US2375127A - Tire - Google Patents

Tire Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2375127A
US2375127A US410183A US41018341A US2375127A US 2375127 A US2375127 A US 2375127A US 410183 A US410183 A US 410183A US 41018341 A US41018341 A US 41018341A US 2375127 A US2375127 A US 2375127A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
shoe
chamber
partition
rubber
fabrics
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
US410183A
Inventor
Bernard E Mendelsohn
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.)
B HOWARD BENSON
HOWARD BENSON B
Original Assignee
HOWARD BENSON B
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 HOWARD BENSON B filed Critical HOWARD BENSON B
Priority to US410183A priority Critical patent/US2375127A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2375127A publication Critical patent/US2375127A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60CVEHICLE TYRES; TYRE INFLATION; TYRE CHANGING; CONNECTING VALVES TO INFLATABLE ELASTIC BODIES IN GENERAL; DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS RELATED TO TYRES
    • B60C5/00Inflatable pneumatic tyres or inner tubes
    • B60C5/20Inflatable pneumatic tyres or inner tubes having multiple separate inflatable chambers

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to tire construcreinforces theshoe about the bead by the addi'-, tion, and in particular to safety tires for use on tion of the number of layers of fabric used in the motor vehicles for both air-crafts and ground partition itself. This method and construction machines. may be employed with a number of modifications.
  • the present invention has for its object the Within the inner partition is the usual inflation, over-coming of certain difliculties which contube which may be joined with the chamber structions of the prior art have been troubled through a release valve which releases under the with. desired pressure.
  • a release valve which releases under the with. desired pressure.
  • the inner wall of the their use comprises layers of fabrics 5 and rubber 6 in its
  • the present invention relates to a safety shoe side walls which is non-extensible but flexible in connection with such constructions.
  • the apand a top portion 1 ofpure rubber which is plicant has previously used a shoe in which an mounted or joined at its sides 3 and 9 to theside i air chamber is formed between the shoe itself and fabrics 5.
  • the side fabrics 5 forming the sides internal flexible but non-yielding fabric partiof the inner partition are preferably molded as tion which is anchored about the bead of the a part of the shoe in the formation of the shoe. shoe.
  • This partition because of the manner in This may be done b moulding and curing the which it is held to the shoe, permits a fairly comside fabrics 5 with the fabrics I 0 and I 0 forming plete deformation of the shoe, for instance when the sides of the shoe, some suitable material bethe machine hits a bump or comes down heavily, ing placed between the fabrics 5 and ID to prewithout putting too great a stress upon the parvent the former from adhering to the side walls tition itself. However, in some cases the conof the shoe.
  • the fabrics 5 in this way have their struction cannot be such as toallow sufficient 40 other ends molded or formed as an integral part deformation to prevent undue stresses upon the of the shoe itself.
  • the section around the base is mations are prevented without unduly stressing here referred to as the bead section. the partition. This is accomplished principally
  • the yielding po on '1 0f e inner partition by adding in the top central section in the fab may then be vulcanized or molded to the free ric partition, a yielding flexible section yielding edges of the flaps all the way around the shoe,
  • the extensible rubber piece 7 should be of concase the fabric portions of the partitions may be siderable thickness in comparison to the inner formed and molded with the ply layers of the tube l2 which rests against the inner partition shoe with their inner edges free, permitting the at its inner side.
  • the p p se O s i to p addition of the yielding section after the shoe has mit considerable pressure to be built up within been substantially completed.
  • chamber 13 formed y the inn r t e 2 tion the inner fabric partition strengthens and fore the rubber top member I will expand.
  • This valve may be of a known construction and comprises a valve stem I5 at the end of which is a piston l6 which sits against the valve seat H.
  • a spring I81 exerts a pressure between the inside of the valve seat 11 and a head l8 formed at the end of the valve stem in such .a way that the piston l6 will not be raised from its seat to permit the air to escape from the chamber I3 to the chamber 3 until the desired pressure, for instance fifteen pounds per square inch is a differential between the two chambers.
  • the valve may be installed by cementing to the fabric of the side walls, a disc 19 having a bushing 20 into which is inserted the collar element 2
  • the chamber l3 may be inflated by the valve 23 in the usual manner and as the pressure in the chamber l3 becomes sufiiciently great so that the valve- I4 opens, the external chamber becomes inflated.
  • the valve isadjusted so that it will open at a pressure less than thatrequired to expand the rubber element 1 to any great degree so that air begins to flow into the external chamber 3 before any appreciable expansion of the internal chamber occurs, and in this manner the desired ratio of chamber size between the inner and outer chamber is maintained.
  • the inner chamber will expand and fill out the entire space within the shoe. Subsequent to this air would escape from the inner chamber until its pressure was equal to the established pressure differential in which case the inner chamber would come back to its general normal size and the machine would be run under these conditions maintaining partial pressure on the tires.
  • the present arrangement also permits ready repair of the external chamber in event that a puncture occurs through the shoe wall.
  • the rubber wall of the internal partition at I may be slit and the leak readily repaired if the repairs cannot be made from the external side. If the rubber partition I is slit a new piece of rubber may be vulcanized or cemented to the piece 1 in the same manner that an inner tube might be repaired.
  • the rubber member I should of course be made of such a thickness that a stretch of the nature required, that is, approximately will not be of such a nature as to decrease the thickness of the member beyond the point where the stress is greater than that permissible under working conditions.
  • a pneumatic tire casing for motor vehicles and the like comprising an outer shell of rubber and fabric adapted to fit on the rim of a wheel and having beads adapted to be in contact with said rim, an inner casing having fabric side walls cured tosaid outer casing in said beads and an extensible yielding rubber piece forming the crown wall of said inner casing and joined at both sides to said fabric side walls.

Description

May 1', 1945.
B. E. MENDELSOHN' TIRE Filed Sept. 9,. 1941 I V In $771250? $ernay f Mab e/.2945;
gummy ##4 tin 9 n7 varying pl cords running up as high or higher prevent the air from escaping through the shoe to with-stand bursting stresses which occur in chamber 3 is formed by the partition 4 which under excessive pressures so that the fabric in thus completing the formation of the partition.
Patented May 1, i945 I I 1 UNITED STATES ATENT OFFICE d 7 2,375.127 I TIRE! Bernard E. Mendelsohn, Brookline, Mass, assignor of onehalf toB. Howard Benson, Boston, Mass. I Application September 9, 1941, Serial No. 410,183 1 Claim. 152-3391) The present invention relates to tire construcreinforces theshoe about the bead by the addi'-, tion, and in particular to safety tires for use on tion of the number of layers of fabric used in the motor vehicles for both air-crafts and ground partition itself. This method and construction machines. may be employed with a number of modifications. The present invention has for its object the Within the inner partition is the usual inflation, over-coming of certain difliculties which contube which may be joined with the chamber structions of the prior art have been troubled through a release valve which releases under the with. desired pressure. I In all vehicles, and particularly in vehicles Various other and further modificationsjmay: which bear heavy loads or'which are intended to 10 be employed 'withinthe principles of the inven'f-f be driven at high speeds, the stresses on the rubtion as generally described above, but initsprebershoes at times becomes very great. This is ferred form the invention is described below in particularly true with air craft wheels, which connection with the specification and drawing il-f while in use only for very short distances, such lustrated showing an embodiment of the same, in as taking off or landing, never-thej-less must enwhich: dure great stresses at such times, first because of The sole figure shows a radial section through the load of the machine, and secondly, because theshoe and the rim. i f taking off and landing speeds are often consider- Referring to the figure, l represents the shoe ably higher than that of the driving speed of the" which may be built up of any number of plies, ordinary automobile. In addition to this, forced depending upon the use to which theshoe' is to],
landing and imperfect landings are such as to be put. On the inner surfaceof the shoe l ,anon- I stress unduly the rubber shoes of the wheels. leak seal compound 2 of rubber or other suitable Automobile and air-craft shoes are made with material may be used. The purpose of this is to than thirty-six plies in order to be strong enough from the chamber 3. The inner wall of the their use. comprises layers of fabrics 5 and rubber 6 in its The present invention relates to a safety shoe side walls which is non-extensible but flexible in connection with such constructions. The apand a top portion 1 ofpure rubber which is plicant has previously used a shoe in which an mounted or joined at its sides 3 and 9 to theside i air chamber is formed between the shoe itself and fabrics 5. The side fabrics 5 forming the sides internal flexible but non-yielding fabric partiof the inner partition are preferably molded as tion which is anchored about the bead of the a part of the shoe in the formation of the shoe. shoe. This partition, because of the manner in This may be done b moulding and curing the which it is held to the shoe, permits a fairly comside fabrics 5 with the fabrics I 0 and I 0 forming plete deformation of the shoe, for instance when the sides of the shoe, some suitable material bethe machine hits a bump or comes down heavily, ing placed between the fabrics 5 and ID to prewithout putting too great a stress upon the parvent the former from adhering to the side walls tition itself. However, in some cases the conof the shoe. The fabrics 5 in this way have their struction cannot be such as toallow sufficient 40 other ends molded or formed as an integral part deformation to prevent undue stresses upon the of the shoe itself. extending in the form of a flap fabric partition. or apron from the bead H of the shoe when the In the present invention abnormal deformashoe is made. The section around the base is mations are prevented without unduly stressing here referred to as the bead section. the partition. This is accomplished principally The yielding po on '1 0f e inner partition by adding in the top central section in the fab may then be vulcanized or molded to the free ric partition, a yielding flexible section yielding edges of the flaps all the way around the shoe,
the partition will not be unduly strained. In this The extensible rubber piece 7 should be of concase the fabric portions of the partitions may be siderable thickness in comparison to the inner formed and molded with the ply layers of the tube l2 which rests against the inner partition shoe with their inner edges free, permitting the at its inner side. The p p se O s i to p addition of the yielding section after the shoe has mit considerable pressure to be built up within been substantially completed. In this constructh chamber 13 formed y the inn r t e 2 tion the inner fabric partition strengthens and fore the rubber top member I will expand. Ordi- This provision eliminates excessive stresses in the Side fabrics, since in the present construction when the member I stretches, the side fabrics 5 move outward with the bead as the anchor point until the fabrics 5 come in contact with the inner wall of the shoe. The diiferential pressure between the inner chamber I3 and the outer chamber 3 is obtained by means of the connecting valve I 4 between the tube l2 and the external chamber 3. This valve may be of a known construction and comprises a valve stem I5 at the end of which is a piston l6 which sits against the valve seat H. A spring I81 exerts a pressure between the inside of the valve seat 11 and a head l8 formed at the end of the valve stem in such .a way that the piston l6 will not be raised from its seat to permit the air to escape from the chamber I3 to the chamber 3 until the desired pressure, for instance fifteen pounds per square inch is a differential between the two chambers.
The valve may be installed by cementing to the fabric of the side walls, a disc 19 having a bushing 20 into which is inserted the collar element 2| which extends from the disc 22 cemented to the outside wall of the inner tube l2. The chamber l3 may be inflated by the valve 23 in the usual manner and as the pressure in the chamber l3 becomes sufiiciently great so that the valve- I4 opens, the external chamber becomes inflated. -The valve isadjusted so that it will open at a pressure less than thatrequired to expand the rubber element 1 to any great degree so that air begins to flow into the external chamber 3 before any appreciable expansion of the internal chamber occurs, and in this manner the desired ratio of chamber size between the inner and outer chamber is maintained.
If a blow-out should occur, initially the inner chamber will expand and fill out the entire space within the shoe. Subsequent to this air would escape from the inner chamber until its pressure was equal to the established pressure differential in which case the inner chamber would come back to its general normal size and the machine would be run under these conditions maintaining partial pressure on the tires.
The present arrangement also permits ready repair of the external chamber in event that a puncture occurs through the shoe wall. In this case the rubber wall of the internal partition at I may be slit and the leak readily repaired if the repairs cannot be made from the external side. If the rubber partition I is slit a new piece of rubber may be vulcanized or cemented to the piece 1 in the same manner that an inner tube might be repaired. The rubber member I should of course be made of such a thickness that a stretch of the nature required, that is, approximately will not be of such a nature as to decrease the thickness of the member beyond the point where the stress is greater than that permissible under working conditions.
Having now described my invention, I claim:
A pneumatic tire casing for motor vehicles and the like comprising an outer shell of rubber and fabric adapted to fit on the rim of a wheel and having beads adapted to be in contact with said rim, an inner casing having fabric side walls cured tosaid outer casing in said beads and an extensible yielding rubber piece forming the crown wall of said inner casing and joined at both sides to said fabric side walls.
BERNARD E. MENDELSOHN.
US410183A 1941-09-09 1941-09-09 Tire Expired - Lifetime US2375127A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US410183A US2375127A (en) 1941-09-09 1941-09-09 Tire

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US410183A US2375127A (en) 1941-09-09 1941-09-09 Tire

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2375127A true US2375127A (en) 1945-05-01

Family

ID=23623594

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US410183A Expired - Lifetime US2375127A (en) 1941-09-09 1941-09-09 Tire

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2375127A (en)

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2524808A (en) * 1947-04-10 1950-10-10 Khalil Seyed Pneumatic tire
US2554815A (en) * 1947-09-25 1951-05-29 Dunlop Tire & Rubber Corp Pneumatic tire and safety tube
US3038516A (en) * 1958-02-26 1962-06-12 Howard S Mcconkie Combination tubeless tire and tube
US3116778A (en) * 1956-04-24 1964-01-07 Goodrich Co B F Inflatable emergency tire
US3160191A (en) * 1962-09-11 1964-12-08 Goodyear Tire & Rubber Safety tire having an inner tire provided with a chafe and puncture resisting tread
US4254810A (en) * 1979-01-03 1981-03-10 Uniroyal, Inc. Nail-deflecting, inner-tube assembly for run-flat tires
US5301729A (en) * 1992-07-27 1994-04-12 Blair Johnny E Dual chamber safety tire
US8656971B2 (en) 2011-08-02 2014-02-25 Eladio A. Vargas Wheel and multi chamber tire assembly
US8875761B2 (en) 2012-01-13 2014-11-04 Bear Corporation System and method of securing a pneumatic tire to a rim
US10479146B2 (en) 2014-12-03 2019-11-19 Bridgestone Americas Tire Operations, Llc Rapid tire inflation system

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2524808A (en) * 1947-04-10 1950-10-10 Khalil Seyed Pneumatic tire
US2554815A (en) * 1947-09-25 1951-05-29 Dunlop Tire & Rubber Corp Pneumatic tire and safety tube
US3116778A (en) * 1956-04-24 1964-01-07 Goodrich Co B F Inflatable emergency tire
US3038516A (en) * 1958-02-26 1962-06-12 Howard S Mcconkie Combination tubeless tire and tube
US3160191A (en) * 1962-09-11 1964-12-08 Goodyear Tire & Rubber Safety tire having an inner tire provided with a chafe and puncture resisting tread
US4254810A (en) * 1979-01-03 1981-03-10 Uniroyal, Inc. Nail-deflecting, inner-tube assembly for run-flat tires
US5301729A (en) * 1992-07-27 1994-04-12 Blair Johnny E Dual chamber safety tire
US8656971B2 (en) 2011-08-02 2014-02-25 Eladio A. Vargas Wheel and multi chamber tire assembly
US8875761B2 (en) 2012-01-13 2014-11-04 Bear Corporation System and method of securing a pneumatic tire to a rim
US10479146B2 (en) 2014-12-03 2019-11-19 Bridgestone Americas Tire Operations, Llc Rapid tire inflation system

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2877819A (en) Puncture sealing pneumatic tire
US2937684A (en) Pneumatic tire
US2375127A (en) Tire
US3191654A (en) Safety tire and valve therefor
US2898969A (en) Stabilizer means
US2752980A (en) Tire casing
US2169041A (en) Pneumatic tire
US3116778A (en) Inflatable emergency tire
US2150648A (en) Inner tube for pneumatic tires
US2699811A (en) Pneumatic tire
US2699194A (en) Safety type inner tube
US2820500A (en) Tubeless tire
US2090210A (en) Method of building safety inner tubes for pneumatic tires
US2713371A (en) Tubeless tire
US2493047A (en) Pneumatic tire
US2273283A (en) Method of making vehicle tires
US2605200A (en) Method of making safety type inner tube
US2675846A (en) Safety tire
US3060990A (en) Inflation valve arrangements for pneumatic tires
US2537107A (en) Method of making inner tubes for pneumatic tires
US2900005A (en) Safety tire construction
US2331795A (en) Tire
US1626512A (en) Pneumatic tire
US2237207A (en) Tire
US1395770A (en) Pneumatic tire