US223115A - Improvement in speaking-tube annunciators - Google Patents

Improvement in speaking-tube annunciators Download PDF

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US223115A
US223115A US223115DA US223115A US 223115 A US223115 A US 223115A US 223115D A US223115D A US 223115DA US 223115 A US223115 A US 223115A
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tube
whistle
drop
valve
speaking
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10KSOUND-PRODUCING DEVICES; METHODS OR DEVICES FOR PROTECTING AGAINST, OR FOR DAMPING, NOISE OR OTHER ACOUSTIC WAVES IN GENERAL; ACOUSTICS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • G10K11/00Methods or devices for transmitting, conducting or directing sound in general; Methods or devices for protecting against, or for damping, noise or other acoustic waves in general
    • G10K11/18Methods or devices for transmitting, conducting or directing sound
    • G10K11/22Methods or devices for transmitting, conducting or directing sound for conducting sound through hollow pipes, e.g. speaking tubes

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  • My present invention relates to speakingtube annunciators,77 so called, ior hotels and other large habitable structures containing a series ot' rooms with which communication is to be established with an oiiice common to all, such oral annunciators consisting ot a series of speaking-tubes connecting one end with the various rooms or apartments ot' the structure, and at the other assembled in a common case or tablet located in the office, each tube being employed to communicate vocal messages from such apartments to the oftice, and being combined with a suitable signal mechanism, which is operated or put in motion by the breath of the occupant passing through the tube to call the attention of the clerk or attendant in the office to the message of suoli occupant.
  • a suitable signal mechanism which is operated or put in motion by the breath of the occupant passing through the tube to call the attention of the clerk or attendant in the office to the message of suoli occupant.
  • my present annuneiator I employ a whistle,located at the office or receiving ond or the tube, as a means of imparting the desired signal, and pivot a drop in front of such whistle in such manner that the guest, in blowing the tube to call attention to his wants, sounds the whistle and lowers or displaees the drop by the air passing through the whistle.
  • I connect the receiving or ottlce end of each tube with a small chamber containing a return-orifice, through which the attendant can reply to the message through the tube, such orifice being closed from the inside by a drop-valve, while the adjacent end ot the tube is provided with a whistle and covered by a balanced valve or drop containing the number ot' the apartments with which the tube connects, the whole being so arranged that upon the occupant ot the apartment blowing in the end of the tube within the apartment occupied by him the whistle is sounded and the balanced drop is lowered, thus calling the attention of the attendant in the office to the summons, the drop being preferably so arranged with respect to the returnopening before named as in its fall to cover the latter and compel the attendant to restore such drop to its norma-l position before being able to reply to the summons.
  • the valve of the return-opening closes byits own gravity from the inside of the chamber before named, and serves to prevent escape of air while the whistle is being blown by the occupant of the apartment, and when the attendant is to reply to the summons ot such oecnpant he, of necessity, Alirst returns the drop to its nornial position, and then inserts the end of a portable mouth-piece in the return or ot'- iiee opening or end otA the tube, thereby opening the valve and preparing the way for his return-.message through the same tube, the whistle being so situated in the chamber with respect to the said return-opening and its valve that as the latter is opened by the insertion ofthe mouth-piece the valve covers to a greater ⁇ or less degree the approach to the whistle and prevents possibility of the latter being sounded as the reply of the attendant is being sent through the tube.
  • rFhe tube is shown in said ligure as communicating at its office or receiving end t with the interior or chamber B ot' a box or case, C, which is located in the case A, the chamber B having two openings, D E, in front, the uppermost one ot' which is tilled with a whistle, F, while the lowermost one is provided with a drop or tlap valve, b, pivoted above it on the insidein such manner as by its own gravity to close the openin g and prevent escape oi" air through the latter upon a current ot' air being blown through the tube c from the opposite end.
  • the whistle is located in a short horizontal pipe, c, confined within the upper part of the case C and above the mouth ot' the speakingtube a, the arrangement of the said pipe c, tube c, opening E, and valve l) being such that when the occupant of the apartment with which the tube a communicates blows within the mouth of such tube within such apartment the current of air thus set in motion through the tube closes the valve b and escapes through the whistle F, thus sounding a signal, which calls the attention of the clerk or other attendant to the fact that a message is to be delivered through the tube.
  • a short distance in front of the whistle F I dispose a drop,7 so called, the same being ⁇ a thin iiat plate, G, pivoted by a horizontal hinge, d, to the front ot' the escutcheon in front of case G, and nicely balanced in such manner as to lean lightly against and cover the opening D, through which the air escapes after passing through the whistle.
  • the escutcheon justnamed is marked I, and is shown detached on an enlarged scale, in perspective, in Figs. et and 5.
  • the escntcheonplate which is here made of such size as to tit one ot' the valve boxes or cases C, there being in this case one escutcheon for each box, is arranged, as shown in Fig. 3, to hold the case G in place, and is provided with tubular nozzles D E', which meet and form prolongations of the passages D E, hereinbeiorc referred to.
  • the drop G is placed midway between the openings D and E, in order that when it (the drop) t'alls from its upright or normal position it shall cover the opening E and necessitate its return to place before the attendant can communicate through the tube with the occupant of the apartment, it being observed that the number or designa tion ot' the apartment is inscribed upon the front of the drop, as shown in Fig. I of the drawings.
  • My purpose in providing a space, c, between the whistle and drop is to permit the current ot" air, after passing through the contracted oritice ofthe whistle, to occupy a space equal to or greater than the area of the opening D, in order to cover as large a portion as possible ofthe drop, and insure its fall.
  • a movable or portable mouth-piece (shown at H in the drawings,) which is to be deposited in a convenient place adjacent to the register, such mouth-piece consisting ct' a Hanging or concave receiving-tube, f, and a nose, g, united by an intervening liexible tube, It, the nose g being adapted to enter the opening E oi" the chamber B, and in so doing elevate the valve b in such manner as to close the approach to the whistle, as shown in Fig. 3 o't' the accompanying drawings, thereby preventing possibility of such whistle being sounded upon speaking or blowing through such opening E.
  • rIhe operation of my annunciator is briefly as follows: rIhe occupant ot' the apartment with which the tube a. communicates, desiring to communicate with the oi'lice through such tube, blows into his end ot' the tube, and the current of air thus put in motion through said tube passes through the whistle, sounds the latter, and lowers the drop, thus calling the attention otthc attendant, who seizes the mouthpiece, restores the drop to itsnormal position, and inserting the nose of such mouth-piece in the opening d, and thereby opening' communication with lthe caller through the tube, responds to his summons and receives his message through the mouth-piece as a conductor. rlhe conversation through the tube a being concluded, the mouth-piece is removed and restored to its place, the valve b in the act dropping to its seat and shutting oit' communication through the tube except by way ofthe whistle.
  • rIlhe valve b in combination with the speaking-tube, the whistle, and the openings D E, and arranged so as, when closed, to direct the current ot' air passing through the tube to the whistle, and when open to close entrance of air to the whistle from an opposite direction, and establish communication with the speaking-tube through the opening E, to

Description

J. R.`GREIGHT0N. Speaking-Tube Annunciator.
KN0. 223,115. Patented Dec. 30,1879.
UNITED STATES PATENT OEETCE.
JAMES It. OREIGHTON, OF BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS.
IMPROVEMENT IN SPEAKING-TUBE AN'NUNCIATORS.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 223, l 15, dated December 30, 1879; application tiled November .24, 1879.
To all 'whom it may concer/n:
Be it known that I, J Arms R. Ganter-Iron, of Boston, in the county of Sutl'oll; and State of Massachusetts, have invented certain Improvementsin Speaking-Tube Annunciators, of which the following is a specification.
My present invention relates to speakingtube annunciators,77 so called, ior hotels and other large habitable structures containing a series ot' rooms with which communication is to be established with an oiiice common to all, such oral annunciators consisting ot a series of speaking-tubes connecting one end with the various rooms or apartments ot' the structure, and at the other assembled in a common case or tablet located in the office, each tube being employed to communicate vocal messages from such apartments to the oftice, and being combined with a suitable signal mechanism, which is operated or put in motion by the breath of the occupant passing through the tube to call the attention of the clerk or attendant in the office to the message of suoli occupant.
Anotable instance ot the class of annunciators to which my present invention relates is shown in Letters Patent of the United States issued to myselfl on the 30th day of September, 1873, in which a nicely-balanced drop is pivoted below and leans lightly against the outlet of each tube and serves to cover such outlet, while an alarm or signal mechanism is connected with the drop in such manner that as the drop falls, by a current of air induced through the tube by the sender of the message, it puts in motion the signal mechanism, and thereby attracts the attention of the attendant.
In my present annuneiator I employ a whistle,located at the office or receiving ond or the tube, as a means of imparting the desired signal, and pivot a drop in front of such whistle in such manner that the guest, in blowing the tube to call attention to his wants, sounds the whistle and lowers or displaees the drop by the air passing through the whistle.
In carrying out the principle oil my invention in one manner in which it may be accomplished, I connect the receiving or ottlce end of each tube with a small chamber containing a return-orifice, through which the attendant can reply to the message through the tube, such orifice being closed from the inside by a drop-valve, while the adjacent end ot the tube is provided with a whistle and covered by a balanced valve or drop containing the number ot' the apartments with which the tube connects, the whole being so arranged that upon the occupant ot the apartment blowing in the end of the tube within the apartment occupied by him the whistle is sounded and the balanced drop is lowered, thus calling the attention of the attendant in the office to the summons, the drop being preferably so arranged with respect to the returnopening before named as in its fall to cover the latter and compel the attendant to restore such drop to its norma-l position before being able to reply to the summons.
The valve of the return-opening closes byits own gravity from the inside of the chamber before named, and serves to prevent escape of air while the whistle is being blown by the occupant of the apartment, and when the attendant is to reply to the summons ot such oecnpant he, of necessity, Alirst returns the drop to its nornial position, and then inserts the end of a portable mouth-piece in the return or ot'- iiee opening or end otA the tube, thereby opening the valve and preparing the way for his return-.message through the same tube, the whistle being so situated in the chamber with respect to the said return-opening and its valve that as the latter is opened by the insertion ofthe mouth-piece the valve covers to a greater `or less degree the approach to the whistle and prevents possibility of the latter being sounded as the reply of the attendant is being sent through the tube.
The drawings aceon'xpanying this specification represent in Figure 1 a front view, and
in Figs. 2 and 3 sections, ot' an annunciatorln Fig. 2 ofthe dra-wings I have shown but one tube and its attachments, since the others are simply counterparts of it. rFhe tube is shown in said ligure as communicating at its office or receiving end t with the interior or chamber B ot' a box or case, C, which is located in the case A, the chamber B having two openings, D E, in front, the uppermost one ot' which is tilled with a whistle, F, while the lowermost one is provided with a drop or tlap valve, b, pivoted above it on the insidein such manner as by its own gravity to close the openin g and prevent escape oi" air through the latter upon a current ot' air being blown through the tube c from the opposite end.
The whistle is located in a short horizontal pipe, c, confined within the upper part of the case C and above the mouth ot' the speakingtube a, the arrangement of the said pipe c, tube c, opening E, and valve l) being such that when the occupant of the apartment with which the tube a communicates blows within the mouth of such tube within such apartment the current of air thus set in motion through the tube closes the valve b and escapes through the whistle F, thus sounding a signal, which calls the attention of the clerk or other attendant to the fact that a message is to be delivered through the tube.
A short distance in front of the whistle F, I dispose a drop,7 so called, the same being` a thin iiat plate, G, pivoted by a horizontal hinge, d, to the front ot' the escutcheon in front of case G, and nicely balanced in such manner as to lean lightly against and cover the opening D, through which the air escapes after passing through the whistle.
The escutcheon justnamed is marked I, and is shown detached on an enlarged scale, in perspective, in Figs. et and 5. The escntcheonplate, which is here made of such size as to tit one ot' the valve boxes or cases C, there being in this case one escutcheon for each box, is arranged, as shown in Fig. 3, to hold the case G in place, and is provided with tubular nozzles D E', which meet and form prolongations of the passages D E, hereinbeiorc referred to.
Ihe pivot or hin ge ot' the drop G is placed midway between the openings D and E, in order that when it (the drop) t'alls from its upright or normal position it shall cover the opening E and necessitate its return to place before the attendant can communicate through the tube with the occupant of the apartment, it being observed that the number or designa tion ot' the apartment is inscribed upon the front of the drop, as shown in Fig. I of the drawings.
My purpose in providing a space, c, between the whistle and drop is to permit the current ot" air, after passing through the contracted oritice ofthe whistle, to occupy a space equal to or greater than the area of the opening D, in order to cover as large a portion as possible ofthe drop, and insure its fall.
It the drop were placed closely up to the opening ot' the whistle, the current ot' air passing through the latter would cover so small a portion oi" the area ot' the drop that sut'licient power would not be exerted upon the latter to insure its i'all; hence the intervening space, c, which permits ot' the impact with the drop oi" a body ot' air equal to that passing through the tube c.
I provide with this annunciator a movable or portable mouth-piece, (shown at H in the drawings,) which is to be deposited in a convenient place adjacent to the register, such mouth-piece consisting ct' a Hanging or concave receiving-tube, f, and a nose, g, united by an intervening liexible tube, It, the nose g being adapted to enter the opening E oi" the chamber B, and in so doing elevate the valve b in such manner as to close the approach to the whistle, as shown in Fig. 3 o't' the accompanying drawings, thereby preventing possibility of such whistle being sounded upon speaking or blowing through such opening E.
rIhe operation of my annunciator is briefly as follows: rIhe occupant ot' the apartment with which the tube a. communicates, desiring to communicate with the oi'lice through such tube, blows into his end ot' the tube, and the current of air thus put in motion through said tube passes through the whistle, sounds the latter, and lowers the drop, thus calling the attention otthc attendant, who seizes the mouthpiece, restores the drop to itsnormal position, and inserting the nose of such mouth-piece in the opening d, and thereby opening' communication with lthe caller through the tube, responds to his summons and receives his message through the mouth-piece as a conductor. rlhe conversation through the tube a being concluded, the mouth-piece is removed and restored to its place, the valve b in the act dropping to its seat and shutting oit' communication through the tube except by way ofthe whistle.
One feature of value in my present annunciator will be seen in its low cost and extreme simplicity, which obviates any danger ci' its becoming deranged or inoperative, and enables it to be put up by persons oi' ordinary intelligence, as no nice adjustment is required.
I claim- 1. rIhe combination, with the case C, or its equivalent, ot' the speaking-tube a, whistle F, opcningsD E, and valve I), under the arrangement substantially as herein described, whereby, upon blowing through such tube, the valve b is closed and the current of air directed through the whistle and the drop lowered.
2. rIlhe valve b, in combination with the speaking-tube, the whistle, and the openings D E, and arranged so as, when closed, to direct the current ot' air passing through the tube to the whistle, and when open to close entrance of air to the whistle from an opposite direction, and establish communication with the speaking-tube through the opening E, to
enable the attendant to eonversewith the caller.
3. The combination, with the Whistle-passage, the speaking-tube, and the valve closing the office end of the tube, of the portable month-piece, arranged and operating, when inserted in the tube, to open the Valve and to close the whistle-passage, substantially as set forth.
4. The Combination, with the ease C, or its equivalent, of the speaking-tube et, openings D E, Whistle F, drop G, valve b, and portable mouth-piece.
5. The combination, with the valve ease or box, of the esenteheon formed with nozzles to register with the passages in the front of lthe valve-box, and arranged to bold in place the said box in the main ease or frame.
i' JAMES R. CREIGHTON.
Witnesses:
LoUIs A. CURTIS, F. CURTIS.
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