US2177260A - Apparatus for and a method of making coils - Google Patents

Apparatus for and a method of making coils Download PDF

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US2177260A
US2177260A US147912A US14791237A US2177260A US 2177260 A US2177260 A US 2177260A US 147912 A US147912 A US 147912A US 14791237 A US14791237 A US 14791237A US 2177260 A US2177260 A US 2177260A
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strand
winding
coil
wound
turns
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US147912A
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Herbert W Laube
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AT&T Corp
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Western Electric Co Inc
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01FMAGNETS; INDUCTANCES; TRANSFORMERS; SELECTION OF MATERIALS FOR THEIR MAGNETIC PROPERTIES
    • H01F41/00Apparatus or processes specially adapted for manufacturing or assembling magnets, inductances or transformers; Apparatus or processes specially adapted for manufacturing materials characterised by their magnetic properties
    • H01F41/02Apparatus or processes specially adapted for manufacturing or assembling magnets, inductances or transformers; Apparatus or processes specially adapted for manufacturing materials characterised by their magnetic properties for manufacturing cores, coils, or magnets
    • H01F41/04Apparatus or processes specially adapted for manufacturing or assembling magnets, inductances or transformers; Apparatus or processes specially adapted for manufacturing materials characterised by their magnetic properties for manufacturing cores, coils, or magnets for manufacturing coils
    • H01F41/06Coil winding
    • H01F41/071Winding coils of special form
    • H01F41/074Winding flat coils
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S242/00Winding, tensioning, or guiding
    • Y10S242/02Narrow fabric winding apparatus
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/49002Electrical device making
    • Y10T29/4902Electromagnet, transformer or inductor
    • Y10T29/49071Electromagnet, transformer or inductor by winding or coiling

Definitions

  • INVEN TOR- HJV. LA 085 A 7' TORNE Y Patented Oct. 24, 1939 UNITED STATES APPARATUS FOR AND A METHOD OF MAKIN G COILS Herbert W. Laube, Cranford, N. J., assignor to Western Electric Company, Incorporated, New York, N. Y., a corporation of New York Application June 12, 1937, Serial No. 147,912
  • This invention relates to apparatus for and a method of making coils and more particularly to apparatus for and a method of winding and assembling flat spiral coils of wire.
  • coils of insulated wire comprising a coplanar plurality of turns arranged in single layered flat spirals.
  • Such coils may be useful, for example, as auxiliary windings to be associated withtransformers used in various types of communications apparatus.
  • An object of .the present invention is to produce a simple, convenient and accurately functioning apparatus or device for winding strand into a coil having a plurality of turns arranged coplanarly in a fiat spiral.
  • an apparatus in an apparatus may comprise a rotatable winding member having means to fasten one end of a strand thereto to be wound thereon, guiding means to force the successive coils as wound to lie in coplanar rela- 35 tion, and means to tension the strand being wound.
  • a method in a method may comprise steps .of winding a strand in a flat spiral on a substantially flat supporting member, applying an adhesive coated coil 30 base member to the spiral, compressing the coil base member and the spiral on the supporting member, and allowing the adhesive to set.
  • Fig. 1 is a broken view in front elevation of an apparatus construction in accordance with the invention
  • Fig. 2 is a broken view, slightly enlarged, in right side elevation of the upper portion of Fig. 1 45 with the tension device bracket removed;
  • Fig. 3 is a' detail of the tension device in side elevation
  • Fig. 4 is an exploded view in elevation of the drying clamp as associated with the apparatus
  • Fig. 5 is a plan view of a coil as completed.
  • a body member 20 is stationarily supported in any suitable manner not shown, and carries a.
  • a driving pin 25 is mounted in the upper surface of the table near its periphery and stands up above the table.
  • a bracket 30 is pivotably and slidably secured by a thumbscrew 3
  • the bracket 30 may conveniently con- 20 sists of a pair of metal strips, as shown, secured together by welding, riveting or the like and having a common slot 32 for the passage of the thumbscrew 3
  • the two component strips are bent over at a right angle, spaced apart and perforated to slidably support a. vertical plunger rod 35 having apressure pad 30 attached to its bottom end.
  • This pressure pad may conveniently consist of a metal plate 36 secured to the end of the rod 35-and a felt pad 31 cemented or otherwise attached to the under side of the plate 36.
  • the plate 36 and pad 31 are 35 arcuately concave at the side nearest the shaft 2
  • a second bracket 40 rigidly secured to the body 20 has a flat upper surface coplanar with and spaced conveniently from the, top surface of,the table 24.
  • and 42 is resiliently clamped down on the upper surface of the bracket 40 by a screw 43 passing freely through central perforations in the disks and entering a correspondingly threaded '50 bore in the bracket 40.
  • serves to press the discs together with a force adjustable by means of the screw 5 3.
  • a wedge member ll mounted on the bracket lll enters between the disks 4
  • a strand ill to be wound, drawn from a supply thereof not shown is threaded between the disks 4
  • the strand thus passesthrough a more or less triangular space defined by the disks and the screw and thus tends to be constrained to remain between the disks.
  • is placed on the top surface of the table 40.
  • This laten is a flat disk of suitable material, e. g.
  • vulcanized fibre molded artificial resin or the like, of size appropriate to the diameter of the coil to be wound, having a notch or slot therein to receive the driving pin 25, and also formed with a perforation or radial slot 52 giving access from the top of the platen to the passage 26.
  • the end of the strand is drawn from the tension disks 4i and 42 over the top surface of the platen, down through the slot 52 and the passage 26, and isjammed under the clamp 21 to be held thereby.
  • is then driven in rotation. This winds the strand 5! about the shaft 2
  • a suitable mode of proceeding further is the following.
  • the desired number of turns having been wound, the shaft is stopped.
  • the bracket 30 is then raised and swung down, thus carrying the pad 81 and its supports out of the way.
  • a laminar annulus 80 of suitable material such as paper, cloth or the like, coated on its under side only with adhesive material, is slipped down over the top of the shaft II to lie on the newly wound spiral coil with its adhesive side resting on the coils.
  • the upper end of the shaft II is preferably slightly tapered, as shown, to facilitate this and the subsequent step in the process.
  • annular block ill whose central aperture is formed and dimensioned to fit down snugly but not tightly over the upper end of the shaft, is
  • the block I0 is provided with spring catches H, I2; and the block I0, its
  • , wound coil, annulus 80 and block 10 may now be removed upwardly from the apparatus and set aside or treated to dry the adhesive. Another platen may then be placed on the table 24 and the entire operation repeated to make another coil.
  • the platen When the adhesive is dry, the platen is pulled axially away from the block 10, the catches being held back to permit this.
  • the coil, now-mounted on the annulus as a base, may then be slipped out laterally under the catches and appears as the finished product shown in Fig. 5.
  • a method of making a coil which method comprises the steps of winding a strand into a plurality of substantially coplanar spiral turns upon a supporting member having a slightly conically dished convex surface which aids to prevent successive turns of winding from overriding previous turns, applying an adhesive coated.
  • annular base member to the convex side of the substantially coplanar group of turns, applying a compression member to the base member, compressing the wound coil and the base member between the supporting member and the compression member, and allowing the adhesive to set.
  • a method of making a coil which method comprises the steps of winding upon a supporting member a strand into a group of substantially coplanar spiral turns having a convex side, applying a retaining member over theturns of strand while being wound, removing the retaining member, applying an adhesive coated annular base member to the convex side of the substantially coplanar group of turns, compressing the wound spiral and the base member, and allowing the adhesive to set.
  • -A method of making a coil, which method comprises the steps of winding a strand into a plurality of substantially coplanar spiral turns upon a supporting member having a slightly conically dished convex surface which aids to prevent successive turns of winding from overriding previous turns, applying a retaining member over the turns of strand while being wound, removing the retaining member, applying an adhesive coated it base member to the wound turns while still upon the supporting surface.
  • An apparatus for winding a coil having a substantially fiat spiral winding which apparatus comprises a rotatable support having a substantially flat but slightly conically convexly dished supporting surface transverse to the axis of rotation, means on the support to secure one end of a strand thereto for winding thereon, and means to maintain the strand in contact with the supporting surface while being wound to cause successive turns of strand to lie upon the surface in substantially coplanar but slightly dished spiral relation.
  • An apparatus for winding a coil having a substantially flat spiral winding which apparatus comprises a rotatable support having a substantially flat but slightly conically convexly dished supporting surface transverse to the axis of rotation, means on the support to secure one end of a strand thereto for winding thereon, means to maintain the strandin contact with the supporting surfacewhile being wound to cause successive turns of strand to-lie upon the surface in substantially coplanar but slightly dished spiral relation, an adhesive base member for securing the turns against relative movement, and means to compress the wound coil and base member.
  • An apparatus for winding a coil having a substantially flat spiral winding which apparatus comprises a stationary body, a rotatable shaft mounted therein, a winding table on the shaft and rotatable therewith, a removable platen on the table and rotatable therewith and having a substantially flat but slightly conically convexly dished strand supporting surface transverse to the axis of rotation, and a strand retaining member mounted on the body to coact with the platen to force a strand being wound thereon to lie in substantially coplanar but slightly conically convexly dished consecutive spiral turns upon the supporting surface.
  • a strand supporting member having a slightly conically convexly dished surface for supporting a strand
  • a strand supporting member having a slightly conically convexly dished surface for supporting a strand
  • a strand supporting member having a slightly conically convexly dished surface for supporting a strand being wound and causing each successive turn of the strand to lie with its axis beyond the plane of the axis of its previous turn adjacent the member, and means for rotating the member.
  • a strand supporting member having a slightly conically convexly dished surface for supporting a strand being wound and causing each successive turn of the strand to lie with its axis beyond the plane of the axis of its previous turn adjacent the member, means for rotating the member, and means for securing the turns of the coil against displacement.
  • a strand supporting member having a slightly conically convexly dished surface for supporting a strand being wound and causing each successive turn of the strand to lie with its axis beyond the plane of the axis of its previous turn adjacent the member, means for applying a predetermined tension to the strand to cause the turns to build one upon.

Description

Oct. 24, 1939. w. LAUBE 7,2
APPARATUS FOR AND A METHOD'OF MAKING cons Filed June 12 19:57
INVEN TOR- HJV. LA 085 A 7' TORNE Y Patented Oct. 24, 1939 UNITED STATES APPARATUS FOR AND A METHOD OF MAKIN G COILS Herbert W. Laube, Cranford, N. J., assignor to Western Electric Company, Incorporated, New York, N. Y., a corporation of New York Application June 12, 1937, Serial No. 147,912
12 Claims.
This invention relates to apparatus for and a method of making coils and more particularly to apparatus for and a method of winding and assembling flat spiral coils of wire.
For some purposes and particularly for use in certain electrical devices used in the communications arts it is desirable to have coils of insulated wire comprising a coplanar plurality of turns arranged in single layered flat spirals.
Such coils may be useful, for example, as auxiliary windings to be associated withtransformers used in various types of communications apparatus.
An object of .the present invention is to produce a simple, convenient and accurately functioning apparatus or device for winding strand into a coil having a plurality of turns arranged coplanarly in a fiat spiral.
With the above and other objects in view one embodiment of the invention in an apparatus may comprise a rotatable winding member having means to fasten one end of a strand thereto to be wound thereon, guiding means to force the successive coils as wound to lie in coplanar rela- 35 tion, and means to tension the strand being wound. So also one embodiment of the invention in a method may comprise steps .of winding a strand in a flat spiral on a substantially flat supporting member, applying an adhesive coated coil 30 base member to the spiral, compressing the coil base member and the spiral on the supporting member, and allowing the adhesive to set.
Other objects and features of the invention will appear from the following detailed descrip- 35 tion of one embodiment thereof taken in connection with the accompanying drawing in which the same reference numerals are applied to identical parts in the several figures and in which- Fig. 1 is a broken view in front elevation of an apparatus construction in accordance with the invention;
Fig. 2 is a broken view, slightly enlarged, in right side elevation of the upper portion of Fig. 1 45 with the tension device bracket removed;
Fig. 3 is a' detail of the tension device in side elevation;
Fig. 4 is an exploded view in elevation of the drying clamp as associated with the apparatus,
to and Fig. 5 is a plan view of a coil as completed.
In the embodiment of the invention herein disclosed, a body member 20 is stationarily supported in any suitable manner not shown, and carries a.
"5 shaft 2| Journalled to be rotatable therein. A
bevel gear 22 secured to the lower end of the shaft affords means for driving the shaft by power means not shown. A winding table 24, in the form of a fiat axially perforated disk, is rigidly mounted on the shaft above the body 20 to .5 rotate with'the shaft. A driving pin 25 is mounted in the upper surface of the table near its periphery and stands up above the table. There is also a vertical perforation through the table or notch in the wall of the axial perforation, numl0 bored 26; and a spring clip 21 is secured against the under face of the table near the perforation 26.
A bracket 30 is pivotably and slidably secured by a thumbscrew 3| to the body 20 to be rotatable Illv on the body 20, from the vertical position shown in Fig. l, counterclockwise to the left, 90 or more or less as convenient, and to be simultaneously slidably adjustable, longitudinally of itself, on the body. The bracket 30 may conveniently con- 20 sists of a pair of metal strips, as shown, secured together by welding, riveting or the like and having a common slot 32 for the passage of the thumbscrew 3| which is mounted in the body 20. Stops 33 and 34 are secured to the body toposi- 25 tion the bracket accurately in its vertical position. At the upper end of the bracket 30, the two component strips are bent over at a right angle, spaced apart and perforated to slidably support a. vertical plunger rod 35 having apressure pad 30 attached to its bottom end. This pressure pad may conveniently consist of a metal plate 36 secured to the end of the rod 35-and a felt pad 31 cemented or otherwise attached to the under side of the plate 36. The plate 36 and pad 31 are 35 arcuately concave at the side nearest the shaft 2| to press against the shaft when thebracket 30 is vertical and so be prevented from rotation on or with the rod 35. A helical compression spring 38 surrounding the rod 35 between the plate 36 4 and the underside of the lower rod support 39, urges the pad downwardly toward the table 24.
A second bracket 40 rigidly secured to the body 20 has a flat upper surface coplanar with and spaced conveniently from the, top surface of,the table 24. A pair of mutually abutted tension disks 4| and 42 is resiliently clamped down on the upper surface of the bracket 40 by a screw 43 passing freely through central perforations in the disks and entering a correspondingly threaded '50 bore in the bracket 40. A helical compression spring 44 surrounding the screw between the under side of the screw head and the top of the upper disk 4| serves to press the discs together with a force adjustable by means of the screw 5 3. A wedge member ll mounted on the bracket lll enters between the disks 4| and 42 at one side and serves to tilt the upper disk ii on the lower disk 42.
In operation a strand ill to be wound, drawn from a supply thereof not shown is threaded between the disks 4| and l! on the opposite side of the screw 43 from the wedge 45. The strand thus passesthrough a more or less triangular space defined by the disks and the screw and thus tends to be constrained to remain between the disks. A winding spool head or platen 5| is placed on the top surface of the table 40. This laten is a flat disk of suitable material, e. g. vulcanized fibre, molded artificial resin or the like, of size appropriate to the diameter of the coil to be wound, having a notch or slot therein to receive the driving pin 25, and also formed with a perforation or radial slot 52 giving access from the top of the platen to the passage 26. The end of the strand is drawn from the tension disks 4i and 42 over the top surface of the platen, down through the slot 52 and the passage 26, and isjammed under the clamp 21 to be held thereby.
During all the preceding preparation, the bracket 30 has been down in the dotted line position of Fig. 1. This bracket is now swung up into the vertical fullline position of Fig. 1 and is drawn downwardly until the felt pad 31 presses against the upper surface of the platen and the bracket is locked in place by the thumbscrew ii.
The shaft 2| is then driven in rotation. This winds the strand 5!! about the shaft 2| as a mandrel; and, since the strand leads between the platen and the pad, the successive coils are forced to lie in a flat spiral on the platen. To-assist in assuring this effect, it may be preferable to form the upper surface-of the platen as a wide angled convex cone frustum as indicated in Figs. 2 and 4.
When the predetermined number of turns has been wound, the rotation of the shaft is stopped. The strand may now be severed between the platen and the tension disks, if desired, and the wound coil removed. However, without further means to maintain the turns in relative position it is not easily practicable to remove the coil without destroying its desired character.
A suitable mode of proceeding further is the following. The desired number of turns having been wound, the shaft is stopped. The bracket 30 is then raised and swung down, thus carrying the pad 81 and its supports out of the way. A laminar annulus 80 of suitable material such as paper, cloth or the like, coated on its under side only with adhesive material, is slipped down over the top of the shaft II to lie on the newly wound spiral coil with its adhesive side resting on the coils. The upper end of the shaft II is preferably slightly tapered, as shown, to facilitate this and the subsequent step in the process.
An annular block ill, whose central aperture is formed and dimensioned to fit down snugly but not tightly over the upper end of the shaft, is
then slipped over the shaft and pressed down to rest on the annulus III. The block I0 is provided with spring catches H, I2; and the block I0, its
and hold it firmly against the block thereby lightly compressing the coil and its superimposed annulus. The entire temporary assembly of platen 5|, wound coil, annulus 80 and block 10 may now be removed upwardly from the apparatus and set aside or treated to dry the adhesive. Another platen may then be placed on the table 24 and the entire operation repeated to make another coil.
When the adhesive is dry, the platen is pulled axially away from the block 10, the catches being held back to permit this. The coil, now-mounted on the annulus as a base, may then be slipped out laterally under the catches and appears as the finished product shown in Fig. 5.
While the coil as shown and described has only one uniplanar spiral lamina of winding, obviously the strand may be carried back to the shaft and another spiral wound beside the first. This may be repeated ifdesired to make a coil having as many such spiral windings in laterally abutted relation as may be desired. Obviously also, laminae may be intercalated as desired be tween successive spirals. The only change required in the apparatus disclosed, is in the length of the catches H and 12.
The embodiment of the invention herein disclosed is only illustrative and may be modified and departed from in many ways without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as pointed out in and limited solely by the appended claims.
What is claimed is:
1. A method of making a coil, which method comprises the steps of winding a strand into a plurality of substantially coplanar spiral turns upon a supporting member having a slightly conically dished convex surface which aids to prevent successive turns of winding from overriding previous turns, applying an adhesive coated. annular base member to the convex side of the substantially coplanar group of turns, applying a compression member to the base member, compressing the wound coil and the base member between the supporting member and the compression member, and allowing the adhesive to set.
2. A method of making a coil, which method comprises the steps of winding upon a supporting member a strand into a group of substantially coplanar spiral turns having a convex side, applying a retaining member over theturns of strand while being wound, removing the retaining member, applying an adhesive coated annular base member to the convex side of the substantially coplanar group of turns, compressing the wound spiral and the base member, and allowing the adhesive to set.
3. -A. method of making a coil, which method comprises the steps of winding a strand into a plurality of substantially coplanar spiral turns upon a supporting member having a slightly conically dished convex surface which aids to prevent successive turns of winding from overriding previous turns, applying a retaining member over the turns of strand while being wound, removing the retaining member, applying an adhesive coated it base member to the wound turns while still upon the supporting surface.
5. An apparatus for winding a coil having a substantially fiat spiral winding, which apparatus comprises a rotatable support having a substantially flat but slightly conically convexly dished supporting surface transverse to the axis of rotation, means on the support to secure one end of a strand thereto for winding thereon, and means to maintain the strand in contact with the supporting surface while being wound to cause successive turns of strand to lie upon the surface in substantially coplanar but slightly dished spiral relation.
6. An apparatus for winding a coil having a substantially flat spiral winding, which apparatus comprises a rotatable support having a substantially flat but slightly conically convexly dished supporting surface transverse to the axis of rotation, means on the support to secure one end of a strand thereto for winding thereon, means to maintain the strandin contact with the supporting surfacewhile being wound to cause successive turns of strand to-lie upon the surface in substantially coplanar but slightly dished spiral relation, an adhesive base member for securing the turns against relative movement, and means to compress the wound coil and base member.
7. An apparatus for winding a coil having a substantially flat spiral winding, which apparatus comprises a stationary body, a rotatable shaft mounted therein, a winding table on the shaft and rotatable therewith, a removable platen on the table and rotatable therewith and having a substantially flat but slightly conically convexly dished strand supporting surface transverse to the axis of rotation, and a strand retaining member mounted on the body to coact with the platen to force a strand being wound thereon to lie in substantially coplanar but slightly conically convexly dished consecutive spiral turns upon the supporting surface.
8. In an apparatus for winding a coil, a strand supporting member having a slightly conically convexly dished surface for supporting a strand,
and means to form a spiral winding of strand h material on the dished surface.
9. In an apparatus for winding a coil having a substantially flat spiral winding, a strand supporting member having a slightly conically convexly dished surface for supporting a strand;
being wound in combination with means to retain consecutive substantially coplanar spiral turns of strand in relative position upon the surface.
10. In an apparatus for winding a coil having a substantially flat spiral winding, a strand supporting member having a slightly conically convexly dished surface for supporting a strand being wound and causing each successive turn of the strand to lie with its axis beyond the plane of the axis of its previous turn adjacent the member, and means for rotating the member.
11. In an apparatus for winding a coil having a substantially flat spiral winding, a strand supporting member having a slightly conically convexly dished surface for supporting a strand being wound and causing each successive turn of the strand to lie with its axis beyond the plane of the axis of its previous turn adjacent the member, means for rotating the member, and means for securing the turns of the coil against displacement.
12. In an apparatus for winding a coil having a substantially flat spiral winding, a strand supporting member having a slightly conically convexly dished surface for supporting a strand being wound and causing each successive turn of the strand to lie with its axis beyond the plane of the axis of its previous turn adjacent the member, means for applying a predetermined tension to the strand to cause the turns to build one upon.
the other, and means for rotating the member. HERBERT W. LAUBE.
US147912A 1937-06-12 1937-06-12 Apparatus for and a method of making coils Expired - Lifetime US2177260A (en)

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Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2489867A (en) * 1946-06-13 1949-11-29 Belmont Radio Corp Method for making electrical coils
US2505104A (en) * 1946-06-13 1950-04-25 Belmont Radio Corp Method of making electrical coils
US2511897A (en) * 1950-06-20 Inductance device
US2656873A (en) * 1949-05-02 1953-10-27 Minnesota Mining & Mfg Process and apparatus for producing glass fibrous tubes
US2850709A (en) * 1954-04-28 1958-09-02 Int Standard Electric Corp High frequency electric transformers
US2978005A (en) * 1955-12-29 1961-04-04 Illinois Tool Works Apparatus for winding and mounting induction coils
US3020627A (en) * 1956-07-06 1962-02-13 Northrop Corp Coil-fabricating method
US3145759A (en) * 1959-06-11 1964-08-25 Lufkin Rule Co Apparatus for making power springs
US3417466A (en) * 1965-05-17 1968-12-24 Westinghouse Electric Corp Method of making a winding for an electrical inductive apparatus
US3652364A (en) * 1969-09-30 1972-03-28 Frank F Ali Cartridge winding machine
US3737990A (en) * 1971-04-12 1973-06-12 Boeing Co Method of making a coil for an electromagnetic high energy impact apparatus
US4344807A (en) * 1978-10-23 1982-08-17 Dennesen Joseph C Spiral winding of filaments
US4387504A (en) * 1979-12-05 1983-06-14 Mavilor Systemes Machine for flats or conical windings in the form of a disc for electric motors
US5236538A (en) * 1983-08-09 1993-08-17 The Boeing Company Cone control tool for manufacturing composite shafts
WO1997012380A1 (en) * 1995-09-28 1997-04-03 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method and device for producing an arrangement comprising a carrier and an air-core coil
US6328837B1 (en) * 1997-04-21 2001-12-11 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Fiber optic accelerometer sensor and a method of constructing same

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2511897A (en) * 1950-06-20 Inductance device
US2489867A (en) * 1946-06-13 1949-11-29 Belmont Radio Corp Method for making electrical coils
US2505104A (en) * 1946-06-13 1950-04-25 Belmont Radio Corp Method of making electrical coils
US2656873A (en) * 1949-05-02 1953-10-27 Minnesota Mining & Mfg Process and apparatus for producing glass fibrous tubes
US2850709A (en) * 1954-04-28 1958-09-02 Int Standard Electric Corp High frequency electric transformers
US2978005A (en) * 1955-12-29 1961-04-04 Illinois Tool Works Apparatus for winding and mounting induction coils
US3020627A (en) * 1956-07-06 1962-02-13 Northrop Corp Coil-fabricating method
US3145759A (en) * 1959-06-11 1964-08-25 Lufkin Rule Co Apparatus for making power springs
US3417466A (en) * 1965-05-17 1968-12-24 Westinghouse Electric Corp Method of making a winding for an electrical inductive apparatus
US3652364A (en) * 1969-09-30 1972-03-28 Frank F Ali Cartridge winding machine
US3737990A (en) * 1971-04-12 1973-06-12 Boeing Co Method of making a coil for an electromagnetic high energy impact apparatus
US4344807A (en) * 1978-10-23 1982-08-17 Dennesen Joseph C Spiral winding of filaments
US4387504A (en) * 1979-12-05 1983-06-14 Mavilor Systemes Machine for flats or conical windings in the form of a disc for electric motors
US5236538A (en) * 1983-08-09 1993-08-17 The Boeing Company Cone control tool for manufacturing composite shafts
WO1997012380A1 (en) * 1995-09-28 1997-04-03 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Method and device for producing an arrangement comprising a carrier and an air-core coil
US6328837B1 (en) * 1997-04-21 2001-12-11 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Fiber optic accelerometer sensor and a method of constructing same

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