US265239A - Automatic air-cock for steam-heat radiators - Google Patents

Automatic air-cock for steam-heat radiators Download PDF

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US265239A
US265239A US265239DA US265239A US 265239 A US265239 A US 265239A US 265239D A US265239D A US 265239DA US 265239 A US265239 A US 265239A
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bar
valve
steam
cock
expansion
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24DDOMESTIC- OR SPACE-HEATING SYSTEMS, e.g. CENTRAL HEATING SYSTEMS; DOMESTIC HOT-WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS; ELEMENTS OR COMPONENTS THEREFOR
    • F24D19/00Details
    • F24D19/08Arrangements for drainage, venting or aerating
    • F24D19/081Arrangements for drainage, venting or aerating for steam heating systems

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  • PETERS Fnum-Limognpber. wuhingmn, D c.
  • GILMAN IV BROWN, OF WEST NEWBURY, MASSACHUSETTS.
  • FigAE is avertical section of the air-cock, showing the guide-thimble as open at both ends and having the valveseat at its inner end, the shank of the valve being prismatic or otherwise properly shaped to enable it to guide the valve and allow of the tlow of air through the thimble when the valve is sprung off its seat by the compound expansion-bar, to be hereinafter described.
  • Fig. 5 is a transverse section ot' the thimble and the valve-spindle.
  • This air-cock is for letting out of a radiator while it is being charged with steam any air that may be within it, the educt of the cock being closed automatically after the radiator may have received its charge.
  • A denotes thetubular case of the cock, such case having aremovable bottom, a, and cap b, the bottom being screwed into and the cap upon the case.
  • c which serves to receive and guide the prismatic or grooved stem d ofthe conical valve B, arranged to operate with antician or educt, e, made in the case at its opposite side.
  • the compound expansion-bar is shown at G, it being arranged in the casein manneras represented, and composed of one bar, f, of copper or brass, and another, g, of iron or steel, they being laid side by side and connected to each other bya series of rivets, h, going through them, or by brazing or soldering them together.
  • This compound bar atitslowerend is firmly fixed in or to the bottom a. At its upper end the baris notched or forked, and enters a groove, i, made transversely in and around the valvestem.
  • the bottom a has in it one or more holes,k,
  • said bottom is also provided with a female screw, l, for connecting it with a radiator for warming an apartment by heat received from steam 1ct into such radiator.
  • valveseat is represented at l', at the inner end ofthe thimble, which has an opening, m, in its head.
  • Vhat I claim as my invention is- 1.
  • the thimble e secured to the ease near its opposite end, and the valve, grooved to receive the free end ot' the expansion-bar and provided with the guide-spindle extending within the thimble, all being substantially as set forth.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Thermal Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Lift Valve (AREA)

Description

(No Model.) 2 Sheets- Sheet 1.
' G. W. BROWN.
AUTOMATIG AIR COOK FOR STEAM HEAT RADIATORS.
Patented Oct. 3, 1882.
n m a N. PETERS Fnum-Limognpber. wuhingmn, D c.
2 sheetssheet (No Model.)
G. W. BROWN. AUTOMATIC ATR 000K TOR STEAM HEAT RADTAToRs.
Patented 001;. 3, 1882..
lille www N. PETERS. Phmo-Uuwgnpnnr, wnhingtun. n. c
'Unirse Smarts arnnrr rrrcn.
GILMAN IV. BROWN, OF WEST NEWBURY, MASSACHUSETTS.
AUTOMATIC AI-R-COCK FOR STEAM-HEAT RADIATORS'.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 265,239, dated October 3, 1882.
Application led July 24, 1882.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, GILMAN W. BROWN, of fest Newbury,in the coun ty ofEssex and State of Massachusetts, have invented a new and useful Improvement in Automatic AirOocks forSteam-Heat Radiators; and I do hereby dedare the same to be described in the following specification and represented in the accompanying drawings, of which- Figure 1 is a side elevation, andFig.2 a vertical and transverse section, of an air-cock of my improved kind. Fig. 3 is a front view of itscompound expansion-bar. FigAE is avertical section of the air-cock, showing the guide-thimble as open at both ends and having the valveseat at its inner end, the shank of the valve being prismatic or otherwise properly shaped to enable it to guide the valve and allow of the tlow of air through the thimble when the valve is sprung off its seat by the compound expansion-bar, to be hereinafter described. Fig. 5 is a transverse section ot' the thimble and the valve-spindle. Y
The nature of my improvement is defined in the claims hereinafter presented.
This air-cock is for letting out of a radiator while it is being charged with steam any air that may be within it, the educt of the cock being closed automatically after the radiator may have received its charge.
Un steam being stopped from entering the` radiator that which may be therein will, by cooling of the radiator, be condensed, and in consequence a vacuum or partial vacuum in the radiator will follow, whereby air will generally get into the radiator, the greater part, if not all, of such air entering by the educt of the radiator.
Prior to my invention it has been customary (No model.)
use a compound expansion-bar made of two i bars unequally expansive when increased in temperature, (they being laid side by side and riveted together, and onebeing of copper and the other of iron or steel, for instance,) butinstead of adapting the valve to the compound expansion-bar, so as to be moved by it in the direction of the length thereof,I applythetwo so that on expansion of the bar the valve shall be moved in a direction transversely of the bar, which, by any increase of temperature, will be curved like a bow. In this way I have-the natural elasticity of the bar to prevent the valve from being pressed too hard against its seat, and, besides, I am enabled to obtain a greater range of motion of the valve under any increase of temperature.
In the drawings, A denotes thetubular case of the cock, such case having aremovable bottom, a, and cap b, the bottom being screwed into and the cap upon the case. Into the case, nearits top, is screwedathimble, c,which serves to receive and guide the prismatic or grooved stem d ofthe conical valve B, arranged to operate with an orice or educt, e, made in the case at its opposite side.
The compound expansion-bar is shown at G, it being arranged in the casein manneras represented, and composed of one bar, f, of copper or brass, and another, g, of iron or steel, they being laid side by side and connected to each other bya series of rivets, h, going through them, or by brazing or soldering them together. This compound bar atitslowerend is firmly fixed in or to the bottom a. At its upper end the baris notched or forked, and enters a groove, i, made transversely in and around the valvestem. That metallic strip of the compound bar which expands the sloweris to be arranged next to the valve, in order that as the bar,while expanding, may curve laterally the valve thereby shall be moved toward its seat, a reverse movement of the valve taking place as the bar may decrease in temperature.
The bottom a has in it one or more holes,k,
for admission of steam into the case, and said bottom is also provided with a female screw, l, for connecting it with a radiator for warming an apartment by heat received from steam 1ct into such radiator.
On the radiator being charged with steam itwill flow into the air-cock case and will sur round and heat the compound expansion-bar, and thereby canse it to expand lengthwise. In so doing the bar will be curved or bowed laterally, so as to force the valve up to its seat and close the eduet, the air that may have collected in the radiator escaping in the meantime through the eduet of the case. On the steam being shut off or stopped from entering the radiator the steam within it will be condensed, and the compound bar will by cooling return to its normal condition, and by so doing will draw the valve ott' its seat.
Sometimes I construct the thimble open at both ends, and have thevalve-seat at the inner end of the thimble instead of in the ease, such being as shown in Fig. 4, in which the valveseat is represented at l', at the inner end ofthe thimble, which has an opening, m, in its head.
I do not claim an automatic air'coclr having a single expansion-rod, and also having its valve adapted to move to and from its seatin directions lengthwise ofthe rod; nor do I claim a compound expansion-bar firmly fastened at one end only within its case, and at the other end to a valve, without any guide-spindle to enter and work in a thimble screwed into the case nor do I claim an expansion-bar fastened at one or both of its opposite ends and arranged l to operate avalve adapted to it at its middle, all such constructions being complicated or otherwise objectionable rela-tively to mine, in which the valve moves rectilinearly on and ott1 its seat and is separate from the furcated eXpansion-bar,which, by being fastened at one end only, is not liable to lose its elasticity or become set in use. In my improvement the mode of applying or adapting the bar to the valve readily admits ot removal of the valve and thimble from Jthe bar and case for cleansing of them, as occasion may require; but
Vhat I claim as my invention is- 1. In combination with the ease A and with the fureated compound expansion-bar G fastened rmly in position at one end only therein, the thimble e, secured to the ease near its opposite end, and the valve, grooved to receive the free end ot' the expansion-bar and provided with the guide-spindle extending within the thimble, all being substantially as set forth.
2. The combination of the guidethimble, provided with the opening at its outer end and the valve-seat at its inner end, with the case, thefurcated compound expansion-bar, fastened firmly at one end only in said case at or near one end thereof, and the valve, grooved to receive the free end ot' the expansion-bar and provided with the guidespindle adapted to play in the thimble, all being essentially as shown and described.
GILMAN IV. BROWN.
Witnesses:
R. H. EDDY, E. B. PRATT.
US265239D Automatic air-cock for steam-heat radiators Expired - Lifetime US265239A (en)

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2486706A (en) * 1948-04-24 1949-11-01 Eberhardt Walter Thermostatically responsive valve
US2524667A (en) * 1945-10-29 1950-10-03 Domestic Thermostat Company Thermostatic control
US2845227A (en) * 1956-07-18 1958-07-29 Leonardis Michael J De Construction of a steam exhaust valve for venting radiators
US5909843A (en) * 1997-09-23 1999-06-08 Ramo; Henry Steam radiator exhaust valve

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2524667A (en) * 1945-10-29 1950-10-03 Domestic Thermostat Company Thermostatic control
US2486706A (en) * 1948-04-24 1949-11-01 Eberhardt Walter Thermostatically responsive valve
US2845227A (en) * 1956-07-18 1958-07-29 Leonardis Michael J De Construction of a steam exhaust valve for venting radiators
US5909843A (en) * 1997-09-23 1999-06-08 Ramo; Henry Steam radiator exhaust valve

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