapted to be'mounted on the 'ta'ffraiL Supported in any practicable manner at one end of the casting 8 is a shaft 10, having an eye 11 to which is attached the cable (not shown) having at its other end the usual y 4'or rotator.
  • the fly is rotated as it is towed through the water, thereby rotatingits attached cable and theshaft l0 at a speed proportioned to the speed of the vessel.
  • a disk 12 At the inner end 'of vthe' shaft 10 is fixed a disk 12, having a finger 14 which drives the mechanism of the log.
  • the 'shaft 10 is preferably journaled in a casing 16, removably secured on theend of the casting 8.
  • the driving finger 14 abuts against and rotates a radial arm 18 fixed at the end of' a shaft 20 suitably journaled in bearings on adisk 22' which threads into :a F ar't 'of the casting.
  • Ball bearings 30 are interposed between the two annuli and the annulus 28 is held in place by a circular spring cl1p 32 seating in an adjacent part of the casting 8.
  • the annulus 28 has a circular face plate or disk 34, preferably integral' therewith, which as presently explained supplies the driving member of a disk and roller friction transmission.
  • the system of gearing above described preferably greatly reduces the speed ofthe shaft 10 to a slow speed of rotation of the disk 34.
  • a disk 36 Engaging the disk 34 by roller friction, and driven thereby, is a disk 36, having 'la hub 37 mounted upon a stud 38 'and confined against axial movement on said stud by collars ⁇ 89 and 40, fixed on the stud.y Ait its other end the stud 38 threads into a block 42 which (Fig. 3) is freely pivoted onl a pin 44.
  • a plug 46 having afsliding lit' 1n a seat in the block 42, is pressed toward the left in Fig. l, by a spring 47 carried on the block, this arrangement tending to rock the block 42 horizontally on its pin 44 so as to hold the disk 36 firmly but yieldingly in engagement with the driving disk 34.
  • the plug 46 fits in a slightly eccentric cam slot in a quadrant 50, fast to a shaft 51 which projects to the eX- terior ofthe casting 8 and has fixedthere'to an index 52.
  • the plug 46 ' is cammed vertically so as to move the block 42 upwardly or downwardly 'on its 'pin 44,
  • This serves as a self-locking means
  • a vertically disposed pin 54 Fixed upon the disk 36 is a vertically disposed pin 54, projecting ⁇ into a depending sleeve 56 preferably integral with a disk 57 having an annular 'seat on a ring 58 preferably stationary in the casting 8.
  • a removable thimble 60 Mounted upon the disk 57 is a removable thimble 60, having upon its top an index 61 which indicates the movement of the disk 57.
  • each graduation of thescale 70 would also indicate a knot and a complete trip of the index 68 around the scale 70 would indicate one hundred knots of distance.
  • the hinged lid 72 has a circular, transparent panel 73, held in its seat byA a spring clip 74..
  • the movable annulus ⁇ .63 .preferably merely rests with sliding contact upon the annulus 62; and 1t maybe held in its proper position by a thin, annular plate 78 resting thereon and. retained in place by a spring clip 80.
  • the iy or rotator, in handling may have oneoi its blades broken, bent, distorted or otherwise affected, so as to vary its eiiciency and 1nterfere with its accuracy as regards its intended relation with the log mechanism which it propels.
  • An error in the record of distance traversed, arising from such causes, may be detected with considerable accuracy y comparison of the reccrd with, tliaealpulated distance traveled obtainable from bearings of latitude and longitude taken p from time to time.
  • One feature of the present invention per.- Itains to an adjustment for a log mechanism whereby any chan c in eiliciency due to mutilation of the fiy may be compensated so as to eliminate the effect of the mutilation upon theindicated log record.
  • the described cmbodiment utilizes the variable speed ⁇ transmission between the driving disk 34 and the driven disk 36. By lifting the hinged lid 72 and removing the thimble 60 access may be had, through a central aperture in the disk 57, to the slotted head of the stud 38 which threads into the block 4.2.
  • said stud 38 carries fixed collars 39 and 40, between which is journaled the hub 37 of the disk 36. Accordingly, by turning the stud 38 through its slotted head it may be vertically adjusted so as to move the disk 36 towardand from the axis of the driving disk 34, ythereby varying the speed of transmission. i The desii-ed Aextent of variation in the speed l of transmission may be ascertained by checking up the indicated record of distance trav' eled with the calculated distance. Thus, if the former is less than the latter the stud 38 and its disk 36 should be adjusted up- 'wardly to increase the speed of transmission; and vice versa.
  • the invention comprises a valuable method of regulating ships logs which, for illustration, consists in com.
  • the last-mentioned means including a locking device for locking said driving and driven means in the desired driving relation while permitting adjustment under the inluence of said grasping member.
  • driven indicating means In a log mechanism, the combination of driven indicating means; driving means; an axially sliiftable driving connection between said driving and driven means; and means to vary the operative relation of said. driving and driven means by axially shifting said connection, including an axially shiftable screw-threaded spindle upon which said driving connection is loosely mounted; anda member with which said spindle has screw-threaded engagement.

Description

H. H. OUMMINGS.
SHIPS LOG.
ABPLIOATION FILED Amm, 190s.
Patented Feb. 16, 1915.
.,r. Se
HENRY '"H. CUIHINGS', 0F NEWTON, MASSACHUSETTS.
SBIPS LOG.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented Feb. 16, 1915.
Application led 'April 9, 1908. I Serial No. 425,988.
T0 all Iwhom 'it may concern Be it known vthat I, HENRY H. CUmnNes, a citizen of the United States, and a resident of Newton, in the county of Middlesex and State of Massachusetts, have invented an Improvement-in Ships Logs, of which the following description, in connection with the accompanying drawings, is a specification, like Iigures on the drawings representing like parts.
This invention pertains to ships logs; and is designed to provide improvements in construction and organization which shall render a log simple in its operating mechanism, extremely accurate and readily adjustable.'
The character of the invention can be best appreciated by reference to `the vaccompanying drawings which show, merely for lpurposes of illustration, one of the embodiments of which the invention is susceptible.
In lthe drawings: Figure 1 is a side elevation, partly broken away, on a line 1-1 of Fig. 2, of a ships log embodying this invention; Fig. 2, a plan view of the dials of the log shown in Fig. 1; Fig. 3, a vertical section on the line 3-3 of Fig. 1; Fig. 4 is a'horizontal section onA the line 4--4 of F ig. 1: Fig. 5 is a fragmentary end view, viewedrom the left in Fig. 1. v
The log comprises a main casting 8, appropriately -trunnioned horizontally and pivoted vertically on a bracket 9 adapted to be'mounted on the 'ta'ffraiL Supported in any practicable manner at one end of the casting 8 is a shaft 10, having an eye 11 to which is attached the cable (not shown) having at its other end the usual y 4'or rotator. As is well understood in the art, the fly is rotated as it is towed through the water, thereby rotatingits attached cable and theshaft l0 at a speed proportioned to the speed of the vessel.
At the inner end 'of vthe' shaft 10 is fixed a disk 12, having a finger 14 which drives the mechanism of the log. The 'shaft 10 is preferably journaled in a casing 16, removably secured on theend of the casting 8. The driving finger 14 abuts against and rotates a radial arm 18 fixed at the end of' a shaft 20 suitably journaled in bearings on adisk 22' which threads into :a F ar't 'of the casting. On the inner end of t e shaft 20 is formed la. .pinion '24 engaging a floating pinion 25"n1eshing with the internal gears of a stationary annulus 26 and a movable annulus 28, the latter having one more tooth than the former. Ball bearings 30 are interposed between the two annuli and the annulus 28 is held in place by a circular spring cl1p 32 seating in an adjacent part of the casting 8. The annulus 28 has a circular face plate or disk 34, preferably integral' therewith, which as presently explained supplies the driving member of a disk and roller friction transmission. The system of gearing above described preferably greatly reduces the speed ofthe shaft 10 to a slow speed of rotation of the disk 34. y
Engaging the disk 34 by roller friction, and driven thereby, is a disk 36, having 'la hub 37 mounted upon a stud 38 'and confined against axial movement on said stud by collars `89 and 40, fixed on the stud.y Ait its other end the stud 38 threads into a block 42 which (Fig. 3) is freely pivoted onl a pin 44. A plug 46, having afsliding lit' 1n a seat in the block 42, is pressed toward the left in Fig. l, by a spring 47 carried on the block, this arrangement tending to rock the block 42 horizontally on its pin 44 so as to hold the disk 36 firmly but yieldingly in engagement with the driving disk 34.
Referring to Fig. 3, the plug 46 fits in a slightly eccentric cam slot in a quadrant 50, fast to a shaft 51 which projects to the eX- terior ofthe casting 8 and has fixedthere'to an index 52. By turning the index 52, its shaft and the quadrant 50, the plug 46 'is cammed vertically so as to move the block 42 upwardly or downwardly 'on its 'pin 44, This serves as a self-locking means |to adjust the driven disk 36 toward and from the axis'of the driving disk 34, in order to vary the speed of transmission, to compensate for decreased efficiency in the driving rotation of the towed fly occasioned by slipping of the latter as the speed of the vessel increases. That is to say, when a vessel Iis going at high speed, as 'is well understood, there is greater tendency for the iy'to slip through the water without effectively rotating than is true at a low speed. Accordingly, Without a.- compensating adjustment the accuracy of the log indications would ydecline with 'nn increase in speed of travel; The index 52 constituting a graspingmember, exterior to the 'casting 8 and readily accessible and observable, lcopcrate's with a 52, being turned to register with any given graduation, adjusts the variable Speed transmission devices so. that the driven speed of the log mechanism is changed sufiiciently to compensate for the varylngeiiciency, z'. c. to
j compensate 4for thev degree of slipping .in
the drive by the lly prevailing at the speed indicated on the scale. Fixed upon the disk 36 is a vertically disposed pin 54, projecting` into a depending sleeve 56 preferably integral with a disk 57 having an annular 'seat on a ring 58 preferably stationary in the casting 8. Mounted upon the disk 57 is a removable thimble 60, having upon its top an index 61 which indicates the movement of the disk 57. Fixed to the ring 58, and therefore normally stationary in the casting 8, is al1-internally toothed annulus 62; and super-posed thereupon is a second internally toothed annulus 63,'` the latter having one more tooth than the former. Meshing with both-said annuli is a pinion 65, journaled on a stud 66 projecting upwardly from .the driven disk 57. Thus the orbital movement of the pinion 65, meshing vwith the stationary annulus 62 and the movable annulus 63, rotates the latter through the distance of one tooth lfor each complete revolution of the disk 57. Pinned to the movable annulus 63 so as to rotate therewith is a dial disk 67, having thereon (Fig. 2) an index 68 which coperates with a scale 70 provided on a hinged lid 72, said scale being graduated in one hundred-parts.v The gearing between the disk 57 and the disk 67 is such that for each revolution of the former (turning the indexz 61 once completely around) the index 68 is moved through a hundredth part of a' revolution, that is, from one graduation to the next. Thus, if
a com-plete revolution of the disk 57 indicates a knot of travel of the vessel, each graduation of thescale 70 would also indicate a knot and a complete trip of the index 68 around the scale 70 would indicate one hundred knots of distance.` The hinged lid 72 has a circular, transparent panel 73, held in its seat byA a spring clip 74.. The movable annulus` .63 .preferably merely rests with sliding contact upon the annulus 62; and 1t maybe held in its proper position by a thin, annular plate 78 resting thereon and. retained in place by a spring clip 80.
It may frequently occur that the iy or rotator, in handling, may have oneoi its blades broken, bent, distorted or otherwise affected, so as to vary its eiiciency and 1nterfere with its accuracy as regards its intended relation with the log mechanism which it propels. An error in the record of distance traversed, arising from such causes, may be detected with considerable accuracy y comparison of the reccrd with, tliaealpulated distance traveled obtainable from bearings of latitude and longitude taken p from time to time.
' One feature of the present invention per.- Itains to an adjustment for a log mechanism whereby any chan c in eiliciency due to mutilation of the fiy may be compensated so as to eliminate the effect of the mutilation upon theindicated log record. To illustrate this feature of the invention, the described cmbodiment utilizes the variable speed `transmission between the driving disk 34 and the driven disk 36. By lifting the hinged lid 72 and removing the thimble 60 access may be had, through a central aperture in the disk 57, to the slotted head of the stud 38 which threads into the block 4.2. It
will be remembered that said stud 38 carries fixed collars 39 and 40, between which is journaled the hub 37 of the disk 36. Accordingly, by turning the stud 38 through its slotted head it may be vertically adjusted so as to move the disk 36 towardand from the axis of the driving disk 34, ythereby varying the speed of transmission. i The desii-ed Aextent of variation in the speed l of transmission may be ascertained by checking up the indicated record of distance trav' eled with the calculated distance. Thus, if the former is less than the latter the stud 38 and its disk 36 should be adjusted up- 'wardly to increase the speed of transmission; and vice versa.
It will be seen that the invention comprises a valuable method of regulating ships logs which, for illustration, consists in com.
paring recorded distance with calculated distance, and varying speed transmission in the log mechanism to compensate for error.
It is to be understood, of course, that the invention is not limited to the specific details of construction, organization and mode of operation hereinbefore set forth since, as will appear to those Yfamiliar with the art, the invention may be variously embodied and the features thereof may be used in numerous combinations and subcombinations, and may. be employed also separately to advantage.
Claims:
l. In a log mechanism, the combination of driving means, driven indicating means driven by said driving means, and means operative to change the transmission of motion between said driving and driven means to compensate for varying efficiency of the liy at different speeds, the last-mentioned means including an automatically-acting locking device for preventing accidental change in adjustment.
2. In a log mechanism, the combination of driving means, driven means, a casing therefor, a grasping member exterior to said casing, and means actuated by said grasping meinberlin. causar-'hesse 0f.. tatie. 0
revolution between said driving and driven means with varying speeds of travel of the towed fly, the last-mentioned means including a locking device for locking said driving and driven means in the desired driving relation while permitting adjustment under the inluence of said grasping member.
3. In a log mechanism, the combination of driven indicating means; driving means; a casing inclosing said driving and driven means; speed changing means to vary the relative operation of the driving and driven means at different speeds of travel; and indicator means external to said casing cooperating with the speed changing means to indicate adjustments appropriate to respec* tive speeds of travel.
4. In a log mechanism, a combination of fly-controlled driving means; driven indicating means; means to adjust the transmission of motion therebetween to suit variations in effectiveness of the fly control at different speeds of travel; and indicator means having graduations representing units of travel per interval of time to indicate appropriate adjustments for different respective speedsl of travel. j
In a log mechanism, the :combination of driving means; driven indicating means, driven by said driving'means; meansv to vary the'relative operation of the driving and driven means to compensate for loss of efliciency in the driving means; and means to vary the relative operation of the driving and driven means to compensate for inaccuracy resulting from injury to the driving means.
6. In a. log mechanism, the combination of driven indicating means; drivin means; a connection between said driving and driven means; and means to vary the operative relation of said driving and driven means by adjustment of said connection, including an index and self-locking means actuated by said index for shifting said connection.
7,. In a. log mechanism,vthe combination of driven indicating means; drivin means; a connection between said driving and driven means; and means to vary the opei'atiive relation of said driving and driven means by adjustment of said connection, including a manually shiftable cam having its cam-path transverse to the direction of said adjustment, and means actuated by said cam for shifting said connection.
S. In a log mechanism, the combination of driven indicating means; driving means; a connection between said driving and driven means; and means to vary t e operative relation of said driving and driven means by adjustment of said connection, including a manually shiftable swivelcd cam having a curved track, and means engaging said track for shifting said connection.
9. In a log mechanism, the combination of driven indicating means; driving means; a connection between said driving and driven means; and means to vary the operative relation of said driving and driven means by adjustment of said connection, including a manually shiftable cam, and springpressed means engaging said cam for shifting said connection.
10. In a log mechanism, the combination of driven indicating means; driving means; a connection between said driving and driven means; and means to vary the operative relation oi" said driving and driven means by adjustment o said connection, including a manually shiftable cam, means actuated by said cam for shifting said connection, and a spring tending to hold said cam in fixed position.
l1. In a log mechanism, the combination of driven indicating means; driving means; an axially shiftable driving connection between said driving and driven means; and means to vary the operative relation of said driving and driven means by axially shifting said connection, including an axially shiftable spindle upon which said driving connection is loosely'mounted, and means to restrain said driving connection against axial movement relative to said spindle.
1'2. In a log mechanism, the combination of driven indicating means; driving means; an axially sliiftable driving connection between said driving and driven means; and means to vary the operative relation of said. driving and driven means by axially shifting said connection, including an axially shiftable screw-threaded spindle upon which said driving connection is loosely mounted; anda member with which said spindle has screw-threaded engagement.
In testimony whereof, I have signed my name to this specification, in the presence o two subscribing witnesses.-
HENRY H. CUMMINGS.
I/Vitnesses:
LAURENCE A. JANNEY, Evnnn'r'r S. EMERY.
US42598808A 1908-04-09 1908-04-09 Ship's log. Expired - Lifetime US1128417A (en)

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