US1203578A - Surface discharge apparatus for tanks. - Google Patents

Surface discharge apparatus for tanks. Download PDF

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US1203578A
US1203578A US1913743481A US1203578A US 1203578 A US1203578 A US 1203578A US 1913743481 A US1913743481 A US 1913743481A US 1203578 A US1203578 A US 1203578A
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tank
plate
delivery pipe
casting
gasolene
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Robert A Brooks
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60KARRANGEMENT OR MOUNTING OF PROPULSION UNITS OR OF TRANSMISSIONS IN VEHICLES; ARRANGEMENT OR MOUNTING OF PLURAL DIVERSE PRIME-MOVERS IN VEHICLES; AUXILIARY DRIVES FOR VEHICLES; INSTRUMENTATION OR DASHBOARDS FOR VEHICLES; ARRANGEMENTS IN CONNECTION WITH COOLING, AIR INTAKE, GAS EXHAUST OR FUEL SUPPLY OF PROPULSION UNITS IN VEHICLES
    • B60K15/00Arrangement in connection with fuel supply of combustion engines or other fuel consuming energy converters, e.g. fuel cells; Mounting or construction of fuel tanks
    • B60K15/03Fuel tanks
    • B60K15/06Fuel tanks characterised by fuel reserve systems
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T137/00Fluid handling
    • Y10T137/8593Systems
    • Y10T137/86236Tank with movable or adjustable outlet or overflow pipe
    • Y10T137/86252Float-supported outlet
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T137/00Fluid handling
    • Y10T137/8593Systems
    • Y10T137/86236Tank with movable or adjustable outlet or overflow pipe
    • Y10T137/8626Swinging outlet pipe or spout

Definitions

  • nwrr a ROBERT A BROOKS, OF CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.
  • My present invention is in the nature of an improvement upon thatdescribed and claimed in Letters Patent of the United States No. 1,040,872, granted to me on Oct. 8th, 1912, as hereinafter more fully set forth and particularly pointed out in my claims.
  • My present invention like my former one, relates to a combined surface feeder and strainer for feeding gasolene from supply tanks to gasolene engines or the carbureters thereof, and has for its object the provision of an improved feeding device of this character by means of which the gasolene is not only withdrawn from the upper part of the supply in the tank near the surface thereof, instead of being withdrawn from the lower part thereof, which naturally holds the greatest amount of sediment and foreign matter, but effectively excludes from the supply withdrawn from the tank even such foreign matter as may be carried in the upper part thereof, as well as any water which may be contained in the gasolene.
  • Figure 1 is a vertical section of one end of a. gasolene tank showing my novel feeding device in elevation therein;
  • Fig. 2 a perspective view of the base plate of my novel device and some of the parts carried by it;
  • Fig. 3 a vertical section of the parts shown in Fig. 2 in the plane indicated by the dotted lines 83 of Figs. 1 and 2;
  • Fig. 4 a perspective view corresponding with Fig. 9-,but showing a modified construction in which the base plate supporting-the operating parts is detachably secured to the bottom of the tank;
  • Fig. 5 a vertical section corresponding to Fig. 3, but showing the modified construction of Fig. 4;
  • Fig. 6 a. sectional detail of Fig. 4 in the plane of the dotted lines 6- -6 of said figure;
  • 7 a sectional detail of the float and strainer and upper end of the delivery pipe by which they are carried;
  • Fig. 8 a perspective view of the strainer or filtering that figure.
  • the tank A containing the supply of gasolene, is provided in its bottom with an Patented Nov. 7, leis.
  • opening B circular in form in the present instance
  • the closure for which opening is formed byjwhat may be termed the base plate or supporting plate C of my novel feeding device.
  • This plate '0 is likewise circular in form in the present instance, and
  • the plate C is provided upon-its under surface with two integral and internally threaded depending tubular bosses D, E, the former of which constitutes a drainage outlet for the tank and carries a drain-cock d, shown in Fig. 1, while the latter constitutes the deliveryoutlet through which the gasolene is fed from the tank to the engine or other point ofconsumption, the lower portion of the boss E being reduced and externally threaded at e, for the connection of the delivery pipe.
  • the cylindrical member 7 of the casting F is. provided, in what may be termed its forwardside Figs. 2 and i, with a segmental slot f through which the lower end of the delivery pipe H projects and in which it may have vertical play (limited by the length of the slot), as the float I rises and ner end. with a reduced extension or projecting sleeve g, Fig. 3, which fits within a corresponding bore in the horizontal portion of the casting F and furnishes communication for the delivery pipe H through the hub G, to the delivery passage within the vertical arm 7 of the casting F and the coincident passage in the lower reduced end of the boss E.
  • Figs. 7 and 8 The construction of the combined float and strainer or filter which 1 preferably employ is best shown in Figs. 7 and 8, where the body of the float I is shown as consisting of a sheet metal cup I, approximately square in longitudinal section in the present instance, whose circular. wall, adjacent its open end, is spun outwardly, at z", to form a receptacle and seat for the, closed end or bottom of a shallow cup I" which is brazed or otherwise secured in the enlarged end of the first mentioned cup.
  • the strainer 01' filter J, Fig. 8 is in the present instance of similar size and shape to the shallow cup I", of the float, being of sufliciently less diameter than said cup to fitsnugl'y within the same as shown in Fig. 7, with its open end abutting against the bottom ofsaid cupand its closed end serving to close the open end of the cup.
  • the strainer J is provided with anopening j for the passage through it of the upper end of the delivery pipe H, which is externally threaded and. screwed into the outer end of an internally threaded boss or sleeve I which is secured at'its inner end, by brazing or otherwise, to the bottom of the shallow cup I.
  • the boss or sleeve-I is providedin its opposite sides, adjacent the bottom of the cup I, with openings i througl'i which the gasol'ene may flow from the cup 1 into the upper end. of the delivery pipe H.
  • the gasolene is obliged to pass through the strainer J, in order to escape from the tank A through the delivery pipe H, and said strainer not'only serves to exclude all sediment and similar foreign matter from the'gasolene delivered from the tank, but all water as well, since when the surface of the strainer J is once wet with gasolene no water will pass through it.
  • the base plate C is detachably se cured to the bottom of the tank A, and can be readily removed, and the parts carried by it, including the delivery pipe and float and strainer, be withdra-wn. through the opening in the bottom. of the tank which is closed by said plate when the latter is in place.
  • annular attaching plate K having around its inner edge a circular shoulder 72 which projects upward into and fits snugly within the opening B in the bottom of the tank A, as shown in Figs. 5 and 6.
  • This-attaching plate K is provided upon its underside with a series of'integral depending threaded bolts L which pass through coincident holes formed for them in the base plate C, which latter is securedin position upon said bolts by nuts'M.
  • A. packing ring N formed of a. material impervious to gasolene, such as pigskin, is interposed between: the upper surface of the plate C and theattaching plate K, to prevent escape of gasolene from the tank through the joint between said plates.
  • the lower ends of the nuts M are radially notched, as shown in Figs. t and 5, and the bolts L are provided with diametrical holes through which cotter pins, fitting in the notches in the nuts, are passed, to prevent unscrewing of thenuts.
  • a mounting for the support of a pivoted oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like comprising a base plate secured to the bottom of the tank and serving to close an opening therein, a'casting carried by said base plate and extending upward through said opening into the tank and provided with a delivery passage leading through said plate, and a pivotal support for the lower end of the delivery pipe having its bearings in said casting and provided with a passage communicating with the delivery pipe and with the passage in the casting; substantially as described.
  • a mounting for the support of a pivoted oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like comprising a base plate detachably secured to the bottom of the tank and serving to close an opening therein, a casting carried by said base plate and extending upward through the opening in the attaching plate and bottom of the tank to the interior thereof, and having a delivery passage leading through the base plate, and a pivotal support for the lower end of the delivery pipe mounted in said casting and provided with a passage communicating with the delivery pipe and with the delivery passage in the casting; substantially as de scribed.
  • a mounting for the support of a pivoted oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like comprising the base, a base plate C detachably secured to the bottom of the tank and serving to close an opening therethrough, a casting F carried by the plate C and extending upward through the opening in the attaching plate and bottom of the tank to the interior thereof, said casting being formed with a housing at its top and having a delivery passage leading through the base plate, a hub Gr having a bearing in said housingformed in said casting F, a delivery pipe H having its lower end secured to and carried by said hub and communicating with the passage leading through the same and connecting with the delivery passage in the casting F; substantially as described.
  • a mounting for the support of a pivoted oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like comprising an attaching plate K permanently secured to the bottom of. the tank and having an opening coincident with an opening B in the latter, a plate C detachably secured to the plate K and formed with a depending internally and externally threaded tubular boss E, a casting F carried by the plate C and extending upward through the opening in the attaching plate and bottom of the tank to the interior thereof, said casting being formed with a housing at its top and having a delivery passage leading through said plate 0, a hub G having a bearing in said housing formed in the casting F, a delivery pipe H having its lower end secured to and carried by said hub and communicating with the passage leading through the same and connecting with the delivery passage in the casting F; substantially as described.
  • a mounting for the support of a pivoted oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like comprising the plate C de tachably secured to the bottom of the tank and formed with a depending internally and externally threaded tubular boss E and a second internally threaded boss D, a casting F having its externally threaded lower end screwed into the internally threaded upper end of the boss E and extending upward through the opening in the attaching plate and bottom of the'tankto' the interior thereof, said casting being formed with the laterally disposed housing f at its top and having a delivery passage through it, a hub G having its bearing in the laterally disposed housing 7 of the casting F and having connecting radial and axial passages, the latter communicating with the passage through the casting-F, a delivery pipe H secured to and carried by the hub G and communicating with the passages extending through it, and a drain cock (Z secured in the boss D of the plate C; substantially as described.
  • a mounting for the support of a pivoted oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like comprising an attaching plate K secured to the bottom of the tank and having an opening coincident with an opening B therein, said plate K having depending threaded bolts L, a plate C fitting against the under side of the plate K, and
  • a mounting for the support of a pivot ed oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like comprising an attaching plate K secured to the under side of the tank coincident with an opening B therein and provided upon its under side with depending threaded bolts L, a plate C fitting against the under side of the plate K and serving to close the opening through the same and through the bottom of-the tank, said-:plate C having openings coincident with vthe bolts L through which the latter pass; apacking ring N, formed of material impervious to gasolene, interposed between the plates K and C, nuts M applied to the bolts.L:forsecuring the plate 0 imposition, and a castingF carried by the plate C and extending upward through the openings in the plate K and bottom of the tank to the interior ofthe lattensaid casting having at its upper end anoscillating bearing forthe delivery pipeand being provided with delivery passages extending through said oscillating bearing and communicating with the delivery pipe.
  • Aniounting for the support of a pivot ed oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanksandthe like comprising an attaching plate K secured to the bottom ofthe tank andihavinga'n opening coincident with an opening B therein, and provided with depending threaded bolts L a plate'C fitting against the under side ofthe plate K and serving to close the opening therethrough and through the bottom of the tank, and provided with holes coincident with the bolts L through which the latter pass, nuts M applied to the bolts L said nuts M provided with diametrically disposed notches, cotter pins passed through holes in the bolts L and engaging said notches in the nuts M, and a casting F carried by the plate C and extending upward into the interior of the tank, said casting having at its upper end an oscillating bearing for the delivery pipe and being provided with delivery passages extending through said oscillating bearing and communicating with the delivery pipe.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Sustainable Development (AREA)
  • Sustainable Energy (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Transportation (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Filling Or Discharging Of Gas Storage Vessels (AREA)

Description

I n. A. BROOKS. SURFACE DISCHARGE APPARATUS FOR TANKS.
APPLICATION FILED 'JAN. 22, I913- Patented Nov. 7, 1916.
Izvzfa 4; a. K m/ k;
device of Fig. 7 g and Fig.
nwrr a ROBERT A. BROOKS, OF CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.
SURFACE DISCHARGE APPARATUS FOR TANKS.
Specification of Letters Patent.
macaw filed Januar 22, 1913. Serial in. 743,431.
Apparatus for Tanks, of which the following is a description, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, forming part of this specification.
My present invention is in the nature of an improvement upon thatdescribed and claimed in Letters Patent of the United States No. 1,040,872, granted to me on Oct. 8th, 1912, as hereinafter more fully set forth and particularly pointed out in my claims. My present invention, like my former one, relates to a combined surface feeder and strainer for feeding gasolene from supply tanks to gasolene engines or the carbureters thereof, and has for its object the provision of an improved feeding device of this character by means of which the gasolene is not only withdrawn from the upper part of the supply in the tank near the surface thereof, instead of being withdrawn from the lower part thereof, which naturally holds the greatest amount of sediment and foreign matter, but effectively excludes from the supply withdrawn from the tank even such foreign matter as may be carried in the upper part thereof, as well as any water which may be contained in the gasolene.
In the accompanying drawings Figure 1 is a vertical section of one end of a. gasolene tank showing my novel feeding device in elevation therein; Fig. 2 a perspective view of the base plate of my novel device and some of the parts carried by it; Fig. 3 a vertical section of the parts shown in Fig. 2 in the plane indicated by the dotted lines 83 of Figs. 1 and 2; Fig. 4 a perspective view corresponding with Fig. 9-,but showing a modified construction in which the base plate supporting-the operating parts is detachably secured to the bottom of the tank; Fig. 5 a vertical section corresponding to Fig. 3, but showing the modified construction of Fig. 4; Fig. 6 a. sectional detail of Fig. 4 in the plane of the dotted lines 6- -6 of said figure; 7 a sectional detail of the float and strainer and upper end of the delivery pipe by which they are carried; Fig. 8 a perspective view of the strainer or filtering that figure.
9 a sectional dc tail of Fig. 3 on the dotted lines 9-9 of The same letters of reference are used to indicate corresponding parts in the several views. 7
The tank A, containing the supply of gasolene, is provided in its bottom with an Patented Nov. 7, leis.
opening B, circular in form in the present instance, the closure for which opening is formed byjwhat may be termed the base plate or supporting plate C of my novel feeding device. I This plate '0 is likewise circular in form in the present instance, and
is provided, at a suitable distance within its periphery, with an annular shoulder which projects into and fits within the. circular opening 13 in the bottom of thetank, the plate as-a whole being firmlysecured to the bottom of the tank'by brazing or sweating its uppersurface, outside the annular shoulder 0, to the under surfaceof the tank surrounding the opening B'therein. The plate C is provided upon-its under surface with two integral and internally threaded depending tubular bosses D, E, the former of which constitutes a drainage outlet for the tank and carries a drain-cock d, shown in Fig. 1, while the latter constitutes the deliveryoutlet through which the gasolene is fed from the tank to the engine or other point ofconsumption, the lower portion of the boss E being reduced and externally threaded at e, for the connection of the delivery pipe.
Screwed 'nto the internally threaded upper portion of the boss E of the base plate G is the short vertically extending tubular arm 7 of an elbow-shaped castingF whose laterally projecting arm or portion f consists of an enlarged cylindrical housing and bearing for a hub G which has secured in it the lower end of the delivery pipe H, Fig.
1, which carries at its upper end the float I.
The cylindrical member 7 of the casting F is. provided, in what may be termed its forwardside Figs. 2 and i, with a segmental slot f through which the lower end of the delivery pipe H projects and in which it may have vertical play (limited by the length of the slot), as the float I rises and ner end. with a reduced extension or projecting sleeve g, Fig. 3, which fits within a corresponding bore in the horizontal portion of the casting F and furnishes communication for the delivery pipe H through the hub G, to the delivery passage within the vertical arm 7 of the casting F and the coincident passage in the lower reduced end of the boss E. Under this'construction gasolene admitted to the upper end of the delivery pipe H may flow through the same and out of the tank through the hub G and the passages in the casting F and boss E. A packing washer G interposed between the hub G and the end wall of the housing f", around the sleeve 9, prevents escape of gasolene from the tank except through the delivery pipe H andits communicating passage through the hub G and casting F.
The construction of the combined float and strainer or filter which 1 preferably employ is best shown in Figs. 7 and 8, where the body of the float I is shown as consisting of a sheet metal cup I, approximately square in longitudinal section in the present instance, whose circular. wall, adjacent its open end, is spun outwardly, at z", to form a receptacle and seat for the, closed end or bottom of a shallow cup I" which is brazed or otherwise secured in the enlarged end of the first mentioned cup. The strainer 01' filter J, Fig. 8, is in the present instance of similar size and shape to the shallow cup I", of the float, being of sufliciently less diameter than said cup to fitsnugl'y within the same as shown in Fig. 7, with its open end abutting against the bottom ofsaid cupand its closed end serving to close the open end of the cup.
I and serve as astrainer for the gasolene entering said cup. The strainer J is provided with anopening j for the passage through it of the upper end of the delivery pipe H, which is externally threaded and. screwed into the outer end of an internally threaded boss or sleeve I which is secured at'its inner end, by brazing or otherwise, to the bottom of the shallow cup I. The boss or sleeve-I is providedin its opposite sides, adjacent the bottom of the cup I, with openings i througl'i which the gasol'ene may flow from the cup 1 into the upper end. of the delivery pipe H.
'l-he combined float and strain-er, together with the delivery pipe H, are of such gravity that the float will rest in the upper portion of the gasolene within the tank A at such depth as to sufficiently submerge the strainer J and open end. of the cup 1 within the gasolene, as shown in Fig. l, and the latter will flow through the strainer J and into the upper end of the delivery pipe H, and
- pass thence. through the same and its supporting. hub G to the passages in the cast?- ingF and boss E, and the pipe leading to the engine; and as the supply of gasolene is used and its level within the tank A cor- 'respondingly lowered, the combined float and strainer will fall with the level of the gasolene, the oscillating hub G, in which the lower end of the delivery pipe H is secured, and. the segmental opening f in the cylindrical housing which incloses and supports said hub, permitting such movement of the parts. The gasolene is obliged to pass through the strainer J, in order to escape from the tank A through the delivery pipe H, and said strainer not'only serves to exclude all sediment and similar foreign matter from the'gasolene delivered from the tank, but all water as well, since when the surface of the strainer J is once wet with gasolene no water will pass through it.
In the construction shown in Figs. 1, 2 and 3, andabove described, the base plate 0, whichcarries the casting F and delivery pipe H and float and strainer J, is secured directly and permanently to the bottom of the tank A, so that access to the float and strainer, or the other parts carried by the plate C, can be had only through some other opening in the tank A. In the modified construction shown in Figs. 4:, 5 and 6, however, the base plate C is detachably se cured to the bottom of the tank A, and can be readily removed, and the parts carried by it, including the delivery pipe and float and strainer, be withdra-wn. through the opening in the bottom. of the tank which is closed by said plate when the latter is in place. To this end, in the construction shown in Figs. 4, 5 and 6, I permanently secure to the bottom of the tank A, by brazing or otherwise, an annular attaching plate K having around its inner edge a circular shoulder 72 which projects upward into and fits snugly within the opening B in the bottom of the tank A, as shown in Figs. 5 and 6. This-attaching plate K is provided upon its underside with a series of'integral depending threaded bolts L which pass through coincident holes formed for them in the base plate C, which latter is securedin position upon said bolts by nuts'M. A. packing ring N, formed of a. material impervious to gasolene, such as pigskin, is interposed between: the upper surface of the plate C and theattaching plate K, to prevent escape of gasolene from the tank through the joint between said plates. The lower ends of the nuts M are radially notched, as shown in Figs. t and 5, and the bolts L are provided with diametrical holes through which cotter pins, fitting in the notches in the nuts, are passed, to prevent unscrewing of thenuts.
-As will be understood from the foregoing description, I have provided, in. the modified construction shown in Figs. 4, 5 and 6, a construction in which the advantages of that shownin Figs. 2 and 3. are retained, and in which the additional advantage of havingthebase plate detachable, and permittion, I claim tank, is attained, which is a matter of very considerable convenience in some instances.
Having thus fully described my invenl. A mounting for the support of a pivoted oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like comprising a base plate secured to the bottom of the tank and serving to close an opening therein, a'casting carried by said base plate and extending upward through said opening into the tank and provided with a delivery passage leading through said plate, and a pivotal support for the lower end of the delivery pipe having its bearings in said casting and provided with a passage communicating with the delivery pipe and with the passage in the casting; substantially as described.
2. A mounting for the support of a pivoted oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like comprising a base plate detachably secured to the bottom of the tank and serving to close an opening therein, a casting carried by said base plate and extending upward through the opening in the attaching plate and bottom of the tank to the interior thereof, and having a delivery passage leading through the base plate, and a pivotal support for the lower end of the delivery pipe mounted in said casting and provided with a passage communicating with the delivery pipe and with the delivery passage in the casting; substantially as de scribed.
3. A mounting for the support of a pivoted oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like comprising the base, a base plate C detachably secured to the bottom of the tank and serving to close an opening therethrough, a casting F carried by the plate C and extending upward through the opening in the attaching plate and bottom of the tank to the interior thereof, said casting being formed with a housing at its top and having a delivery passage leading through the base plate, a hub Gr having a bearing in said housingformed in said casting F, a delivery pipe H having its lower end secured to and carried by said hub and communicating with the passage leading through the same and connecting with the delivery passage in the casting F; substantially as described.
a. A mounting for the support of a pivoted oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like comprising an attaching plate K permanently secured to the bottom of. the tank and having an opening coincident with an opening B in the latter, a plate C detachably secured to the plate K and formed with a depending internally and externally threaded tubular boss E, a casting F carried by the plate C and extending upward through the opening in the attaching plate and bottom of the tank to the interior thereof, said casting being formed with a housing at its top and having a delivery passage leading through said plate 0, a hub G having a bearing in said housing formed in the casting F, a delivery pipe H having its lower end secured to and carried by said hub and communicating with the passage leading through the same and connecting with the delivery passage in the casting F; substantially as described.
5. A mounting for the support of a pivoted oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like comprising the plate C de tachably secured to the bottom of the tank and formed with a depending internally and externally threaded tubular boss E and a second internally threaded boss D, a casting F having its externally threaded lower end screwed into the internally threaded upper end of the boss E and extending upward through the opening in the attaching plate and bottom of the'tankto' the interior thereof, said casting being formed with the laterally disposed housing f at its top and having a delivery passage through it, a hub G having its bearing in the laterally disposed housing 7 of the casting F and having connecting radial and axial passages, the latter communicating with the passage through the casting-F, a delivery pipe H secured to and carried by the hub G and communicating with the passages extending through it, and a drain cock (Z secured in the boss D of the plate C; substantially as described.
6. A mounting for the support of a pivoted oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like, comprising an attaching plate K secured to the bottom of the tank and having an opening coincident with an opening B therein, said plate K having depending threaded bolts L, a plate C fitting against the under side of the plate K, and
' provided with openings coincident with the bolts L, through which openings said bolts pass, nuts M applied to said bolts to secure the plate C in position, a casting F carried by the plate C and extending upward through the openings in the plate K and bottom of the tank-into the interior of the latter, said casting having at its upper end an oscillating bearing for the delivery pipe and being provided with delivery passages extending through said oscillating bearing and communicating with the delivery pipe.
7. A mounting for the support of a pivot ed oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanks and the like, comprising an attaching plate K secured to the under side of the tank coincident with an opening B therein and provided upon its under side with depending threaded bolts L, a plate C fitting against the under side of the plate K and serving to close the opening through the same and through the bottom of-the tank, said-:plate C having openings coincident with vthe bolts L through which the latter pass; apacking ring N, formed of material impervious to gasolene, interposed between the plates K and C, nuts M applied to the bolts.L:forsecuring the plate 0 imposition, and a castingF carried by the plate C and extending upward through the openings in the plate K and bottom of the tank to the interior ofthe lattensaid casting having at its upper end anoscillating bearing forthe delivery pipeand being provided with delivery passages extending through said oscillating bearing and communicating with the delivery pipe.
8. Aniounting for the support of a pivot ed oscillating delivery pipe for gasolene tanksandthe like comprising an attaching plate K secured to the bottom ofthe tank andihavinga'n opening coincident with an opening B therein, and provided with depending threaded bolts L a plate'C fitting against the under side ofthe plate K and serving to close the opening therethrough and through the bottom of the tank, and provided with holes coincident with the bolts L through which the latter pass, nuts M applied to the bolts L said nuts M provided with diametrically disposed notches, cotter pins passed through holes in the bolts L and engaging said notches in the nuts M, and a casting F carried by the plate C and extending upward into the interior of the tank, said casting having at its upper end an oscillating bearing for the delivery pipe and being provided with delivery passages extending through said oscillating bearing and communicating with the delivery pipe.
ROBERT A. BROQKS.
lVitnesses:
EDWARD Rno'ron, ROBERT DOBBERMAN.
Copies of this patent may be obtained for five cents each, by addressing the Commissioner of Patents, Washington, I). C.
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Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2530594A (en) * 1948-02-04 1950-11-21 F W Benedict Separating solid matter from hot wort
US3060954A (en) * 1959-06-08 1962-10-30 Carl R Froetschner Water level control
US3172581A (en) * 1963-04-19 1965-03-09 Nanni Martin Fluid withdrawal means for tanks
US3969249A (en) * 1975-04-09 1976-07-13 Dodd Joseph C Solids remover for high rate algae ponds
US4290887A (en) * 1978-10-03 1981-09-22 Brown Arthur D Liquid surface decanter
US4648967A (en) * 1985-09-20 1987-03-10 Calltharp Glen R Decanting apparatus
US4711716A (en) * 1985-09-20 1987-12-08 Calltharp Glen R Decanting apparatus
US5277166A (en) * 1992-08-24 1994-01-11 Ford Motor Company Apparatus for controlling the rate of composition change of a fluid
US5303685A (en) * 1992-03-23 1994-04-19 Ford Motor Company Homogenizing fuel pickup system

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2530594A (en) * 1948-02-04 1950-11-21 F W Benedict Separating solid matter from hot wort
US3060954A (en) * 1959-06-08 1962-10-30 Carl R Froetschner Water level control
US3172581A (en) * 1963-04-19 1965-03-09 Nanni Martin Fluid withdrawal means for tanks
US3969249A (en) * 1975-04-09 1976-07-13 Dodd Joseph C Solids remover for high rate algae ponds
US4290887A (en) * 1978-10-03 1981-09-22 Brown Arthur D Liquid surface decanter
US4648967A (en) * 1985-09-20 1987-03-10 Calltharp Glen R Decanting apparatus
US4711716A (en) * 1985-09-20 1987-12-08 Calltharp Glen R Decanting apparatus
US5303685A (en) * 1992-03-23 1994-04-19 Ford Motor Company Homogenizing fuel pickup system
US5277166A (en) * 1992-08-24 1994-01-11 Ford Motor Company Apparatus for controlling the rate of composition change of a fluid

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