US1921500A - Mooring buoy - Google Patents

Mooring buoy Download PDF

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Publication number
US1921500A
US1921500A US614157A US61415732A US1921500A US 1921500 A US1921500 A US 1921500A US 614157 A US614157 A US 614157A US 61415732 A US61415732 A US 61415732A US 1921500 A US1921500 A US 1921500A
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United States
Prior art keywords
buoy
spindle
mooring
hook
connection
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Expired - Lifetime
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US614157A
Inventor
Preble W Blake
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HARMON P ELLIOTT
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HARMON P ELLIOTT
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Priority to US614157A priority Critical patent/US1921500A/en
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B63SHIPS OR OTHER WATERBORNE VESSELS; RELATED EQUIPMENT
    • B63BSHIPS OR OTHER WATERBORNE VESSELS; EQUIPMENT FOR SHIPPING 
    • B63B22/00Buoys
    • B63B22/02Buoys specially adapted for mooring a vessel

Definitions

  • This invention relates to mooring buoys and is intended as an improvement on the buoy of the Elliott Patent No. 1,801,729, dated April 21, 1931;
  • the mooring spindle upstands above the buoy at one side of the vertical middle thereof so that V the buoy can rotate upon a side pull of the mooring rope on the spindle and present the inverted hook at the top of the spindle always in the proper position to be entered and engagedby the rope, regardless of the direction of pull of the rope.
  • the same result can be obtained when the spindle is in the middle of the buoy, if the connection between the anchor cable and the buoy is ofiset from the vertical middle of the buoy, an arrangement that is preferable for many purposes, since it provides a buoy that is symmetrical in appearance and eliminates the necessity of weighting the buoy to counterbalance the offset weight of the upstandirn spindle.
  • a buoy so constructed constitutes an object of the present invention.
  • a further object is generally to improve the construction of buoys.
  • Fig. 1 is an elevation of amooring buoy em-' bodying the present invention.
  • Fig. 2 is a sectional elevation through the buoy 14 which overlies the top of said shell and a circular side wall 16 which surrounds and overlies The open lower end or apex of the conical section of the buoy is closed by a head 22 having an upstanding circular .side wall 23 that surrounds the lower portion of the conical section and is secured thereto in a water-tight manner.
  • the buoy is provided with a spindle 24 which extends through the' middle of the top head 14 and through the bottom head 22 atone side of the vertical axis or" the buoy and near the bottom edge of the'conical section 12.
  • the spindle has a straight Vertical section 26 that upstands above the top of the buoy to a suitable height in the middle or vertical axis of the buoy.
  • the spindle is bent immediately under the top head and has a straight lower section 28 that extends downwardly and is inclined away from the vertical axis to the point where it passes through the lower head.
  • the spindle, where it passes through the buoy is sealed thereto in any suitable watertight manner.
  • spindle is provided with an eye 30 to which an anchor cable or chain 32 is attached, the eye being screw-threaded onto the spindle and welded onto the lower head, thereby preventing the eye from turning and also providing a watertight seal between the spindle and the buoyant member thereat.
  • the upper end of thespindle is provided with an inverted hook 34 which is offset laterally from or is located at one side of the spindle, in a direction toward the attaching eye 30, and an entrance 36 which faces the buoy.
  • the entrance is yieldingly closed by a spring latch comprising a resilient plate 38 which is secured to the hook and bears yieldingly against the spindle.
  • The, bight of a rope passed upwardly on the spindle can spring the latch away from the spindle and thus enter the hook where it will be retained until the latch is sprung by hand.
  • a reinforcing collar 101' flange 40 is secured bybeing welded'to-the to head about, and
  • the buoy as'thus constructed is caused to rotate in the water under a sidewise pull of a mooring rope 42 thereon about the anchor chain as'a pivot so thatthe straight upstanding axial section 20 of the spindle is nearer the boat 44 thanythe eye 30 to which the anchor chain is attached and the hook 34 is facing away from the boat.
  • the pull of the mooring rope causes The lower external end of the v the buoy to tilt to such an angle that the bight of the rope slides upwardly on the spindle and into the hook, thereby automatically causing the rope to be connected with the buoy and, through the spindle, with the anchor chain.
  • a mooring buoy comprising a buoyant member having a spindle which upstands from the middle of the buoy and has a connection for a mooring rope above the buoy, and a connection for an anchor cable at the bottom of the buoy at one side of the middle thereof.
  • a mooring buoy comprising a buoyant member having a spindle which upstands from the middle of the buoy and has a connection for a mooring rope above the buoy, and a connection for an anchor cable at the bottom of the buoy at one side of the middle thereof, said mooring rope connection comprising an inverted hook having an entrance which faces said buoyant member and projects from the spindle on the side toward said anchor cable connection.
  • a mooring buoy comprising a buoyant member having a spindle which upstands from the middle of the buoy and has a connection for a mooring rope above the buoy, and a connection for an anchor cable at the bottom of the buoy at one side of the middle thereof, said mooring rope connection comprising an inverted hook having an entrance which faces said buoyant member and projects from the spindle on the side toward said anchor cable connection, said hook having a latch which removably closes said I hook-entrance.
  • a mooring buoy comprising a symmetrical buoyant member, a mooring spindle carried by said buoyant member having a straight section which upstands from said member in the vertical axis thereof and has an inverted mooring hook at the upper portion which extends laterally from said spindle and has an entrance which faces said member and a latch disposed in position to removably close said entrance, said spindle having a lower section which extends downwardly through said buoyant member at an angle with

Description

P. W. BLAKE MOORING BUOY Aug. 8, 1933.
Filed May 28, 1932 Patented Aug. 8, 1933 I ,PATEN T F C MOORING BUOY' Preble, W. Blaiae, Newton, Mass, assignor to Harmen P. Elliott, Watertown,.Mass.
Application May, 28, 1932. Serial No. 614,157
5 Claims.
This invention relates to mooring buoys and is intended as an improvement on the buoy of the Elliott Patent No. 1,801,729, dated April 21, 1931;
One of the features of the Elliott buoy is that the mooring spindle upstands above the buoy at one side of the vertical middle thereof so that V the buoy can rotate upon a side pull of the mooring rope on the spindle and present the inverted hook at the top of the spindle always in the proper position to be entered and engagedby the rope, regardless of the direction of pull of the rope. I have found, however, that the same result can be obtained when the spindle is in the middle of the buoy, if the connection between the anchor cable and the buoy is ofiset from the vertical middle of the buoy, an arrangement that is preferable for many purposes, since it provides a buoy that is symmetrical in appearance and eliminates the necessity of weighting the buoy to counterbalance the offset weight of the upstandirn spindle. A buoy so constructed constitutes an object of the present invention.
A further object is generally to improve the construction of buoys.
Fig. 1 is an elevation of amooring buoy em-' bodying the present invention.
Fig. 2 is a sectional elevation through the buoy 14 which overlies the top of said shell and a circular side wall 16 which surrounds and overlies The open lower end or apex of the conical section of the buoy is closed by a head 22 having an upstanding circular .side wall 23 that surrounds the lower portion of the conical section and is secured thereto in a water-tight manner.
In accordance with the present invention the buoy is provided with a spindle 24 which extends through the' middle of the top head 14 and through the bottom head 22 atone side of the vertical axis or" the buoy and near the bottom edge of the'conical section 12. The spindle has a straight Vertical section 26 that upstands above the top of the buoy to a suitable height in the middle or vertical axis of the buoy. The spindle is bent immediately under the top head and has a straight lower section 28 that extends downwardly and is inclined away from the vertical axis to the point where it passes through the lower head. The spindle, where it passes through the buoy, is sealed thereto in any suitable watertight manner. spindle is provided with an eye 30 to which an anchor cable or chain 32 is attached, the eye being screw-threaded onto the spindle and welded onto the lower head, thereby preventing the eye from turning and also providing a watertight seal between the spindle and the buoyant member thereat. The upper end of thespindle is provided with an inverted hook 34 which is offset laterally from or is located at one side of the spindle, in a direction toward the attaching eye 30, and an entrance 36 which faces the buoy. The entrance is yieldingly closed by a spring latch comprising a resilient plate 38 which is secured to the hook and bears yieldingly against the spindle. The, bight of a rope passed upwardly on the spindle can spring the latch away from the spindle and thus enter the hook where it will be retained until the latch is sprung by hand. I
A reinforcing collar 101' flange 40 is secured bybeing welded'to-the to head about, and
also to, the spindle where the spindle passes through the head to provide a good connection thereat between the buoyant member and the spindle and 'to provide a water-tight seal-between the spindle and the buoyant member. However, 'no particular mooringstrain is taken by the buoyant member as the spindle transmits the strain directly from the hook to the anchor chain. 7
The buoy as'thus constructed is caused to rotate in the water under a sidewise pull of a mooring rope 42 thereon about the anchor chain as'a pivot so thatthe straight upstanding axial section 20 of the spindle is nearer the boat 44 thanythe eye 30 to which the anchor chain is attached and the hook 34 is facing away from the boat. The pull of the mooring rope causes The lower external end of the v the buoy to tilt to such an angle that the bight of the rope slides upwardly on the spindle and into the hook, thereby automatically causing the rope to be connected with the buoy and, through the spindle, with the anchor chain.
I claim:
1. A mooring buoy comprising a buoyant member having a spindle which upstands from the middle of the buoy and has a connection for a mooring rope above the buoy, and a connection for an anchor cable at the bottom of the buoy at one side of the middle thereof.
2. A mooring buoy comprising a buoyant member having a spindle which upstands from the middle of the buoy and has a connection for a mooring rope above the buoy, and a connection for an anchor cable at the bottom of the buoy at one side of the middle thereof, said mooring rope connection comprising an inverted hook having an entrance which faces said buoyant member and projects from the spindle on the side toward said anchor cable connection.
3. A mooring buoy comprising a buoyant member having a spindle which upstands from the middle of the buoy and has a connection for a mooring rope above the buoy, and a connection for an anchor cable at the bottom of the buoy at one side of the middle thereof, said mooring rope connection comprising an inverted hook having an entrance which faces said buoyant member and projects from the spindle on the side toward said anchor cable connection, said hook having a latch which removably closes said I hook-entrance.
l. A mooring buoy comprising a symmetrical buoyant member, a mooring spindle carried by said buoyant member having a straight section which upstands from said member in the vertical axis thereof and has an inverted mooring hook at the upper portion which extends laterally from said spindle and has an entrance which faces said member and a latch disposed in position to removably close said entrance, said spindle having a lower section which extends downwardly through said buoyant member at an angle with
US614157A 1932-05-28 1932-05-28 Mooring buoy Expired - Lifetime US1921500A (en)

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Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2680859A (en) * 1951-12-31 1954-06-15 Hultberg Ake Albin Boat-buoy
US2814055A (en) * 1955-02-14 1957-11-26 Hermon E Phillips Mooring buoy
US2943590A (en) * 1958-03-25 1960-07-05 Harold W Andersen Boat mooring
US2955561A (en) * 1959-01-23 1960-10-11 Harold W Andersen Boat mooring
US3077614A (en) * 1960-07-20 1963-02-19 Robert L Lloyd Buoy for mooring vessels
US3083676A (en) * 1959-10-16 1963-04-02 Harold W Andersen Automatic mooring catch
US3155069A (en) * 1962-08-17 1964-11-03 B P Tanker Company Ltd Mooring arrangements for ships
US3266068A (en) * 1964-10-30 1966-08-16 Msl Ind Inc Buoy
US3431568A (en) * 1966-05-17 1969-03-11 Seal Basin Marine Co Mooring device
US3659544A (en) * 1969-12-12 1972-05-02 Rudolph A Goepfrich Boat anchor
USD377586S (en) * 1996-02-05 1997-01-28 Mcbride Jason Buoy utensil holder
US7699014B1 (en) * 2007-03-29 2010-04-20 Harrison Robert W Watercraft anchoring system
WO2020237127A1 (en) * 2019-05-22 2020-11-26 Reuter Ronald J Mooring apparatus and system

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2680859A (en) * 1951-12-31 1954-06-15 Hultberg Ake Albin Boat-buoy
US2814055A (en) * 1955-02-14 1957-11-26 Hermon E Phillips Mooring buoy
US2943590A (en) * 1958-03-25 1960-07-05 Harold W Andersen Boat mooring
US2955561A (en) * 1959-01-23 1960-10-11 Harold W Andersen Boat mooring
US3083676A (en) * 1959-10-16 1963-04-02 Harold W Andersen Automatic mooring catch
US3077614A (en) * 1960-07-20 1963-02-19 Robert L Lloyd Buoy for mooring vessels
US3155069A (en) * 1962-08-17 1964-11-03 B P Tanker Company Ltd Mooring arrangements for ships
US3266068A (en) * 1964-10-30 1966-08-16 Msl Ind Inc Buoy
US3431568A (en) * 1966-05-17 1969-03-11 Seal Basin Marine Co Mooring device
US3659544A (en) * 1969-12-12 1972-05-02 Rudolph A Goepfrich Boat anchor
USD377586S (en) * 1996-02-05 1997-01-28 Mcbride Jason Buoy utensil holder
US7699014B1 (en) * 2007-03-29 2010-04-20 Harrison Robert W Watercraft anchoring system
WO2020237127A1 (en) * 2019-05-22 2020-11-26 Reuter Ronald J Mooring apparatus and system
US11180221B2 (en) 2019-05-22 2021-11-23 Ronald J. Reuter Mooring apparatus and system

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