US2788783A - Stock watering tank with built-in heating means - Google Patents

Stock watering tank with built-in heating means Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2788783A
US2788783A US354181A US35418153A US2788783A US 2788783 A US2788783 A US 2788783A US 354181 A US354181 A US 354181A US 35418153 A US35418153 A US 35418153A US 2788783 A US2788783 A US 2788783A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
water
burner
heating means
built
compartment
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
US354181A
Inventor
George L Ritch
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
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 Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US354181A priority Critical patent/US2788783A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2788783A publication Critical patent/US2788783A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01KANIMAL HUSBANDRY; AVICULTURE; APICULTURE; PISCICULTURE; FISHING; REARING OR BREEDING ANIMALS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NEW BREEDS OF ANIMALS
    • A01K7/00Watering equipment for stock or game
    • A01K7/02Automatic devices ; Medication dispensers
    • A01K7/027Drinking equipment with water heaters, coolers or means for preventing freezing

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improvements in watering tanks for livestock and including a self-contained assembly for automatically maintaining the water thereof at a predetermined temperature, the primary object being to provide an inexpensive, strong and durable construction requiring little care and attention once the same has been pre-set for continuous operation.
  • Another object of this invention is to provide a stock tank having heating means as a part thereof that includes a burner for the coils of the heater operably coupled with the aforementioned control, the coils extending through the partition in communication with the water-in the compartment so as to provide a natural circulation of the water through the coils, and to heat the water in response to the operation of the temperature control element adjacent the level of the water.
  • Other objects include the way in which a safety measure is provided through a pilot burner for automatically blocking the flow of fuel in the event the flame of the pilot burner is extinguished; the manner of extending the heating assembly through a top Wall for the heater chamber so as to evacuate products of combustion; the manner in which the heater, as well as the compartment of the tank, are provided with doors for rendering the primary burner and the pilot burner accessible; and many additional objects including important details of construction to be made clear as the following specification progresses.
  • Figure l is a top plan view of a stock watering tank with built-in heating means made pursuant to the present invention parts being broken away and in section to reveal details of construction.
  • Fig. 2 is a fragmentary side elevational view, parts being broken away and in section for clearness.
  • Fig. 3 is a vertical, transverse, cross-sectional view taken on line III--III of Fig. 2;
  • Fig. 4 is an enlarged, elevational view partially in sec- .tion showing one face of the automatic control.
  • FIG. 1 to 3 An open top stock watering tank 10, is shown in Figs. 1 to 3 inclusive of the drawing having a side wall 12 and :a bottom wall 14.
  • a vertical partition 16 presents a water compartment 18 and a heater chamber 20, chamber 20 being provided with a top wall 22.
  • a coil 30 within the drum 24 has an inlet 32 extending through a tube 34 joining drum 24 with partition 16 and an outlet 36 extending through a tube 38 that also connects drum 24 to partition 16.
  • a second coil 40 within the coil 30 has an inlet 42 in the tube 34 and an outlet 44 in the tube 38. It is understood that the inlets 32 and 42, as well as the outlets 36 and 44, are all in communication with the compartment 18.
  • a control unit broadly designated by the numeral 46, is mounted within the chamber 20 and upon the partition 16 through which it extends just below the top wall 22.
  • a fuel inlet line 48 connects with the control unit 46 and the latter in turn couples with a primary burner 50 within the drum 24 below coils 30 and 40 by a continuation of the line 48 and designated by the numeral 52.
  • a pilot burner 54 within the drum 24 adjacent burner 50 is joined with the control 46 by a fuel tube 56 and by a thermocouple lead 58.
  • the pilot burner 54 has a bimetallic element or thermocouple (not shown) forming a part thereof, which controls, through the lead 58, a thermomagnet 60 forming a part of the control 46 and operably coupled with a valve (not shown) within the control 46 for blocking the passage of fuel from the line 48 to the line 52 and to the tube 56.
  • Control 46 is also provided with a valve (not shown) controlling the flow of fuel to the burner 50 and which is in turn controlled by an expansion rod thermostat (not shown) within a tube 62 that is disposed in a tubular shield 64 that extends into the compartment' 18 just below the level of water 66 therein.
  • the burners 50 and 54 are rendered accessible by a door 68 on the drum 24 and a closure 70 on the side wall 12 of the tank 10.
  • control 46 is manipulated to supply the burner 54 with fuel and the latter is lighted, whereupon, by operation of a temperature adjustment lever 72, the burner assembly is rendered automatic.
  • the flame from the pilot burner 54 ignites fuel emanating from the burner 50 when the temperature of the water 66 falls below a predetermined temperature, all as controlled by the thermostat within the tube 62.
  • the flow of fuel is completely blocked by operation of the thermocouple and the electromagnet 60.
  • the burner 50 is ignited to heat the water within the coils 30 and 40, water 66 will continuously flow into the coils 30 and 40 through inlets 32 and 42 and flow from the coils 30 and 40 back into the compartment 18 by way of the outlets 36 and 44.
  • a horizontally elongated, open top, watering tank for livestock said tank being provided with a bottom, an upstanding side wall, and an internal vertical partition dividing the tank into an open top water compartment and a heating chamber, there being a top wall covering the chamber and provided with an opening therein;
  • a water heater in said chamber including an inner and an outer tubular water coil, each having a lowermost inlet end and an uppermost outlet end, a primary burner and a pilot burner underlying the coil, and a hollow, open ended, heat confining drum around the burners and the coils and passing through said opening to carry products of combustion from the burners out of the chamber; an upper tube and a lower tube interconnecting the drum and the partition, said inlet ends of the coils extending through the lower tube into communication with the compartment, said outlet ends of the coils extending through the upper tube into communication with the compartment, said upper tube being disposed at a level substantially above the level of said lower tube; a thermocouple adjacent the pilot burner; a fuel line
  • thermocouple operably connected with said thermocouple for controlling the flow of fuel to said pilot burner, said side wall and said drum being provided with closures for rendering the pilot burner accessible.

Landscapes

  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Environmental Sciences (AREA)
  • Animal Husbandry (AREA)
  • Biodiversity & Conservation Biology (AREA)
  • Regulation And Control Of Combustion (AREA)

Description

p 6, 1957 G. L. RITCH 2,788,783
STOCK WATERING TANK WITH BUILT-IN HEATING MEANS Filed May 11, 1953 IN VHV TOR.
{a 3 w I I Ga /ye AMP/fab- ATTORNEK United States Patent STOCK WATERING TANK WITH BUILT-1N HEATING MEANS George L. Ritch, Harrisonville, Mn.
Application May 11,1953, Serial No. 354,181
1 Claim. (Cl. 126-374) This invention relates to improvements in watering tanks for livestock and including a self-contained assembly for automatically maintaining the water thereof at a predetermined temperature, the primary object being to provide an inexpensive, strong and durable construction requiring little care and attention once the same has been pre-set for continuous operation.
It is the most important object of the present invention to provide a stock watering tank that has a partition therein to set otf a water compartment and a heating chamber, there being an automatic control for the heater within the compartment that includes a temperature control element that extends through the partition and into the water within the compartment for automatically controlling the temperature of the water in the latter.
Another object of this invention is to provide a stock tank having heating means as a part thereof that includes a burner for the coils of the heater operably coupled with the aforementioned control, the coils extending through the partition in communication with the water-in the compartment so as to provide a natural circulation of the water through the coils, and to heat the water in response to the operation of the temperature control element adjacent the level of the water.
Other objects include the way in which a safety measure is provided through a pilot burner for automatically blocking the flow of fuel in the event the flame of the pilot burner is extinguished; the manner of extending the heating assembly through a top Wall for the heater chamber so as to evacuate products of combustion; the manner in which the heater, as well as the compartment of the tank, are provided with doors for rendering the primary burner and the pilot burner accessible; and many additional objects including important details of construction to be made clear as the following specification progresses.
In the drawing:
Figure l is a top plan view of a stock watering tank with built-in heating means made pursuant to the present invention parts being broken away and in section to reveal details of construction.
Fig. 2 is a fragmentary side elevational view, parts being broken away and in section for clearness.
Fig. 3 is a vertical, transverse, cross-sectional view taken on line III--III of Fig. 2; and
Fig. 4 is an enlarged, elevational view partially in sec- .tion showing one face of the automatic control.
An open top stock watering tank 10, is shown in Figs. 1 to 3 inclusive of the drawing having a side wall 12 and :a bottom wall 14. A vertical partition 16 presents a water compartment 18 and a heater chamber 20, chamber 20 being provided with a top wall 22.
A hollow drum 24 supported by the partition 16 within the chamber 20 by means of a bracket 26, extends through the top wall 22 and is provided with damper 'means 28 designed to permit exhausting of products of combustion and preventing ingress of rain or other elements.
A coil 30 within the drum 24 has an inlet 32 extending through a tube 34 joining drum 24 with partition 16 and an outlet 36 extending through a tube 38 that also connects drum 24 to partition 16. A second coil 40 within the coil 30 has an inlet 42 in the tube 34 and an outlet 44 in the tube 38. It is understood that the inlets 32 and 42, as well as the outlets 36 and 44, are all in communication with the compartment 18.
A control unit broadly designated by the numeral 46, is mounted within the chamber 20 and upon the partition 16 through which it extends just below the top wall 22. A fuel inlet line 48 connects with the control unit 46 and the latter in turn couples with a primary burner 50 within the drum 24 below coils 30 and 40 by a continuation of the line 48 and designated by the numeral 52.
A pilot burner 54 within the drum 24 adjacent burner 50, is joined with the control 46 by a fuel tube 56 and by a thermocouple lead 58. The pilot burner 54 has a bimetallic element or thermocouple (not shown) forming a part thereof, which controls, through the lead 58, a thermomagnet 60 forming a part of the control 46 and operably coupled with a valve (not shown) within the control 46 for blocking the passage of fuel from the line 48 to the line 52 and to the tube 56.
Control 46 is also provided with a valve (not shown) controlling the flow of fuel to the burner 50 and which is in turn controlled by an expansion rod thermostat (not shown) within a tube 62 that is disposed in a tubular shield 64 that extends into the compartment' 18 just below the level of water 66 therein.
The burners 50 and 54 are rendered accessible by a door 68 on the drum 24 and a closure 70 on the side wall 12 of the tank 10.
In operation, control 46 is manipulated to supply the burner 54 with fuel and the latter is lighted, whereupon, by operation of a temperature adjustment lever 72, the burner assembly is rendered automatic. The flame from the pilot burner 54 ignites fuel emanating from the burner 50 when the temperature of the water 66 falls below a predetermined temperature, all as controlled by the thermostat within the tube 62. In the event the flame of the burner 54 becomes accidentally extinguished, the flow of fuel is completely blocked by operation of the thermocouple and the electromagnet 60. When the burner 50 is ignited to heat the water within the coils 30 and 40, water 66 will continuously flow into the coils 30 and 40 through inlets 32 and 42 and flow from the coils 30 and 40 back into the compartment 18 by way of the outlets 36 and 44.
Having thus described the invention what is claimed as new and desired to be secured by Letters Patent is:
Structure of the kind described comprising a horizontally elongated, open top, watering tank for livestock, said tank being provided with a bottom, an upstanding side wall, and an internal vertical partition dividing the tank into an open top water compartment and a heating chamber, there being a top wall covering the chamber and provided with an opening therein; a water heater in said chamber including an inner and an outer tubular water coil, each having a lowermost inlet end and an uppermost outlet end, a primary burner and a pilot burner underlying the coil, and a hollow, open ended, heat confining drum around the burners and the coils and passing through said opening to carry products of combustion from the burners out of the chamber; an upper tube and a lower tube interconnecting the drum and the partition, said inlet ends of the coils extending through the lower tube into communication with the compartment, said outlet ends of the coils extending through the upper tube into communication with the compartment, said upper tube being disposed at a level substantially above the level of said lower tube; a thermocouple adjacent the pilot burner; a fuel line extending through the side wall into the chamber and. coupled with the burners; and a. control unit carried by said partition in the chamber and including a tubular shield extending through the partition into the compartment .at a level substantially above and to one side of theoutlet .end of the coil, adjacent. said top of the tank'and below the level of Water in said compartmeilt, an expansion rod thermostat in said shield for controlling the How of fuel to said primary burner and a thermomagnet operably connected with said thermocouple for controlling the flow of fuel to said pilot burner, said side wall and said drum being provided with closures for rendering the pilot burner accessible.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS Edminster Nov. 12, 1889 Kelly Apr. 29, 1913 Slauter Dec. 17, 1929 Shurts Feb. 13, 1940 Pitman Aug. 4, 1942 Alfery Jan. 14, 1947 Holmes July 11, 1950 FOREIGN PATENTS Great Britain Dec. 10, 1925
US354181A 1953-05-11 1953-05-11 Stock watering tank with built-in heating means Expired - Lifetime US2788783A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US354181A US2788783A (en) 1953-05-11 1953-05-11 Stock watering tank with built-in heating means

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US354181A US2788783A (en) 1953-05-11 1953-05-11 Stock watering tank with built-in heating means

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2788783A true US2788783A (en) 1957-04-16

Family

ID=23392181

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US354181A Expired - Lifetime US2788783A (en) 1953-05-11 1953-05-11 Stock watering tank with built-in heating means

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2788783A (en)

Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US414800A (en) * 1889-11-12 Tank-heater
US1060458A (en) * 1912-04-03 1913-04-29 Michael Kelly Water-jacketed stove.
GB243875A (en) * 1924-10-30 1925-12-10 George Porteous Mitchell Improvements relating to the heating of domestic washing and like gas-heated boilers
US1739695A (en) * 1925-11-12 1929-12-17 Charles H Slauter Cleaning tank
US2190165A (en) * 1937-07-21 1940-02-13 Strauss Electric Appliance Com Dairy appliance
US2292156A (en) * 1939-07-07 1942-08-04 J C Pitman & Sons Inc Heat control
US2414220A (en) * 1943-05-13 1947-01-14 Milwaukee Gas Specialty Co Temperature control and safety shutoff
US2514642A (en) * 1948-08-10 1950-07-11 Harry C Holmes Hot-water boiler

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US414800A (en) * 1889-11-12 Tank-heater
US1060458A (en) * 1912-04-03 1913-04-29 Michael Kelly Water-jacketed stove.
GB243875A (en) * 1924-10-30 1925-12-10 George Porteous Mitchell Improvements relating to the heating of domestic washing and like gas-heated boilers
US1739695A (en) * 1925-11-12 1929-12-17 Charles H Slauter Cleaning tank
US2190165A (en) * 1937-07-21 1940-02-13 Strauss Electric Appliance Com Dairy appliance
US2292156A (en) * 1939-07-07 1942-08-04 J C Pitman & Sons Inc Heat control
US2414220A (en) * 1943-05-13 1947-01-14 Milwaukee Gas Specialty Co Temperature control and safety shutoff
US2514642A (en) * 1948-08-10 1950-07-11 Harry C Holmes Hot-water boiler

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4779795A (en) Convector room heater incorporating a hot water boiler
US20070257123A1 (en) Storage water heater
US2364791A (en) Water heater
US2036136A (en) Water heater
US2788783A (en) Stock watering tank with built-in heating means
US3191590A (en) Automatic cooking apparatus
US2339614A (en) Draft appliance
US2948276A (en) Coal-fired space heater
US3951335A (en) Oven stack action control
US4350141A (en) Blow back prevention apparatus for a wood-burning stove
US2607335A (en) Wood burning stove
US2162084A (en) Room heater
US2143640A (en) Cooking range or stove
US1644900A (en) Stove
US2088444A (en) Oil burning range for heating and cooking
US2232013A (en) Gas heating device
US1715989A (en) Gas burner
KR102022675B1 (en) Automatic gas pressure regulator with hot water temperature sensing function
US2303127A (en) Thermostat control for domestic water heaters
US2559931A (en) Automatically controlled water heater for coffee urns
US3228449A (en) Steam syphon oil burner
US1925294A (en) Low water indicator
SU1100466A1 (en) Device for checking draft for household gas water heater
US1950670A (en) Bake oven
US2060627A (en) Combination heater-range