US1154982A - Tube-mill. - Google Patents

Tube-mill. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1154982A
US1154982A US77318913A US1913773189A US1154982A US 1154982 A US1154982 A US 1154982A US 77318913 A US77318913 A US 77318913A US 1913773189 A US1913773189 A US 1913773189A US 1154982 A US1154982 A US 1154982A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
mill
grinding
grinding bodies
bodies
tube
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
Application number
US77318913A
Inventor
William Fennell
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US77318913A priority Critical patent/US1154982A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1154982A publication Critical patent/US1154982A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B02CRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING; PREPARATORY TREATMENT OF GRAIN FOR MILLING
    • B02CCRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING IN GENERAL; MILLING GRAIN
    • B02C17/00Disintegrating by tumbling mills, i.e. mills having a container charged with the material to be disintegrated with or without special disintegrating members such as pebbles or balls
    • B02C17/18Details
    • B02C17/20Disintegrating members

Definitions

  • the grinding bodies described by way of example comprised short bodies of circular
  • the comparatively small clongated hollow grinding bodies are each formed with one ormore grooves, recesses, holes or passages (hereinafter referred to generically as holes) extending from its exterior surface inward to any desired extent .but preferably [sofas to pass completely through the wall of the hollow body and communicate with the hole or passage ea. tending lengthwise therethrough.
  • holes may be of any dee pcoiilcetioa of letters Pateht.
  • sired shape as for'exaniple circular or slotlike, andin the latter case may be curved ,or straight and be example at right angles or inclined to the axis of the grinding body.
  • the unrecessed or unperforated portion or portions of the outer surface of the grinding bodies must of course'he Wider or larger than the recessed or perforated portion or portions thereof so as to avoid. any possibility of adjacent grind ing bodies becoming interlocked or entangled With each other instead of sliding endwise one against the other.
  • Grinding bodies such as described may be of hardened and tempered steel or of other metal or material according to the nature of the material to be ground.
  • Figure shows in central longitudinal section, and Fig. 2 in cross section, to a larger scale, a tube. mill, Figs. 3 and l show respectively in side elevation and vertical section, one of the improved grinding'bodies.
  • Fig-5 shows a perforated metal; strip from which grinding bodies such as shown in Figs. 3 and 4 can coilveniently be made.
  • Fig. 6 shows in end view a modified form of the grinding body.”
  • ' 1 is a tube mill of any ordinary construe tion having hollow trunnions 2 and in which a large number of loose freely morale grinding bodies constructed according to the present invention, with intermixed cement or other material to be ground, are placed for the purpose of grinding such cement or other material when the mill is rotated, the mass of grinding bodies, with intermixed material being indicated at 3 and bounded at the top by the dotted line 3.
  • Figs. 3 and i show a hollow grinding: body made in the Form of a short cylindrical of holes extending Such holes may be elongated and inclined to the axis of thehcllow body, as shown at 'T in Figs. 3, land 5,01 be, arranged at right angles to the aXis of the; body as shown at El in. Fig. 5, or be made of curved form, for example of circular form. as shown at 9 in Fig. 5.
  • Such hollow perforated. grinding bodies may conveniently be inadeirom' strip metal 10, for examr. (see Fig 5), in which the holes variously arranged, as for 1 lllt iii
  • sired shape are punched and which is then cut into short lengths or blanks that are bent into tubular shape in any convenient man- .ner to form the required hollow perforated grinding bodies.
  • the grinding bodies instead of being of circular cross section, as shown in l, may each be of other shape in end view or cross section, for example of hollow, oval shape as shown in Fig. 6.
  • each body serves in addition to the hole 11 extending throughthe center of the body, to further lighten the body as compared with its overall bulk, and also to raise material to be ground and distribute it among the mess of grinding bodies-in such manner that a greater output of groimd 1aterial is obtained from a will of given s ze in a given time charged "with such grinding bodies than with the iSlKllB weight of grinding bodies previously used.
  • the hollow grinding bodies of helical or'perforated shape as described, they have a greater overall bulk for a givenoweight than hollow grinding bodies such as deshribed in the specification .difany said former upplication Serial l lo.
  • What I claim is l.
  • the combination with a tube mill of a number of loose freely movable hollow cylindrical grinding bodies each made 01 a length that is equal to a fraction only of the radius of the mill but is of greater length than diameter and consists of a lon- 8.
  • the combination with tube'mill of tmlly and longlt-mlinally through the lon a number of loose freely movable hollow est dimension of the body.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Food Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Crushing And Grinding (AREA)

Description

W. FENNELL.
TUBE MILL.
APPLICATION FILED JUNE 12, 1913.
PatentedSept. 28,1915.
W M XVGOG, 5000M G 7500 @060 S @0609 X f f WILLIhm' FENNELL, or scores-3e,
areas sneer, sin-memo.
ahaaia mn ammu- Application filed June 12, rate,
To all whom it may, concern:
Be it known that 1., WILLIAM FENNELL, a, subject of the King ;of Great Britain and Ireland, residing at Southain, near Rugby, in, the county of Warwick, England, have invented Improvements in or Relating to Tube-lvlills, of which the following is a specification. i v In the specification of another application forlLett'ers Patent filedby ,nie' November 'l'6th 1912, Serial No; $31861, l have described. the use iii-tube mills for grinding and pulverizingfcement, slagylirnestone, ore,
coal and'other mamriale of "a'large number of loose freelymovable grinding bodies each made hollow or partly hollow for the reception and movement of material to be ground and made of comparatively small length in relation to-the diameter of the mill but oi greater length than diameter or Width, the
relative dimensions and shape being such that the. several grinding bodies when in use will not roll uponeach other but will move in planes'at right angles, or approximately so, to the axis of the rotatin mill and will raisernaterial to be'ground trom the lower part of the mill and distribute it among the grinding bodies, all as and for the purposes set forth in the said specification.
In the said former specification, the grinding bodies described by way of example, comprised short bodies of circular,
oval or elliptical shape in cross section and haying a. hole extending centrally and lengthwise therethrough, their length being equal to only a small fraction of'theradius of the mill. Now according to the present invention, the comparatively small clongated hollow grinding bodies are each formed with one ormore grooves, recesses, holes or passages (hereinafter referred to generically as holes) extending from its exterior surface inward to any desired extent .but preferably [sofas to pass completely through the wall of the hollow body and communicate with the hole or passage ea. tending lengthwise therethrough. In either case the weight of the grinding body relatively to its overall dimension will, with advantage, be decreased as compared with the grinding bodies described in the said former specification. The holes may be of any dee pcoiilcetioa of letters Pateht.
-tilbe ti having a number through its wall.
Patented Sept. 2%, 1M5. Serial a name.
sired shape, as for'exaniple circular or slotlike, andin the latter case may be curved ,or straight and be example at right angles or inclined to the axis of the grinding body. The unrecessed or unperforated portion or portions of the outer surface of the grinding bodies must of course'he Wider or larger than the recessed or perforated portion or portions thereof so as to avoid. any possibility of adjacent grind ing bodies becoming interlocked or entangled With each other instead of sliding endwise one against the other. a
Grinding bodies such as described may be of hardened and tempered steel or of other metal or material according to the nature of the material to be ground.
In the accompanying illustrative drawlegs, "Figure shows in central longitudinal section, and Fig. 2 in cross section, to a larger scale, a tube. mill, Figs. 3 and l show respectively in side elevation and vertical section, one of the improved grinding'bodies. Fig-5 shows a perforated metal; strip from which grinding bodies such as shown in Figs. 3 and 4 can coilveniently be made. Fig. 6 shows in end view a modified form of the grinding body."
' 1 is a tube mill of any ordinary construe tion having hollow trunnions 2 and in which a large number of loose freely morale grinding bodies constructed according to the present invention, with intermixed cement or other material to be ground, are placed for the purpose of grinding such cement or other material when the mill is rotated, the mass of grinding bodies, with intermixed material being indicated at 3 and bounded at the top by the dotted line 3.
Figs. 3 and i show a hollow grinding: body made in the Form of a short cylindrical of holes extending Such holes may be elongated and inclined to the axis of thehcllow body, as shown at 'T in Figs. 3, land 5,01 be, arranged at right angles to the aXis of the; body as shown at El in. Fig. 5, or be made of curved form, for example of circular form. as shown at 9 in Fig. 5. Such hollow perforated. grinding bodies may conveniently be inadeirom' strip metal 10, for examr. (see Fig 5), in which the holes variously arranged, as for 1 lllt iii
sired shape are punched and which is then cut into short lengths or blanks that are bent into tubular shape in any convenient man- .ner to form the required hollow perforated grinding bodies. The grinding bodies instead of being of circular cross section, as shown in l, may each be of other shape in end view or cross section, for example of hollow, oval shape as shown in Fig. 6. The
. over at the top of the load and descending and also turning over end for end when they abut endwise againsteach otherv until they reach the bottom of the mill when they again ascend. In this way the bodies slide endwise against each other and grinding Cir material between them. The holes or passages '7, 8, 9 (Figsfi, l. and 5) extending through the walls of each body serve in addition to the hole 11 extending throughthe center of the body, to further lighten the body as compared with its overall bulk, and also to raise material to be ground and distribute it among the mess of grinding bodies-in such manner that a greater output of groimd 1aterial is obtained from a will of given s ze in a given time charged "with such grinding bodies than with the iSlKllB weight of grinding bodies previously used. Furthermore, by making the hollow grinding bodies of helical or'perforated shape as described, they have a greater overall bulk for a givenoweight than hollow grinding bodies such as deshribed in the specification .difany said former upplication Serial l lo. 318%1, and a far greater overall bull; iiora given weight, as compared with solid metal cylinders, each having tne same areaof grinding surface, sd that the Volume or hull: of the load, composed of cement or other material to be ground and grinding bodies, in the mill will be increased as compared with a load comprising the same -weight of cement or other material and grinding bodies of either of the other forms referred to, with the result that not onlywill the output of the mill be considerably in creased but the power required to drive the mill and its load will be decreased.
What I claim is l. The combination with a. tube mill of a number of loose freely movable hollow grinding bodies each made of a length that is equal to a "traction only of the radius of masses the mill but is oi greater length than diameter and has in its peripheral surface a plurality of holes the width or diameter of each of which is less than the width of adjacent portions of the said peripheral surface.
2. The combination with a tube mill of a number of loose freely movable hollow grinding bodies each made of a length that is equal to a fraction only of the radius of the mill but is of greater length than diameter and has a plurality of holes extending completely through its wall, the width or diameter of each hole being less than the width of adjacent portions of the peripheral surface of said wall.
3. The combination with a tube mill of a number of loose freely movable hollow grinding bodies each made of a length that is equal to a fraction only of the radius of the mill but is of greater length than diamcter and has a plurality of elongated holes extending partly, around and completely through its peripheral Wall.
4. The combination with a tube mill of a number of loose freely movable hollow grinding bodies of uniform external cross sectional dimensions throughout their length, eachof said bodies being made of a length that is equal to a fraction only of the radius of the mill but is of greater length than diameter and having a plurality of holes extending through its peripheral wall at an angle to the open ended hole extending centrally and longitudinally through the longest dimension of the body.
5. The combination with a tube mill of number of loose freely movable hollow grinding bodies of uniform cross section throughout their length, each of said bodies being made of a length that is equal to a fraction only of the radius of the mill but is of greater length than diameter and consists of a tube of sheet material divided longitudinally and having holes extending through its wall.
6. The combination with a tube mill of a number of loose freely movable hollow cylindrical grinding bodies each made 01 a length that is equal to a fraction only of the radius of the mill but is of greater length than diameter and consists of a lon- 8. The combination with tube'mill of tmlly and longlt-mlinally through the lon a number of loose freely movable hollow est dimension of the body.
grimling bodies each made of a, length that Signed at London, Englanfi, this 4 clay is equal to a fraction only of the radius of of June 1913.
the will but of greater length than diameter 1 T7 r T HT T and of cylindrical shape both externally and M ILLEAM 1* internally and having a plurality of holes Ylitnesses:
extending through its peripheral Wall at an CYRIL U NDERLAU,
angle to the open ended hole extending cen O. J. WORTH.
US77318913A 1913-06-12 1913-06-12 Tube-mill. Expired - Lifetime US1154982A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US77318913A US1154982A (en) 1913-06-12 1913-06-12 Tube-mill.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US77318913A US1154982A (en) 1913-06-12 1913-06-12 Tube-mill.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1154982A true US1154982A (en) 1915-09-28

Family

ID=3223046

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US77318913A Expired - Lifetime US1154982A (en) 1913-06-12 1913-06-12 Tube-mill.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1154982A (en)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2539809A (en) Material storage rack
DE1915613A1 (en) tire
EP0317732A2 (en) Spring element
US1154982A (en) Tube-mill.
EP3222390A1 (en) Chisel
EP1273396B1 (en) Chisel resp. drill bit
EP3122574B1 (en) Vehicle tire
US1154981A (en) Tube-mill.
DE1757399B2 (en) Rotating container mill
RU2568491C1 (en) Mill
RU2568496C1 (en) Tubular continuous-operation mill
DE102020201635A1 (en) Pneumatic vehicle tires
RU2519874C2 (en) Tubular mill
RU2694940C2 (en) Finishing machine
US1374490A (en) Chamber-head
US1887360A (en) Punch
EP0026512A2 (en) Wall building block
RU2568494C1 (en) Vibratory mill
DE801740C (en) Hollow body cover
RU2551147C1 (en) Vibratory mixer of loose materials
DE10259198B4 (en) Apparatus for the handling of bulk goods of transport vehicles
DE1132987B (en) Rotating parabolic antenna
DE2111652B2 (en) Composite stone, preferably for fastening embankments
GB191302799A (en) Improvements in or relating to Tube Mills.
DE322872C (en) Grinding bodies, the diameter of which is smaller than their length, for the exercise of comminution in tubular mills