US217184A - Improvement in sewing-machines - Google Patents

Improvement in sewing-machines Download PDF

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US217184A
US217184A US217184DA US217184A US 217184 A US217184 A US 217184A US 217184D A US217184D A US 217184DA US 217184 A US217184 A US 217184A
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shuttle
post
feed
bar
plate
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D05SEWING; EMBROIDERING; TUFTING
    • D05BSEWING
    • D05B57/00Loop takers, e.g. loopers
    • D05B57/08Loop takers, e.g. loopers for lock-stitch sewing machines
    • D05B57/10Shuttles
    • D05B57/14Shuttles with rotary hooks

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  • My invention relates to improvements in that kind of sewing-machines which are constructed With an upright work-supporting post, the top of which forms a diminutive table at a considerable elevation above the general level of the bed of the machine, and around which a clear space is left, in which work that is doubled or folded into irregular ⁇ form may be permitted to overhang the post and lie freely around the same below the plane of its top, While that portion which is being sewed lies horizontally upon the work-plate on the top of the post, such elevated and diminished supporting surface enabling the operator to stitch certain kinds of work of a folded, hollow, or tubular character with greater facility and less liability to deface and injure the goods thus being worked upon from undue doubling and pressure in the process of stitching, such as an ordinary fiat table would necessitate.
  • Machines constructed with an elevated post and employedfor stitchin gleather with a waxed thread, forming a chain-stitch, have been long in use, as shown in the patent granted to David Haskell August 28, 1860, and machines have been formed with a post of diminutive size for glove-sewing, with a shuttle therein, and having a feed mechanism operated from above, and performing the double duty of a pressenfoot and feeding device.
  • the object of my invention is to produce a shuttle or lock stitch in connection with a work-supporting post and mechanism adapted to dry-thread stitching, and a class of work for which neither of said machines are adapted, or for which they Acan be successfully employed; and my invention consists in so constructing such post as to support in its top part, in a circular recessed race, a rotative shuttle for carrying a second thread and passing the same through loops formed of the upper or needle thread, and combining with such post and shuttle a shuttle-driver and feed mechanism, both of which are operated from beneath the post 5 also, in combining with such post, shuttle, and feeding device so arranged, a presser-foot operated from above to act upon the material being sewed, and in conjunction with the feeding device; also, in the peculiar construction and arrangement of the feed-lever and its combination with coacting parts, and in the peculiar construction of the ⁇ shuttle and 4its combination with coaeting parts.
  • Figure l is aside elevation of a sewing-machine embodying my improvements.
  • Fig. 2 is a detached vertical section taken through the axis of the vertical shaft which drives the shuttle, and in the direction indicated by line m
  • Fig. 3 is a top view of the work-support ing post with the sliding work-plate removed to disclose the shuttle in its circular raceway.
  • Fig. 4 is an enlarged vertical section taken on the line indicated by line z z, Figs. l and l1, and as viewed from the left in said Fig. l.
  • Fig. 5 is a top or plan View of my improved shuttle with the perforated thread-retaining cap removed.
  • Fig. 6 is a plan view of said cap.
  • Fig. 2 is a detached vertical section taken through the axis of the vertical shaft which drives the shuttle, and in the direction indicated by line m
  • Fig. 3 is a top view of the work
  • Fig. 7 is an edge elevation of the shuttle, the top, as shown in Fig. 5, being shown at the right in this figure.
  • Fig. S is a detached under-side or inverted plan view, showing the relative positions, arrangement, and connections of the driving-shaft and the short auxiliary shaft, the crank and pitman, the rack and pinion, the feed-lever, and the cam and pin on the short shaft that actuates such lever.
  • Fig. 9 is a detached elevation taken as viewed from the left in Fig. 1, and showin g the presserfoot and its bar, the means of actuating and adjusting the same, andthe adjacent parts of the machine.
  • Fig. S is a detached under-side or inverted plan view, showing the relative positions, arrangement, and connections of the driving-shaft and the short auxiliary shaft, the crank and pitman, the rack and pinion, the feed-lever, and the cam and pin on the short shaft that actuates such lever.
  • Fig. 9 is a detached elevation taken as viewed from the
  • FIG. 10 is a detached top or plan view, showing the front portion of the goose-neck, the needle-actuatin g lever, the needle and presser-,foot bars, the presser-footdepressing spring, and its adjusting device.
  • Fig. ll is a horizontal transverse section taken through post M, the f'eedlever, and shuttledriver on the line indicated byline y y, Fig. 4.
  • A represents the bed of the machine.
  • B is the goose-neck, upon which is pivoted the lever C for operating the needlebar D.
  • Said neck also supports the usual presser-foot, take-up, thread-guides, and tension devices, which, so far as they are material to my invention, will be described in their order.
  • the driving-shaft E is journaled in bearings a a, and carries upon its outer end the belt-pulleys and balance-wheel F, also an eccentric, which operates, through pitman Gr, the lever C.
  • crank H At the opposite end of the driving-shaft is a crank, H., part l of which is secured or formed upon the short auxiliary shaft c', while part 2 of such crank is formed upon a sleeve, a', which is secured upon shaft E by set-screws, as shown in Figs. 2 and 8.
  • H is a pitmau, one end whereof is pivoted upon the wrist-pin which connects parts l and 2 of crank H, while its oppositeend is pivoted upon a stud secured to rack I, which rack engages the pinion J, secured upon the vertical shaft K, whereby the rotation of shaft E,
  • a post-like worksupport, M the top of which constitutes a diminished table, Fig. 3, and is provided with a slotted throat-plate, b, through which the rough-surface feed-plate c of the feed-bar operates, and through a perforation therein the eye-pointed needle passes in the usual manner.
  • a sliding plate, cZ is also provided and fitted to slide in ways in the top of said post, as shown in Fig. 3, and so made removable for the purpose of access to the shuttle-race.
  • a circular shuttle-race, e, Fig. 2 within which the shuttle f is seated, as shown in Fig.
  • the side Nef the post M is removable, and is secured to the main portion of said post, when in position, by screws.
  • Said side N is also vertically slotted, as at h, to receive a iianged and centrallythreaded block, z', Figs.
  • the feed-bar composed of,
  • Said feed-bar is formed in two parts or members', Zand Z', for convenience of removal of the upper part from the post and adjustment thereof and its plate c relative to plate b.
  • the rough-surface plate c is also removable in order that such part which comes in immediate contact with the material being sewed may be changed for one more or less rough or sharply toothed, as may in any case be required.
  • the top part of bar Z is formed with a dovetail recess to receive the lower end of the top part, Z', which is secured therein by the locking-screw a, Figs.
  • the shuttle represented separately in Figs. 5, 6, and 7 is formed with a circular threadchamber, t, having no central bobbin or threadspindle, but is adapted to receive and carry a solid ball of thread so wound as to deliver from its center.
  • Said shuttle is provided with a perforated cap, s, which serves to keep the thread in place, and by means of its perforations, through which the thread passes, and in conjunction with the perforated spring-plate u, also serves as a tension device, whereby a uniform tension upon the shuttle-thread is secured independently of any action of the threadball within the shuttle.
  • the cap s is held and kept from rotation relative to the shuttle by means of the projectious from its periphery, which enter'corresponding recesses in the wall of the shuttle, (shown in Fig. 5,) and it is held from vertical displacement by the spring-pressure of plate u, produced by spring fv, between which plate and said cap, under a pressure produced and regulated by the adjusting-screw w, the shuttlc-thread passes with the desired tension.
  • the pressure-roller b' which is of the comcured by set-screws upon the vertical bar T, as shown fully in Fig. 9.
  • This bar is arranged to slide vertically in bearin gs in goose-neck. B, as shown in said figure, and is raised from the feed-plate ⁇ by the usual lifting-lever i', pivoted to the said bar, and acting upon the lower bearing of goose-neck B.
  • this lever When this lever is released the requisite depressing force is exerted upon bar T by the spring U, the front end of which acts upon a stirrnp, la-secured upon the bar by a set-screw, as shown in Fig. 9.
  • the coinbination of an elevated work-supporting post, M having in the head thereof a shuttle-race, e, of a rotative shuttle, j', a ,feedbar, l, a shuttle-driver, L, an actuating-shaft,V E, and intermediate devices for operating such shuttlc-driver and feed-bar, substantially as specitied.
  • adjustable feed-bar supported by and operated from below such post by means substantially as described, and a presser-foot, b arranged and operated above such post, all substantially as specified.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Sewing Machines And Sewing (AREA)

Description

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D. WHITTEMORE. Sewing-Machine. l No. 217,184. Patented July 1, 1879.
NAFETERS. PHOTO-L THOGRAPHER WASHINGTON D C UNITED STATES PATENT OEEIcE.
DAVID WHITTEMORE, OF QUINGY, MASSACHUSETTS, ASSIGNOR TO WALTER L. WHITTEMORE, OF SAME PLACE.
IMPROVEMENT IN SEWING-MACHINES.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 217,184, dated July 1, 1879; application iiled January 28, 1879.
" To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, DAVID WHITTEMORE, of Quincy, in the county .of Norfolk and State of Massachusetts, have invented a new and useful Improvement in Sewing-Machines, which invention is fully set f'orth in the following specication, reference being had to the accompanying drawings.
My invention relates to improvements in that kind of sewing-machines which are constructed With an upright work-supporting post, the top of which forms a diminutive table at a considerable elevation above the general level of the bed of the machine, and around which a clear space is left, in which work that is doubled or folded into irregular `form may be permitted to overhang the post and lie freely around the same below the plane of its top, While that portion which is being sewed lies horizontally upon the work-plate on the top of the post, such elevated and diminished supporting surface enabling the operator to stitch certain kinds of work of a folded, hollow, or tubular character with greater facility and less liability to deface and injure the goods thus being worked upon from undue doubling and pressure in the process of stitching, such as an ordinary fiat table would necessitate.
Machines constructed with an elevated post and employedfor stitchin gleather with a waxed thread, forming a chain-stitch, have been long in use, as shown in the patent granted to David Haskell August 28, 1860, and machines have been formed with a post of diminutive size for glove-sewing, with a shuttle therein, and having a feed mechanism operated from above, and performing the double duty of a pressenfoot and feeding device.
The object of my invention is to produce a shuttle or lock stitch in connection with a work-supporting post and mechanism adapted to dry-thread stitching, and a class of work for which neither of said machines are adapted, or for which they Acan be successfully employed; and my invention consists in so constructing such post as to support in its top part, in a circular recessed race, a rotative shuttle for carrying a second thread and passing the same through loops formed of the upper or needle thread, and combining with such post and shuttle a shuttle-driver and feed mechanism, both of which are operated from beneath the post 5 also, in combining with such post, shuttle, and feeding device so arranged, a presser-foot operated from above to act upon the material being sewed, and in conjunction with the feeding device; also, in the peculiar construction and arrangement of the feed-lever and its combination with coacting parts, and in the peculiar construction of the `shuttle and 4its combination with coaeting parts.
In the accompanying drawings, Figure l is aside elevation of a sewing-machine embodying my improvements. Fig. 2 is a detached vertical section taken through the axis of the vertical shaft which drives the shuttle, and in the direction indicated by line m, Figs. l and ll. Fig. 3 is a top view of the work-support ing post with the sliding work-plate removed to disclose the shuttle in its circular raceway. Fig. 4 is an enlarged vertical section taken on the line indicated by line z z, Figs. l and l1, and as viewed from the left in said Fig. l. Fig. 5 is a top or plan View of my improved shuttle with the perforated thread-retaining cap removed. Fig. 6 is a plan view of said cap. Fig. 7 is an edge elevation of the shuttle, the top, as shown in Fig. 5, being shown at the right in this figure. Fig. S is a detached under-side or inverted plan view, showing the relative positions, arrangement, and connections of the driving-shaft and the short auxiliary shaft, the crank and pitman, the rack and pinion, the feed-lever, and the cam and pin on the short shaft that actuates such lever. Fig. 9 is a detached elevation taken as viewed from the left in Fig. 1, and showin g the presserfoot and its bar, the means of actuating and adjusting the same, andthe adjacent parts of the machine. Fig. 10 is a detached top or plan view, showing the front portion of the goose-neck, the needle-actuatin g lever, the needle and presser-,foot bars, the presser-footdepressing spring, and its adjusting device. Fig. llis a horizontal transverse section taken through post M, the f'eedlever, and shuttledriver on the line indicated byline y y, Fig. 4.
In these figures, A represents the bed of the machine. B is the goose-neck, upon which is pivoted the lever C for operating the needlebar D. Said neck also supports the usual presser-foot, take-up, thread-guides, and tension devices, which, so far as they are material to my invention, will be described in their order.
Beneath the bed A the driving-shaft E is journaled in bearings a a, and carries upon its outer end the belt-pulleys and balance-wheel F, also an eccentric, which operates, through pitman Gr, the lever C.
At the opposite end of the driving-shaft is a crank, H., part l of which is secured or formed upon the short auxiliary shaft c', while part 2 of such crank is formed upon a sleeve, a', which is secured upon shaft E by set-screws, as shown in Figs. 2 and 8.
H is a pitmau, one end whereof is pivoted upon the wrist-pin which connects parts l and 2 of crank H, while its oppositeend is pivoted upon a stud secured to rack I, which rack engages the pinion J, secured upon the vertical shaft K, whereby the rotation of shaft E,
acting through its crank H, pitman H', and
rack I, which latter slides in fixed ways, will produce a reciprocating rotary movement of pinion J and of the shaft K, to which it is secured, for the purpose of actuating the shuttle through its driver, in the manner to be described.
Upon the bed A is erected a post-like worksupport, M, the top of which constitutes a diminished table, Fig. 3, and is provided with a slotted throat-plate, b, through which the rough-surface feed-plate c of the feed-bar operates, and through a perforation therein the eye-pointed needle passes in the usual manner. A sliding plate, cZ, is also provided and fitted to slide in ways in the top of said post, as shown in Fig. 3, and so made removable for the purpose of access to the shuttle-race. In the top of said post is a circular shuttle-race, e, Fig. 2, within which the shuttle f is seated, as shown in Fig. 3, and is actuated by the driver L, which latter is operated through the shaft K, as already stated, the depending shaft or stem of said driver being centrally inserted and' secured in the head of shaft K, as shown in Fig. 2, for convenience of assembling or removal of said parts. The side Nef the post M is removable, and is secured to the main portion of said post, when in position, by screws. Said side N is also vertically slotted, as at h, to receive a iianged and centrallythreaded block, z', Figs. 2 and 4, through which' a screw-stud, j', headed at its inner end, passes outward through a slot, j, in the part Z of the feed-bar, such stud serving as an adjustable fulcrum, upon which said bar rocks and by which the throw of its upper feeding-surface c is regulated. parts Z and Z', is reciprocated vertically by a cam or eccentric, q, secured upon shaft c', and acting against a shoulder, tZ, on the back side of part Z. (See Fig. 2, and indicated by dotted lines in Fig. 4.) A short pin, P, Figs. 2,
The feed-bar, composed of,
4, 8, secured eccentrically in shaft o', and act-l ing in slot n in the lower end of the feed-lever, serves Yto impart to suchend of the lever a horizontal vibratory movement; and as the pivotal stud j is, by means of the lock-nutO and block Z, adjusted higher or lower relative to pin P and the toothed feed-plate c, the length of the feed-movement of said plate will be accordingly varied. A coiled spring, 7c, secured at its upper end to the feed-bar and at its lower end to plate N, insures the constant lcontactof shoulder d of the bar with cam q. Said feed-bar is formed in two parts or members', Zand Z', for convenience of removal of the upper part from the post and adjustment thereof and its plate c relative to plate b. The rough-surface plate c is also removable in order that such part which comes in immediate contact with the material being sewed may be changed for one more or less rough or sharply toothed, as may in any case be required. The top part of bar Z is formed with a dovetail recess to receive the lower end of the top part, Z', which is secured therein by the locking-screw a, Figs. 4t and 11, and in the lower end of part Z is threaded a screw, m, the turning of which in or out to the requisite degree gages or graduates the depth to which part Z' enters the recess in part Z, and consequently regulates the position of its roughsurface plate c relative to the upper face of the work-plate b. This feed-bar, by the operation of the mechanism described, performs the part of the well-known four-motion feed.
The shuttle represented separately in Figs. 5, 6, and 7 is formed with a circular threadchamber, t, having no central bobbin or threadspindle, but is adapted to receive and carry a solid ball of thread so wound as to deliver from its center. Said shuttle is provided with a perforated cap, s, which serves to keep the thread in place, and by means of its perforations, through which the thread passes, and in conjunction with the perforated spring-plate u, also serves as a tension device, whereby a uniform tension upon the shuttle-thread is secured independently of any action of the threadball within the shuttle. v
The cap s is held and kept from rotation relative to the shuttle by means of the projectious from its periphery, which enter'corresponding recesses in the wall of the shuttle, (shown in Fig. 5,) and it is held from vertical displacement by the spring-pressure of plate u, produced by spring fv, between which plate and said cap, under a pressure produced and regulated by the adjusting-screw w, the shuttlc-thread passes with the desired tension. By this construction of a shuttle audits selfcontained tension devices, independent of a bobbin or threadholder, the constantly-varying quantity of thread within the shuttle will in no degree affect the uniformity and perfect working of the thread-tension.'
The pressure-roller b', which is of the comcured by set-screws upon the vertical bar T, as shown fully in Fig. 9. This bar is arranged to slide vertically in bearin gs in goose-neck. B, as shown in said figure, and is raised from the feed-plate` by the usual lifting-lever i', pivoted to the said bar, and acting upon the lower bearing of goose-neck B. When this lever is released the requisite depressing force is exerted upon bar T by the spring U, the front end of which acts upon a stirrnp, la-secured upon the bar by a set-screw, as shown in Fig. 9. The back end of said spring rests upon the upper side of a lug, g', formed upon the goose-neck, and the requisite adjustment of the force to be exerted by said spring upon said bar is produced by screw c', threaded in lug f', and which screw, when turned down, acts directly upon the upper side of spring U, thereby increasing its pressure upon the barT through the stirrup 71,'. t
I claim as my invention- 1. In a lock-stitch sewing-machine, the coinbination of an elevated work-supporting post, M, having in the head thereof a shuttle-race, e, of a rotative shuttle, j', a ,feedbar, l, a shuttle-driver, L, an actuating-shaft,V E, and intermediate devices for operating such shuttlc-driver and feed-bar, substantially as specitied. Y
adjustable feed-bar, supported by and operated from below such post by means substantially as described, and a presser-foot, b arranged and operated above such post, all substantially as specified.
3. In combination, the recessed post M, with its removable side N, having slot Il, and the feed-bar l, having slot j, the flanged stud screw-stud j, and securing-nut O, all substantially as specied.
4. In a sewing-machine feed-bar, the combination, with part l, having the longitudinal slot j, of the part l', adjustably seated in part l, and the locking-screw a and adjustingscrew m, all substantially as specified.
5. The shuttle f, chambered as described, and provided with the perforated cap s, the spring-plate u, the spring c, and adjustingscrew w, all substantially as specified.
D. VHITTEMORIL Witnesses EUGENE HUMPHREY, Snr/1L. F. HOWARD.
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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20080318176A1 (en) * 2005-08-05 2008-12-25 Kubicek Chris A Fuel element for melting plate candle assembly

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20080318176A1 (en) * 2005-08-05 2008-12-25 Kubicek Chris A Fuel element for melting plate candle assembly

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