US146048A - Improvement in safes and vaults - Google Patents

Improvement in safes and vaults Download PDF

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US146048A
US146048A US146048DA US146048A US 146048 A US146048 A US 146048A US 146048D A US146048D A US 146048DA US 146048 A US146048 A US 146048A
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plates
backing
chilled
ribs
vaults
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F41WEAPONS
    • F41HARMOUR; ARMOURED TURRETS; ARMOURED OR ARMED VEHICLES; MEANS OF ATTACK OR DEFENCE, e.g. CAMOUFLAGE, IN GENERAL
    • F41H5/00Armour; Armour plates
    • F41H5/013Mounting or securing armour plates

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  • My present invention relates to certain improvements in the vault for which Letters Patent were granted to me on the 23d day of July, 1872, numbered 129,795; and the improvements consist in the employment of hardened steel bars in the joints between the body-plates; in a peculiar manner of securing rubber strips in the joints of the body in arranging between the ribs of the body-plates a drill-proof backing and a non-conducting filling held by the ribs; in making the ribs with shoulders and securing the drill-proof backing in place by casting metal between the ribs in such manner as to engage under their shoulders, and in the peculiar arrangement of the drill-proof material, as hereinafter more fully explained.
  • Figure l is a cross-section through one of the cells of my improved vault, Fig. 2, a section through a modified form of the same 5 and Fig. 3, a cross-section through one of the joints be tween the body-plates.
  • each plate with two longitudinal grooves, a, so arranged that those in one plate are directly opposite those in the other, and then insert in said grooves hardened steel bars or joggles b, as shown in Fig. 3, each bar fitting into the two plates and extending across the joint or seam between them.
  • Any suitable number of the bars may be used, and they may be located atany desired distances from the outer face of the plates; but, in practice, I have found it best to employ two bars, one through the V-j oint and the other justbehind the tongue and groove, as shown.
  • I hen two or more bars are employed they are set to the right and left out of line with each other, as shown, so as to leave no point through which a drill can be inserted clear of the bars.
  • the tongue and groove and the V-joint may be omitted and the steel bars alone used, but I consider it desirable to use them, as they give additional strength and security without materially increasing the cost.
  • the steel bars inserted as shown are an effectual safeguard against the separation of the plates by wedges, as the wedges can neither be driven through nor around the bars, and it is impossible to force the bars from their places.
  • the body-plates A are provided, as
  • proof backing consisting of round balls or loose blocks of metal of any desired shape; or of a single plate of hardened steel, franklinite, or other like material, which will resist the action of a drill; or of several thin plates of different materials; or of a compound plate having a hard face to resist a drill and a soft fibrous backing to hold the parts of the face together in case it is cracked or broken.
  • a backing, H of such nature that, in case the chilled iron is broken, the backing will still stop a drill.
  • a layer, K of some material which is a non-conductor of heat such, for example, as asbestus, alum and plaster, oxide of zinc, paper pulp, or other fibrous material-and I then cast into the cell, behind the non-conducting material, a plate of iron, J, which serves to hold said material, the backing H, and the chilled plates all in place.
  • a plate of iron, J which serves to hold said material, the backing H, and the chilled plates all in place.
  • I provide the ribs, which form the walls or sides of the cells, with shoulders (I, under which the plate engages, as shown.
  • the ribs may be provided with grooves to receive the edge of the plate, so that it will be held from moving inward in case the 11011- oonducting material shrinks, as well as from moving outward.
  • a groove for this purpose is shown on the left hand in Fig. 3.
  • the non conducting material is introduced for the purpose of preventing the molten iron J from softening the hard drill-proof materials in the front of the cell; but it also answers as an elastic cushion for the hard plates and prevents them from being as readily broken as if they were supported by a solid backing.
  • the rear edges of the ribs may be widened or thickened, as in Fig. 1, so as to render the cells wider at the bottom than at the top, and then the cells may be filled up flush, with any suitable composition or concrete, I, which, owing to the shape of the cells, will be held firmly in.
  • the concrete filling will give 'a smooth interior finish to the vault, and when composed of nonconducting substances it will add matcrially to the fire-proof qualities of the safe or vault.
  • the edges of the ribs will be reduced in thickness, as shown in Fig. 2, in order to decrease the weight and the expense consequent thereon.
  • the safe or vault body consisting of the ribbed body-plates A, provided with the drillproof backing, arranged as described, and with the concrete lining or backing I of non-conducting material, applied between and held by the

Description

N m Tl E5 TC l. H D K N mw A BM H ER m 8 A g 0 J;CRUMR Safes and Vaults.
Patented Dec. 30,1873.
'lblg SW53, 3.3533 PRQIEEIEQN AND RELAIED UEVIC S.
PATENT OFFICE.
JOHN ORUMP, OF PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA.
IMPROVEMENT IN SAFES AND VAULTS.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 146,048, (lattd December 30, 1873; application filed April 8, 1873.
CASE A.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, J ornv ORUMP, of Philadelphia, in the county of Philadelphia and State of Pennsylvania, have invented certain Improvements in Safe-Vaults, of which the following is a specification:
My present invention relates to certain improvements in the vault for which Letters Patent were granted to me on the 23d day of July, 1872, numbered 129,795; and the improvements consist in the employment of hardened steel bars in the joints between the body-plates; in a peculiar manner of securing rubber strips in the joints of the body in arranging between the ribs of the body-plates a drill-proof backing and a non-conducting filling held by the ribs; in making the ribs with shoulders and securing the drill-proof backing in place by casting metal between the ribs in such manner as to engage under their shoulders, and in the peculiar arrangement of the drill-proof material, as hereinafter more fully explained.
Figure l is a cross-section through one of the cells of my improved vault, Fig. 2, a section through a modified form of the same 5 and Fig. 3, a cross-section through one of the joints be tween the body-plates.
I construct my present vault in the same general manner as the one already patentedthat is to say, of a series of iron plates having their flanged edges bolted together and their inner faces provided with intersecting ribs, forming cells, in which chilled-iron plates are secured, to check the entrance of drills. I now provide the edges of the plates, as before,with a tongue-and-groove joint, m, and a V-shaped joint, n, as shown in Fig. 3, to lock the plates together and prevent the insertion of wedges. In addition to these joints, I now provide the edge of each plate with two longitudinal grooves, a, so arranged that those in one plate are directly opposite those in the other, and then insert in said grooves hardened steel bars or joggles b, as shown in Fig. 3, each bar fitting into the two plates and extending across the joint or seam between them. Any suitable number of the bars may be used, and they may be located atany desired distances from the outer face of the plates; but, in practice, I have found it best to employ two bars, one through the V-j oint and the other justbehind the tongue and groove, as shown. I hen two or more bars are employed they are set to the right and left out of line with each other, as shown, so as to leave no point through which a drill can be inserted clear of the bars. The tongue and groove and the V-joint may be omitted and the steel bars alone used, but I consider it desirable to use them, as they give additional strength and security without materially increasing the cost. The steel bars inserted as shown are an effectual safeguard against the separation of the plates by wedges, as the wedges can neither be driven through nor around the bars, and it is impossible to force the bars from their places. In order to prevent the introduction of powder or other explosive material either into the joint or through the joint into the interior of the vault, I insert in the adjoining edges of the plates a rubber strip, G, which closes the joint perfectly, so that there is no space left in the joint to hold explosive material, nor any crack left through which access can be had to the interior. The rubber also serves, of course, to prevent moisture from e11- terin g. In the present instance I have inserted the rubber against the front side of the inner steel bar I), in the same grooves therewith, but it may be inserted in separate grooves at any desired point. By means of the steel and rubber strips in the joints, I render it impossible for burglars to effect an entrance through the joints, or at least from doing so in the limited time to which they will be confined in their opin my patent, with inside cells, containing chilled-iron plates B, to resist the entrance of drills. The plates were, however, unsupported except by pins passed through the ribs, so that a hole could be drilled through the plates A, and the chilled plates then broken by driving a punch inward through the hole. After the chilled plate was broken it would fall or could be readily pushed out of its cell, and thus an opening left through to the inside of the body, so that it could be easily opened either by tools or explosives. In order to prevent this danger,
I now place behind the chilled plates a drillerations. The body-plates A are provided, as
proof backing, l-I, consisting of round balls or loose blocks of metal of any desired shape; or of a single plate of hardened steel, franklinite, or other like material, which will resist the action of a drill; or of several thin plates of different materials; or of a compound plate having a hard face to resist a drill and a soft fibrous backing to hold the parts of the face together in case it is cracked or broken. In short, I place behind the chilled plates a backing, H, of such nature that, in case the chilled iron is broken, the backing will still stop a drill. Behind the backing H Iplace a layer, K, of some material which is a non-conductor of heat such, for example, as asbestus, alum and plaster, oxide of zinc, paper pulp, or other fibrous material-and I then cast into the cell, behind the non-conducting material, a plate of iron, J, which serves to hold said material, the backing H, and the chilled plates all in place. In order that the plate J may take a firm hold, and be solidly supported, I provide the ribs, which form the walls or sides of the cells, with shoulders (I, under which the plate engages, as shown. Instead of holding the plate J by a simple shoulder, the ribs may be provided with grooves to receive the edge of the plate, so that it will be held from moving inward in case the 11011- oonducting material shrinks, as well as from moving outward. A groove for this purpose is shown on the left hand in Fig. 3. The non conducting material is introduced for the purpose of preventing the molten iron J from softening the hard drill-proof materials in the front of the cell; but it also answers as an elastic cushion for the hard plates and prevents them from being as readily broken as if they were supported by a solid backing. When desired, the rear edges of the ribs may be widened or thickened, as in Fig. 1, so as to render the cells wider at the bottom than at the top, and then the cells may be filled up flush, with any suitable composition or concrete, I, which, owing to the shape of the cells, will be held firmly in.
place. The concrete filling will give 'a smooth interior finish to the vault, and when composed of nonconducting substances it will add matcrially to the fire-proof qualities of the safe or vault. When the filling is not to be used, the edges of the ribs will be reduced in thickness, as shown in Fig. 2, in order to decrease the weight and the expense consequent thereon.
By backing up the chilled plates in the manner described, and then securing them and the backing in place by casting the metal into the cells behind them, Ifasten them with far greater security and solidity than in my patent, prevent them from being driven in or broken and taken out, prevent a drill from entering the interior in case the chilled plates are broken, and materially reduce the expense of securing the chilled plates in place.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim is 1. The hardened steel bars I) inserted between the body-plates A of an iron safe or vault, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.
2. The cast-iron body-plates or sections A, having their abutting edges provided with grooves a, in col'l'ibination with the rubber strips G inserted therein, as shown and de- I scribed.
3. The safe or vault body consisting of the ribbed body-plates A, provided with the drillproof backing, arranged as described, and with the concrete lining or backing I of non-conducting material, applied between and held by the
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