US131750A - Improvement in tuyeres - Google Patents

Improvement in tuyeres Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US131750A
US131750A US131750DA US131750A US 131750 A US131750 A US 131750A US 131750D A US131750D A US 131750DA US 131750 A US131750 A US 131750A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
fire
tube
plate
bed
tuyeres
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
Publication date
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US131750A publication Critical patent/US131750A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B21MECHANICAL METAL-WORKING WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
    • B21JFORGING; HAMMERING; PRESSING METAL; RIVETING; FORGE FURNACES
    • B21J19/00Blacksmiths requisites not otherwise provided for
    • B21J19/02Hearths; Air supply arrangements specially adapted therefor

Definitions

  • This plate is made of any desired size, and is thicker on the back than at the front, so as to produce a slope and allow the clinker and refuse to settle at the front edge.
  • the edge of the bed-plate is squared off all round, so as to suit to an ordinary-sized brick. Any number of sides can thusbe' put upon the plate, but six sides will ordinarily be enough; These edges are sloped from the outside of the top of the plate inward to the bottom thereof, so as to give the bricks placed around it a cant and make the nest in which the fire is placed larger at the top of the bricks than at the bottom.
  • the opening in the attached tube can be of any desired shape; but I prefer it of an oblong square. This opening increases in size from the discharge in the bed-plate to the other end, so thatan'y dust or clinker that may pass into it out of the fire shall have an unobstructed passage to the bottom or end below.
  • Attached to the lower end is a small flap or door-valve, hinged, so that at the will of the workman it can be closed or opened.
  • Figure 1 is a vertical side sectional view of my invention, showing the tuyere in position; and Fig. 2 is a topview of the tuyere, showing the shape of the fire-bed plate.
  • A is the round tube or pipe into which the nozzle of the bellows or blast-pipe fits. 1t tapers to a smaller size, until it strikes and enters the second tube set at any required angle, and marked 13. The passage in the said tube tapers onupward. until it makes its exit in the bed-plate O.
  • This bed-plate has its edges 0 squared, so that the corners will be apart the'width of an ordinary brick, and has a slope to the front marked a b, to allow rcfuse to slide in that direction and accumulate V in front of the opening by which the blast euters the fire.
  • a flap or door-valve, D attached to the tube by thehinge cl, and having an arm, 0, to which a cord, F, is fastened.
  • the said cord passes up along the side of the forge and through two eyelets or other analogous arrangement, and has at its other end a weight, E, which, when hanging free, keeps the said door-valve D closed.

Landscapes

  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Heart & Thoracic Surgery (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Special Wing (AREA)

Description

J. H. GARTSIDE.
Improvement in Tljyeres.
No. 131,750. Patented Oct-1, 1872.
Fig '1. SOALE' mm EQUAL To In wrm'zsszs. 0% fi 'l NVENTD H.
JOSEPH H. eniars'inn, or PITTSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA, ASSIGNO'R or oNE- 5 HALF HIS RIGHT T0 JOHN B. GEYSER, OF SAME PLACE.
"IMiROVEM ENT IN TUYERES.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 131,750, dated October 1, 1872.
T 0 all whom it may concern:
Beit known that I, J osEPH H. GARTsIDE, of the city of Pittsburg, county of Allegheny and State of Pennsylvania, have invented certain Improvements in Tuyeres for Blackiron at all times, as well as the obtaining of a direct blast from the bottom of the 'fire,and allowing the same to be cleaned with greater ease by the workman. To accomplish this-I have added to the ordinary tube into which the bellows'nozzle or blast-pipe fits a second tube, which the first strikes at an angle a short distance below the fire bed or box. This angle may be of any number of degrees, although I prefer it at twenty-five. At the upper end of this tube, a short distance from the connection of the two, is the firebed or bottom-plate of the fire. This plate is made of any desired size, and is thicker on the back than at the front, so as to produce a slope and allow the clinker and refuse to settle at the front edge. The edge of the bed-plate is squared off all round, so as to suit to an ordinary-sized brick. Any number of sides can thusbe' put upon the plate, but six sides will ordinarily be enough; These edges are sloped from the outside of the top of the plate inward to the bottom thereof, so as to give the bricks placed around it a cant and make the nest in which the fire is placed larger at the top of the bricks than at the bottom. The opening in the attached tube can be of any desired shape; but I prefer it of an oblong square. This opening increases in size from the discharge in the bed-plate to the other end, so thatan'y dust or clinker that may pass into it out of the fire shall have an unobstructed passage to the bottom or end below.
I Attached to the lower end is a small flap or door-valve, hinged, so that at the will of the workman it can be closed or opened.
In the accompanying drawing, Figure 1 is a vertical side sectional view of my invention, showing the tuyere in position; and Fig. 2 is a topview of the tuyere, showing the shape of the fire-bed plate.
The same letters of reference apply to both.
A is the round tube or pipe into which the nozzle of the bellows or blast-pipe fits. 1t tapers to a smaller size, until it strikes and enters the second tube set at any required angle, and marked 13. The passage in the said tube tapers onupward. until it makes its exit in the bed-plate O. This bed-plate has its edges 0 squared, so that the corners will be apart the'width of an ordinary brick, and has a slope to the front marked a b, to allow rcfuse to slide in that direction and accumulate V in front of the opening by which the blast euters the fire. At the bottom of the tube B is a flap or door-valve, D, attached to the tube by thehinge cl, and having an arm, 0, to which a cord, F, is fastened. The said cord passes up along the side of the forge and through two eyelets or other analogous arrangement, and has at its other end a weight, E, which, when hanging free, keeps the said door-valve D closed.
The tuyerebeing in place, and the fire in order, the workman allows the weight E to hang free, which closes the door-valve D. The blast beingput on, the air rushes through the opening G in bed-plate ,O, and gives him his heat. Should any dustor clinker get into this opening it passes down the tube B and accumulates against the doorvalve. Cinder in a fluid state runs along the incline a b and accumulates at the front edge of the fire-bed. Should the workmen desire to leave the fire for other work, he lifts the weight E and places it upon the forge, thus relieving the door-valve D, which by its own gravity falls open, and the dust escapes out of the tube, while at the same time a natural draft of air is introduced into the fire-nest, preventing it from going out,
and not allowing any gas to pass from the fire into the bellows, to their detriment. Should the clinker accumulate too much on the front of the incline the workman must clean it off but at most this will be necessary but once or twice a day, instead of .every hour, as is usual in ordinary fires. The blast being forced into the bottom of the fire, there is no chance for the sulphur in the coal to act upon the iron and spoil it, and good welding heats can be obtained without the use of sand or other acoessories. These advantages havelboen practically proven.
I make no claim to the tapering round tube A, for the reception of the nozzle of the bellows or blast, for that is in common use; but
I claim as my invention- 1. The angular fire-bed plate 0, the slope a I), and beveled edges 0 0 at the upper end of the tube B, substantially as and for the purposes hereinbefore set forth.
JOSEPH H. GARTSIDE. [L. 5.]
Witnesses:
JOHN B. GEYsER, WILLIAM N. G-ARTSIDE.
US131750D Improvement in tuyeres Expired - Lifetime US131750A (en)

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US131750A true US131750A (en) 1872-10-01

Family

ID=2201166

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US131750D Expired - Lifetime US131750A (en) Improvement in tuyeres

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US131750A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20040103689A1 (en) * 1998-12-31 2004-06-03 Chia Meang K. Decorative jewelry article

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20040103689A1 (en) * 1998-12-31 2004-06-03 Chia Meang K. Decorative jewelry article

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US131750A (en) Improvement in tuyeres
US56582A (en) Improvement in tuyeres
US726422A (en) Twyer for blast-furnaces.
US1202700A (en) Damper for furnaces.
US54552A (en) Improved cupola-furnace
US56098A (en) Improved water-box for tuyeres
US1405029A (en) Ash-discharge device for furnaces
US93742A (en) Improvement in coal-stoves
US65630A (en) Improvement in checking the dbaught in fuknaces
US85931A (en) Theophilus hessenbruch
US60844A (en) William a
US337735A (en) Half to james wimee
US184161A (en) Improvement in cupola-furnaces
US341360A (en) Coal-filling and gas-controlling device for magazine-boilers
US66618A (en) Adolph ohlenslager
US124467A (en) Improvement in smelting-furnaces
US62308A (en) Of boston
US1047044A (en) Dust-flue hood, ash-grate, and coal-economizer.
US94147A (en) Improved tuyere
US124842A (en) Improvement in hot-air furnaces
US85881A (en) Improved furnace for roasting- and calcining ores
US118279A (en) Improvement in furnaces for the manufacture of iron and steel
US2416A (en) Liaed
US55065A (en) Improvement in open coal-grates
US206761A (en) Improvement in glory-hole furnaces for finishing glassware