US2151402A - Air compressor - Google Patents

Air compressor Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2151402A
US2151402A US130918A US13091837A US2151402A US 2151402 A US2151402 A US 2151402A US 130918 A US130918 A US 130918A US 13091837 A US13091837 A US 13091837A US 2151402 A US2151402 A US 2151402A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
cylinders
air
cylinder
pistons
crank
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
US130918A
Inventor
Carl E Burch
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
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 Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US130918A priority Critical patent/US2151402A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2151402A publication Critical patent/US2151402A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F04POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
    • F04BPOSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS
    • F04B27/00Multi-cylinder pumps specially adapted for elastic fluids and characterised by number or arrangement of cylinders
    • F04B27/04Multi-cylinder pumps specially adapted for elastic fluids and characterised by number or arrangement of cylinders having cylinders in star- or fan-arrangement
    • F04B27/06Multi-cylinder pumps specially adapted for elastic fluids and characterised by number or arrangement of cylinders having cylinders in star- or fan-arrangement the cylinders being movable, e.g. rotary
    • F04B27/065Multi-cylinder pumps specially adapted for elastic fluids and characterised by number or arrangement of cylinders having cylinders in star- or fan-arrangement the cylinders being movable, e.g. rotary having cylinders in star- or fan-arrangement, the connection of the pistons with an actuating element being at the inner ends of the cylinders
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F04POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
    • F04BPOSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS
    • F04B27/00Multi-cylinder pumps specially adapted for elastic fluids and characterised by number or arrangement of cylinders
    • F04B27/04Multi-cylinder pumps specially adapted for elastic fluids and characterised by number or arrangement of cylinders having cylinders in star- or fan-arrangement
    • F04B27/053Multi-cylinder pumps specially adapted for elastic fluids and characterised by number or arrangement of cylinders having cylinders in star- or fan-arrangement with an actuating element at the inner ends of the cylinders
    • F04B27/0536Multi-cylinder pumps specially adapted for elastic fluids and characterised by number or arrangement of cylinders having cylinders in star- or fan-arrangement with an actuating element at the inner ends of the cylinders with two or more series radial piston-cylinder units
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F04POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
    • F04BPOSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS
    • F04B39/00Component parts, details, or accessories, of pumps or pumping systems specially adapted for elastic fluids, not otherwise provided for in, or of interest apart from, groups F04B25/00 - F04B37/00
    • F04B39/0005Component parts, details, or accessories, of pumps or pumping systems specially adapted for elastic fluids, not otherwise provided for in, or of interest apart from, groups F04B25/00 - F04B37/00 adaptations of pistons
    • F04B39/0016Component parts, details, or accessories, of pumps or pumping systems specially adapted for elastic fluids, not otherwise provided for in, or of interest apart from, groups F04B25/00 - F04B37/00 adaptations of pistons with valve arranged in the piston

Definitions

  • This invention relates to air compressors and is especially directed to a reciprocating-piston character of air compressor.
  • the present invention aims to improve the efficiency of engines of the above character and this I achieve by associating the cylinders of a multiple-cylinder engine in such. a manner that the related pistons act to compress under pressure in a peculiarly advanced manner by which the pressure upon the com,- pressing piston in no way opposes the simultaneous suction-stroke travel of an associated piston.
  • a further and related object of the invention is to provide, through the association referred to, a more effective balance as between the several pistons of the engine than has heretofore been possible.
  • Figure 1 is a transverse vertical section taken on the line I-l of Fig. 2 to illustrate a compressor constructed according to the now preferred embodiment of the present invention.
  • Fig. 2 is a horizontal section taken on the section line 2-2 of Fig. l, the view being somewhat schematic in that each of the several indicated cylinders, for simplicity in illustration, is represented as lying in a common horizontal plane whereas (note Fig. 5) the first, second, fourth and fifth cylinders, assuming the engine to be in that position of its cyclical activity shown in Fig. 1, properly are inclined slightly above and below this plane.
  • Fig. 3 is an enlarged fragmentary longitudinal vertical section detailing the construction of one of the air-compressing cylinders and the supporting manifold by which the same is pivotally carried.
  • Fig. 4 is a fragmentary vertical section taken on the line 4-4 of Fig. 3;
  • Fig. 5 is a diagrammatic end view indicating the axial lines of the several cylinders in the relative positions in which the same lie at that selected point in the cyclical activity of the compressor represented in Figs. 1 and 2.
  • the reference numeral 1 designates fixed annular plates which lie in longitudinally spaced relation and are rigid with respect to a suitable engine base.
  • the plates, seven in number, are in- 1937, Serial No. 130,918
  • crank pins 8 and associated spacers 9 terconnected by rods 8 and associated spacers 9 and centrally of each provide a main bearing for a six-throw crank shaft ID of which the several crank pins l lie in the spaces between the separated plates.
  • the crank pins respectively are engaged by a connecting rod bearing H to which are attached three rods located at angles of 120 to one another.
  • the former is represented as being fixed to and the other pair of rods as pivotally engaging the bearing member H although it is obvious that the plates 1 might be spaced to a greater extent and the crank shaft formed to allow the rods to lie in side-by-side relation and each find a direct bearing on the crank pin,
  • the plates adjacent the perimeter thereof and at intervals of 60, provide openings [3 aligned longitudinally of the engine and through these openings are received manifold pipes M.
  • the pipes operating as wrist pins, provide a pivotal mounting for cylinders l and these cylinders I arrange in alternating relation which is to say that the cylinders, three in number, associated with the second pin of the crank shaft lie between the cylinders associated with the first crank pin.
  • Each of these circumferentiallyspaced pivot-forming manifolds connect with one another through the instrumentality of end conduits Hi, from which a delivery pipe I! leads to a suitable pressure tank or directly to the work, as may be desired.
  • each manifold provides slots [8 in the transverse vertical planes of related alternate crank pins and fitting over such slotted portions are wrist-type sleeves 20 which rigidly engage the respective cylinder.
  • Egress ports 21 in the sleeves lie in registering relation to the slots l8 toobtain communication as between the cylinder chamber and the manifold.
  • At each end of the sleeves are external .bearing surfaces which find a seat in the bore of collars 22 bolted to the plates 1. Terminal threads on the sleeves accommodate packing assemblies of which the followers are denoted by 23.
  • Each cylinder is of closed design with the bottom wall thereof axially bored for the reception of the respective connecting rod to which is coupled a piston 24 fitted with spring-closing check valves 25 permitting passage of air in the down-stroke travel of the piston only.
  • a piston 24 fitted with spring-closing check valves 25 permitting passage of air in the down-stroke travel of the piston only.
  • check valves 26 In said bottom wall of the cylinders are similarly acting check valves 26.
  • eighteen or more cylinders afiord the degree of balance required to effectively equalize compressor stresses, six of these cylinders or, stated otherwise, one cylinder from each of the six manifold-coupled groupsof three, acting in unison.
  • the numerals I through 6 as a means of identifying the cylinders, the numeral 1 for example indicating the axial lines of the three cylinders whose pistons connect by the rods I 2, l2, or 12, as the case may be, with the first pin of the crank shaft, the numeral 2 the axial lines of the three next adjacent cylinders whichengage the second crank pin, etc, I illustrate'in' Fig. 5 the relative location of each of the several cylinders in an eighteen-cylinder compressor engine from which it will be readily seen that the cylinders associated with the first, third, and
  • the present in-' vention compresses only at the extreme of the down-stroke travel of the pistons.
  • the invention 7 has a further advantage in that a'fixed compression value is obtained, the compressor being in capable of compressing the air within the manifold beyond a known point and thereby maintaining the pressure constant without the necessity of employing safety valves or the equivalenti thereof in the system.
  • crank is of six-throw design and wherein the cylinder-and-piston assemblies are associated in sets of three with each pin of the crank shaft.
  • crank shaft having its cranks uniformly spaced circumferentially of the crank shaft, pistons and rodsifor driving the pistons connected in sets of three with each pin of the crank shaft, pivotally mounted cylinders for the pistons arranged in radial uniformly-spaced relation circumferentially about the crankshaft, means permitting admissionof air for compression purposes to the crank ends of the cylinders as the pistons move away from the crank shaft,

Description

which 21, 1939. c BURCH v AIR COMPRESSOR Filed March 15, 1937 Z Sheets-Sheet 1 INVENTOR.
Car/ 5 BY ATTORNEY).
E URCH March 1, 1939.
AIR COMPRESSOR 3 heets-Sheet 3 Filed March 15, 1937 INVENTOR Car/Eg ATTORNEYJ.
Patented Mar. 21, 1939 PATENT OFFICE AIR COMPRESSOR Carl E. Burch, Seattle, Wash.
Application March 15,
3 Claims.
This invention relates to air compressors and is especially directed to a reciprocating-piston character of air compressor. I
As its principal object, the present invention aims to improve the efficiency of engines of the above character and this I achieve by associating the cylinders of a multiple-cylinder engine in such. a manner that the related pistons act to compress under pressure in a peculiarly advanced manner by which the pressure upon the com,- pressing piston in no way opposes the simultaneous suction-stroke travel of an associated piston. A further and related object of the invention is to provide, through the association referred to, a more effective balance as between the several pistons of the engine than has heretofore been possible.
The foregoing, together with further and more particular objects and advantages, will become apparent in the course of the following detailed description and the claims annexed thereto, the invention consisting in the novel construction, adaptation, and combination of parts hereinafter described and claimed.
In the drawings:
Figure 1 is a transverse vertical section taken on the line I-l of Fig. 2 to illustrate a compressor constructed according to the now preferred embodiment of the present invention.
Fig. 2 is a horizontal section taken on the section line 2-2 of Fig. l, the view being somewhat schematic in that each of the several indicated cylinders, for simplicity in illustration, is represented as lying in a common horizontal plane whereas (note Fig. 5) the first, second, fourth and fifth cylinders, assuming the engine to be in that position of its cyclical activity shown in Fig. 1, properly are inclined slightly above and below this plane.
Fig. 3 is an enlarged fragmentary longitudinal vertical section detailing the construction of one of the air-compressing cylinders and the supporting manifold by which the same is pivotally carried.
Fig. 4 is a fragmentary vertical section taken on the line 4-4 of Fig. 3; and
Fig. 5 is a diagrammatic end view indicating the axial lines of the several cylinders in the relative positions in which the same lie at that selected point in the cyclical activity of the compressor represented in Figs. 1 and 2. V
The reference numeral 1 designates fixed annular plates which lie in longitudinally spaced relation and are rigid with respect to a suitable engine base. The plates, seven in number, are in- 1937, Serial No. 130,918
terconnected by rods 8 and associated spacers 9 and centrally of each provide a main bearing for a six-throw crank shaft ID of which the several crank pins l lie in the spaces between the separated plates. The crank pins respectively are engaged by a connecting rod bearing H to which are attached three rods located at angles of 120 to one another.. Of these rods, indicated by I2, I2 and I2", the former is represented as being fixed to and the other pair of rods as pivotally engaging the bearing member H although it is obvious that the plates 1 might be spaced to a greater extent and the crank shaft formed to allow the rods to lie in side-by-side relation and each find a direct bearing on the crank pin,
The plates, adjacent the perimeter thereof and at intervals of 60, provide openings [3 aligned longitudinally of the engine and through these openings are received manifold pipes M. The pipes, operating as wrist pins, provide a pivotal mounting for cylinders l and these cylinders I arrange in alternating relation which is to say that the cylinders, three in number, associated with the second pin of the crank shaft lie between the cylinders associated with the first crank pin. Each of these circumferentiallyspaced pivot-forming manifolds connect with one another through the instrumentality of end conduits Hi, from which a delivery pipe I! leads to a suitable pressure tank or directly to the work, as may be desired.
As respects said cylinder mounting, each manifold provides slots [8 in the transverse vertical planes of related alternate crank pins and fitting over such slotted portions are wrist-type sleeves 20 which rigidly engage the respective cylinder. Egress ports 21 in the sleeves lie in registering relation to the slots l8 toobtain communication as between the cylinder chamber and the manifold. At each end of the sleeves are external .bearing surfaces which find a seat in the bore of collars 22 bolted to the plates 1. Terminal threads on the sleeves accommodate packing assemblies of which the followers are denoted by 23.
Each cylinder is of closed design with the bottom wall thereof axially bored for the reception of the respective connecting rod to which is coupled a piston 24 fitted with spring-closing check valves 25 permitting passage of air in the down-stroke travel of the piston only. In said bottom wall of the cylinders are similarly acting check valves 26.
Believed to be clear is the system of compres- 55 sion employed, the check valves 26 admitting atmospheric air behind the up-stroke movement of the piston, the check valves 25 in the latter being held in their seated position throughout the greater portion of the pistons do-wnstroke movement and being unseated only as the com pression pressure of the air below the piston exceeds the pressure obtaining in the manifold, the connecting arranagement of the latter acting to deliver to each cylinder in the down-stroke movement of the piston therein a volume of compressed air equivalent to that simultaneously displaced from another cylinder in the engine. According to the present invention, eighteen or more cylinders afiord the degree of balance required to effectively equalize compressor stresses, six of these cylinders or, stated otherwise, one cylinder from each of the six manifold-coupled groupsof three, acting in unison.
Utilizing, according to location relative to the crank shaft, the numerals I through 6 as a means of identifying the cylinders, the numeral 1 for example indicating the axial lines of the three cylinders whose pistons connect by the rods I 2, l2, or 12, as the case may be, with the first pin of the crank shaft, the numeral 2 the axial lines of the three next adjacent cylinders whichengage the second crank pin, etc, I illustrate'in' Fig. 5 the relative location of each of the several cylinders in an eighteen-cylinder compressor engine from which it will be readily seen that the cylinders associated with the first, third, and
fifth crank pins find their pivotal mounting on one group of equally spaced manifolds while the cylinders associated with the second, fourth, and sixth crank pins find their pivotal mounting on the intervening manifolds. In said diagrammatic view, full lines are employed to represent the six cylinders under full compression action, dash lines the six cylinders approaching compression action, and dash-and-dot lines the six cylinders which'in their up -stroke activity expel a volume of air equivalent to the volumetric displacement of the pistons of the preceding cylinder group,
the latter two cylinder groups thereby effectively balancing one another in that the end pressures thereon are equalized. As distinguished from the progressively built-up compression pressures peculiar to the conventional reciprocatingpiston type of compressor unit, the present in-' vention compresses only at the extreme of the down-stroke travel of the pistons. The invention 7 has a further advantage in that a'fixed compression value is obtained, the compressor being in capable of compressing the air within the manifold beyond a known point and thereby maintaining the pressure constant without the necessity of employing safety valves or the equivalenti thereof in the system. By the expedient of admitting air to the cylinders at a pressure in exe cess of atmospheric, the pressure value of the spaced relation circumferentially about the axis of the crank, said pivotal mounting comprising hollow wrist pins of which the cavities thereof are in constant communication with the bore of the related cylinder at one end thereof, and a connecting manifold providing constant communication between each of said wrist-pin cavities, the cylinder-and-piston assembly providing valved openings. acting to admit air for compression purposes to the ends of the cylinders opposite the wrist pins in one stroke of the piston cycle and pass the air under the influence of compression actionthereon to the other ends of the cylinders in theopposite-stroke of the piston cycle.
2. The compressor defined in claim 1 wherein the crank is of six-throw design and wherein the cylinder-and-piston assemblies are associated in sets of three with each pin of the crank shaft.
3. In an air compressor, in combination, a six-throw crank shaft having its cranks uniformly spaced circumferentially of the crank shaft, pistons and rodsifor driving the pistons connected in sets of three with each pin of the crank shaft, pivotally mounted cylinders for the pistons arranged in radial uniformly-spaced relation circumferentially about the crankshaft, means permitting admissionof air for compression purposes to the crank ends of the cylinders as the pistons move away from the crank shaft,
means permitting 'passage'of the admitted air under the influence of compression action thereon to the outer ends of the cylinders as the pistons move toward the crank shaft, and means com;- prised of a system of manifolds connecting the outer ends of the, cylinders of the compressor and obtaining constant communication as between the same for maintaining, in said outer ends of the cylinders, a relatively uniform pressure throughout the cyclical activity of the pistons, thereby applying pressure on the pistons during their movement towards the crank shaft which pressure is exceeded by the compression pressure of the admitted air only near the en'd'cf said piston movement.
' CARL E. BURCH.
US130918A 1937-03-15 1937-03-15 Air compressor Expired - Lifetime US2151402A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US130918A US2151402A (en) 1937-03-15 1937-03-15 Air compressor

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US130918A US2151402A (en) 1937-03-15 1937-03-15 Air compressor

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2151402A true US2151402A (en) 1939-03-21

Family

ID=22446971

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US130918A Expired - Lifetime US2151402A (en) 1937-03-15 1937-03-15 Air compressor

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2151402A (en)

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2441797A (en) * 1943-07-09 1948-05-18 Orson A Carnahan Fluid pressure mechanism
US2600205A (en) * 1950-06-09 1952-06-10 Meyer Geo J Mfg Co Semiautomatic label-applying machine
US2760439A (en) * 1953-03-20 1956-08-28 Exxon Research Engineering Co Energy absorber and braking device
US3407743A (en) * 1966-07-25 1968-10-29 Jean Florent Francois Marcel Robert Landreau Rotary pressure-fluid machines
US20060083627A1 (en) * 2004-10-19 2006-04-20 Manole Dan M Vapor compression system including a swiveling compressor
US20060182640A1 (en) * 2005-02-17 2006-08-17 Slack And Parr Technologies Llc High pressure pump
US20070292282A1 (en) * 2006-06-08 2007-12-20 Schuetzle Larry A Reciprocating compressor or pump and a portable tool powering system including a reciprocating compressor
US20100040486A1 (en) * 2005-02-17 2010-02-18 Kinemax Pump Systems Llc High pressure pump
US20140301865A1 (en) * 2013-04-05 2014-10-09 Enginetics, Llc Hybridized compressor
CN107542660A (en) * 2016-06-24 2018-01-05 王辉明 Rotor slide rail type air compressor

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2441797A (en) * 1943-07-09 1948-05-18 Orson A Carnahan Fluid pressure mechanism
US2600205A (en) * 1950-06-09 1952-06-10 Meyer Geo J Mfg Co Semiautomatic label-applying machine
US2760439A (en) * 1953-03-20 1956-08-28 Exxon Research Engineering Co Energy absorber and braking device
US3407743A (en) * 1966-07-25 1968-10-29 Jean Florent Francois Marcel Robert Landreau Rotary pressure-fluid machines
US20060083627A1 (en) * 2004-10-19 2006-04-20 Manole Dan M Vapor compression system including a swiveling compressor
US7661935B2 (en) 2005-02-17 2010-02-16 Kinemax Pump Systems Llc High pressure pump
US20060182640A1 (en) * 2005-02-17 2006-08-17 Slack And Parr Technologies Llc High pressure pump
US20100040486A1 (en) * 2005-02-17 2010-02-18 Kinemax Pump Systems Llc High pressure pump
US8267672B2 (en) 2005-02-17 2012-09-18 Kellar Franz W High pressure pump
US9188116B2 (en) 2005-02-17 2015-11-17 Kinemax Systems, Llc High pressure pump
US20070292282A1 (en) * 2006-06-08 2007-12-20 Schuetzle Larry A Reciprocating compressor or pump and a portable tool powering system including a reciprocating compressor
US20080003112A1 (en) * 2006-06-08 2008-01-03 Schuetzle Larry A Reciprocating compressor or pump and a portable tool powering system including a reciprocating compressor
US7959415B2 (en) * 2006-06-08 2011-06-14 Larry Alvin Schuetzle Radial type reciprocating compressor and portable tool powering system with cylinder liner, valve and annular manifold arrangement
US8721300B2 (en) 2006-06-08 2014-05-13 Larry Alvin Schuetzle Reciprocating compressor or pump and a portable tool powering system including a reciprocating compressor
US20140301865A1 (en) * 2013-04-05 2014-10-09 Enginetics, Llc Hybridized compressor
CN107542660A (en) * 2016-06-24 2018-01-05 王辉明 Rotor slide rail type air compressor

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2151402A (en) Air compressor
CA1067343A (en) Multi-plunger reciprocating pump
US2765976A (en) Two stage compressor
US2151825A (en) Fluid compressor
US1894033A (en) Engine
PH12020551085A1 (en) Internal combustion engine
US2268532A (en) Internal combustion engine
US2610785A (en) Internal-combustion engine driven compressor unit
US2405016A (en) Piston and cylinder device
US2434584A (en) Multiple cylinder opposed piston and pumps
US1736507A (en) Compressor-operating means
US2167946A (en) Internal combustion engine
US2359564A (en) Two-shaft opposed-piston internal-combustion engine
US1804010A (en) Two cycle internal combustion engine swash plate construction
CN101660447B (en) Novel stationary point free piston engine
US2442468A (en) Engine and pump unit
US1474549A (en) Internal-combustion engine
US2375748A (en) Transmission mechanism for reciprocating engines
US330388A (en) Compound steam engine
US2155068A (en) Internal combustion engine apparatus
US1389017A (en) Reciprocating engine
US1312605A (en) wygodsky
US11313317B2 (en) Crankcase ventilation system with dead space alignment sleeves
US2147644A (en) Internal combustion engine
US1490294A (en) Engine