US1681648A - Rubbing machine - Google Patents

Rubbing machine Download PDF

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US1681648A
US1681648A US65758A US6575825A US1681648A US 1681648 A US1681648 A US 1681648A US 65758 A US65758 A US 65758A US 6575825 A US6575825 A US 6575825A US 1681648 A US1681648 A US 1681648A
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casing
machine
strip
cushion
springs
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US65758A
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Charles S Root
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B24GRINDING; POLISHING
    • B24BMACHINES, DEVICES, OR PROCESSES FOR GRINDING OR POLISHING; DRESSING OR CONDITIONING OF ABRADING SURFACES; FEEDING OF GRINDING, POLISHING, OR LAPPING AGENTS
    • B24B23/00Portable grinding machines, e.g. hand-guided; Accessories therefor
    • B24B23/04Portable grinding machines, e.g. hand-guided; Accessories therefor with oscillating grinding tools; Accessories therefor

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Finish Polishing, Edge Sharpening, And Grinding By Specific Grinding Devices (AREA)

Description

. plied Patented Aug. 21, 1 928.
UNITED .ST'A
RUBBING Application filed October 80,
My invention relates to improvements in portable rubbing machines, of the'type having relatively reciprocating upper and under elements, for smoothing and polishing auto- 5 mobile bodies, woodwork of various kinds,
and the like, and consists essentially of upper, and under casings of peculiar construction, mechanism in said cating said lower casing, when the same 1s apto the surface to be finished and the machine is held in the hand by the upper casing and moved over such surface, said mechanism being operatedor driven from a distant motor, through the medium of a flexibleshaft connected with said mechanism, and a specially constructed cushion carried by the lower casing, for the abrasive or polishing strip used with the machine, together with attachin or fastening means for such'strip, and
such other parts and members as may be necessary or desira le in order to render the machine complete and serviceable in every respect, all as hereinafter set forth.
One object of my invention'is to produce a rubbing machine, of the character described,
which is small, compact, light in weight, comparatively simple and inexpensive in construction, with few parts and those not liable to-break or get out of order, capable of being applied with practically equal facility to curved as well as flat surfaces, and withal highly practicable and eflicient. i
Another object is to furnish the machine with a cushion or yielding support which possesses-the desired degree of flexibility or resiliency, while at the same time affording the necessaryresistance backing, for the abrading or polishing strip.
A further objectis to provide the machine to with means for easily and quickly changing the abrading or polishing strip, hereinafter termed the finishing strip. v
Other objects and advantages will appear in the course of the following description.
' I attain the objects and secure the advantages of my invention by the mechanism illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in whichl Figure 1' is a side elevation of a. rubbing machine which embodies a practical form of my invention; Fig. 2, an end elevation of said machine; Figs3, an enlarged, centred, longitudinal, vertical section through said machine; Fig. 4, an enlarged, central, transverse, vertical section through the machine; Fig. 5, an
. trating a modification in upper casing for reciprores" PATENT orrics.
cnannns s. Boer, or srnmermnn,
mssacnusnrrs.
mourns. i
1925. Serial No. 65,758. 0
sectional detail illus-' the driving or operating-mechanism, and, ig. 6, an enlarged top plan of the members which directly impart the reciprocating motion, such members being positioned as in Figs. 4 and 5. Similar reference characters designate sim- 1lar parts throughout the several views.
. In the. first two views a finishing strip 1 is shown attached to the machine and ready for enlarged, fragmentary,
use. This strip may be an abrading strip or a polishingstrip, this depending on the partlcular use which is to be made of the machine at any given time. a The finishing strip is changed when worn out, or whenever it is necessary to substitute fora strip of the polishing type one of the abrading type, or vice versa.
Tn its general make up the machine comprises upper and under casings 2 and 3, re spectively, guiding means and reciprocatin means for said casings, and a cushion carrie by said lower casing and upon which both casings bear or rest, said cushion being the support for the rubbing portion or reach of the finishing strip 1.
Secured in position in the center of the floor of the casing 2 is a bearing 4, and said casing has at the sides downwardly-extending flanges 5-5. Two gibs 6 are securely fastened to the under sides of the flanges 5 by means of a plurality of screws 7, two of such screws appearing in Fig. 4. The gibs 6 extend inwardly beyond the inner sides of the flanges 5. At one end of the casing 2, in the longitudinal center thereof, is a horizontal bearing 8 which is provided with a bushing 9 fora spindle 10.
The casing 2 has an opening in the top which is closed by means of a cover 11. The cover 11 fits in between the ends of the aforesaid opening and rests on the upper edges of the casin 2, and is secured to said casing by means 0 1 a plurality of screws 12, two of which are shown in Fig. 4. Depending from the center of the cover 11 is a bearing 13 which l'its a bushing l-therein for a vertical spin Seburedto the inner terminal of the spindle 10 is a small bevel-gear'16. The outer terminals of the spindle 10 and the bushing 9 are constructed in the usual manner for the attachment thereto respectively of the rotary and non-rotary elements of a flexible-shaft (not shown). Secured to the spindle 15 and 110 intermeshing with the-bevel-gear 16 is alarge bevel-gear 17. The spindle v the lower terminal in the bearing 4, and Saul I 15 is-journaled at spindle has secured thereto below said bearing an eccentric 18.
It will now be seen that rotary motion imparted to the horizontal spindle 10 is transmitted to the vertical spindle 15 and .the cocentric 18, through the medium of the bevelgears 16 and 17.
Rising from each corner of the casing is a post 20 having a convex top, and secured to the topof said casing between said posts is a guide-plate 19. The end portions of the guide-plates 19, between the posts 20, are flush With the ends of the casing 3, and such portions have convexities on top to form seats 20 -20 for clamp-bars 2121. The convexities of the posts 20 and seats 2O are similar, except that preferably the latter are slightly higher than the'formcr, in order to afford a good clamping bed for the strip 1. The clamp-bars 21 have concave bottoms to corre spond with the convexities of the seats 20*- and posts 20. A screw 22 is set in each post 20, and a thumb-nut 23 is provided for said screw. Each clamp-bar 21 is perforated'vertically adjacent to its ends to receive each pair of screws 22, and said screws project above said clamp-bar to have mounted thereon two of the thumb-nuts 23. The terminals of the finishing strip 1 are inserted between the curved surfaces of the seats 20 and clampbars 21 and there secured by tightening the thumb-nuts 23.
The longitudinal edges of the guide-plate 19, bet-ween the seats 20, arecut back and undercut to bear against the inner sides of the flanges 5 and receive the inner portions of the gibs 6. The upper casing 2 is considerably shorter than the distance between the end posts 20 and the seats 20, consequently the under casing 3 can be reciprocated While said upper casing is held stationary, said lower casing being supported and guided by means of its guide-plate 1.9 and the gibs 6 and In the center of the guide-plate 19 is an oblong opening or slot 24:, and arranged to reciprocate in said slot is a rectangular driveblock 25, said drive-block being shorter than the slot but having a sliding 'fit'with the lon- 'gltudinal'sides thereof. In the center of the drive-block 25 is a round opening 26 of' the size of the eccentric 18 and in which said eccentric 18 is received. When is revolved the eccentric 18 rotates in the opening 26 and causes the drive-block 25 to reciprocate in'the slot 24, and at the same time said drive-block is caused by said eccentrio to move first in one direction and then in the other lengthwiseof the machine, with the. b
result that the guide-plate 19 is caused to reciprocate longitudinally and to impart longitudinal reciprocation to the casing 3, assumthe spindle 15 ncsne4s ing that the casing 2 be held against the action of the reciprocating mechanism.
The cushion to which reference hasbeen made comprises a plurality of helical springs 27, upper and under flexible sheets 28 and 29, respectively, with a pad 30 between, and a bottom flexible sheet 31. and 31 are preferably made of rubber, and the pad 30 is preferably made of felt. 5
There. are fifteen springs 27 in the present example, but such number may vary. Each spring 27 is attached at the upper end to the top of the casing 3, by means of a screw 32 which is tapped into such top from below, and a rivet 33 is employed to attach the sheets 28 and 29 and the pad 30 to said spring at the The sheets 28, 29,
bottom, such rivet having its lower end upset neath the clamp-bars 21, in the manner hereinbefore-explained.
The flexible sheets and pads, of the cushion just described, provide a normally flat and sufficiently substantial backing for the finishing strip 1, so that the same can be used on flat sur aces to the best advantage, and the springs 27 afford a yielding support for such backing and strip of a character which enables the cushion to conform to curved surfaces, and to do so without seriously or even materially in most cases interfering with the satisfactory and eflicient operation of said strip. The springs 27 enable the' cushion to yield in all necessary directions, but always there is the suflicient backing or support for the finishing strip provided by the flexible and yielding members attached to said springs.
It is understood, of course, that the cushion and finishing strip move or reciprocate with thecasing 3.
. Briefly the operation of the machine as a whole is as follows:
After clamping the finishing strip 1 to the casing 3, the operator grasps the casing 2 in his hand, turns on the power, and applies the under side of said strip to the surface to be smoothed 0r polished' The machine is moved slowly over the surface being treated, and the 'casing3, with its cushion and the strip. 1, is rapidly reciprocated on such surface. The rubbing action produced by the driving mechanism, on the surface being operated on, and the movement of the machine y the hand of the operator over such surface, expeditiously sults.
.Thstrip 1 is removed from the machine,
upset ends of the brings about the desired rethe rotary element of said after loosening t e thumb huts 23, by withdrawing the ends of said strip from between the seats '20 and the clamp-bars 21. A new finishing strip may then be placed in position and secured by means of the clamp-bars and thumb-nuts.
If desired, the gear drive may be dispensed with, and the flexible-shaft attached directly to a vertical spindle 34, which spindle has the eccentric 18 at the lower end, and is adapted at the upper end to have attached thereto flexible-shaft. This arrangement is illustrated in Fig. 5, wherein the cover 11 has a bearing that takes the placeof the bearings 13 and 4 in the other construction, and in which is a bushing 36, the head of said bushing being above the cover 11 and adapted to have attached thereto the non-rotary element of the flexible-shaft. The operation of a machine thus modified is generally similar to or practically thesame as that of the machine wherein the gear drive is employed.
Although'l am aware that portable rubbing machines comprising relatively reciprocating parts are old, and do not seek to claim such a machine broadly, some change in matters of shape, size, arrangement, and construction, in addition to those hereinbefore specifically pointed out, may be made without said springs departing' from the spirit of my invention or exceeding the scope of what is claimed.
What I claim as my invention, and to secure by Letters Patent, is-
1. In a rubbing machine, a flat-bottom casing, a pluralit of helical springs arrange with their sma 1 ends uppermost and attachedto the underside of said casing, a normally fiat pad of yielding material under and extending to and ending approximately at the outermost edges of" he outer springs, and means to secure said pad to the large bottom ends of the springs, whereby is formed a cushion for a finishing strip.
2. In a rubbing machine, a casing, a plurality of helical springs arranged with their small ends uppermost and having desire an intermediate yiel cure said sheets and pad to said springs at. their bottom ends, and a flexible sheet secured to the under side'of the lower of said firstnamed sheets and covering said securing means, said springs, ing a cushion for a finishing strip, and being unattached except by the small ends of to said casing, whereby great freedom of movement in alldirections is permitted to said cushion.
I CHARLES S. ROOT.
said ends attached to said casing, flexible sheets and ding pad, means to se-.
sheets, and pad form
US65758A 1925-10-30 1925-10-30 Rubbing machine Expired - Lifetime US1681648A (en)

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Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3148487A (en) * 1963-06-12 1964-09-15 Milt Wilhelm Sanding device
US3629893A (en) * 1969-04-01 1971-12-28 Thomas Brown Window-cleaning apparatus
US5681213A (en) * 1995-05-16 1997-10-28 Ryobi Limited Sanding tool
US5713785A (en) * 1997-01-17 1998-02-03 Linax Co., Ltd. Vacuum type portable sander
US5901403A (en) * 1997-01-20 1999-05-11 Winbound Electronics, Corp. Scrubber brush
US6183355B1 (en) 1998-09-25 2001-02-06 Walter J. Robinson Adapter apparatus for sanding, grinding or buffing
US7963253B1 (en) * 2005-05-12 2011-06-21 Carey A Bauknecht Rotating animal grooming device
US20140235149A1 (en) * 2013-02-15 2014-08-21 Timothy Wayne ERICKSON Sanding Apparatus for Removing Runs and Drips
US20170028525A1 (en) * 2014-03-07 2017-02-02 C. & E. Fein Gmbh Component for Establishing a Form-Locking Riveted Connection of a Tool

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3148487A (en) * 1963-06-12 1964-09-15 Milt Wilhelm Sanding device
US3629893A (en) * 1969-04-01 1971-12-28 Thomas Brown Window-cleaning apparatus
US5681213A (en) * 1995-05-16 1997-10-28 Ryobi Limited Sanding tool
US5713785A (en) * 1997-01-17 1998-02-03 Linax Co., Ltd. Vacuum type portable sander
US5901403A (en) * 1997-01-20 1999-05-11 Winbound Electronics, Corp. Scrubber brush
US6183355B1 (en) 1998-09-25 2001-02-06 Walter J. Robinson Adapter apparatus for sanding, grinding or buffing
US7963253B1 (en) * 2005-05-12 2011-06-21 Carey A Bauknecht Rotating animal grooming device
US20140235149A1 (en) * 2013-02-15 2014-08-21 Timothy Wayne ERICKSON Sanding Apparatus for Removing Runs and Drips
US8900038B2 (en) * 2013-02-15 2014-12-02 Timothy Wayne ERICKSON Sanding apparatus for removing runs and drips
US20170028525A1 (en) * 2014-03-07 2017-02-02 C. & E. Fein Gmbh Component for Establishing a Form-Locking Riveted Connection of a Tool
US9737969B2 (en) * 2014-03-07 2017-08-22 C. & E. Fein Gmbh Component for establishing a form-locking riveted connection of a tool

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