US1228776A - Driving device for boats. - Google Patents

Driving device for boats. Download PDF

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US1228776A
US1228776A US83169614A US1914831696A US1228776A US 1228776 A US1228776 A US 1228776A US 83169614 A US83169614 A US 83169614A US 1914831696 A US1914831696 A US 1914831696A US 1228776 A US1228776 A US 1228776A
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propeller
motor
boats
ring
connecting rod
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US83169614A
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Carl Alrik Hult
Oscar Walfrid Hult
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F04POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
    • F04DNON-POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
    • F04D29/00Details, component parts, or accessories
    • F04D29/26Rotors specially for elastic fluids
    • F04D29/32Rotors specially for elastic fluids for axial flow pumps
    • F04D29/38Blades
    • F04D29/384Blades characterised by form

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to that type of driving devices for boats termed outboard motors, and comprising essentially an explosion or combustion motor with a reciprocating piston, a propeller driven by the said motor, and a. device for attaching the motor and the propeller to a boat, entirely or partially outside the same.
  • outboard motors are customarily provided with a fiy wheel which is connected with the propeller by a suitable transmission device.
  • the principal object of the present invention is to simplify the construction of outboard motors by placing the rotary mass, which has heretofore constituted a fly wheel, on or in the propeller itself. In this manner both the fly wheel and a transmission device between it and the propellerl are dispensed with.
  • the propeller may be made hollow and filled with a substance, the specific weight of which is greater than that of the-propeller material, ag. with lead.
  • the propeller may also be connected directly, that is, without any transmission device, with a ring or the like, which may suitably surround the propeller, which will i thereby also be protected. In this case, if it be necessary, either the propeller or the ring, or both, may be filled with lead, or the like.
  • outboard motors are also, in accordance with this invention, simplied by transmitting the motive power developed by the explosion or combustion motor as directly as possible to the propeller, e. g. to a crank pin mounted on the propeller or the ring connected with it, or engaging the propeller or the ring.
  • the invention also comprises certain structural features of the propeller itself.
  • Figure l shows a cross section of a propeller blade filled with lead or the like.
  • Fig. 2 shows a side elevation partially ⁇ in section, of an outboard motor with the propeller blades arranged in accordance with Fig. 1, one of the blades being provided with a pin for the connecting rod of themotor.
  • Fig. 3 is a similar view of an outboard motor, the propeller of which is surrounded by a ring filled with lead or the like, and in which motor the propeller is driven with the aid of a crank pin inserted into it; while Fig. 4 is a view similar to Figs.
  • Fig. 5 shows a form of a propeller seen from the rear
  • Figs. 6 and 7 show sections taken along the lines 5L-A and B-B in Fig. 5.
  • the frame 2 of the explosion motor 1 is in some suitable manner detachably mounted on the boat, and in the said frame the shaft 4 of the propeller 3 is journaled.
  • the propeller blades are filled with lead or some other material, the specific weight of which is greater than that of the walls surrounding it, so that the propeller, when rotating, has the requisite momentum for uniform running, and consequently1 a separate Hy wheel is unnecessary.
  • the propeller blades appear in cross section as shown in Fig. l. @n one of the propeller blades is firmly fixed a crank pin 5, to whichthe connecting rod 6 of the explosion motor 1 is connected, so that the motive power is transmitted as directly as possible to thepropeller.
  • the propeller is surrounded by a ring I, whichl is connected with, or made integral with, the propeller blades, which are either solid or iilled with lead or the like, the ring being connected with the blades at their free ends and being filled with lead or the like, so that the momentum of the rotary system is sufficiently great.
  • rI ⁇ he ring 7 may likewise be solid; however, by employing the lead filling the volume of the rotary system, and the resistance of the water to it is less than it would be if the ring 7 were made solid.
  • a shaft 9 co-axial with the shaftv 4 is provided with a crank pin 8, said shaft 9 being journaled in an arm l() of the frame 2, and the crank pin 8, to which the connecting rod 6 of the motor l is connected, is inserted into an aperture in one of the propeller blades, so that the propeller is driven as directly as possible from the motor 1.
  • This form is especially 1ntended for driving devices in which the motor develops considerable motive power; the thrust being taken up not o nly by that part of the frame 2 which is behlnd the propeller, but also by the frame part 10 which is in front of the propeller.
  • the hub 11 of the propeller is filled with lead or the like and as will be seen from this figure, the propeller blades'are also s o filled, although they may be solid.
  • the propeller in accordance with Fig. 3, may be provided with a lled or solid ring 7.
  • the hub 11 may be regarded as an interior ring (the sleeve 12 directly embracing the propeller shaft 4 will then be regarded as a hub), so that the propeller may be said to be provided withtwo rlngs increasingits momentum.
  • the propeller shaft, whlch 1s journaled in bearings in a casing 13 carried by the frame 2 is provided with a crank 14, to the pin 15 of which the connecting rod 6, which together with the crank 14 moves in the casing 13, is connected.
  • a propeller the mass of which has been increased by the prolongation of the propeller blades.
  • the outer part of each of the propeller blades is prolonsd in the direction of its circumference. y reason of this prolongation and by making such prolongation thicker than the other part of the propeller-blade, this part of the blade is comparatively heavy and at the same time long and pointed, as a result of which the blade can with ease screw its way through the water without any appreciably greater los of friction than in an ordinary propeller.
  • the mass of the propeller may be such that a fly wheel becomes superfluous. If desired, the propeller in this case too may be filled with lead, or the like.
  • the motive power can be transmitted to the ring 7 or the ring 11, or to a crank pin or the'like mounted on it or engaging with it.
  • the filling in the propeller or in the ring or rings renders possible the balancing of the rotary system- 6. g. with regard to the crank devicein a simple manner.
  • Propellers intended for outboard motors arranged in accordance with the present invention may-whether they are provided Vwith a ring or rings or not-consist of parts pressed out of sheet'inetal, which parts are in a suitable manner (e. g. by soldering) joined to one another, and between which parts the filling is situated. Also one vof the parts may be cast, while the other consists of pressed sheet metal.
  • the invention also comprises the ⁇ arrangement in outboard motors that the piston in the motor cylinder, situated above the water surface, is connected with the propeller by means of a connecting rod which eX- tends below the level of the water surface to the ⁇ crank pin below the said level, from which crank pin the power is transmitted to the propeller either directly (Figs. 2 and 3) or by means of a separate crank l(Fi 4).
  • the connecting ro may either be free, as shown in Figs. 2 and 3, so that it is in l immediate contact with the water, or it may be surrounded by a casing 6a which keeps the water out of contact with it. This latter arrangement is shown in Fig. 4.
  • the invention comprises a simple device for fixing the motor to a boat in such a manner that it is rotatable around a vertical (or somewhat inclined) axis, so that the steering of the boat or a reversal of its direction of motion can be eected by turning the motor.
  • the cylindrical part located immediately below the mo-tor cylinder 1 (see Figs. 2, 3 and 4) is shown rotatably surrounded by a cylindrical sleeve 16, so that the motor-with the aid of a tiller 17 fixed in the motor cylindercan be turned around a vertical axis, whereby the steering of the boat is effected.
  • the sleeve 16 which consists of two parts held together by suitable means, is connected by an arm 18 with a clamp 19, by means of which the outboard motor is suspended from the boat. From the arm 18 projects an arm 20, carrying a clamping device 21, which cooperates with a slotted guide 22 projecting from the clamp 19, in order to keep the motor in a suitable position independently of the shape of the boat at the stern.
  • rlhe motor may be provided with some suitable device, such as a handle, indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 2 and arranged on the casing l diametrically opposite the tiller 17, for turning the motor half a revolution, when the direction of motion of the boat is to be reversed (and somewhat more for steering when backing).
  • a handle indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 2 and arranged on the casing l diametrically opposite the tiller 17, for turning the motor half a revolution, when the direction of motion of the boat is to be reversed (and somewhat more for steering when backing).
  • the device for suspending the motor from the boat may be constructed in other ways than that indicated above.
  • the sleeve 16 which may be replaced by an equivalent part, such as a ring or a bow, or a plurality of such parts, may surround the motor cylinder or another part of the motor; the essential point of this part of the invention is that the motor with its appurtenant parts is fixed to the boat in such a manner that it is rotatable around a vertical or somewhat oblique axis.
  • This axis obviously need not coincide with the axis or center line of the motor; these two axes may be parallel to, or somewhat oblique relatively to, one another.
  • Outboard motors provided with the arrangements above described are very simple in their construction and therefore very cheap. Owing to the fact that the connecting rod drives the propeller as ⁇ directly as possible, the gearing in ordinaryoutboard motors and the shafts and bearings used,
  • an explosive engine having a reciprocable piston therein
  • means consisting of' a sleeve loosely surrounding a part of the engine for supporting said engine froma boat above the surfaceof the water, whereby said engine is rotatable as a whole about its vertical axis in said supporting means
  • a propeller having an interior filling of a. material which is specifically heavier than the walls inclosing said filling and the total weight of which propeller is'suiciently great to revolve by momentum withoutiaid of a. Hy wheel
  • a connecting rod extend- 5 'l ing below the surface of the water, the lower end of said' connecting rod being directly connected to said propeller.

Description

C. A. & 0. W. HULT.
DRIVING DEVICE' FOR BOATS.
APPLlcAnov man M1114, 1914.
- Patente J une 5,1917.
- 4 SHEETS-SHEET l.
(01m/v MAW JWM C. A. 6L 0. W. HULT.
DRIVING DEVICE FOB BOATS. APPLICATION FILED APII. I4. I9I4.
4 SHEETS-SHEET 2- /wIM/I/Im um IMI 'W m, @mmmm *I @im Patented June 5, 1917.
C. A. & O. W. HULT.
DRIVING DEVICE FOR BOATS.
APPLICATION FILED APR. I4. I9I4.
4 SHEETS-SHEET 3.
7.... 1 Qu 1 5I e n u J d e t D e Lb. nu D...
C. A. L 0. W. HULT.
DRIVING DEVICE FOR BOATS.
APPLICATION man APR. 14. 1914.
l ,2 ,'YG.. Patented June 5, 1917.
4 SHEETS-SHEET 4- CLYAILRIK HULT AND OSCAR WALFRID HULT, 0F STOCKHOLM, SWEIJEN.
` DRIVING :DnvIcn :son Boers.
rasante.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented June 5, 1917.
Application led April 14, 1914.. Serial No. 831,696.
To all 'whom it may concern.'
Be it known that we, CARI.` ALBIR I-IULT and OSCAR WALFRID HULT, subjects of the King of Sweden, and residents of4 l Inedalsgatan, Stockholm, in the Kingdom of Sweden, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Driving Devices for Boats, of which the following is a specification, reference being made to the accompanying drawings.
The present invention relates to that type of driving devices for boats termed outboard motors, and comprising essentially an explosion or combustion motor with a reciprocating piston, a propeller driven by the said motor, and a. device for attaching the motor and the propeller to a boat, entirely or partially outside the same. At present outboard motors are customarily provided with a fiy wheel which is connected with the propeller by a suitable transmission device.
The principal object of the present invention is to simplify the construction of outboard motors by placing the rotary mass, which has heretofore constituted a fly wheel, on or in the propeller itself. In this manner both the fly wheel and a transmission device between it and the propellerl are dispensed with. For the purpose in question the propeller may be made hollow and filled with a substance, the specific weight of which is greater than that of the-propeller material, ag. with lead. For the same purpose the propeller may also be connected directly, that is, without any transmission device, with a ring or the like, which may suitably surround the propeller, which will i thereby also be protected. In this case, if it be necessary, either the propeller or the ring, or both, may be filled with lead, or the like.
rIhe construction of outboard motors is also, in accordance with this invention, simplied by transmitting the motive power developed by the explosion or combustion motor as directly as possible to the propeller, e. g. to a crank pin mounted on the propeller or the ring connected with it, or engaging the propeller or the ring.
The invention also comprises certain structural features of the propeller itself.
In the accompanying drawings are shown by way of example diderent forms of the present invention. Figure l shows a cross section of a propeller blade filled with lead or the like. Fig. 2 shows a side elevation partially `in section, of an outboard motor with the propeller blades arranged in accordance with Fig. 1, one of the blades being provided with a pin for the connecting rod of themotor. Fig. 3 is a similar view of an outboard motor, the propeller of which is surrounded by a ring filled with lead or the like, and in which motor the propeller is driven with the aid of a crank pin inserted into it; while Fig. 4 is a view similar to Figs. l and 2 of an outboard motor in which a ring inside the propeller blades or the propeller hub, is filled with lead or the like, and the propeller is mounted on a crank shaft driven by the motor. Fig. 5 shows a form of a propeller seen from the rear, while Figs. 6 and 7 show sections taken along the lines 5L-A and B-B in Fig. 5.
The frame 2 of the explosion motor 1 is in some suitable manner detachably mounted on the boat, and in the said frame the shaft 4 of the propeller 3 is journaled.
In the form indicated in Fig. 2 the propeller blades are filled with lead or some other material, the specific weight of which is greater than that of the walls surrounding it, so that the propeller, when rotating, has the requisite momentum for uniform running, and consequently1 a separate Hy wheel is unnecessary. The propeller blades appear in cross section as shown in Fig. l. @n one of the propeller blades is firmly fixed a crank pin 5, to whichthe connecting rod 6 of the explosion motor 1 is connected, so that the motive power is transmitted as directly as possible to thepropeller.
In the form of the invention shown in Fi 3, the propeller is surrounded by a ring I, whichl is connected with, or made integral with, the propeller blades, which are either solid or iilled with lead or the like, the ring being connected with the blades at their free ends and being filled with lead or the like, so that the momentum of the rotary system is sufficiently great. rI`he ring 7 may likewise be solid; however, by employing the lead filling the volume of the rotary system, and the resistance of the water to it is less than it would be if the ring 7 were made solid. In this form a shaft 9 co-axial with the shaftv 4 is provided With a crank pin 8, said shaft 9 being journaled in an arm l() of the frame 2, and the crank pin 8, to which the connecting rod 6 of the motor l is connected, is inserted into an aperture in one of the propeller blades, so that the propeller is driven as directly as possible from the motor 1. This form is especially 1ntended for driving devices in which the motor develops considerable motive power; the thrust being taken up not o nly by that part of the frame 2 which is behlnd the propeller, but also by the frame part 10 which is in front of the propeller.
In the form of invention shown 1n Fig. 4 the hub 11 of the propeller is filled with lead or the like and as will be seen from this figure, the propeller blades'are also s o filled, although they may be solid. In this case too the propeller, in accordance with Fig. 3, may be provided with a lled or solid ring 7. The hub 11 may be regarded as an interior ring (the sleeve 12 directly embracing the propeller shaft 4 will then be regarded as a hub), so that the propeller may be said to be provided withtwo rlngs increasingits momentum. In this form of the invention the propeller shaft, whlch 1s journaled in bearings in a casing 13 carried by the frame 2, is provided with a crank 14, to the pin 15 of which the connecting rod 6, which together with the crank 14 moves in the casing 13, is connected. Although the transmission of force between the explosion motor and the propellerv in this case is not as direct as 'in the forms indicated in Figs. 2 and 5, the arrangement for this purpose is nevertheless very simple.
In Figs. 5-7 is shown a propeller the mass of which has been increased by the prolongation of the propeller blades. As is most clearly seen from Fig. 5, the outer part of each of the propeller blades is prolonsd in the direction of its circumference. y reason of this prolongation and by making such prolongation thicker than the other part of the propeller-blade, this part of the blade is comparatively heavy and at the same time long and pointed, as a result of which the blade can with ease screw its way through the water without any appreciably greater los of friction than in an ordinary propeller. Thus also by this arrangement the mass of the propeller may be such that a fly wheel becomes superfluous. If desired, the propeller in this case too may be filled with lead, or the like.
Instead of being transmitted directly to the propeller, or to one of the propeller blades, the motive power can be transmitted to the ring 7 or the ring 11, or to a crank pin or the'like mounted on it or engaging with it.
The filling in the propeller or in the ring or rings renders possible the balancing of the rotary system- 6. g. with regard to the crank devicein a simple manner.
Propellers intended for outboard motors arranged in accordance with the present invention may-whether they are provided Vwith a ring or rings or not-consist of parts pressed out of sheet'inetal, which parts are in a suitable manner (e. g. by soldering) joined to one another, and between which parts the filling is situated. Also one vof the parts may be cast, while the other consists of pressed sheet metal. A
The invention also comprises the `arrangement in outboard motors that the piston in the motor cylinder, situated above the water surface, is connected with the propeller by means of a connecting rod which eX- tends below the level of the water surface to the `crank pin below the said level, from which crank pin the power is transmitted to the propeller either directly (Figs. 2 and 3) or by means of a separate crank l(Fi 4). In this arrangement the connecting ro may either be free, as shown in Figs. 2 and 3, so that it is in l immediate contact with the water, or it may be surrounded by a casing 6a which keeps the water out of contact with it. This latter arrangement is shown in Fig. 4. Experiments made by us have shown that the movement of the connecting rod in the water causes hardly any loss of force. rlhis loss of force is in any case considerably less than the loss of force which occurs in other outboard motors in consequence of the transmission customary in them and situated between the motor and the propeller.
Moreover, the invention comprises a simple device for fixing the motor to a boat in such a manner that it is rotatable around a vertical (or somewhat inclined) axis, so that the steering of the boat or a reversal of its direction of motion can be eected by turning the motor. In the drawings the cylindrical part located immediately below the mo-tor cylinder 1 (see Figs. 2, 3 and 4) is shown rotatably surrounded by a cylindrical sleeve 16, so that the motor-with the aid of a tiller 17 fixed in the motor cylindercan be turned around a vertical axis, whereby the steering of the boat is effected. The sleeve 16, which consists of two parts held together by suitable means, is connected by an arm 18 with a clamp 19, by means of which the outboard motor is suspended from the boat. From the arm 18 projects an arm 20, carrying a clamping device 21, which cooperates with a slotted guide 22 projecting from the clamp 19, in order to keep the motor in a suitable position independently of the shape of the boat at the stern.
rlhe motor may be provided with some suitable device, such as a handle, indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 2 and arranged on the casing l diametrically opposite the tiller 17, for turning the motor half a revolution, when the direction of motion of the boat is to be reversed (and somewhat more for steering when backing).
The device for suspending the motor from the boat may be constructed in other ways than that indicated above. Thus, for instance, the sleeve 16, which may be replaced by an equivalent part, such as a ring or a bow, or a plurality of such parts, may surround the motor cylinder or another part of the motor; the essential point of this part of the invention is that the motor with its appurtenant parts is fixed to the boat in such a manner that it is rotatable around a vertical or somewhat oblique axis. This axis obviously need not coincide with the axis or center line of the motor; these two axes may be parallel to, or somewhat oblique relatively to, one another.
Outboard motors provided with the arrangements above described are very simple in their construction and therefore very cheap.. Owing to the fact that the connecting rod drives the propeller as `directly as possible, the gearing in ordinaryoutboard motors and the shafts and bearings used,
with said gearing are dispensed with, whereby wearand tear andl friction are considerably diminished, and a very good efficiency is obtained.
Having now described our invention, what 'we claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent is:
1. In driving apparatus for boats, the v combination of an explosive engine having a reciprocable piston therein, means consisting of a sleeve loosely surrounding a part of the engine. for supporting said engine from a boat -above the surface ofthe water,- whereby said engine is rotatable as a whole about its vertical axis in said supporting .means, a propeller of suiiicient weight to revolve by momentum without aid of a fly wheel, and a connecting rod extending below the surface of the water, the lower end of said connecting rod being directly Joonnecte'd to said propeller.`
2. In driving apparatus for boats, the combination of an explosive engine" having a reciprocable piston therein, means consisting of' a sleeve loosely surrounding a part of the engine for supporting said engine froma boat above the surfaceof the water, whereby said engine is rotatable as a whole about its vertical axis in said supporting means, a propeller having an interior filling of a. material which is specifically heavier than the walls inclosing said filling and the total weight of which propeller is'suiciently great to revolve by momentum withoutiaid of a. Hy wheel, and a connecting rod extend- 5 'l ing below the surface of the water, the lower end of said' connecting rod being directly connected to said propeller.
-3. In driving apparatus for boats, thev combination of an explosive engine having a reciprocable pistontherein, means consistthickness vat their v'outer peripheries'and being ofy suiicient weight to revolve by momentum without aid of a fly wheel, and a Connecting rod extending below the surfaceA of the water, the lower end of said connecting rod being directly connected to said propeller.
4. ln driving apparatus for boats, the combination of an explosive engine having a reciprocable piston therein, means consisting of a sleeve loosely surrounding a part of the engine for supporting said engine from a boat above the surface of the water, whereby'said engine is rotatable as a whole about its vertical axis in said supporting means, `a propeller having blades elongated in the direction of the periphery of the propeller `'and being of suliicient weight to relvolve by momentum without aid of a fly wheel, and a ,connecting rod extending below the surface of the water and having its lower end directly connected to said propeller.
5. In driving apparatus for boats, the combination of an explosive engine having a reciprocable piston therein, a sleeve fixed to the boat and loosely surrounding a part of said engine and in which said engine is 'suspended and capable of rotating as )a whole about its vertical axis, a propeller of v sufficient weight to` revolve by momentum ,without-aid of a fly wheel, and a connecting rod extending below the 'surface of the water and .having its lower end directly connected.v
to said propeller.
In witness whereof we have hereunto set y our hands in presence of two witnesses.
CARL ALRIK HULT. OSCAR WALFRIlD I-IULT.`
US83169614A 1914-04-14 1914-04-14 Driving device for boats. Expired - Lifetime US1228776A (en)

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4871298A (en) * 1987-07-09 1989-10-03 Ecia - Equipments Et Composants Pour L'industrie Automoblie Falciform blade for a propeller and its application in particular in motorized fans for automobiles
US5044884A (en) * 1989-09-05 1991-09-03 Trustees Of The University Of Pennsylvania Safety propeller

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4871298A (en) * 1987-07-09 1989-10-03 Ecia - Equipments Et Composants Pour L'industrie Automoblie Falciform blade for a propeller and its application in particular in motorized fans for automobiles
US5044884A (en) * 1989-09-05 1991-09-03 Trustees Of The University Of Pennsylvania Safety propeller

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