US198028A - Improvement in plows - Google Patents

Improvement in plows Download PDF

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Publication number
US198028A
US198028A US198028DA US198028A US 198028 A US198028 A US 198028A US 198028D A US198028D A US 198028DA US 198028 A US198028 A US 198028A
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Prior art keywords
board
mold
sod
plow
plows
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01BSOIL WORKING IN AGRICULTURE OR FORESTRY; PARTS, DETAILS, OR ACCESSORIES OF AGRICULTURAL MACHINES OR IMPLEMENTS, IN GENERAL
    • A01B3/00Ploughs with fixed plough-shares
    • A01B3/04Animal-drawn ploughs
    • A01B3/16Alternating ploughs, i.e. capable of making an adjacent furrow on return journey
    • A01B3/18Turn-wrest ploughs

Definitions

  • FIG. 4 represents, upon an enlarged scale, a plan view of the working-surface of the moldboard, detached and turned a quarter-way over, and the point elevated, while the rear of the mold-board is depressed, for the purpose of illustrating more fully and clearly the peculiar construction of said mold-board, as indicated in Figs. 5, -6, and 7, which repre sent transverse sections through my said improved mold-board, taken on lines A B, B C, and'O D, respectively, Figs. 5 and 6, looking in the direction indicated by arrow 1, Fig. 7, and in the direction of arrow 2, Fig. 4.
  • part marked A represents the plow-standard; B, the plow-beam; O, the handles, and D my improved moldboard.
  • the working-surface E of mold which, as before explained, represents a top or plan view of the entire working-surface of the mold-board when thelatter is detached and turned a quarter-way over, and the point elevated, while the rear of the mold-board is depressed, for the purpose of illustrating more fully and clearly the peculiar construction of said mold-board.
  • the mold-board D is made with two inclined planes, which planes act in combination, in gradually raising the sod upon the principal of the wedgethat is to say, when the plow is in operation (the parts occupying the relative positions shown in Fig.
  • the point 1 enters the ground and runs under the sod, which is gradually raised by the lower inclined plane 3, while the upper inclinedv plane 3 acts upon the Sod as soon as it is elevated to that height to gradually turn the sod over, while the wing or cutting-edge 3' also comes into action to support and assist in turning the sod as fast as it is elevated above the upper inclined plane 3", and, by the combined action of said two inclined planes, the wing or cutting-edge 3' and the central concave and convex portions E of the central part of the mold-board gradually raise and turn over the sod in such a manner that the power required for such operation is reduced to the minimum, while, at the same time, the action on the earth upon the under side of the sod is such as to disintegrate such earth, whereby, when the sod is turned over, both the earth and the sod are left in a comparatively loose or pulverized state or condition, instead of in a comparatively hard and solid mass.
  • the mold-board D is swiveled to the base of the plow-standards in the usual manner, and, consequently, as the mold-board is made up of two parts which are just alike, the act-ionwill be the same as that just above described, when the moldboard is swung to the opposite side of the plow-beam to cut the reverse furrow.
  • the sod and the earth being elevated withit are so acted upon between the lines 0 D and B O that the earth and sod are not only rolled, broken, or disintegrated, but are so forced off from portions of the working-surface of the mold-board as to admit the air freely between the earth and the moldboard, thereby preventing that heavy drag or draft due to the adhesion or suction of the furrow-slice.
  • Amold-board, D for swivel-plows, the workin g-surface E of which consists of combined concave and convex surfaces, arranged in relation to'each other, as shown and described, to produce or form two direct inclined planes, diverging from the point 1 to the points 2 2, substantially as and for the purposes set forth.

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  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Zoology (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Soil Sciences (AREA)
  • Environmental Sciences (AREA)
  • Soil Working Implements (AREA)

Description

S. A. KNOX.
Plow.
Patented Dec. 11, 1877.
WITNESSES! |NVENTOR= INGTON. D C- N, PETERSA PHOTO-LITHQGRAPHiR. WASH To all whom it may concern:
UNITED STATES PATENT QFFICE.
SAMUEL A. KNOX, or WORCESTER, MASsAcHusnTTs.
||v| PROVEMENT IN PLOWS.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 198,028 dated December 11, 1877; application filed May 3, 1877".
'Be it known that I, SAMUEL A. KNOX, of the city and county of Worcester, and Com monwealth of Massachusetts, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Swivel or Side-Hill Flows; and I do hereby declare that the following is a full, clear, and exact description of the same, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, forming a part of this specification, and in which Figure 1 represents a top or plan view of a swivel or side-hill plow having my improvements applied thereto. Fig. 2 represents a 7 side view of the same looking in the direction of arrow 1, Fig.1. Fig. 3 represents also aside view of the plow shown in. Fig. 1, looking in the direction of arrow 2, Fig. 1. Fig. 4 represents, upon an enlarged scale, a plan view of the working-surface of the moldboard, detached and turned a quarter-way over, and the point elevated, while the rear of the mold-board is depressed, for the purpose of illustrating more fully and clearly the peculiar construction of said mold-board, as indicated in Figs. 5, -6, and 7, which repre sent transverse sections through my said improved mold-board, taken on lines A B, B C, and'O D, respectively, Figs. 5 and 6, looking in the direction indicated by arrow 1, Fig. 7, and in the direction of arrow 2, Fig. 4.
To enable those skilled in the art to which my invention belongs to make and usethe same, I will proceed to describe it more in detail.
In the drawings, the part marked A represents the plow-standard; B, the plow-beam; O, the handles, and D my improved moldboard.
As will be seen from Figs. 4, 5, 6, and 7 of the drawings, the working-surface E of moldwhich, as before explained, represents a top or plan view of the entire working-surface of the mold-board when thelatter is detached and turned a quarter-way over, and the point elevated, while the rear of the mold-board is depressed, for the purpose of illustrating more fully and clearly the peculiar construction of said mold-board. 7 As before indicated, the mold-board D is made with two inclined planes, which planes act in combination, in gradually raising the sod upon the principal of the wedgethat is to say, when the plow is in operation (the parts occupying the relative positions shown in Fig. 1) the point 1 enters the ground and runs under the sod, which is gradually raised by the lower inclined plane 3, while the upper inclinedv plane 3 acts upon the Sod as soon as it is elevated to that height to gradually turn the sod over, while the wing or cutting-edge 3' also comes into action to support and assist in turning the sod as fast as it is elevated above the upper inclined plane 3", and, by the combined action of said two inclined planes, the wing or cutting-edge 3' and the central concave and convex portions E of the central part of the mold-board gradually raise and turn over the sod in such a manner that the power required for such operation is reduced to the minimum, while, at the same time, the action on the earth upon the under side of the sod is such as to disintegrate such earth, whereby, when the sod is turned over, both the earth and the sod are left in a comparatively loose or pulverized state or condition, instead of in a comparatively hard and solid mass.
It will be understood that the mold-board D is swiveled to the base of the plow-standards in the usual manner, and, consequently, as the mold-board is made up of two parts which are just alike, the act-ionwill be the same as that just above described, when the moldboard is swung to the opposite side of the plow-beam to cut the reverse furrow.
It will be further understoodthat, when the mold-board is reversed and swung to the other side of, the plow-beam, as just stated, both the position and action of the inclined planes are reversed-that is to say, in- V clined plane 3 becomes the upper and the in- 7 the ground in the bottom of the furrow.
By the peculiar combination of the convex and concave surfaces and wings or cutting edges 3' and 3", the sod and the earth being elevated withit are so acted upon between the lines 0 D and B O that the earth and sod are not only rolled, broken, or disintegrated, but are so forced off from portions of the working-surface of the mold-board as to admit the air freely between the earth and the moldboard, thereby preventing that heavy drag or draft due to the adhesion or suction of the furrow-slice.
Having described my improvements in swivel or side-hill plows, what I claim therein as new and of my invention, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
Amold-board, D, for swivel-plows, the workin g-surface E of which consists of combined concave and convex surfaces, arranged in relation to'each other, as shown and described, to produce or form two direct inclined planes, diverging from the point 1 to the points 2 2, substantially as and for the purposes set forth.
SAMUEL A. KNOX.
Witnesses:
THOS. H. DODGE, EDWIN E. MOORE.
US198028D Improvement in plows Expired - Lifetime US198028A (en)

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