US2452431A - Production of vulcanizable elastic coil cables having reversingly coiled portions - Google Patents

Production of vulcanizable elastic coil cables having reversingly coiled portions Download PDF

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US2452431A
US2452431A US577110A US57711045A US2452431A US 2452431 A US2452431 A US 2452431A US 577110 A US577110 A US 577110A US 57711045 A US57711045 A US 57711045A US 2452431 A US2452431 A US 2452431A
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cord
cable
mandrel
coiled
production
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US577110A
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Ralph D Collins
William J Drigot
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Kellogg Switchboard and Supply Co
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Kellogg Switchboard and Supply Co
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01BCABLES; CONDUCTORS; INSULATORS; SELECTION OF MATERIALS FOR THEIR CONDUCTIVE, INSULATING OR DIELECTRIC PROPERTIES
    • H01B13/00Apparatus or processes specially adapted for manufacturing conductors or cables
    • H01B13/008Apparatus or processes specially adapted for manufacturing conductors or cables for manufacturing extensible conductors or cables
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C53/00Shaping by bending, folding, twisting, straightening or flattening; Apparatus therefor
    • B29C53/02Bending or folding
    • B29C53/12Bending or folding helically, e.g. for making springs
    • 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
    • Y10S264/00Plastic and nonmetallic article shaping or treating: processes
    • Y10S264/40Processes of coiling plastics

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  • This invention relates to elastic coil structures or cables more particularly such as retractile and extensible cords for various purposes, principally electrical, in which a conductor or a plurality of conductors With a covering or sheath of unvulcanized or incompletely vulcanized rubber or the like may be formed into a helix usually about a mandrel after which the mandrel and cable thereon are placed in an oven or subjected to other treatment to cure or further vulcanize the rubber-like material, after which the direction of pitch of the coils is reversed thus producing an extension cord, for example, which is readily extensible to a relatively great distance while being automatically retracted to helically coiled form only by its resilience when released.
  • the present invention aims to provide an improved cable of this class in which torque or twisting strains are minimized or eliminated while retaining the advantages of the compact helical arrangement when retracted and the relatively great extensibility of the cable when pulled upon and stretched, for any purpose, such as, for example, to cause the cord to follow the user in markedly extreme variations of position or pos ture.
  • torque or twisting strains are minimized or eliminated while retaining the advantages of the compact helical arrangement when retracted and the relatively great extensibility of the cable when pulled upon and stretched, for any purpose, such as, for example, to cause the cord to follow the user in markedly extreme variations of position or pos ture.
  • the present invention discloses means for eliminating or at least minimizing such undesirable twisting action, while retaining the other advantages of the helical formation, by coiling one portion of a continuous cord in one direction and other portion of the same cord in the opposite direction, before vulcanization, and then reversing each portion after vulcanization and thus one portion neutralizing the uncoiling action of another portion when extended, the natural uncoiling tendency of the cord being expended in termedially of the cord instead of at its ends.
  • Figure 2 is a view of a cable embodying the present invention without the mandrel;
  • Figure 3 is an enlarged view of one, means for forming the cable of Figure 2;
  • Figure 4 is a view on the scale of Figure 3 and showing another means for forming the cable of Figure 2;
  • Figure 5- is a view on the scale of Figures 3 and showing an extended fragment. of a cord constructed in accordance with the present invention and with an additional element thereof not shown in Figure 2;
  • Figure 6 is a fragmentary view of a further modification
  • the cable l0 shown in Figure l is conventional to elastic coil cables of this class, and comprises, say, a plurality of insulated electrical conductors H twisted together and upon which has been extruded a cylindrical sheath or covering l2v of rubber-like material and preferably one of the successful synthetic substitutes or elastomers now On the market, and which has characteristics of initial plasticity and later toughness, elasticity, extensibility and resilience after vulcanization or what is commonly known as curing, in which process it is understood that polymerization of the molecules of the material occurs with the advantageous end product thereby attained.
  • the cable 10 is commonly formed helically, prior to curing, upon a rod or mandrel such as that indicated at l3 and by any suitable manual or mechanical means not here necessary to be described, and the mandrel with the cable l0 thereon is then placed in an oven for baking 0r curing, whereupon the material [2 sets to a strong, springy condition, and thereafter, in one well known practice, after removal from the. mandrel the coils of the, cable it. are then reversed in pitch direction, for example, as disclosed and claimed in the Campbell Patent No. 2,173,- 096, which reversing of pitch direction has many desirable advantages including an enhanced resilience. of the cable and more rapid and certain retraction thereof automatically by its own resilience to compact helical formation when an end of the cable is released.
  • a compositely coiled cable of the present invention as shown at 24 has improved characteristics not found in the conventional cable l while retaining the desirable characteristics of the cable [0.
  • the expedients illustrated in Figure 3- may be employed.
  • the mandrel l5 instead of the simple straight mandrel or rod I3, the mandrel l5 may be employed which has, say, a centrally transverse post I6 projecting therefrom.
  • a portion of the cable It, as for example, a leading portion l'l, may be wound around the mandrel E5 in the usual way, and, when it has been so wound up to the post I6 on the mandrel, the cable then is looped about the post as at I8.and the direction of the pitch of the turns reversed to produce the coils of the trailing portion IQ of the cable with the pitch reversed.
  • the mandrel it: with the cable [4 thereon may be placed in the oven for curing, at which time the material of the rubber-like substance is set.
  • the stud 16 may be removed from the mandrel, the stud for example having a threaded end lfia which is received in the tapped hole li-ib in the mandrel, and the cable I l thereupon slid off the mandrel.
  • the cable will then have the form as shown in Figure 2, the end tails 2i! and 2E of the cable being suitable in the usual manner for making electrical connections as desired.
  • the connecting portion it of the cable When thus formed. the connecting portion it of the cable [4, having been baked to this condition, will retain its shape and position in the coils, even though the coils be stretched to the extent suggested by Figure 5 or even to a greater extent to almost straighten the cable. If, however, the connecting portion 18 be not initially formed during the baking step or if for any reason it be desired to stabilize the connecting portion 18, means are here provided, such for example as a metallic split sleeve 22 which may be placed upon the connecting portion it before the cable goes into use.
  • the cables M may be formed by other means than that illustrated by Figure 3, and other expedients for this purpose are illustrated in Figure 4 hereof.
  • a mid-portion of the cable M as at E8 is looped about the finger 2d of the mandrel 23 and then the trailing portion E5 of the cable id looped about the mandrel 23 with its coils pitched in the opposite direction to the pitch of the leading portion ll of the cable.
  • the looped connecting portion 18 ma be slipped on of the mandrel finger 26 and the portion ill of the cable slipped entirely off of the mandrel.
  • a cable of such as illustrated, in Figure 2 has the advantage of relieving torque or twisting strains which would be otherwise exerted on the cable terminations 2c and 2 i. Furthermore, it has been found that it requires less force to extend it to a given length than if the entire cable were to have its coils reversed in pitch after having been initiall formed in one direction.-- At the same time, the retractive capacity of the cord is substantially unimpaired.
  • the cable of the present invention might be arrived at Icy-means of other manufacturing expedients and, furthermore, that the cable itself might in some-instances have other forms while still falling within the present invention, such, for example, as having alternate portions of the cable pitched in opposite directions.
  • the metallic stabilizing sleeve 22 might be replaced by a thicker integral portion of the material body 12 itself initially formed therein and cured therewith in the baking or vulcanizing step, for example, as shown in Figure 6 at 25.
  • Figure 7 shows for example a mandrel N0 of U-shape which may be employed in place of say the mandrel l5 (Fig. 3), and on which the cord iti has one portion, such as I02, coiled in one direction, on one leg Nita. of the mandrel, and the other portion thereof, such as W3, coiled in the opposite direction, on the other leg i007) of the mandrel, While still maintaining a connecting portion l8 between the cord portions 182 and H33, similar to such portion as shown in the other views of the drawings.
  • the cord Ilii when baked on and then removed from the mandrel lilo may finally be straightened out to the form of the cord i4 shown in Figure 5.
  • the connecting portion l8 may be varied in its location in the cord. That is to say, a shorter portion of the cord ma constitute the leading portion l! of the cord and a longer portion the trailing portion 19, or vice versa, depending upon the results desired at the place of connection of the cord to the electrical appliance with which it is to be used, of greater extensibility with less torque, or vice versa, as will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art hav ing the benefit of the present disclosure.
  • Figures 8, 9 and 10 show a further modified method following the present invention, and which finds particular utility as another method of forming the cord Ill! as shown in Figure 7.
  • a chuck H36 which is carried by a shaft it! rotatable in a frame M8.
  • the shaft 501 may carry a spur gear m9.
  • Mounted parallel to the mandrel I04 is the similar mandrel 15, already referred to. gand held by a chuck H0 carried by a shaft EH also rotatable in the frame m8 and also carrying a spur gear numbered H2, which meshes with the spur gear W9.
  • a third spur gear l 23 carried by a driving shaft ill-t on the frame H18 meshes with the spur gear I l2, and thus drives the gears I09 and H2 in opposite directions.
  • the driving shaft H ma be understood to be rotated (by means not necessary to be here described) in the direction of the arrow H5, which will thus rotate the mandrel I04 in the same direction, that is, in the direction of the arrow H5, and at the same time will rotate the mandrel m5 in the opposite direction, that is, in the direction of the arrow ill.
  • the cord Illi in the method as shown in Figure 8 of the drawings, ma have its free ends lilla and H11?) respectively secured (as by spring clips H8 and H9 carried respectively by the mandrels Hi l and to the mandrels Hi l and H65 respectively.
  • Rotation of the shaft H4 may now be effected and it will be readily understood that the portion i532 of the cord Nil will be helically wound up on the mandrel not with the turns or pitch of its coils in the direction of what may be termed analogous to a left-hand screw-thread.
  • cord I93 While, simultaneously, the cord I93 will be wound up on the mandrel I05 with the turns or pitch of its coils in the direction of what may be termed analogous to a right-hand screw-thread, until the connecting portion I3 of the cord I9I between the portions I02 and I03 is slightly taut, where-- upon the actuation of the shaft H4 may be discontinued.
  • a holder may be provided for holding the mandrels 94 and i655 together in the same parallel relation as they maintain in the chucks, said holder to permit removal of the mandrels from the chucks and the placing of the mandrels together (with the wound cord I9! thereon) in a heating oven or the like for subjection of the cord to vulcanizing temperatures.
  • the holder I I9 here shown is representative of expedients for this purpose. .t will be understood that the holder I I 9 is not placed on the mandrels until the cord has first been wound thereupon as already described.
  • the holder I9 may comprise in this instance a block-like body somewhat elongated in directions both transversely and longitudinally of the mandrels and is here shown in somewhat oval form.
  • the body has cylindrical passages 29 and HI therein which receive the ends respectively of the mandrels I 04 and I 65 when the holder is passed thereover after the cord has been wound.
  • a clamping set-screw I22 may be provided for each passage which may be tightened after the mandrel has been received therein.
  • the mandrels may now be removed from the chucks I05 and I I0, and the two mandrels with the holder II9 thus constitute together a rigid somewhat U-shaped contrivance for holding the cord IIlI in the desired form during vulcanization.
  • the cord after vulcanization and removal from the mandrels may have each of its portions individually reversed in the direction of the pitch of their coils.
  • This may be done in accordance with the Campbell Patent No. 2,173,096 previously referred to, as is now well understood by the workers in, the art and which need not be here specifically described.
  • the portion I 92 of the cord I III will now have a right-hand screw-thread as it were, and the portion I03 a left-hand screwthread so to speak, these portions of the same cord being still thus oppositely coiled, with the uncoiled connecting portion l8 therebetween.
  • the cord IIII When extended under tension, with its ends IBIa and I GIb extending in opposite directions, the cord IIII will function with the similar desirable results already described with reference to the cord I4, and, under tension, will assume substantially the same form as the cord M has in Figure 5. It will be understood that if desired a stabilizing member, such as the metal clip I23, may be placed on the connecting portion I8 either before 6 or after the reversal of the cord to the formation shown in Figure 10, to maintain the sections I02 and we of the cord substantially in line on a common axis as shown in Figure 11.
  • a stabilizing member such as the metal clip I23
  • the cord is permitted to freely untwist intermedially as it is stretched, the connecting portion IS (with either the extraneous stabilizin element 22 or I23 or the integral stabilizing element 252' thereon) rotating as the cord is stretched and thus expending the inherent untwisting tendency of the cord intermedially of the cord instead of at its ends.
  • the method of production of elastic coil structures characterized by the steps of: providing a flexible cord-like member comprising a cable portion of vulcanizable material, helically coiling respective portions of the member in opposite directions, vulcanizing the material while the member is still coiled, and subsequently reversing the directions of the coils of the individual member portions whereby the member has portions helically coiled in opposite directions and each portion is reversed in direction from that in which it was initially coiled and vulcanized.
  • the method of production of elastic coil structures characterized by the steps of: providing a flexible cord-like member comprising a cable portion of vulcanizable material, helically coiling respective portions of the member in opposite directions simultaneously each upon one of a plurality of parallel mandrels, vulcanizing the material while the member is still coiled upon the mandrels, removing the member from the mandrels, and subsequently reversing the direction of pitch of each coiled portion whereby the member has portions helically coiled in opposite directions and each portion is reversed in direction from that in which it was initially coiled and vulcanized.

Description

Oct. 26, 1948. R. D. COLLINS ETAL 2,452,431
PRODUCTION OF VULCANIZABLE ELASTIC COIL CABLES HAVING REVERSINGLY COILED PORTIONS 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed Feb. 9, 1945 MEN five 7 i716 and fag pk. D. Cod Z wizlzlana Jfi? 96%, 26 1948, g3, COLLINS -r 2 $523,431 1 9 PRODUCTION OF VULCANIZABLE ELASTIC COIL CABLES HAVING REVERSINGLY COILED PORTION-S 2 SheetsSheet 2 Filed Feb. 9, 1945 Patented Oct. 26, 1949) PRODUCTION OF VULCANIZABLE ELASTIC COIL CABLES HAVING REVERSINGLY COILED PORTIONS Ralph 1). Collins, Beverly Hills, Calif., and William J. Drigot, Chicago, 111.; said Drigot assignor to Kellogg Switchboard and Supply Company, a corporation of Illinois Application February 9, 1945, Serial No. 577,110
2 Claims. 1
This invention relates to elastic coil structures or cables more particularly such as retractile and extensible cords for various purposes, principally electrical, in which a conductor or a plurality of conductors With a covering or sheath of unvulcanized or incompletely vulcanized rubber or the like may be formed into a helix usually about a mandrel after which the mandrel and cable thereon are placed in an oven or subjected to other treatment to cure or further vulcanize the rubber-like material, after which the direction of pitch of the coils is reversed thus producing an extension cord, for example, which is readily extensible to a relatively great distance while being automatically retracted to helically coiled form only by its resilience when released.
The present invention aims to provide an improved cable of this class in which torque or twisting strains are minimized or eliminated while retaining the advantages of the compact helical arrangement when retracted and the relatively great extensibility of the cable when pulled upon and stretched, for any purpose, such as, for example, to cause the cord to follow the user in markedly extreme variations of position or pos ture. It has been well known in the use of such cables that with their many attendant advantages, a disadvantage has been found in the torque or twisting strain which the helical formation of the coils tends inherently to exert upon the connections to which the terminations of the cable are attached, and this is particularly disadvantageous when such connections are in the appliance field, or are of a character which is intended to be disconnected by a twisting action.
The present invention discloses means for eliminating or at least minimizing such undesirable twisting action, while retaining the other advantages of the helical formation, by coiling one portion of a continuous cord in one direction and other portion of the same cord in the opposite direction, before vulcanization, and then reversing each portion after vulcanization and thus one portion neutralizing the uncoiling action of another portion when extended, the natural uncoiling tendency of the cord being expended in termedially of the cord instead of at its ends.
The invention will be understood by reference to the following description, taken together with the accompanying drawings, of an illustrative embodiment thereof, and in which drawings Figure l is a reduced view showing a cable of this type as it may conventionally appear when wound about a mandrel, either immediately be.- fore or immediately after baking;
Figure 2 is a view of a cable embodying the present invention without the mandrel;
Figure 3 is an enlarged view of one, means for forming the cable of Figure 2;
Figure 4 is a view on the scale of Figure 3 and showing another means for forming the cable of Figure 2;
Figure 5- is a view on the scale of Figures 3 and showing an extended fragment. of a cord constructed in accordance with the present invention and with an additional element thereof not shown in Figure 2;
Figure 6 is a fragmentary view of a further modification;
Figure '7 shows a method modification; and
Figures 8, 9, l0 and 11 show additional modifications.
Referring in detail to the illustrative construction shown in the drawings, the cable l0 shown in Figure l is conventional to elastic coil cables of this class, and comprises, say, a plurality of insulated electrical conductors H twisted together and upon which has been extruded a cylindrical sheath or covering l2v of rubber-like material and preferably one of the successful synthetic substitutes or elastomers now On the market, and which has characteristics of initial plasticity and later toughness, elasticity, extensibility and resilience after vulcanization or what is commonly known as curing, in which process it is understood that polymerization of the molecules of the material occurs with the advantageous end product thereby attained.
The cable 10 is commonly formed helically, prior to curing, upon a rod or mandrel such as that indicated at l3 and by any suitable manual or mechanical means not here necessary to be described, and the mandrel with the cable l0 thereon is then placed in an oven for baking 0r curing, whereupon the material [2 sets to a strong, springy condition, and thereafter, in one well known practice, after removal from the. mandrel the coils of the, cable it. are then reversed in pitch direction, for example, as disclosed and claimed in the Campbell Patent No. 2,173,- 096, which reversing of pitch direction has many desirable advantages including an enhanced resilience. of the cable and more rapid and certain retraction thereof automatically by its own resilience to compact helical formation when an end of the cable is released.
In accordance with the present invention, it has been found that if the cable is arranged so.
that the coils are pitched in one direction for a portion of its length and pitched in another direction for a portion of its length, vulcanized in this form, and then each portion reversed after vulcanization, a compositely coiled cable of the present invention as shown at 24 (Fig. 2) has improved characteristics not found in the conventional cable l while retaining the desirable characteristics of the cable [0.
For forming the cable IQ, for example, the expedients illustrated in Figure 3- may be employed. In this instance, instead of the simple straight mandrel or rod I3, the mandrel l5 may be employed which has, say, a centrally transverse post I6 projecting therefrom. With the use of the mandrel l5 a portion of the cable It, as for example, a leading portion l'l, may be wound around the mandrel E5 in the usual way, and, when it has been so wound up to the post I6 on the mandrel, the cable then is looped about the post as at I8.and the direction of the pitch of the turns reversed to produce the coils of the trailing portion IQ of the cable with the pitch reversed. Next, the mandrel it: with the cable [4 thereon may be placed in the oven for curing, at which time the material of the rubber-like substance is set. After suitable curing, the stud 16 may be removed from the mandrel, the stud for example having a threaded end lfia which is received in the tapped hole li-ib in the mandrel, and the cable I l thereupon slid off the mandrel. The cable will then have the form as shown in Figure 2, the end tails 2i! and 2E of the cable being suitable in the usual manner for making electrical connections as desired.
When thus formed. the connecting portion it of the cable [4, having been baked to this condition, will retain its shape and position in the coils, even though the coils be stretched to the extent suggested by Figure 5 or even to a greater extent to almost straighten the cable. If, however, the connecting portion 18 be not initially formed during the baking step or if for any reason it be desired to stabilize the connecting portion 18, means are here provided, such for example as a metallic split sleeve 22 which may be placed upon the connecting portion it before the cable goes into use.
It has been mentioned that the cables M may be formed by other means than that illustrated by Figure 3, and other expedients for this purpose are illustrated in Figure 4 hereof. In other words, a mid-portion of the cable M as at E8 is looped about the finger 2d of the mandrel 23 and then the trailing portion E5 of the cable id looped about the mandrel 23 with its coils pitched in the opposite direction to the pitch of the leading portion ll of the cable. Thereupon the looped connecting portion 18 ma be slipped on of the mandrel finger 26 and the portion ill of the cable slipped entirely off of the mandrel.
Howsoever formed, a cable of such as illustrated, in Figure 2, has the advantage of relieving torque or twisting strains which would be otherwise exerted on the cable terminations 2c and 2 i. Furthermore, it has been found that it requires less force to extend it to a given length than if the entire cable were to have its coils reversed in pitch after having been initiall formed in one direction.-- At the same time, the retractive capacity of the cord is substantially unimpaired.
It is to be understood that the cable of the present invention might be arrived at Icy-means of other manufacturing expedients and, furthermore, that the cable itself might in some-instances have other forms while still falling within the present invention, such, for example, as having alternate portions of the cable pitched in opposite directions. Furthermore, the metallic stabilizing sleeve 22 might be replaced by a thicker integral portion of the material body 12 itself initially formed therein and cured therewith in the baking or vulcanizing step, for example, as shown in Figure 6 at 25.
Figure 7 shows for example a mandrel N0 of U-shape which may be employed in place of say the mandrel l5 (Fig. 3), and on which the cord iti has one portion, such as I02, coiled in one direction, on one leg Nita. of the mandrel, and the other portion thereof, such as W3, coiled in the opposite direction, on the other leg i007) of the mandrel, While still maintaining a connecting portion l8 between the cord portions 182 and H33, similar to such portion as shown in the other views of the drawings. The cord Ilii when baked on and then removed from the mandrel lilo may finally be straightened out to the form of the cord i4 shown in Figure 5.
With respect to any of the forms here shown, or the methods of arriving thereat, it has been found that the connecting portion l8 may be varied in its location in the cord. That is to say, a shorter portion of the cord ma constitute the leading portion l! of the cord and a longer portion the trailing portion 19, or vice versa, depending upon the results desired at the place of connection of the cord to the electrical appliance with which it is to be used, of greater extensibility with less torque, or vice versa, as will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art hav ing the benefit of the present disclosure.
Figures 8, 9 and 10 show a further modified method following the present invention, and which finds particular utility as another method of forming the cord Ill! as shown in Figure 7.
Referring specifically to Figure 8 of the drawings, in place of the U-shaped mandrel of Figure 7, the two initially separate parallel reaches or mandrels I84 and H15 may be employed. The
'mandrel we is shown mounted in a chuck H36 which is carried by a shaft it! rotatable in a frame M8. The shaft 501 may carry a spur gear m9. Mounted parallel to the mandrel I04 is the similar mandrel 15, already referred to. gand held by a chuck H0 carried by a shaft EH also rotatable in the frame m8 and also carrying a spur gear numbered H2, which meshes with the spur gear W9. A third spur gear l 23 carried by a driving shaft ill-t on the frame H18 meshes with the spur gear I l2, and thus drives the gears I09 and H2 in opposite directions.
In this instance, the driving shaft H ma be understood to be rotated (by means not necessary to be here described) in the direction of the arrow H5, which will thus rotate the mandrel I04 in the same direction, that is, in the direction of the arrow H5, and at the same time will rotate the mandrel m5 in the opposite direction, that is, in the direction of the arrow ill.
The cord Illi, in the method as shown in Figure 8 of the drawings, ma have its free ends lilla and H11?) respectively secured (as by spring clips H8 and H9 carried respectively by the mandrels Hi l and to the mandrels Hi l and H65 respectively. Rotation of the shaft H4 may now be effected and it will be readily understood that the portion i532 of the cord Nil will be helically wound up on the mandrel not with the turns or pitch of its coils in the direction of what may be termed analogous to a left-hand screw-thread.
While, simultaneously, the cord I93 will be wound up on the mandrel I05 with the turns or pitch of its coils in the direction of what may be termed analogous to a right-hand screw-thread, until the connecting portion I3 of the cord I9I between the portions I02 and I03 is slightly taut, where-- upon the actuation of the shaft H4 may be discontinued.
Next, a holder may be provided for holding the mandrels 94 and i655 together in the same parallel relation as they maintain in the chucks, said holder to permit removal of the mandrels from the chucks and the placing of the mandrels together (with the wound cord I9! thereon) in a heating oven or the like for subjection of the cord to vulcanizing temperatures. The holder I I9 here shown is representative of expedients for this purpose. .t will be understood that the holder I I 9 is not placed on the mandrels until the cord has first been wound thereupon as already described.
The holder I9 may comprise in this instance a block-like body somewhat elongated in directions both transversely and longitudinally of the mandrels and is here shown in somewhat oval form. The body has cylindrical passages 29 and HI therein which receive the ends respectively of the mandrels I 04 and I 65 when the holder is passed thereover after the cord has been wound. A clamping set-screw I22 may be provided for each passage which may be tightened after the mandrel has been received therein. The mandrels may now be removed from the chucks I05 and I I0, and the two mandrels with the holder II9 thus constitute together a rigid somewhat U-shaped contrivance for holding the cord IIlI in the desired form during vulcanization.
As a final advantageous step in the production of the cord, the cord after vulcanization and removal from the mandrels, may have each of its portions individually reversed in the direction of the pitch of their coils. This may be done in accordance with the Campbell Patent No. 2,173,096 previously referred to, as is now well understood by the workers in, the art and which need not be here specifically described. For example, referring to the cord I M when so reversed, as shown in Figure 10, the portion I 92 of the cord I III will now have a right-hand screw-thread as it were, and the portion I03 a left-hand screwthread so to speak, these portions of the same cord being still thus oppositely coiled, with the uncoiled connecting portion l8 therebetween. When extended under tension, with its ends IBIa and I GIb extending in opposite directions, the cord IIII will function with the similar desirable results already described with reference to the cord I4, and, under tension, will assume substantially the same form as the cord M has in Figure 5. It will be understood that if desired a stabilizing member, such as the metal clip I23, may be placed on the connecting portion I8 either before 6 or after the reversal of the cord to the formation shown in Figure 10, to maintain the sections I02 and we of the cord substantially in line on a common axis as shown in Figure 11.
In each case also, the cord is permitted to freely untwist intermedially as it is stretched, the connecting portion IS (with either the extraneous stabilizin element 22 or I23 or the integral stabilizing element 252' thereon) rotating as the cord is stretched and thus expending the inherent untwisting tendency of the cord intermedially of the cord instead of at its ends.
It is to be understood that this invention is not intended to be limited to the specific form or steps oi manufacture here illustrated by way of exemplification oi the invention, and that such modifications are intended to be included within the invention as are covered by the appended claims.
Having described our invention, claimed is:
l. The method of production of elastic coil structures characterized by the steps of: providing a flexible cord-like member comprising a cable portion of vulcanizable material, helically coiling respective portions of the member in opposite directions, vulcanizing the material while the member is still coiled, and subsequently reversing the directions of the coils of the individual member portions whereby the member has portions helically coiled in opposite directions and each portion is reversed in direction from that in which it was initially coiled and vulcanized.
2. The method of production of elastic coil structures characterized by the steps of: providing a flexible cord-like member comprising a cable portion of vulcanizable material, helically coiling respective portions of the member in opposite directions simultaneously each upon one of a plurality of parallel mandrels, vulcanizing the material while the member is still coiled upon the mandrels, removing the member from the mandrels, and subsequently reversing the direction of pitch of each coiled portion whereby the member has portions helically coiled in opposite directions and each portion is reversed in direction from that in which it was initially coiled and vulcanized.
RALPH D. COLLINS. WILLIAM J. DRIGOT.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS what is here Number Name Date 1,641,156 Clulee Sept. 6, 1927 1,989,066 Shaw Jan. 22, 1935 2,039,475 Campbell May 5, 1936 2,173,096 Campbell Sept. 19, 1939 2,322,757 Ward June 29, 1943 2,365,952 Hanson Dec. 26, 1944
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Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2731085A (en) * 1951-06-02 1956-01-17 Firestone Tire & Rubber Co Machine for cutting rubber grommets
US2969419A (en) * 1954-09-07 1961-01-24 Western Electric Co Retractile cords
US3057015A (en) * 1955-12-22 1962-10-09 David & David Inc Method for making simulated curly hair
US3130753A (en) * 1962-04-26 1964-04-28 Aeroquip Corp Floating swimming pool hose
US4313645A (en) * 1980-05-13 1982-02-02 Western Electric Company, Inc. Telephone cord having braided outer jacket
US4357500A (en) * 1980-09-26 1982-11-02 Nilsen Robert J Telephone handset cord anti-twist accessory
USRE31197E (en) * 1980-05-13 1983-04-05 Western Electric Company, Inc. Telephone cord having braided outer jacket
WO1996002921A1 (en) * 1994-07-14 1996-02-01 Robin Fry Method of coiling and a coiled conductor
EP1109176A1 (en) * 1999-12-16 2001-06-20 Carrier Kheops Bac Method for cable coiling and coiled cable
CN102142639A (en) * 2010-11-24 2011-08-03 河南省电力公司焦作供电公司 Retractable test wire

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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1641156A (en) * 1923-10-19 1927-09-06 Bay State Optical Co Eyeglass construction
US1989066A (en) * 1933-05-25 1935-01-22 United Elastic Corp Cordage
US2039475A (en) * 1932-07-28 1936-05-05 John W Campbell Flexuously compacted conductor
US2173096A (en) * 1937-12-18 1939-09-19 Ralph D Collins Extensible cord
US2322757A (en) * 1941-07-23 1943-06-29 Ralph E Ward Mold for helical springs
US2365952A (en) * 1942-03-12 1944-12-26 Dow Chemical Co Machine for making plastic helicoidal structures

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1641156A (en) * 1923-10-19 1927-09-06 Bay State Optical Co Eyeglass construction
US2039475A (en) * 1932-07-28 1936-05-05 John W Campbell Flexuously compacted conductor
US1989066A (en) * 1933-05-25 1935-01-22 United Elastic Corp Cordage
US2173096A (en) * 1937-12-18 1939-09-19 Ralph D Collins Extensible cord
US2322757A (en) * 1941-07-23 1943-06-29 Ralph E Ward Mold for helical springs
US2365952A (en) * 1942-03-12 1944-12-26 Dow Chemical Co Machine for making plastic helicoidal structures

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2731085A (en) * 1951-06-02 1956-01-17 Firestone Tire & Rubber Co Machine for cutting rubber grommets
US2969419A (en) * 1954-09-07 1961-01-24 Western Electric Co Retractile cords
US3057015A (en) * 1955-12-22 1962-10-09 David & David Inc Method for making simulated curly hair
US3130753A (en) * 1962-04-26 1964-04-28 Aeroquip Corp Floating swimming pool hose
US4313645A (en) * 1980-05-13 1982-02-02 Western Electric Company, Inc. Telephone cord having braided outer jacket
USRE31197E (en) * 1980-05-13 1983-04-05 Western Electric Company, Inc. Telephone cord having braided outer jacket
US4357500A (en) * 1980-09-26 1982-11-02 Nilsen Robert J Telephone handset cord anti-twist accessory
WO1996002921A1 (en) * 1994-07-14 1996-02-01 Robin Fry Method of coiling and a coiled conductor
EP1109176A1 (en) * 1999-12-16 2001-06-20 Carrier Kheops Bac Method for cable coiling and coiled cable
CN102142639A (en) * 2010-11-24 2011-08-03 河南省电力公司焦作供电公司 Retractable test wire

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