US219621A - Improvement in rolls for horseshoe bars and blanks - Google Patents

Improvement in rolls for horseshoe bars and blanks Download PDF

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US219621A
US219621A US219621DA US219621A US 219621 A US219621 A US 219621A US 219621D A US219621D A US 219621DA US 219621 A US219621 A US 219621A
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rolls
blanks
roll
face
improvement
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B30PRESSES
    • B30BPRESSES IN GENERAL
    • B30B5/00Presses characterised by the use of pressing means other than those mentioned in the preceding groups
    • B30B5/02Presses characterised by the use of pressing means other than those mentioned in the preceding groups wherein the pressing means is in the form of a flexible element, e.g. diaphragm, urged by fluid pressure

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  • This invention relates to rolls for fullering or creasing the blanks for horseshoes, and for producing the indentations at the points in the creases where the nail-holes are to be punched, and these rolls may be employed in producing plain blanks or those having solid calks.
  • Bars and blanks have h eretofore been creased and provided with calks by rolling, and I make no claim to this, broadly, or to the employment of simple rolls for this purpose; but, by means of my improved rolls, the creases may be sunk obliquely into the face of the web, and with a varying obliquity, so as to give the proper direction to the nails at difierent parts of the hoof, all as will be more particularly hereinafter set forth.
  • Figure 1 is a front elevation of a pair of my improved rolls; and Fig. 2 is a transverse section of the same 011 a smaller scale, taken in the plane of the line wwin Fig.
  • Fig. 3 is a detached plan, full size, showing the ereaser; and Fig. 4 shows sections taken through the same at the points indicated by the lines y y and 22. Fig. 5 shows a section of the blank, taken through the crease in the web.
  • A represents a suitable frame or support for the rolls
  • B B- are the roll-mandrels, provided with fixed collars era.
  • the upper roll has hearings in boxes adapted to be adjusted vertically by means of screws 1) b, in the usual way.
  • O is the upp-r and D the lower roll.
  • the lower roll, D has two fixed side flanges, c 0, arranged perpendicular to the axis, and so as to embrace the upper die and the blank or bar, and an oblique conical face, 61, 011 which the bar or blank rests while it is undergoing the rolling operation.
  • the upper roll, 0, has a coned or beveled face, 6, arranged substantially parallel to the similarly-coned face of the roll D when both are in position. On this conical face 0 are raised the creasers f f, provided with elevations g g, to produce indentations for the nail-holes.
  • the axes of rotation of the two rolls are-substantially parallel with each other.
  • the bar to be creased is passed between them, with its upper and lower faces inclined, as will be readily understood but the creases are sunk in the face of the web obliquely with the same for the whole or a portion of their length, as will be seen at 42 in Fig. 5.
  • the plane of the inner face, j, (see Fig. 5,) of the bar or blank is kept at right angles to the plane of the upper and lower faces of the same by means of a fillet, k, Fig. 1, arranged at the re-entering angle made by the junction of one of the flanges c of the lower roll with the face d of the said die.
  • Figs.'3 and4 I have shown, on a large scale, the peculiar construction and form of the creaserf.
  • the inner face of this creaser is warped or variably inclined.
  • the face is perpendicular to the axis of the rolls, as shown in the section to the left in Fig. 4.
  • At the heel end an it is more nearly perpendicular to the face 0 of the roll, and between these extremes it varies in inclination, as will be seen.
  • This has the effect of throwing the heel-nails nearer to the outer edge of the blank than those at the toe, and also gives the nails at this point a more nearly perpendicular direction into the hoof.
  • the object of this is to give the nails, in shoeing, a depth of hold and a direction come I sponding to the peculiar shape of the hoof.
  • the hoof-wall is thicker at the toe than at the heel, and makes a more acute angle with the plane, of the sole. In deed, the walls where the heel-nails are driven are nearly vertical. This makes it important that the angles at which the nails are driven should vary in accordance with the slope-of the hoof.
  • the roll 0 may be provided with suitable recesses to form the toe and heel calks, and one or more ribs or blades h, to indicate the dividing-lines between the shoe-blanks in the bar. These may, however, be omitted in some cases.
  • conical or oblique face, d, and a fillet is, all substantially as and for the purposes set forth.

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Fluid Mechanics (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Treatment Of Fiber Materials (AREA)
  • Footwear And Its Accessory, Manufacturing Method And Apparatuses (AREA)

Description

L. G. CLAUDE. ""Rolls for Horsesh Bawwd Blanks No. 219,621. Patented Sept. 16, 1879.
'ATTESTI UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE LOUIS e. CLAUDE, on NEW YORK, n. Y., ASSIGNOR TO GEORGE H. RUssELL, OF NEWARK, N. J.
IMPROVEMENT IN ROLLS FOR HO-RSESHOE BARS AND B LANKS.
I Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 219,621, dated September 16, 1879 application filed May 14, 1879.
To all whom it may concern:
Beit known that I, LOUIS G. CLAUDE, of the city, county, and State of New York, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Rolls for Horseshoe Bars and Blanks, of which the following is a specification.
This invention relates to rolls for fullering or creasing the blanks for horseshoes, and for producing the indentations at the points in the creases where the nail-holes are to be punched, and these rolls may be employed in producing plain blanks or those having solid calks.
Bars and blanks have h eretofore been creased and provided with calks by rolling, and I make no claim to this, broadly, or to the employment of simple rolls for this purpose; but, by means of my improved rolls, the creases may be sunk obliquely into the face of the web, and with a varying obliquity, so as to give the proper direction to the nails at difierent parts of the hoof, all as will be more particularly hereinafter set forth.
In the drawings which serve to illustrate my invention, Figure 1 is a front elevation of a pair of my improved rolls; and Fig. 2 is a transverse section of the same 011 a smaller scale, taken in the plane of the line wwin Fig.
1. Fig. 3 is a detached plan, full size, showing the ereaser; and Fig. 4 shows sections taken through the same at the points indicated by the lines y y and 22. Fig. 5 shows a section of the blank, taken through the crease in the web.
A represents a suitable frame or support for the rolls, and B B- are the roll-mandrels, provided with fixed collars era. The upper roll has hearings in boxes adapted to be adjusted vertically by means of screws 1) b, in the usual way.
O is the upp-r and D the lower roll. These slide on spline: on the roll-mandrels, and are pressed firmly up to their respective fixed collars by means of tubular sleeves E E and nuts F F. The lower roll, D, has two fixed side flanges, c 0, arranged perpendicular to the axis, and so as to embrace the upper die and the blank or bar, and an oblique conical face, 61, 011 which the bar or blank rests while it is undergoing the rolling operation. The upper roll, 0, has a coned or beveled face, 6, arranged substantially parallel to the similarly-coned face of the roll D when both are in position. On this conical face 0 are raised the creasers f f, provided with elevations g g, to produce indentations for the nail-holes. The axes of rotation of the two rolls are-substantially parallel with each other.
Owing to the obliquity of the faces of the rolls, the bar to be creased is passed between them, with its upper and lower faces inclined, as will be readily understood but the creases are sunk in the face of the web obliquely with the same for the whole or a portion of their length, as will be seen at 42 in Fig. 5.
The plane of the inner face, j, (see Fig. 5,) of the bar or blank is kept at right angles to the plane of the upper and lower faces of the same by means of a fillet, k, Fig. 1, arranged at the re-entering angle made by the junction of one of the flanges c of the lower roll with the face d of the said die.
In Figs.'3 and4 I have shown, on a large scale, the peculiar construction and form of the creaserf. The inner face of this creaser is warped or variably inclined. At the toe end I of the creaser the faceis perpendicular to the axis of the rolls, as shown in the section to the left in Fig. 4. At the heel end an it is more nearly perpendicular to the face 0 of the roll, and between these extremes it varies in inclination, as will be seen. This has the effect of throwing the heel-nails nearer to the outer edge of the blank than those at the toe, and also gives the nails at this point a more nearly perpendicular direction into the hoof. The object of this is to give the nails, in shoeing, a depth of hold and a direction come I sponding to the peculiar shape of the hoof.
It is well known that the hoof-wall is thicker at the toe than at the heel, and makes a more acute angle with the plane, of the sole. In deed, the walls where the heel-nails are driven are nearly vertical. This makes it important that the angles at which the nails are driven should vary in accordance with the slope-of the hoof.
In addition to the creasers, the roll 0 may be provided with suitable recesses to form the toe and heel calks, and one or more ribs or blades h, to indicate the dividing-lines between the shoe-blanks in the bar. These may, however, be omitted in some cases.
In the drawings I have shown the roll 0 provided with two sets of creasers; but it is obvious that by increasing or reducing its diameter one or more sets may be provided thereon, as desired.
These rolls may be driven by connecting them with the bar-rolls or independently, as found most convenient. 1
Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new is- 1. The combination of the roll 0, provided with a conical or oblique face, 0, and creaser f, with the roll D, provided with flanges c 0, a
conical or oblique face, d, and a fillet, is, all substantially as and for the purposes set forth.
2. The creasing-(lief mounted on or formin g a part of the oblique or conical face of the roll 0, its inner face being in a warped plane varying in its inclination or angle with the axis of rotation from Z to m, substantially as shown in Figs. 3 and 4, and for the purposes set forth.
In witness whereof I have hereunto signed my name in the presence of two subscribing witnesses.
LoUIs e. CLAUDE.
Witnesses:
HENRY UONNETT, ARTHUR O. FRASER.
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