US2486421A - Double impeller impact breaker - Google Patents

Double impeller impact breaker Download PDF

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US2486421A
US2486421A US492980A US49298043A US2486421A US 2486421 A US2486421 A US 2486421A US 492980 A US492980 A US 492980A US 49298043 A US49298043 A US 49298043A US 2486421 A US2486421 A US 2486421A
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stone
impact
rotors
bars
rotor
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US492980A
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Lee H Kessler
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NELLIE H KESSLER
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B02CRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING; PREPARATORY TREATMENT OF GRAIN FOR MILLING
    • B02CCRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING IN GENERAL; MILLING GRAIN
    • B02C13/00Disintegrating by mills having rotary beater elements ; Hammer mills
    • B02C13/02Disintegrating by mills having rotary beater elements ; Hammer mills with horizontal rotor shaft
    • B02C13/06Disintegrating by mills having rotary beater elements ; Hammer mills with horizontal rotor shaft with beaters rigidly connected to the rotor
    • B02C13/09Disintegrating by mills having rotary beater elements ; Hammer mills with horizontal rotor shaft with beaters rigidly connected to the rotor and throwing the material against an anvil or impact plate
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B02CRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING; PREPARATORY TREATMENT OF GRAIN FOR MILLING
    • B02CCRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING IN GENERAL; MILLING GRAIN
    • B02C13/00Disintegrating by mills having rotary beater elements ; Hammer mills
    • B02C13/02Disintegrating by mills having rotary beater elements ; Hammer mills with horizontal rotor shaft
    • B02C13/06Disintegrating by mills having rotary beater elements ; Hammer mills with horizontal rotor shaft with beaters rigidly connected to the rotor
    • B02C13/09Disintegrating by mills having rotary beater elements ; Hammer mills with horizontal rotor shaft with beaters rigidly connected to the rotor and throwing the material against an anvil or impact plate
    • B02C13/095Disintegrating by mills having rotary beater elements ; Hammer mills with horizontal rotor shaft with beaters rigidly connected to the rotor and throwing the material against an anvil or impact plate with an adjustable anvil or impact plate

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  • This invention relates generally to crushing equipment but more particularly to certain new and useful improvements in a double impeller impact breaker apparatus for stone and like material.
  • a further object is to provide an impact breaker whose impact elements are so designed and arranged as to be readily adjustable and replaceable as conditions warrant, and which as a whole is manifestly simple and rugged in construction, which has a high capacity for reducing large stones in a minimum period of time to the size desired, and which requires a minimum of power to operate it.
  • Figure 1 is a side elevation of my improved breaker.
  • Figure 2 is an end view of the same.
  • Figure 3 is a transverse vertical section thereof taken on line 3-3, Figure 1.
  • Figure 4 is a fragmentary vertical section taken on line 4-4, Figure 3, showing the rotor impact blade mounting.
  • Figure 5 is a fragmentary horizontal section taken substantially in the plane of line 55, Figure 4.
  • Figure 6 is a perspective view of one of the rotor impact blades.
  • Figure 7 is a sectional side elevation of a modification of my invention.
  • Figure 8 is an enlarged fragmentary vertical section taken on line 88, Figure 7.
  • Figure 9 is an enlarged 8 Claims. (Cl. 241-86) 2 fragmentary horizontal section taken on line 8-9, Figure '7.
  • the housing-section II has an inlet or feed opening l5 with which a feed hopper l6 communicates for delivering the stone to be crushed by gravity into the housing.
  • the lower housing-section I2 is inclined at its opposite ends to provide chutes ll down which the crushed stone is guided to a central discharge opening it provided at the bottom of the housing. With the exception of the inlet and discharge openings, this housing or casing is completely walled in to provide a. breaking or crushing chamber.
  • Each rotor is of a solid construction to withstand the pressure imposed upon it and projecting from its periphery are a plurality of radial impact blades or members 22 which are adapted to intercept any stone contained in or as it is introduced into the housing, the blades successively transmitting crushing blows to the introduced stone and at the same time tendingto maintain the stone in suspension in the crushing chamber and directing it by centrifugal force into impacting and crushing engagement with stationary impact bars 23, 24 disposed transversely of the housing and in predetermined fashion about the top and adjoining outside portion of the respective rotors in substantially the manner shown in Figure 1.
  • the impact bars 23 are disposed in the lower portion of the chamber at opposite sides of the vertical plane between the rotors and substantially axially over the companion rotors outwardly of the tip ends of the rotor-blades 22 and function, in addition to their breaking the stone when it is directed thereagainst by the rotorblades, to keep the larger stones in suspension while they are battered against each other and broken by impact.
  • These bars are preferably arranged. so that they are inclined slightly, to the vertical, being notched at their opposite lower edges, as indicated at 25, to rest upon the op- -'posing bottom edges of companion Openings 26 formed in the front and rear walls of the housingsection II.
  • Cleats 21 extend through these wallopenings and engage the top faces of the impact bars to retain them in place.
  • the housingopenings 26 are normally closed by cover-plates 28, bolted or otherwise secured in place, which serve to retain the impact bars against endwise displacement and which are readily removable endwise through such openings when it is desired to replace the impact bars 23.
  • Each row of impact bars 24 is mounted as a unit in a pendant, adjustable frame consisting of side arms 29 pivoted at their upper ends on a pivot rod 30 secured at its ends in the front and rear walls of the housing and with the impact bars supported at their ends in said arms and in predetermined spaced relation to function as a screen to size the stone before it is discharged from the machine.
  • This frame is supported in a set position of adjustment by a connecting rod 3
  • the blade-receiving groove 39 has laterallyextending recesses or channels 40 which open at the opposite ends of the rotor and in which clamping jaws or cleats 4
  • the upper section II of the crusher housing is provided in its opposite side walls and in a plane intersecting the respective rotor-axes with sets of alining openings 43 of a size to permit the insertion and removal of one or another of the rotor-blades to and from the rotors when it is necessary to replace or reverse their positions. Normally these openings are closed by coverplates 44 detachably secured in place by latching bars 45 wedged at their ends in suitable brackets 48 applied to the housing-section II at opposite sides of such openings, as shown in Figure 1.
  • impact bars are round in cross section and are so supported in the plates as to be free to turn on their axis as they become worn from the impact of the stone there against. As the bars become worn, say at one side, their center of gravity changes and they are caused to turn in the plate-supports and thus present a different surface to the trajected stone as it is thrown by the rotor-blades.
  • the material to be crushed is introduced into the upper portion of the housing 41 where it is intercepted and directed by the rotor impact blades 49 against the impact bars 50 and while in suspension is the housing to the discharge provided in the lower end thereof.
  • a stone breaker of the character described comprising a casing defining a breaking chamber having upper and lower openings for the introduction of the stone to be reduced and for the discharge of the reduced stone, multiple rotors having impact blades thereon disposed in side by side relation in the lower portion of the chamber and with the rotor peripheries closely spaced with but operating clearance between the ends of the impact blades to provide a free space thereover for the suspension of the introduced stone and for closing the direct path of fall of stone to the discharge opening and intercepting andtransmitting crushing blows to the introduced stone, the rotors being spacedirom the end walls of the casing to provide passages for the flow of the reduced stone'to the discharge opening, impact bars disposed in the lower portion of the free space at opposite sides of the vertical plane between the rotors and vertically spaced from the rotors to clear the circular path of rotation of the rotor-blades, an upwardly extending series of spaced impact bars disposed in a plane spaced from said first-named impact bars and the
  • pair of rotors having impact blades thereon disposed in side by side relation in the lower portion of said casing with but operating clearance for the ends of the blades to define the lower wall of said chamber, close the direct fall of stone to the discharge opening and intercept and transmit crushing blows to the introduced stone upwardly into said chamber, means for rotating said rotors in opposite directions with their adjoining faces moving upwardly, and other impact bars disposed in the lower portion of said chamber adjacent the opposite ends thereof and immediately over the downwardly turning faces of the rotors and clear of the circular plane of rotation of their impact blades to intercept and deflect larger stones back in the chamber.
  • a stone breaker of the character described comprising an enclosed casing having an intake opening adjacent itsupper end for the introduction of the stone to be broken and a discharge opening at its lower end for the broken stone, oppositely rotating bladed rotors disposed on horizontal axes in the lower portion of said casing across the discharge opening with but operating clearance between them and the end walls of the casing to substantially close the direct path of fall 01' stone and providing a substantial head space thereover constituting a breaking zone for the circulation and suspension of the stone during breakage, means for rotating said rotors with their adjacent parts turning upwardly for directing the stone upwardly and outwardly in a trajectory-like path in the breaking zone toward the top and adjacent ends of the casing, and spaced impact bars of substantially round cross section disposed in a horizontal row along the top and in a substantially vertical row along and paralleling the end walls of the casing in verticallyspaced relation and against which the suspended and rotor-trajected stone is adapted to impinge, the impact bars along the end walls of said casing being spaced

Description

Nov. 1, 1949. H. KESSLER DOUBLE IMPELLER IMPACT BREAKER 3 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed July 1, 1943 Nov. 1, 1949. H. KESSLER 2,486,421
DOUBLE IMPELLER nmcw BREAKER Filed July 1, 1943 3 Sheets-Sheet 2 NOV. 1, 1949. ss 2,486,421
DOUBLE IMPELLER IMPACT BREAKER Filed July 1, 1943 5.SheetsSheet 3 Patented Nov. 1, 1949 DOUBLE IMPELLER IMPACT BREAKER Lee H. Kessler. Springville, N. Y., asslgnor of oneiourth to Harriet F. Derrick, one-fourth to Norman H. Kessler, and one-fourth to Nellie H. Kessler, all of Springville, N. Y.
Application July 1, 1943, Serial No. 492,980
This invention relates generally to crushing equipment but more particularly to certain new and useful improvements in a double impeller impact breaker apparatus for stone and like material.
It has for one of its objects to provide an apparatus of this character which is so designed to effect the crushing of the stone while in suspension by impact with itself as well as with rotatable and stationary impact members disposedin a predetermined fashion in the crusher-casing.
Another object of the invention is to providev a double impeller impact crusher having oppositely rotating stone-impacting rotors which are so disposed in the breaker chamber of the crusher as to provide a head space thereover and which serve to intercept the introduced stone and transmit multiple breaking or crushing blows thereto while in suspension in such head space and direct it upwardly and outwardly toward the top and opposite ends of the chamber, such ends of the chamber and those portions immediately over the rotors having impact bars against which the rotor-traiected stone is impinged to further break it down and between certain of which bars the reduced and properly sized stone passes for discharge from the machine.
A further object is to provide an impact breaker whose impact elements are so designed and arranged as to be readily adjustable and replaceable as conditions warrant, and which as a whole is manifestly simple and rugged in construction, which has a high capacity for reducing large stones in a minimum period of time to the size desired, and which requires a minimum of power to operate it.
Other features of the invention reside in the construction and arrangement of parts hereinafter described and particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
In the accompanying drawings:
Figure 1 is a side elevation of my improved breaker. Figure 2 is an end view of the same. Figure 3 is a transverse vertical section thereof taken on line 3-3, Figure 1. Figure 4 is a fragmentary vertical section taken on line 4-4, Figure 3, showing the rotor impact blade mounting. Figure 5 is a fragmentary horizontal section taken substantially in the plane of line 55, Figure 4. Figure 6 is a perspective view of one of the rotor impact blades. Figure 7 is a sectional side elevation of a modification of my invention. Figure 8 is an enlarged fragmentary vertical section taken on line 88, Figure 7. Figure 9 is an enlarged 8 Claims. (Cl. 241-86) 2 fragmentary horizontal section taken on line 8-9, Figure '7.
Similar characters of reference indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views.
Referring now to the drawings, l0 indicates a pair of spaced, horizontal angle bars or rails between which the breaker-housing is mounted, the latter including an upper section II into which the stone to be crushed is introduced and a lower section I! from which the crushed stone is discharged, Above and below the joint line I3, the respective sections are bolted, as indicated at M,
or otherwise detachably secured to the supporting 7 bars l0. At its upper. end the housing-section II has an inlet or feed opening l5 with which a feed hopper l6 communicates for delivering the stone to be crushed by gravity into the housing. The lower housing-section I2 is inclined at its opposite ends to provide chutes ll down which the crushed stone is guided to a central discharge opening it provided at the bottom of the housing. With the exception of the inlet and discharge openings, this housing or casing is completely walled in to provide a. breaking or crushing chamber.
Arranged. within the crushing chamber and substantially at the joint plane of its upper and lower sections ll, i2 and at opposite sides of the vertical center thereof are movable impact members which are preferably in the form of rotors l 9 fixed on corresponding drive shafts 20 extending transversely through the housing from one side thereof to the other and J'ournaledat their ends in bearings 2| mounted on the supporting bars Ill. These rotors are adapted 'to be driven at a high rate of speed in opposite directions with their opposing faces turning upwardly and may be driven from a coimnon source of power by a chain or belt drive ,or by individual electric motors. Each rotor is of a solid construction to withstand the pressure imposed upon it and projecting from its periphery are a plurality of radial impact blades or members 22 which are adapted to intercept any stone contained in or as it is introduced into the housing, the blades successively transmitting crushing blows to the introduced stone and at the same time tendingto maintain the stone in suspension in the crushing chamber and directing it by centrifugal force into impacting and crushing engagement with stationary impact bars 23, 24 disposed transversely of the housing and in predetermined fashion about the top and adjoining outside portion of the respective rotors in substantially the manner shown in Figure 1. The rotors l 9 are so spaced horizontally that when their companion blades 22 reach an opposing, alined position they just clear each other and thereby jointly form, because of the speed of the rotors, a closure to intercept and prevent any small-sized stone dropping down between the rotors to the lower section l2 of the housing before passing through the crushing zone in the upper housing-section H. The rotors are sufliciently spaced from the side walls of the crushing chamber to permit certain of the impact bars 24 to extend transversely therebetween and allow the crushed stone to drop onto the inclined walls ll of the housing and thence be discharged through the opening 18.
The impact bars 23 are disposed in the lower portion of the chamber at opposite sides of the vertical plane between the rotors and substantially axially over the companion rotors outwardly of the tip ends of the rotor-blades 22 and function, in addition to their breaking the stone when it is directed thereagainst by the rotorblades, to keep the larger stones in suspension while they are battered against each other and broken by impact. These bars are preferably arranged. so that they are inclined slightly, to the vertical, being notched at their opposite lower edges, as indicated at 25, to rest upon the op- -'posing bottom edges of companion Openings 26 formed in the front and rear walls of the housingsection II. Cleats 21 extend through these wallopenings and engage the top faces of the impact bars to retain them in place. The housingopenings 26 are normally closed by cover-plates 28, bolted or otherwise secured in place, which serve to retain the impact bars against endwise displacement and which are readily removable endwise through such openings when it is desired to replace the impact bars 23.
After being battered about in the mid-portion of the housing and partially reduced, the stones are trajected by one another and by the force of the rotor blades 22 upwardly and outwardly toward the stationary impact bars 24, where they are further reduced or broken up from the resulting impact. These impact bars, which may be round in cross-section as shown, are disposed in a substantially upright row at opposite sides of the housing in the space between the acUoining walls thereof and the companion rotors l9 and extend upwardly to a point adjacent the top of the housing. Each row of impact bars 24 is mounted as a unit in a pendant, adjustable frame consisting of side arms 29 pivoted at their upper ends on a pivot rod 30 secured at its ends in the front and rear walls of the housing and with the impact bars supported at their ends in said arms and in predetermined spaced relation to function as a screen to size the stone before it is discharged from the machine. This frame is supported in a set position of adjustment by a connecting rod 3| extending through an opening provided in the adjoining end wall of the housing and pivotally joined at its inner end to said frame and connected at its outer end to a tie plate 32 adjustably connected to the frame by bolts 33, whereby the impact bar frame may be readily adjusted and set in the position desired in the space between the rotor and adjoining end wall of the housing. Applied to the connecting rod and bearing at one end against the tie plate 32 and at its opposite end against a collar 34 on such rod is a strong spring 35 which yieldingly permits the impact bar frame to be displaced outwardly, as when some hard, foreign, non-crushable object becomes. wedged between such frame and the plate 32 and by which the spring 35 may be adjusted to the tension desired.
The rotor blades 22 are so mounted in the rotor that they can be readily replaced or renewed when necessary with a minimum of effort and without disturbing the rest of the machine. To this end, each blade is shaped as shown in Figure 4 of the drawings to provide two impact heads 31 and a connecting web 38 and is removably seated in a groove or recess 39 formed in the periphery of the rotor and extending parallel to its axis. This groove is undercut and of a cross section simulating that of one of the rotor blade heads and its connecting web whereby the blade is eflectually held against radial displacement with one of its heads projecting from the rotor for impacting engagement with the stone. At one side of its webreceiving portion and at opposite ends thereof, the blade-receiving groove 39 has laterallyextending recesses or channels 40 which open at the opposite ends of the rotor and in which clamping jaws or cleats 4| are seated and detachably held in place by a companion bolt 42 to effectually wedge and retain the rotor-blade against endwise displacement in the rotor. The upper section II of the crusher housing is provided in its opposite side walls and in a plane intersecting the respective rotor-axes with sets of alining openings 43 of a size to permit the insertion and removal of one or another of the rotor-blades to and from the rotors when it is necessary to replace or reverse their positions. Normally these openings are closed by coverplates 44 detachably secured in place by latching bars 45 wedged at their ends in suitable brackets 48 applied to the housing-section II at opposite sides of such openings, as shown in Figure 1.
In the modified form of the invention shown in Figures 7-9, inclusive, 4! indicates the crusherhousing lined with hardened steel plates and having openings therein for the introduction of the stone to be crushed and for the discharge of the crushed stone, 48 the rotors with the radial impact blades 49 projecting radially therefrom as in the first-described construction, and 50 a plurality of stationary impact bars extending transversely in spaced relation along the top and opposite end walls of the housing in the manner shown in Figure 'l to form the crushing chamber. These bars are adapted to be readily replaced when desired and for this purpose extend through slots 5| in the side walls of the housing and are supported in companion plates 52 bolted or otherwise detachably secured to the outer side of the housing and serving as cover plates for such slots. These impact bars are round in cross section and are so supported in the plates as to be free to turn on their axis as they become worn from the impact of the stone there against. As the bars become worn, say at one side, their center of gravity changes and they are caused to turn in the plate-supports and thus present a different surface to the trajected stone as it is thrown by the rotor-blades. The material to be crushed is introduced into the upper portion of the housing 41 where it is intercepted and directed by the rotor impact blades 49 against the impact bars 50 and while in suspension is the housing to the discharge provided in the lower end thereof.
As shown in Figure 7, the end or substantially upright rows of impact bars terminate approximately at the top sides of the rotors 48 and disposed in the clearance space between the latter and the adjoining housing-walls and forming a continuation of such bars are laterallyadju'stable rows or groups of similarly spaced impact bars 53 against which the stone is trajected while in suspension and between which the crushed material passes for discharge. Each group of bars 53 at either end of the housing is mounted as a unit in an adjustably suspended frame consisting of side plates 54 which are guided in suitable ways 55 applied to the opposite side walls of the housing and which are adapted for movement toward and from the companion rotor to locate such ba s where desired. Attached to each frame-plate and extending through a corresponding slot 56 in the sidewall 01 the housing is a block 51 having an outwardly facing boss 58 thereon through which one end of an adjusting screw 59 extends. The other or outer end of this screw is supported in a lug 60 projecting from the adjoining side wall of the housing anda nut 6| engages the screw and is seated against axial movement in a recess 62 formed in the block-boss. By turning the adjusting screws in one direction or the other the companion bar-carrying plates 54 are accordingly moved toward or from the rotors 48. Applied to each screw 59 and interposed between a flange 63 thereon and the lug 60 is a coil spring 64 which yieldingly permits the impact bar plates to. be displaced outwardly, as when some hard, noncrushable object is encountered and enables the release of such objects from the machine without damage thereto. These adjustable impact bars 53 are free to rotate in their supporting plates and are self-responsive, as they become worn, to present the best impactsurface to the action of the suspended stone. A third set of impact bars 65 may be provided which are disposed above the axis of each rotor and extend at a divergent angle relative thereto in the manner shown in Figure 7, and against which the stones are impacted while in suspension. These bars are supported at their ends in plates 66 bolted to the side walls of the housing and are likewise replaceable when necessary.
The provision of the round impact bars not only afi'ord their self-adjustability for wear purposes but they always assure a direct impact of the stone thereagainst to effectually cause its breakage or reduction and eliminate any glancing oil or slippage action of the stone relative thereto.
I claim as my invention: 1. A stone breaker of the character described,
comprising a casing defining a breaker chamber having upper and lower openings for the introduction of the stone to be reduced and for the discharge of the reduced stone, multiple rotors having impact blades thereon disposed in side by side relation in the lower portion of the chamber and with the rotor-peripheries closely spaced with but operating clearance between them to provide a free space thereover for the suspension of the stone and for closing the direct fallof stone to the discharge opening and intercepting and transmitting crushing blows to the introduced stone, the rotors being spaced from the end walls of the casing, impact bars located immediately over the rotors at opposite sides of the central lower portion or the breaking chamber in operating clearance relation to the rotorblades for deflecting larger pieces of the stone upwardly into such chamber, and aseries of spaced impact bars extendingvertically in spaced relation along the end walls of the casing and substantially to the top thereof as well as vertically opposite the rotor overlying bars and the rotors.
2. A stone breaker of the character described, comprising a casing defining a breaking chamber having upper and lower openings for the introduction of the stone to be reduced and for the discharge of the reduced stone, multiple rotors having impact blades thereon disposed in side by side relation in the lower portion of the chamber and with the rotor peripheries closely spaced with but operating clearance between the ends of the impact blades to provide a free space thereover for the suspension of the introduced stone and for closing the direct path of fall of stone to the discharge opening and intercepting andtransmitting crushing blows to the introduced stone, the rotors being spacedirom the end walls of the casing to provide passages for the flow of the reduced stone'to the discharge opening, impact bars disposed in the lower portion of the free space at opposite sides of the vertical plane between the rotors and vertically spaced from the rotors to clear the circular path of rotation of the rotor-blades, an upwardly extending series of spaced impact bars disposed in a plane spaced from said first-named impact bars and the companion end walls of the casing and extending generally vertically substantially from a point opposite the rotor overlying impact bars to the top of the casing, and means adjustably mounted on said casing adjacent the end walls thereof for movement horizontally toward and from the companion rotors and having spaced impact bars thereon disposed in the spaces between the rotors and the end walls of the casing and constituting a continuation of said series of impact bars.
3. In a "stone breaker, a casing forming an enclosed breaking chamber having an upper opening in one of the walls thereof for the intro- .duction of the stone to be reduced and open at its lower end for the discharge of the reduced stone, a pair of rotors disposed in a horizontal plane across the lower discharge end of said chamber in spaced relation to the companion end walls of the casing and adapted to rotate in opposite directions so that the path of motion is upward 1 between the rotor-axes, means for rotating the rotors in such directions, said rotors having impact blades thereon for intercepting and transmitting crushing blows to the introduced stone to direct it upwardly and outwardly from a vertical plane passing between said rotor and with the rotor-peripheries closely spaced with but operating clearance between the ends of the blades to substantially close the direct fall of stone therebetween to the lower discharge end of the chamber, an upwardly extending series of spaced, substantially round impact bars disposed along the end'walls cf the casing in spaced relation thereto with some of them disposed in the spaces between the rotors and such end walls, and like-shaped impact bars disposed in that portionof the chamber immediately over the rotors and in spaced relation to the adjoining bars of said series of impact bars and the circular plane of rotation of the rotor-blades to su-btend the spaces over the downward turning sides of the rotors between the vertical axes thereof and the bars along said casing end walls.
4. A breaker for reducing stone or the like to fragments of predetermined size comprising a casing forming an enclosed chamber having a feed opening in its upper portion and a discharge opening at its bottom, a pair of rotors symmetrically disposed on opposite sides of the chamber with their axes in a horizontal plane substantially below the feed opening and rotatable in opposite directions with their adjacent parts moving upward, means for rotating the rotors in such directions, impact blades projecting from the rotors with their circular paths in close proximity, a series of closely spaced impact bars outside each rotor arranged parallel to the axes of the rotors and extending substantially above the plane 011 the rotors, and a plurality of closely spaced impact bars over part of each rotor in operating clearance relation to the rotor-blades, each plurality of impact bars disposed in an inclined plane extending from the vicinity of the top of the circular pathof the respective impact blades upwards to the vicinity of the nearer series or impact bars.
5. In a stone breaker, an enclosed casing having a feed opening in its upper portion and a discharge opening in its bottom, vertically-spaced impact bars substantially paralleling the end walls of the casing in spaced relation thereto for the passage of the reduced stone a pair of bladed rotors disposed in the casing a substantial distance below the casing top wall to define therewith and the impact bars a breaking chamber into which the stone is introduced and suspended therein by impact of the rotor blades during its reduction, the rotor-peripheries being closely spaced to each other and to the lowermost adjoining impact bars with butoperating clearance for the ends of the blades, and means for rotating said rotors in opposite directions with their adjoining faces moving upwardly.
6. In a stone breaker, an enclosed casing having a feed opening in its upper portion and a discharge opening in its bottom, relatively-spaced impact bars substantially paralleling the end walls of the casing in spaced relation thereto for the passage of the reduced stone and defining with the top wall of the casing a breaker chamber for the suspension and circulation of the introduced stone, a. pair of rotors having impact blades thereon disposed in side by side relation in the lower portion of said casing with but operating clearance for the ends of the blades to define the lower wall of said chamber, close the direct fall of stone to the discharge opening and intercept and transmit crushing blows to the introduced stone upwardly into said chamber, means for rotating said rotors in opposite directions with their adjoining faces moving upwardly, and other impact bars disposed in the lower portion of said chamber adjacent the opposite ends thereof and immediately over the downwardly turning faces of the rotors and clear of the circular plane of rotation of their impact blades to intercept and deflect larger stones back in the chamber.
7. A stone breaker of the character described, comprising an enclosed casing having an intake opening adjacent itsupper end for the introduction of the stone to be broken and a discharge opening at its lower end for the broken stone, oppositely rotating bladed rotors disposed on horizontal axes in the lower portion of said casing across the discharge opening with but operating clearance between them and the end walls of the casing to substantially close the direct path of fall 01' stone and providing a substantial head space thereover constituting a breaking zone for the circulation and suspension of the stone during breakage, means for rotating said rotors with their adjacent parts turning upwardly for directing the stone upwardly and outwardly in a trajectory-like path in the breaking zone toward the top and adjacent ends of the casing, and spaced impact bars of substantially round cross section disposed in a horizontal row along the top and in a substantially vertical row along and paralleling the end walls of the casing in verticallyspaced relation and against which the suspended and rotor-trajected stone is adapted to impinge, the impact bars along the end walls of said casing being spaced therefrom to provide a clearance space for the gravity flow of the broken and sized stone to the discharge opening.
8. A stone breaker, comprising a casing forming an enclosed breaking chamber having upper and lower openings therein for the introduction of the stone to be broken and for the discharge of the broken stone, a pair of rotors disposed side by side with but operating clearance therebetween and in a horizontal plane between said openings and in spaced relation to the end walls of the casing to provide for the passage of the broken stone and spaced substantially below the top wall thereof to provide a free breaking and suspension space thereover for the introduced stone, impact members mounted on said rotors for intercepting and transmitting crushing blows to the introduced stone, impact bar-carrying members suspended in said chamber and having vertically spaced im pact bars mounted thereon paralleling the end walls of the casing in spaced relation thereto and extending between the rotors and the casing end walls and against which the rotor-trajected stone is adapted to impinge and between which bars the reduced stone passes to the discharge opening, means for adjusting said bar-carrying members transversely toward and from the companion rotors, and impact bars disposed in the lower portion of the free breaking space of said chamber at opposite sides of the vertical plane extending between the opposing rotors and substantially axially over the companion rotors in verticallyspaced relation thereto to clear the circular plane of rotation of their impact members and to intercept the larger stones and keep them in suspension in the breaking space while they are battered against one another by the rotor impact members.
LEE H. KESSLER.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file 01' this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 197,484 Mead Nov. 27, 1877 211,576 Lawton et a1 Jan. 21, 1879 399,518 Good Mar. 12, 1889 430,646 Hickey June 24, 1890 455,531 Good et al July 7, 1891 675,751 Moustier June 4, 1901 759,856 Borton May 17, 1904 836,162 Williams Nov. 20, 1906 1,035,313 Buchanan Aug. 13, 1912 1,331,969 Tomlinson Feb. 24, 1920 1,439,581 Sedberry Dec. 19, 1922 1,491,418 Plaistecl Apr. 22, 1924 (Other references on following page) 9 UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Country Date Jones Mar. 15, 1927 Me Dowell May 16, 1933 Gruender July 6, 1937 Swenson July 5, 1938 Dahlstrom Apr. 4, 1939 Hartshorn Aug. 22, 1939 Hartshorn June 30, 1942 Number Number
US492980A 1943-03-01 1943-03-01 Double impeller impact breaker Expired - Lifetime US2486421A (en)

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US492980A US2486421A (en) 1943-03-01 1943-03-01 Double impeller impact breaker
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Cited By (22)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2555879A (en) * 1947-11-14 1951-06-05 Frank D Fogle Rock crusher having contained rock screening and redirection means
US2588434A (en) * 1949-06-16 1952-03-11 Frank P Unti Impact bar assembly for impeller breakers
US2618438A (en) * 1950-03-29 1952-11-18 Jeffrey Mfg Co Breaker bar screen means for rigid hammer rotary impact crushers
US2646224A (en) * 1950-03-29 1953-07-21 Jeffrey Mfg Co Impact crusher rotor with rigid hammers
US2665074A (en) * 1950-08-03 1954-01-05 Lee H Kessler Double impeller impact breaker
DE916488C (en) * 1951-05-16 1954-08-12 Hazemag Hartzerkleinerung Device for attaching blow bars to radial ribs of centrifugal mill circumferences using screws
US2767928A (en) * 1950-12-18 1956-10-23 Pettibone Mulliken Corp Plural stage impact breaker with impacting rotors and adjacent deflector screen grates
DE958712C (en) * 1951-06-09 1957-02-21 Westfalia Dinnendahl Groeppel Storage for swing-out suspended impact plates in centrifugal mills
DE1004899B (en) * 1954-01-13 1957-03-21 Soest Ferrum Appbau G M B H Fastening of blow bars on the runner of impact mills or impact crushers
DE1013499B (en) * 1954-02-11 1957-08-08 Soest Ferrum Appbau G M B H Blow bar for the rotors of impact mills or the like.
DE1032648B (en) * 1951-04-11 1958-06-19 Lukens Steel Co Breaker
US2862669A (en) * 1956-03-22 1958-12-02 Kennedy Van Saun Mfg & Eng Apparatus for reducing material by impact
US2889119A (en) * 1949-05-11 1959-06-02 Hazemag Hartzerkleinerung Slinging impact breakers
US2891734A (en) * 1955-09-06 1959-06-23 Hazemag Hartzerkleinerung Disintegrating asbestos ores
US3058676A (en) * 1960-02-23 1962-10-16 Charles E Hermann Rock crusher
US3343800A (en) * 1964-04-29 1967-09-26 Smidth & Co As F L Crushing and drying apparatus
DE1296940B (en) * 1965-07-09 1969-06-04 Missouri Rogers Corp Impact crusher
US3603514A (en) * 1969-07-28 1971-09-07 Williams Patent Crusher & Pulv Scrap reducing and refining apparatus
US3806047A (en) * 1972-08-14 1974-04-23 H Ober Chopper and shredder
US3874603A (en) * 1974-01-16 1975-04-01 Allis Chalmers Hammer locking arrangement for impact crusher rotor
US3887141A (en) * 1973-09-17 1975-06-03 Ind Mining Machinery Corp Impact-attrition mill utilizing air flow
US20160243553A1 (en) * 2015-02-18 2016-08-25 Joe Rust Apparatus and method for an apron assembly

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US211576A (en) * 1879-01-21 Improvement in bran-dusters
US399518A (en) * 1889-03-12 Grinding-mill
US430646A (en) * 1890-06-24 hickey
US455531A (en) * 1891-07-07 Ore-separator
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US836162A (en) * 1905-07-24 1906-11-20 Williams Patent Crusher & Pulv Dumping-cage for crushers and pulverizers.
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US1331969A (en) * 1915-12-23 1920-02-24 Allis Chalmers Mfg Co Rotary impact-pulverizer
US1439581A (en) * 1920-12-08 1922-12-19 Sedberry James Bernard Grinding mill
US1491418A (en) * 1923-04-02 1924-04-22 Williams Patent Crusher & Pulv Rotary pivoted hammer
US1621256A (en) * 1922-05-31 1927-03-15 Erie City Iron Works Pulverizer beater
US1909623A (en) * 1931-09-23 1933-05-16 La Mont A Mcdowell Hammer mill cylinder
GB456445A (en) * 1935-02-08 1936-11-09 Thomas Henry Miller Improvements in and relating to rotary crushing, granulating and pulverising machines
US2086383A (en) * 1935-09-13 1937-07-06 Nordberg Manufacturing Co Impact crusher
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US2152791A (en) * 1935-10-25 1939-04-04 Formator Ab Device for disintegrating tobacco leaves
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US2287799A (en) * 1939-06-13 1942-06-30 Stanley D Hartshorn Hammer mill
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US197484A (en) * 1877-11-27 Improvement in disintegrating apparatus for reducing grain
US211576A (en) * 1879-01-21 Improvement in bran-dusters
US399518A (en) * 1889-03-12 Grinding-mill
US430646A (en) * 1890-06-24 hickey
US455531A (en) * 1891-07-07 Ore-separator
US675751A (en) * 1899-11-15 1901-06-04 Bruno Moustier Disintegrating-machine.
US759856A (en) * 1903-11-30 1904-05-17 George W Borton Pulverizer, breaker, or disintegrator.
US836162A (en) * 1905-07-24 1906-11-20 Williams Patent Crusher & Pulv Dumping-cage for crushers and pulverizers.
US1035313A (en) * 1910-05-20 1912-08-13 Charles F Johnson Crusher and pulverizer.
US1331969A (en) * 1915-12-23 1920-02-24 Allis Chalmers Mfg Co Rotary impact-pulverizer
US1439581A (en) * 1920-12-08 1922-12-19 Sedberry James Bernard Grinding mill
US1621256A (en) * 1922-05-31 1927-03-15 Erie City Iron Works Pulverizer beater
US1491418A (en) * 1923-04-02 1924-04-22 Williams Patent Crusher & Pulv Rotary pivoted hammer
US1909623A (en) * 1931-09-23 1933-05-16 La Mont A Mcdowell Hammer mill cylinder
GB456445A (en) * 1935-02-08 1936-11-09 Thomas Henry Miller Improvements in and relating to rotary crushing, granulating and pulverising machines
US2086383A (en) * 1935-09-13 1937-07-06 Nordberg Manufacturing Co Impact crusher
US2152791A (en) * 1935-10-25 1939-04-04 Formator Ab Device for disintegrating tobacco leaves
US2122965A (en) * 1936-07-25 1938-07-05 Chain Belt Co Apparatus for disintegrating large solids contained in sewage
US2170407A (en) * 1936-11-02 1939-08-22 Pennsylvania Crusher Co Hammer mill
US2287799A (en) * 1939-06-13 1942-06-30 Stanley D Hartshorn Hammer mill
US2373691A (en) * 1940-05-13 1945-04-17 Lee H Kessler Stone crushing apparatus
US2324382A (en) * 1940-12-27 1943-07-13 Alfred D Goodwin Nut cracker and sheller
US2325605A (en) * 1941-06-14 1943-08-03 Nordberg Manufacturing Co Impact member for impact crushers and securing means therefor

Cited By (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2555879A (en) * 1947-11-14 1951-06-05 Frank D Fogle Rock crusher having contained rock screening and redirection means
US2889119A (en) * 1949-05-11 1959-06-02 Hazemag Hartzerkleinerung Slinging impact breakers
US2588434A (en) * 1949-06-16 1952-03-11 Frank P Unti Impact bar assembly for impeller breakers
US2618438A (en) * 1950-03-29 1952-11-18 Jeffrey Mfg Co Breaker bar screen means for rigid hammer rotary impact crushers
US2646224A (en) * 1950-03-29 1953-07-21 Jeffrey Mfg Co Impact crusher rotor with rigid hammers
US2665074A (en) * 1950-08-03 1954-01-05 Lee H Kessler Double impeller impact breaker
US2767928A (en) * 1950-12-18 1956-10-23 Pettibone Mulliken Corp Plural stage impact breaker with impacting rotors and adjacent deflector screen grates
DE1032648B (en) * 1951-04-11 1958-06-19 Lukens Steel Co Breaker
DE916488C (en) * 1951-05-16 1954-08-12 Hazemag Hartzerkleinerung Device for attaching blow bars to radial ribs of centrifugal mill circumferences using screws
DE958712C (en) * 1951-06-09 1957-02-21 Westfalia Dinnendahl Groeppel Storage for swing-out suspended impact plates in centrifugal mills
DE1004899B (en) * 1954-01-13 1957-03-21 Soest Ferrum Appbau G M B H Fastening of blow bars on the runner of impact mills or impact crushers
DE1013499B (en) * 1954-02-11 1957-08-08 Soest Ferrum Appbau G M B H Blow bar for the rotors of impact mills or the like.
US2891734A (en) * 1955-09-06 1959-06-23 Hazemag Hartzerkleinerung Disintegrating asbestos ores
US2862669A (en) * 1956-03-22 1958-12-02 Kennedy Van Saun Mfg & Eng Apparatus for reducing material by impact
US3058676A (en) * 1960-02-23 1962-10-16 Charles E Hermann Rock crusher
US3343800A (en) * 1964-04-29 1967-09-26 Smidth & Co As F L Crushing and drying apparatus
DE1296940B (en) * 1965-07-09 1969-06-04 Missouri Rogers Corp Impact crusher
US3603514A (en) * 1969-07-28 1971-09-07 Williams Patent Crusher & Pulv Scrap reducing and refining apparatus
US3806047A (en) * 1972-08-14 1974-04-23 H Ober Chopper and shredder
US3887141A (en) * 1973-09-17 1975-06-03 Ind Mining Machinery Corp Impact-attrition mill utilizing air flow
US3874603A (en) * 1974-01-16 1975-04-01 Allis Chalmers Hammer locking arrangement for impact crusher rotor
US20160243553A1 (en) * 2015-02-18 2016-08-25 Joe Rust Apparatus and method for an apron assembly
US10596576B2 (en) * 2015-02-18 2020-03-24 Kolberg-Pioneer, Inc. Apparatus and method for an apron assembly

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