US2705855A - Rotary brush - Google Patents

Rotary brush Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2705855A
US2705855A US333875A US33387553A US2705855A US 2705855 A US2705855 A US 2705855A US 333875 A US333875 A US 333875A US 33387553 A US33387553 A US 33387553A US 2705855 A US2705855 A US 2705855A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
brush
rim
supporting
air
view
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US333875A
Inventor
Niels E Nielsen
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
NEWARK BRUSH Co
Original Assignee
NEWARK BRUSH Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by NEWARK BRUSH Co filed Critical NEWARK BRUSH Co
Priority to US333875A priority Critical patent/US2705855A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2705855A publication Critical patent/US2705855A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B24GRINDING; POLISHING
    • B24DTOOLS FOR GRINDING, BUFFING OR SHARPENING
    • B24D13/00Wheels having flexibly-acting working parts, e.g. buffing wheels; Mountings therefor
    • B24D13/18Wheels having flexibly-acting working parts, e.g. buffing wheels; Mountings therefor with cooling provisions
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B24GRINDING; POLISHING
    • B24DTOOLS FOR GRINDING, BUFFING OR SHARPENING
    • B24D13/00Wheels having flexibly-acting working parts, e.g. buffing wheels; Mountings therefor
    • B24D13/02Wheels having flexibly-acting working parts, e.g. buffing wheels; Mountings therefor acting by their periphery
    • B24D13/10Wheels having flexibly-acting working parts, e.g. buffing wheels; Mountings therefor acting by their periphery comprising assemblies of brushes

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a member or device for supporting a brush or buff wheel which is made up of bristles of suitable material or cloth that is assembled into a circular disc.
  • brush assemblies have been mounted in various ways for rotation on a shaft that is driven at a speed such that the outer periphery of the bristles or equivalent are travelling at a relatively high rate of speed for different purposes 311151111 as polishing the surface of a device for its final Where the speed on the contact surface of the brush is fast, considerable heat is generated and it is an object of my invention to provide cooling means for the numerous parts of the brush. While various cooling means have been utilized in the past 1 have found after many experiments and tests with prior devices that considerable improvements can be made thereon.
  • Figure 2 is a view on the line 2-2 of Figure 1.
  • Figure 3 is a view on the line 33 of Figure 1.
  • Figure 4 is a view on the line 44 of Figure 1.
  • Figure 5 is a view of a sectional part of the brush showing the adaptation of the supporting and cooling member thereto.
  • Figure 6 is a fragmentary view somewhat like Figure 5 but showing the air scoops out of axial alignment or in staggered relationship as they are assembled to different brushes mounted on the driving shaft.
  • Figure 7 is a diagram on a small scale, showing a plurality of brushes having their holders so the air scoops or ducts are in axial alignment.
  • Figure 8 is a view similar to Figure 7 but illustrating non-axial alignment of the air ducts shown in Figure 6
  • Figure 9 is a fragmentary view showing the rim and flange portion of the supporting member of Figure 1 overlapping one of the clamping members that holds the bristles together.
  • Figure 9A is a fragmentary perspective view showing the bearing lugs illustrated in Figures 9 and 1.
  • Figure 10 is a view on the line 1010 of Figure 5 on an enlarged scale but showing a plurality of unit brushes in assembled relation to make a larger brush.
  • Figure 11 is a view on line 1111 of Figure 10.
  • Figure 12 is a view about on line 1212 of Figure 10.
  • Figure 13 is a view similar to Figure 5 but with cloth used as a buff material.
  • the supporting and cooling member carrying the brush or polishing material comprises a disc or circular shaped member having a central body portion 1 with a hub 2 for mounting on a driving shaft 3.
  • the outer periphery of the disc 1 terminates in an annular offset rim 2,705,855 Patented Apr. 12, 1955 ice 4 having a circular flange 5.
  • Forced outwardly from the disc 1 are a plurality of air scoop 6, the formation of which starts at approximately point 7 and continues to the point 8 leaving a supporting edge along the curbed line between the points 8 and 9.
  • the discs are made of a preferably stiff material such as steel properly treated to prevent rusting, these formed air scoops 6 will take in air through an opening which may have a maximum width at a point 10 of approximately of an inch, more or less depending upon the type of brush and the work that the same has to do.
  • the material is forced outwardly across the rim 4 and flange 5 to form an air duct 11 as further shown in Figure 2.
  • bearing hubs 12 are formed in the rim 4 preferably equally spaced between the air ducts 11 where they pass through the rim 4 and flange 5.
  • bearing lugs 12 engage the inner periphery of the brush unit which is made up of bristles of suitable material or of cloth as shown in Figure 13 which are held together by a pair of clamping rings 13 that are laced in position by clamping links 14 as shown in Figure 9 but since the present invention relates to the structure shown in Figure 1 further description of the brush element is not necessary. Since the bearing lugs 12 project outwardly beyond the outer surface of the rim 4 spaces will be provided between the arcuately positioned bearing lugs 12 which space is crossed by the air passages 11 coming from the air scoops 6.
  • a plurality of bristles members with their cooperative supporting and cooling members as shown in Figure l are located in transverse alignment as shown by the diagram in Figure 7.
  • the bristle units C with their cooperating supporting member may be assembled so that the air scoops are aligned as shown in Figures 6 and 8.
  • a unit brush supporting and cooling member comprising a disc of suitable material, the disc having a central body portion with means for mounting it on a drive member and an ofiset rim terminating in an annular flange and a plurality of arcuately positioned air scoops formed outwardly on said central portion, the scoops terminating in depressed parts extending across the rim and outwardly in the flange thereby forming an air passage from the scoop to the outer edge of the flange as and for the purposes described.
  • a unit brush supporting and cooling member as set forth in claim 1 further defined in that arcuately positioned bearing hubs are preferably formed outwardly from the outer periphery of the rim for the purpose described.
  • a unit brush supporting and cooling member comprising a single disc of suitable metal, the disc having centrally located means for mounting it on a driving member, said disc having a relatively large body portion terminating in an offset annular rim and the rim having at one edge an offset projecting annular flange, the body portion having a plurality of arcuately spaced parts punched outwardly from the offset rim flange in a general direction toward the center of the disc so as to form air scoops, the metal of the rim and flange also being 3 depressed from the base of each scoop to the free edge of the flange to form an integral continuation of the said air scoops.
  • a unit brush supporting and cooling member as set forth in claim 3 further defined in that hearing hubs 5 are preferably punched outwardly on the rim between said depressed parts.
  • a unit brush supporting and cooling member as set forth in claim 3 further defined in that the rim has portions between said scoop formations forced outwardly 10 to form hubs for engaging the brush assembly.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Brushes (AREA)
  • Polishing Bodies And Polishing Tools (AREA)

Description

N. E. NIELSEN April 12, 1955 ROTARY BRUSH 3 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed Jan. 29, 1953 April 12, 1955 N. E. NIELSEN ,705,855
ROTARY BRUSH Y Filed Jan. 29, 1955 3 Sheets-Sheet 2 v \i I April 12, 1955 N. E. NIELSEN ROTARY BRUSH 3 Sheets-Sheet 3 Filed Jan. 29, 1953 United States Patent ROTARY BRUSH Niels E. Nielsen, Summit, N. 1., assignor to Newark Brush Company, Kenilworth, N. 1., a corporation of New Jersey Application January 29, 1953, Serial No. 333,875
Claims. (Cl. 51-193) This invention relates to a member or device for supporting a brush or buff wheel which is made up of bristles of suitable material or cloth that is assembled into a circular disc. Heretofore such brush assemblies have been mounted in various ways for rotation on a shaft that is driven at a speed such that the outer periphery of the bristles or equivalent are travelling at a relatively high rate of speed for different purposes 311151111 as polishing the surface of a device for its final Where the speed on the contact surface of the brush is fast, considerable heat is generated and it is an object of my invention to provide cooling means for the numerous parts of the brush. While various cooling means have been utilized in the past 1 have found after many experiments and tests with prior devices that considerable improvements can be made thereon. It is therefore another object of my invention to provide a new supporting member having improved means for forcing cool air through the numerous parts of the brush. These and other objects will be clear to one familiar with this kind of work, from a reading of the specification taken in connection with the annexed drawing wherein Figure 1 is a plan view on a reduced scale of my improved supporting and cooling member.
Figure 2 is a view on the line 2-2 of Figure 1.
Figure 3 is a view on the line 33 of Figure 1.
Figure 4 is a view on the line 44 of Figure 1.
Figure 5 is a view of a sectional part of the brush showing the adaptation of the supporting and cooling member thereto.
Figure 6 is a fragmentary view somewhat like Figure 5 but showing the air scoops out of axial alignment or in staggered relationship as they are assembled to different brushes mounted on the driving shaft.
Figure 7 is a diagram on a small scale, showing a plurality of brushes having their holders so the air scoops or ducts are in axial alignment.
Figure 8 is a view similar to Figure 7 but illustrating non-axial alignment of the air ducts shown in Figure 6 Figure 9 is a fragmentary view showing the rim and flange portion of the supporting member of Figure 1 overlapping one of the clamping members that holds the bristles together.
Figure 9A is a fragmentary perspective view showing the bearing lugs illustrated in Figures 9 and 1.
Figure 10 is a view on the line 1010 of Figure 5 on an enlarged scale but showing a plurality of unit brushes in assembled relation to make a larger brush.
Figure 11 is a view on line 1111 of Figure 10.
Figure 12 is a view about on line 1212 of Figure 10.
Figure 13 is a view similar to Figure 5 but with cloth used as a buff material.
Referring now to details wherein the like numbers refer to corresponding parts on the various views. The supporting and cooling member carrying the brush or polishing material comprises a disc or circular shaped member having a central body portion 1 with a hub 2 for mounting on a driving shaft 3. The outer periphery of the disc 1 terminates in an annular offset rim 2,705,855 Patented Apr. 12, 1955 ice 4 having a circular flange 5. Forced outwardly from the disc 1 are a plurality of air scoop 6, the formation of which starts at approximately point 7 and continues to the point 8 leaving a supporting edge along the curbed line between the points 8 and 9. Since the discs are made of a preferably stiff material such as steel properly treated to prevent rusting, these formed air scoops 6 will take in air through an opening which may have a maximum width at a point 10 of approximately of an inch, more or less depending upon the type of brush and the work that the same has to do. At the same time that air scoops 6 are formed, the material is forced outwardly across the rim 4 and flange 5 to form an air duct 11 as further shown in Figure 2. As shown in Figures 1, 9 and 9A, bearing hubs 12 are formed in the rim 4 preferably equally spaced between the air ducts 11 where they pass through the rim 4 and flange 5. These bearing lugs 12 engage the inner periphery of the brush unit which is made up of bristles of suitable material or of cloth as shown in Figure 13 which are held together by a pair of clamping rings 13 that are laced in position by clamping links 14 as shown in Figure 9 but since the present invention relates to the structure shown in Figure 1 further description of the brush element is not necessary. Since the bearing lugs 12 project outwardly beyond the outer surface of the rim 4 spaces will be provided between the arcuately positioned bearing lugs 12 which space is crossed by the air passages 11 coming from the air scoops 6.
In Figure 5 a plurality of bristles members with their cooperative supporting and cooling members as shown in Figure l are located in transverse alignment as shown by the diagram in Figure 7. As an alternative the bristle units C with their cooperating supporting member may be assembled so that the air scoops are aligned as shown in Figures 6 and 8.
From the enlarged view shown in Figure 10 and in sections 11 and 12 it will be seen that this new type of supporting and cooling member provides a new and improved means for passing air out through the brush or polishing member regardless of whether or not it is made of bristles C as shown in Figures 5, 6 and 10 or whether cloth C is used as shown in Figure 13. By having a better means of cooling the brush material the life of the same has been greatly increased and a better job is performed on the object being treated by the brush. It is obvious that many of the details of construction may be varied without departing from the spirit of my invention and the scope of the appended claims.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim is:
1. A unit brush supporting and cooling member comprising a disc of suitable material, the disc having a central body portion with means for mounting it on a drive member and an ofiset rim terminating in an annular flange and a plurality of arcuately positioned air scoops formed outwardly on said central portion, the scoops terminating in depressed parts extending across the rim and outwardly in the flange thereby forming an air passage from the scoop to the outer edge of the flange as and for the purposes described.
2. A unit brush supporting and cooling member as set forth in claim 1 further defined in that arcuately positioned bearing hubs are preferably formed outwardly from the outer periphery of the rim for the purpose described.
3. A unit brush supporting and cooling member comprising a single disc of suitable metal, the disc having centrally located means for mounting it on a driving member, said disc having a relatively large body portion terminating in an offset annular rim and the rim having at one edge an offset projecting annular flange, the body portion having a plurality of arcuately spaced parts punched outwardly from the offset rim flange in a general direction toward the center of the disc so as to form air scoops, the metal of the rim and flange also being 3 depressed from the base of each scoop to the free edge of the flange to form an integral continuation of the said air scoops.
4. A unit brush supporting and cooling member as set forth in claim 3 further defined in that hearing hubs 5 are preferably punched outwardly on the rim between said depressed parts.
5. A unit brush supporting and cooling member as set forth in claim 3 further defined in that the rim has portions between said scoop formations forced outwardly 10 to form hubs for engaging the brush assembly.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS Murray Dec. 13, Mollica Aug. 15, Richards Oct. 17, Blair et al. Nov. 21, Kingsbury Ian. 30, Richards Nov. 6, Goldberg Apr. 7, Kanter May 12,
US333875A 1953-01-29 1953-01-29 Rotary brush Expired - Lifetime US2705855A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US333875A US2705855A (en) 1953-01-29 1953-01-29 Rotary brush

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US333875A US2705855A (en) 1953-01-29 1953-01-29 Rotary brush

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2705855A true US2705855A (en) 1955-04-12

Family

ID=23304626

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US333875A Expired - Lifetime US2705855A (en) 1953-01-29 1953-01-29 Rotary brush

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2705855A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP3141344A1 (en) * 2009-12-02 2017-03-15 Bridgestone Bandag, LLC Passive buffer brush air cooling

Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2140208A (en) * 1934-03-17 1938-12-13 Joseph W Myers Buffing wheel
US2519275A (en) * 1948-06-29 1950-08-15 United Buff Products Corp Pressure cooled polishing buff
US2526420A (en) * 1948-10-05 1950-10-17 Canadian Hanson Ventilated buffing wheel
US2531249A (en) * 1948-09-29 1950-11-21 Divine Brothers Company Buff construction
US2539844A (en) * 1950-02-09 1951-01-30 American Buff Company Ventilated buffing wheel
US2573874A (en) * 1950-01-07 1951-11-06 Canadian Hanson And Van Winkle Ventilated buffing wheel
US2633680A (en) * 1948-10-20 1953-04-07 Goldberg Samuel Self-cooling buffing wheel
US2637957A (en) * 1949-04-29 1953-05-12 United Buff Products Corp Buffing wheel

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2140208A (en) * 1934-03-17 1938-12-13 Joseph W Myers Buffing wheel
US2519275A (en) * 1948-06-29 1950-08-15 United Buff Products Corp Pressure cooled polishing buff
US2531249A (en) * 1948-09-29 1950-11-21 Divine Brothers Company Buff construction
US2526420A (en) * 1948-10-05 1950-10-17 Canadian Hanson Ventilated buffing wheel
US2633680A (en) * 1948-10-20 1953-04-07 Goldberg Samuel Self-cooling buffing wheel
US2637957A (en) * 1949-04-29 1953-05-12 United Buff Products Corp Buffing wheel
US2573874A (en) * 1950-01-07 1951-11-06 Canadian Hanson And Van Winkle Ventilated buffing wheel
US2539844A (en) * 1950-02-09 1951-01-30 American Buff Company Ventilated buffing wheel

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP3141344A1 (en) * 2009-12-02 2017-03-15 Bridgestone Bandag, LLC Passive buffer brush air cooling
US10493586B2 (en) 2009-12-02 2019-12-03 Bridgestone Bandag, Llc Passive buffer brush air cooling

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2872256A (en) Thrust bearing
US2136747A (en) Buffing wheel
US2871632A (en) Rotative surfacing tool and tufted packs therefor and method of making such packs
GB1047126A (en) An abrading device
US2850852A (en) Air cooled pulley for abrasive belt grinders
US2198282A (en) Abrading or polishing tool
GB1261311A (en) Self air cooling abrading wheel
US2705855A (en) Rotary brush
US2539844A (en) Ventilated buffing wheel
US2506288A (en) Buffing wheel
US2455098A (en) Buffing wheel
US2530960A (en) Traveling band abrading machine
US2027863A (en) Ventilated buffing wheel
US2479941A (en) Air-cooled buffing wheel
US2455099A (en) Buffing wheel
GB624928A (en) Improvements in or relating to flexible abrasive articles in disc form
US2519275A (en) Pressure cooled polishing buff
US872966A (en) Buffing or polishing wheel.
US3857135A (en) Vehicle polishing apparatus
US2866989A (en) Rotary brush
US3621622A (en) Adjustable width rotary finishing tool
US3191350A (en) Polishing apparatus
US2608035A (en) Buffing wheel
US2700257A (en) Abrasive wheel with conforming rim
US2746217A (en) Grinding wheel