US1954856A - Automatic stoker apparatus - Google Patents

Automatic stoker apparatus Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1954856A
US1954856A US199877A US19987727A US1954856A US 1954856 A US1954856 A US 1954856A US 199877 A US199877 A US 199877A US 19987727 A US19987727 A US 19987727A US 1954856 A US1954856 A US 1954856A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
passage
hopper
air
blower
furnace
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
US199877A
Inventor
Wetmore Bert Daniel
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.)
HENRY M BROOKS
Original Assignee
Henry M Brooks
William Tudor Gardiner
Richard Kingsley Hawes
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 Henry M Brooks, William Tudor Gardiner, Richard Kingsley Hawes filed Critical Henry M Brooks
Priority to US199877A priority Critical patent/US1954856A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1954856A publication Critical patent/US1954856A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23KFEEDING FUEL TO COMBUSTION APPARATUS
    • F23K3/00Feeding or distributing of lump or pulverulent fuel to combustion apparatus
    • F23K3/10Under-feed arrangements
    • F23K3/14Under-feed arrangements feeding by screw

Definitions

  • This invention relates to an apparatus for preventing the escape of smoke, gas or dust from an automatic stoker back into the fireroom.
  • FIG. 1 is a fragmentary longitudinal sectional view of a boiler proVided With a stoker of the type to which this invention relates, and an arrangement embodying this invention.
  • Fig. 2 is an end view of the same.
  • numeral 3 represents the interior of the furnace in a boiler 4.
  • the coal or other fuel is adapted to be fed to the furnace 3 by means of the stoker represented generally by the reference numeral 5.
  • the stoker 5 includes a feed passage 6 adapted to discharge into a diverging mouth 7 beneath the bottom of the furnace compartment 3.
  • the outer end of the passage 6 communicates with the bottom of a hopper 8 by means of which coal or other fuel is admitted 'to said passage.
  • screw 9 is mounted longitudinally within the passage 6 and is driven through the intermediary of reduction gearing 10 by a. motor 11.
  • An air passage 12 surrounds the passage 6 and is adapted to deliver air to the furnace 3, and more particularly to deliver the combustion air to the fuel rising from 6.
  • the blower 3 In order to overcome this difficulty I arrange, for the blower 3 to draw air across a surface, as it were, of the coal in the fuel supply system, and to this end preferably provide an angular hood. 14 above the intake of ,the hopper 8 and connect the top of this hood by means of a. pipe connection 15 to the intake 16 of the blower 13.
  • the pipe 18 which is connected, as shown in Fig. 1, to the delivery side of the blower may be utilized for blowing a stream of air into the fuel feeding passage 6 at the inner end thereof toward the fire box to cause a positive flow of air in the passage toward the fire box. This arrangement provides further assurance against the leaking of gases outwardly through the pas-' sage toward the hopper.
  • a furnace having a fire box and a stoker including a fuel passage leading to the fire box, a feed hopper on the outer end of said passage normally open to the atmosphere and to said passage, a blower and conduits connected thereto arranged for delivering air to said furnace and arranged to induce a flow of air from the atmosphere across the inlet of the hopper.
  • a furnace having a fire box and a stoker including a fuel feed passage leading to the fire box, a feed hopper on the outer end of said passage in open communication therewith and normally open to the atmosphere,- means including a conduit connected with the hopper for causing a positive flow of air across the inlet of the hopper and into the fire box and, congases from the passage into the fire box and forpreventing their escape into the atmosphere.
  • a furnace having a fire box and a stoker including afuel passage leading to the fire box, an upwardly extending hopper on the outer end of said passage, a hood over said hopper open to the atmosphere and providing communication from the atmosphere directly through the hood and hopper to said passage, a blower and conduits connected thereto and with fire box and hood constructed to induce air flow from the atmosphere through the hood across the top of said hopper and to deliver said air into the fire box.
  • liver the air into said furnace, and a pipe connected with the blower for directing air into said passage near the inner end thereof toward said fire box.
  • a furnace having a firebox
  • a coal stoker including a passage for coal leading to the firebox, a coal hopper at the outer end of said passage normally open adjacent its upper end and open to said passage to supply coal to the latter, a blower, and a conduit system for said blower, said conduit system including an inlet conduit leading to the inlet of said blower and a second conduit leading from said blower to said firebox to supply combustion air to the latter, and a hood at the inlet end of said inlet conduit, said hood extending over said open upper end of said hopper externally of said hopper and being open to admit air to said inlet conduit.

Description

'April 17, 1934. x B; D. WETMORE 1,954,856
AUTQMA'IIC STOKER APPARATUS Filed Juhe 20, 1927 w i I I I 2206 7%1 Patented Apr. 1 7, 19 34 PATENT OFFICE AUTOMATIC STOKER APPARATUS Bert Daniel Wetmore, Bismarck, N. Dak., as-
signor to Henry M. Brooks, New York, N. 1., William Tudor Gardiner, Augusta, Maine, and Richard Kingsley Hawes, Fall River, Mass.,
trustees Application June 20, 1927, Serial No.'199,877
6 Claims.
This invention relates to an apparatus for preventing the escape of smoke, gas or dust from an automatic stoker back into the fireroom. v
Heretofore, in operating an automatic stoker, especially whenever the feed pas age between the hopper and furnace became empty for any reason smoke, gases and dust were likely to escape from the furnace back through the hopper into the iireroom.
It is accordingly the principal object of this invention to provide an apparatusfor preventing the; escape of gases and dust into the fireroom through the feed passage of an automatic stoker or the like.
It is also an object of this invention to provide an arrangement for preventing the escape of gases into the fireroom which may be conveniently incorporated in the apparatuses now in use for automatically feeding fuel to furnaces.
Other and further objects of this invention will be apparent as the same becomes better understood from an examination of the specification and claims in connection with the accompanying drawing wherein Fig. 1 is a fragmentary longitudinal sectional view of a boiler proVided With a stoker of the type to which this invention relates, and an arrangement embodying this invention.
Fig. 2 is an end view of the same.
Referring to the drawing more particularly,
numeral 3 represents the interior of the furnace in a boiler 4. The coal or other fuel is adapted to be fed to the furnace 3 by means of the stoker represented generally by the reference numeral 5. The stoker 5 includes a feed passage 6 adapted to discharge into a diverging mouth 7 beneath the bottom of the furnace compartment 3. The outer end of the passage 6 communicates with the bottom of a hopper 8 by means of which coal or other fuel is admitted 'to said passage. screw 9 is mounted longitudinally within the passage 6 and is driven through the intermediary of reduction gearing 10 by a. motor 11. An air passage 12 surrounds the passage 6 and is adapted to deliver air to the furnace 3, and more particularly to deliver the combustion air to the fuel rising from 6.
. The outer end of the passage 12 is connected to the discharge of a blower 13 also driven by the motor 11. V p
All of the parts just described are old and well ,known in the'art. In the. operation of these parts the coal or other fuel is suppliedto the hopper 8 and thence is fed through the passage 6 to the furnace 3 by the revolving screw 9. It fre- A feed stoker that the feed passage 6 becomes empty. In such a case smoke or other gases are likely to leak back through the passage 6 into the fireroom. It has been discovered also that some: times air or other gases pass backthrough passag 6 even when the latter is not empty.
In order to overcome this difficulty I arrange, for the blower 3 to draw air across a surface, as it were, of the coal in the fuel supply system, and to this endpreferably provide an angular hood. 14 above the intake of ,the hopper 8 and connect the top of this hood by means of a. pipe connection 15 to the intake 16 of the blower 13. The
vertical side 17 of the hood 14 is left open so that coal or other fuel may be admitted to the hopper. By means of the hood l4 and the connection therefrom to the intake of the blower 13 any smoke or other gases are returned through the air passage 12'to the furnace 3 together with all dust made in filling the hopper 8.
The pipe 18 which is connected, as shown in Fig. 1, to the delivery side of the blower may be utilized for blowing a stream of air into the fuel feeding passage 6 at the inner end thereof toward the fire box to cause a positive flow of air in the passage toward the fire box. This arrangement provides further assurance against the leaking of gases outwardly through the pas-' sage toward the hopper.
It will be apparent that the aforedescribed improvement may be conveniently and readily incorporated in automatic stokers or like apparatus now in use. I
I am aware that many changes may be made throughout a wide range without departing from the principle of this invention and I. therefore do not wish to be limited to the details shown or described.
I claim:
1. The combination of a furnace having a fire box and a stoker including a fuel passage leading to the fire box, a feed hopper on the outer end of said passage normally open to the atmosphere and to said passage, a blower and conduits connected thereto arranged for delivering air to said furnace and arranged to induce a flow of air from the atmosphere across the inlet of the hopper.
2. The combination of a furnace having a fire box and a stoker including a fuel feed passage leading to the fire box, a feed hopper on the outer end of said passage in open communication therewith and normally open to the atmosphere,- means including a conduit connected with the hopper for causing a positive flow of air across the inlet of the hopper and into the fire box and, congases from the passage into the fire box and forpreventing their escape into the atmosphere.
3. The combination of a furnace having a fire box and a stoker including afuel passage leading to the fire box, an upwardly extending hopper on the outer end of said passage, a hood over said hopper open to the atmosphere and providing communication from the atmosphere directly through the hood and hopper to said passage, a blower and conduits connected thereto and with fire box and hood constructed to induce air flow from the atmosphere through the hood across the top of said hopper and to deliver said air into the fire box.
4. The combination of a furnace having a fire box, a stoker including a fuel feed passage leading to the fire box, an upwardly extending hopper on the outer end of said passage open directly to the atmosphere, a hood over said hopper, a blower and conduits connected thereto and with the furmace and hood constructed to intake air through said hood across the top of said hopper and de- 1,954,sse
liver the air into said furnace, and a pipe connected with the blower for directing air into said passage near the inner end thereof toward said fire box.
5. The combination of a furnace having a firebox, a coal stoker including a passage for coal leading to the firebox, a coal hopper at the outer end of said passage normally open adjacent its upper end and open to said passage to supply coal to the latter, a blower, and a conduit system for said blower, said conduit system including an inlet conduit leading to the inlet of said blower and a second conduit leading from said blower to said firebox to supply combustion air to the latter, and a hood at the inlet end of said inlet conduit, said hood extending over said open upper end of said hopper externally of said hopper and being open to admit air to said inlet conduit.
6. The subject matter of claim 5, characterized by the fact that said inlet conduit is so connected to said inlet of said blower that substantially all the air entering said blower passes through said inlet conduit.
' BERT DANIEL WETMORE.
US199877A 1927-06-20 1927-06-20 Automatic stoker apparatus Expired - Lifetime US1954856A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US199877A US1954856A (en) 1927-06-20 1927-06-20 Automatic stoker apparatus

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US199877A US1954856A (en) 1927-06-20 1927-06-20 Automatic stoker apparatus

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1954856A true US1954856A (en) 1934-04-17

Family

ID=22739380

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US199877A Expired - Lifetime US1954856A (en) 1927-06-20 1927-06-20 Automatic stoker apparatus

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1954856A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2600614A (en) * 1949-02-24 1952-06-17 David T Campbell Nonsmoke-back solid fuel furnace

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2600614A (en) * 1949-02-24 1952-06-17 David T Campbell Nonsmoke-back solid fuel furnace

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1443794A (en) Suction means for feeding powdered fuel to fire boxes
US1954856A (en) Automatic stoker apparatus
US1305726A (en) Apparatus for burning powdered euel
US1204631A (en) Feeding and burning fine fuel.
US1830798A (en) Device for eliminating hopper smoke
US2177794A (en) Locomotive stoker
US1550873A (en) Combustion-promoting device
US1304380A (en) santmyer
US2627827A (en) Fly-ash handling apparatus
US2600614A (en) Nonsmoke-back solid fuel furnace
US1324081A (en) Apparatus for using powdered fuel.
US782608A (en) Boiler-flue cleaner.
US2044043A (en) Locomotive stoker
US1173995A (en) Device for feeding powdered fuel.
US2235993A (en) Supplementing waste heat from kilns or the like
US2063347A (en) Underfeed stoker
US2029296A (en) Multiple underfeed stoker
US1383371A (en) Apparatus for burning pulverized fuel in locomotives
US606815A (en) Mechanical stoker
US1457339A (en) Kiln and burner therefor
US1421898A (en) Pulverized-fuel furnace
US1395079A (en) And harry r
US1015746A (en) Smoke-consuming furnace.
US2237938A (en) Stoker
US1320963A (en) Method and apparatus tor eeedito pulvebized fuel