US1909912A - Apparatus for simultaneously printing addresses and other matter - Google Patents

Apparatus for simultaneously printing addresses and other matter Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1909912A
US1909912A US572482A US57248231A US1909912A US 1909912 A US1909912 A US 1909912A US 572482 A US572482 A US 572482A US 57248231 A US57248231 A US 57248231A US 1909912 A US1909912 A US 1909912A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
sector
stencil
sectors
matter
sleeve
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
US572482A
Inventor
Harmon P Elliott
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
ELLIOTT ADDRESSING MACHINE CO
Original Assignee
ELLIOTT ADDRESSING MACHINE CO
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by ELLIOTT ADDRESSING MACHINE CO filed Critical ELLIOTT ADDRESSING MACHINE CO
Priority to US572482A priority Critical patent/US1909912A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1909912A publication Critical patent/US1909912A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41LAPPARATUS OR DEVICES FOR MANIFOLDING, DUPLICATING OR PRINTING FOR OFFICE OR OTHER COMMERCIAL PURPOSES; ADDRESSING MACHINES OR LIKE SERIES-PRINTING MACHINES
    • B41L47/00Details of addressographs or like series-printing machines
    • B41L47/42Printing mechanisms
    • B41L47/46Printing mechanisms using line-contact members, e.g. rollers, cylinders

Landscapes

  • Printing Methods (AREA)

Description

H. P. ELLIOTT May 16, 1933.
APPARATUS FOR SIMUI-ITANEOUSLY PRINTING ADDRESSES AND OTHER MATTER Filed Nov. 2, 1931 4 I l'il/ll II. I
I INVENTOR Harmon 1? Ellz'oii ATTORNEY Patented May 16, 1933 HAIR-MON P. ELLEOTT, OE WATERTOWIF, MASSACH'E TSETTS, ASSIG-NOR TO ELLIOTT" ADDRESSING Ii'IACHINE CUHEPANY, A CUBPORATION OF RiASSACIIUS-ETTS APPARATUS FOR SIMULTANEQUSLY PRIN TING,ADDRESSES AND OTHER- MATTER Application filed November 2, 1931 Serial No. 572,482.
This invention comprises a further improvement on addressing machines of the type shown in my copending application Serial No. 473,322, filed August 6, 1930, in
which machines different names and addresses out or stamped: out in a series of stencils fed along oppositely grooved parallel guide bars or rails are printed on fa series of post cards or other articles which are also fed along with the stencils between a pair of oppositely revolving platen sectors, the upper one of which has a smooth, resilient face carrying ink which is supplied to it by contact with an inking roll journaled above it.
The present invention consists, essentially, in ext-ending said inking roll and the lower, or pressure platen sector a suificient distance beyond one of said stencil guides and then attaching to said smooth faced ink carrying sector a third sector having type formed on its face and located outside of said stencil guide, which last mentioned sector cooperates with said inking roll and lower, pressure platen sector to print the legend outlined by its type upon the margin of each card or sheet of paper in the same operation in which a name and address is being printed onit.
Thus two different types of printing, ad- 30 dress printing and ordinary printing can be done at one and the same time by merely adding the third, or typecarrying sector, to the existing addressing machine shown in my said copending application.
Preferably, also, said two ink carrying sectors are both mounted on a single sleeve which is releasably mounted on a properly journaled revoluble shaft to which it is detachably coupled, as shown in my said co 40 pending application so that such sectors can be removed as a unit and other forms of sector or sectors substituted therefor when desired. The best form of apparatus at present known to me embodying my invention 45 is illustrated in the accompanying drawing in which Fig. 1 is a general side elevation of a portion of an addressing machine such as shown in my said copending application to which 50 the printing sector has been added, a few parts being omitted and others shown in section.
Fig. 2 is a plan view of the parts shown in Fig. 1, and
Fig. 3 is a detail, perspective View of the removable sleeve on which the two ink carrying sectors are mounted. 1 9
Throughout the drawing like reference characters indicate like parts. i
9 and 99 are parallel, oppositely grooved straight bars along the grooves in which a series of stencils 7a, 7a, are fed between lower pressure platen sector 5 and the upper, ink-carrying sector 3a, which receives ink from the inking roll 4 which is above it and rests on it.
21, 21, represent a series of post cards, a stack of which are supported above a feed drum 23, with the front edge of the lower card resting on the roughened rubber strips 35, carried by said drum. These force the bottom card under the spring gate 124 through guides 22 and'between the sectors 5 and 3m in timed relation with stencils 7a, so that some of the ink on 3a is forced through the stencils to print the address cut therein on the card below, all as explained in my said copending application.
The stencil feeding mechanism comprises the slide 41 supported under stencil guide 99, one edge of which it grasps by means of upwardly bent lugs 42, while feed claw 43 projects upward from it to catch the rear end of a stencil alongside the groove of guide bar 99. This slide has a laterally projecting pin over which one end of link 39 may be hooked, the other end of said link be ing pivoted to crank pin 49 on crank disc 38 which revolves with sector 3a. 7
Preferably sector 3a is mounted (as described in my said copending application) on a sleeve 37, which may slide on and off the revoluble shaft 2, beingfeleasablyheld thereon by spring pressed pin 44 carried by the sleeve and engaging annular groove 45 in said shaft. lVhen the sleeve is thus in posit-ion the slot 48 in its end engages radial the slide 41 is reciprocated once in each revolution of the sector 3a.
The above described apparatus is the same as that described in my copending application No. 173,322 except that sleeve 37 is prolonged as shown to carry a third sector 36 which has a facing sheet or block 8 in which are molded the type 7 and the link 39 is bent as shown in Fig. 2 to allow for the resulting offset position of crank disc 38.
Once in each revolution of shaft 2 the type 7 will receive ink from inking roll 4 and thereafter bear on the post card 21, pressing it down on lower sector 5 and printing the legend on the margin of the cardwhile, and just after, an address is being also printed thereon by the ink carrying sector 3a and a cooperating stencil. r
The stencil guides 9 and 99, as shown, extend under and are fastened to castings 101 and 98, which form the base of a stencil magazine, not shown. These castings are supported from laterally sliding bars and 94, so that the stencil guides are adjustable toward and from each other. The construction which permits this lateral adjustment of the stencil guides 9 and 99 results from their being supported on the transverse sliding bars 94 and 95, the supporting apparatus of which is the same as that fully shown and described in my said pending application Serial No. 473,322,- above referred to, and therefore seems not to require further detail illustration. Consequently, when the sleeve, carrying sectors 3a and 3b and connecting rod 39, is removed and any similar sleeve carrying another sector or sectors of different width is mounted on shaft 2, the stencil guides 9 and 99 can be adjusted so as not to interfere with the operation of the modified printing apparatus so produced. The surface of sector 3a and the. type 7 should be formed of the same material,
usually a rubber composition, so that they will cooperate equally well with the inking roll 4, which is usually formed of iron.
The inking roll 4 and lower pressure platen sector 5, as shown in my copending application herein referred to already have broad faces to cooperate with a wider ink carrying sector in printing a mesage on the side of each post card, opposite to that on which an address has been, or is to be, printed. Consequently, all that is needed to make the machine of said prior application also operate in accordance with my present invention and print the mailing permit, or any other short legend, at the same time and on the same surface on which the address is printed, is to substitute for the sleeve 37 there shown another longer one like that here shown having a type faced sector 36 also mounted on it.
Various changes in the details of construction here shown could be made without departing from the underlying principles of the invention as above explained or as may be obvious to those skilled in the art.
Having described my invention, I claim. 1. In an addressing apparatus employing a series of address bearing stencils, the combination comprising a pair of oppositely grooved parallel guide bars along the grooves in which said stencils may be slid, a rotary pressure platen sector journaled below said bars'on an axis extending transversely thereof, one end of said sector ex: tending under and beyond one of said guides, a smooth faced platen sector journaled above said guides so as to rotate between them, a type bearing sector having a common axis with and rigidly connected to said smooth faced sector but spaced away therefrom far enough to locate it outside of the stencil guide under which the pressure platen extends, and a single inking roll having a face broad enough to bear on both said upper sectors, together with means for rotating-all said sectors synchronously and feeding stencils along said guide grooves; whereby a different name and address may be printed on each sheet passed between the upper and lower platent sectors by cooperation of said stencils and smooth faced sector while a uniform legend is printed on all sheets by said type-bearing sector.
2. A combination such as defined in claim 1 in which the face of said smooth sector and the type on the other upper section are both formed of a rubber composition while the face of the inking roll is formed of metal.
3. A combination such as defined in claim 1 in which said upper sectors are both supported on a sleeve removably mounted on a revoluble shaft forming said common axis thereof, and in which said stencil guides are adjustable toward and from one another; whereby said upper sector may be removed and another sector or sectors substituted therefor, the stencil guides being adjusted so as not to interfere with the rotation of any sector so substituted.
Signed at Cambridge in the county of Middlesex and State of Massachusetts this 30th day of October A. D. 1931.
HARMON P. ELLIOTT.
US572482A 1931-11-02 1931-11-02 Apparatus for simultaneously printing addresses and other matter Expired - Lifetime US1909912A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US572482A US1909912A (en) 1931-11-02 1931-11-02 Apparatus for simultaneously printing addresses and other matter

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US572482A US1909912A (en) 1931-11-02 1931-11-02 Apparatus for simultaneously printing addresses and other matter

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1909912A true US1909912A (en) 1933-05-16

Family

ID=24288015

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US572482A Expired - Lifetime US1909912A (en) 1931-11-02 1931-11-02 Apparatus for simultaneously printing addresses and other matter

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1909912A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3948169A (en) * 1974-11-14 1976-04-06 Weber Marking Systems, Inc. Coaxially mounted stencil drum and rubber mat roller segments

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3948169A (en) * 1974-11-14 1976-04-06 Weber Marking Systems, Inc. Coaxially mounted stencil drum and rubber mat roller segments

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
GB369270A (en) Improvements in statistical machines
US1110723A (en) Printing-machine.
US2626149A (en) Card feedbox
US1909912A (en) Apparatus for simultaneously printing addresses and other matter
US2282737A (en) Printing transferring machine
GB402133A (en) Improvements in or relating to record-controlled statistical machines
US1410357A (en) Printing press
US1909910A (en) Addressing and printing apparatus
US2029646A (en) Inking mechanism for check writers
US1997191A (en) Printing device
US1542577A (en) Addressing or like printing machine
US2643605A (en) Printing equipment for guiding printing plates
US3996854A (en) Duplicating apparatus
US2053070A (en) Rotary printing apparatus
US174375A (en) Improvement in machines for printing railway-tickets
US1937750A (en) Flexible stencil card and holder therefor
US2586560A (en) Ribbon inker printing method and apparatus therefor
US1287610A (en) Printing-machine.
US2093409A (en) Printing and ejecting mechanism fok
US440892A (en) Manifold-printing apparatus
US1513131A (en) Addressing machine
US2022540A (en) Apparatus for cutting stencil cards from type plates
US2622514A (en) Postage printer for address printing machines
US2046931A (en) Feed mechanism for duplicating machines
US1916564A (en) Addressing and printing machine