US156017A - Improvement in hydraulic hose - Google Patents

Improvement in hydraulic hose Download PDF

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Publication number
US156017A
US156017A US156017DA US156017A US 156017 A US156017 A US 156017A US 156017D A US156017D A US 156017DA US 156017 A US156017 A US 156017A
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hose
weft
warp
hydraulic hose
stronger
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16LPIPES; JOINTS OR FITTINGS FOR PIPES; SUPPORTS FOR PIPES, CABLES OR PROTECTIVE TUBING; MEANS FOR THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16L11/00Hoses, i.e. flexible pipes
    • F16L11/04Hoses, i.e. flexible pipes made of rubber or flexible plastics
    • F16L11/08Hoses, i.e. flexible pipes made of rubber or flexible plastics with reinforcements embedded in the wall

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  • Hydraulic hose has been made in several well known ways, as by riveting in tubular form flat strips of leather, or plying rubbercoated strips around a mandrel several times, and uniting the plies by adhesive mixtures, or by curing; by weaving tubular hose on looms constructed for the purpose; or by weaving flat strips and uniting them in tubular form, the edges being lapped.
  • a hose rarely breaks the other way, and when it does it is always on account of some injuryto the parts, and not owing to the pressure; but in making leather, or what is known as rubber ply77 hose, the strength of the textile fabric of which the hose is made is about the same longitudinally as laterally, and in the latter greater longitudinally; and in making hose from woven fabrics, the strength is generally greatest longitudinally, because manufacturers of textile fabrics are in the habit of making the warp of all goods stronger than the weft or lling,7 and all looms are organized to do work this way.
  • Hose can be made by the old methods to stand any pressure, however great, but it will then be too heavy to be readily used.
  • the object of this invention is to secure this end of uniting great strength in hose to eX- treme lightness.
  • Hydraulic hose made of woven material ot single thickness, in which the weft-strands are of the same material and stronger than the warp-strands.
  • Hydraulic hose made of a strip of textile fabric of single thickness, in which the weftstrands, being of the same material as the warpstrands, are made stronger than the warp-strands, substantially in the manner and for the purpose set forth.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Rigid Pipes And Flexible Pipes (AREA)
  • Woven Fabrics (AREA)

Description

T. A. nou-GE a E. A. STREET.
AHydraulic-Hose.
No.156,017. Patented ocr.2o,1s7'4.
. 7a2/@mo rif UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
THEODORE A. DODGE, OF CAMBRIDGE, AND EDWIN A. STREET, OF BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS.
IMPROVEMENT IN HYDRAULIC HOSE.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 156.0 I7, dated October 20, 1874 application filed September 28, 1874.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that we, TEEoDoEE A. DODGE, of Cambridge, and EDWIN A. STREET, of Boston, both in the State of Massachusetts, have made certain inventions and Improvements in Hydraulic Hose; and we do hereby declare that the following, taken in connection with the drawings which accompany and form part of this specification, is a description of such invention sufficient to enable those skilled in the art to practice it.
Hydraulic hose has been made in several well known ways, as by riveting in tubular form flat strips of leather, or plying rubbercoated strips around a mandrel several times, and uniting the plies by adhesive mixtures, or by curing; by weaving tubular hose on looms constructed for the purpose; or by weaving flat strips and uniting them in tubular form, the edges being lapped.
When hose of any kind is subjected to pressure by passing through it water or other luids coming from a height, or forced in to the same by a pump, engine, or other power, this pressure causes a strain within the hose which acts laterally much more than longitudinallyi. e., the strain upon the parts is in a line encircling the hose, and not running its length. This is seen in the fact that when a hose ruptures under pressure the iibers that run around 'the hose are the ones broken, and not those running along the hose, and the break is always between the longitudinal bers. A hose rarely breaks the other way, and when it does it is always on account of some injuryto the parts, and not owing to the pressure; but in making leather, or what is known as rubber ply77 hose, the strength of the textile fabric of which the hose is made is about the same longitudinally as laterally, and in the latter greater longitudinally; and in making hose from woven fabrics, the strength is generally greatest longitudinally, because manufacturers of textile fabrics are in the habit of making the warp of all goods stronger than the weft or lling,7 and all looms are organized to do work this way. All textile fabrics are made longer than they are broad, and it is natural to have the greater strength on the warp or longitudinal strand of the fabric rather than on the weft or lateral, because the warp is generally called upon to bear the most pressure. This is particularly the case with canvas or duck. The purposes for which this is used, as sails, awnings, &c., cause the strain to be much more considerable on the warp than on the weft. For this reason looms have been generally so organized that they cannot throw7 a weft or iilling that is as stout or heavy as the warp.
In making hydraulic hose by weaving a tubular structure it has been common to obviate this difliculty by using stronger material in the weft than in the warp, because the weftstrand is less in size, as above explained. Thus, when the warp is made of cotton, the weft would be made of linen, which has much greater tensile strength; but the effect of this is bad, because the different materials donot act alike under like conditions. They do not stretch and contract alike under pressure, or when saturated with water, and do not stand the high heat required for curing the rubber generally in hose, with like results. For these and other reasons, mixing different fibers is undesirable in such textile fabrics.
There have also been made tubes where there were two weft-strands in order to make greater lateral strength, th-us producing a fabric of double thickness; and this is also undesirable, because of the considerable weight added to the structure.
These facts also apply to iat fabrics, from which hose or other articles are made, the lilliug having been made of stronger material, or else a double lling used; but we are not aware that prior to our invention, canvas or other fabrics suitable for hydraulic hose or other similar' manufactures have ever been made, whether flat or tubular, in which were used a single warp and a single weft, both of thesame material, and the weft made stronger than the warp, for the purpose of resisting lateral pressure.
It is very desirable in hydraulic hose to combine lightness with strength. Hose can be made by the old methods to stand any pressure, however great, but it will then be too heavy to be readily used.
The object of this invention is to secure this end of uniting great strength in hose to eX- treme lightness. In order to accomplish this we prefer to organize the loom which weaves the material to be made into hose so that it may be able to throw a single weft of any def vsential part of this invention that the weft strands shall be stronger, and generally of more bulk than the warp-strands, while of the same material. We then weave the canvas, duck, or other fabric in the usual manner, having done which we out the material `in widths suitable for the size of hose to be made, unless 'we have woven the widths to suit, and form a hose by lapping the edges and uniting the same by any suitable means, as is well understood, for which purpose a hand-set rivet or the well-known hosesewing machines of Rice, Blake, or Richardson, may be used; or a tube may be woven in the same manner, having a weft-strand continuously passing around and between the weft-strands, which weft is made stronger than the warp. Such hose may be made up with or without rubber lining, or rubber may be placed inside or out by any of the Well-known methods.
In the drawing is shown a piece of hose made of afabric in which the weft is stronger than the warp, and in which such weft runs around the hose, to resist lateral pressure, a being the Warp and b the filling, and b being stronger than a.
Having thus described our invention, we do not claim any improvements in looms, as these may form the subject of future applications for Letters Patent 5 but We do claim- 1. Hydraulic hose made of woven material ot single thickness, in which the weft-strands are of the same material and stronger than the warp-strands.
2. Hydraulic hose made of a strip of textile fabric of single thickness, in which the weftstrands, being of the same material as the warpstrands, are made stronger than the warp-strands, substantially in the manner and for the purpose set forth.
THEO. A. DODGE.
EDWIN A. STREET.
US156017D Improvement in hydraulic hose Expired - Lifetime US156017A (en)

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