US3687571A - High pressure expansible chamber device - Google Patents

High pressure expansible chamber device Download PDF

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US3687571A
US3687571A US106048A US3687571DA US3687571A US 3687571 A US3687571 A US 3687571A US 106048 A US106048 A US 106048A US 3687571D A US3687571D A US 3687571DA US 3687571 A US3687571 A US 3687571A
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valve
port
fluid
feeding
casing
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Wayne B Easton
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F04POSITIVE - DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; PUMPS FOR LIQUIDS OR ELASTIC FLUIDS
    • F04CROTARY-PISTON, OR OSCILLATING-PISTON, POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT MACHINES FOR LIQUIDS; ROTARY-PISTON, OR OSCILLATING-PISTON, POSITIVE-DISPLACEMENT PUMPS
    • F04C2/00Rotary-piston machines or pumps
    • F04C2/08Rotary-piston machines or pumps of intermeshing-engagement type, i.e. with engagement of co-operating members similar to that of toothed gearing
    • F04C2/10Rotary-piston machines or pumps of intermeshing-engagement type, i.e. with engagement of co-operating members similar to that of toothed gearing of internal-axis type with the outer member having more teeth or tooth-equivalents, e.g. rollers, than the inner member
    • F04C2/103Rotary-piston machines or pumps of intermeshing-engagement type, i.e. with engagement of co-operating members similar to that of toothed gearing of internal-axis type with the outer member having more teeth or tooth-equivalents, e.g. rollers, than the inner member one member having simultaneously a rotational movement about its own axis and an orbital movement
    • F04C2/105Details concerning timing or distribution valves

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  • the invention relates to an expansible chamber type of device which is especially adapted for use with high pressure operating fluids.
  • the device has a valve which directs pressurized fluid from an inlet port to the expanding chambers thereof and non-pressurized fluid from the contracting chambers thereof to an outlet port.
  • a valve sealing arrangement is provided whereby pressurized fluid is utilized to bias the valve into sealing engagement with a valve block which contains passages leading to the expanding and contracting chambers.
  • a main feature is that the inlet and outlet ports are reversible from the standpoint that either p011 may be used as the inlet port to obtain a desired direction of rotation without adversely affecting the operativeness of the sealing arrangement.
  • the invention relates to an expansible chamber type of device which is especially adapted for use with high pressure operating fluids.
  • Such devices commonly have a valve which directs pressurized fluid from an inlet port to the expanding chambers thereof and non-pressurized or spent fluid from the contracting chambers thereof to an outlet port.
  • a sealing arrangement must be provided for and in connection with such a valve to prevent or deter the short circuiting of pressurized fluid from the high pressure side to the low pressure side or from the high pressure side through a shaft seal to a point externally of the device.
  • the expansible chamber device of the present invention is provided with a sealing arrangement in which (1) the high pressure fluid is transferred across only one pair of relatively movable surfaces which are the surfaces of a valve, (2) the valve surfaces are biased together by the pressurized operating fluid, and (3) the inlet and outlet ports are reversible from the standpoint that either port may be used as the inlet port to obtain a desired direction of rotation without adversely affecting the operativeness of the sealing arrangement.
  • the object of the invention is to provide an expansible chamber type of device having a new and improved valve biasing and sealing arrangement.
  • FIG. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of an expansible chamber type of motor, pump, metering device or the like having a new and improved valving arrangement in accordance with the invention, taken on line 1-1 of FIG. 2;
  • FIG. 2 is a transverse sectional view taken on line 2- 2 OF FIG. 1;
  • the drawing illustrates an expansible chamber type of device which will be referred to herein as a motor, for convenience, but which may be, within the scope of the invention, a motor, a pump, a metering device, or any other type of device of the expansible chamber
  • the illustrated motor comprises three cylindrically shaped casing sections 10, 11 and 12 and disk shaped end cover plates 13 and 14, these parts being secured together by bolt means 15.
  • Casing section houses an expansible chamber mechanism which is not specifically illustrated because it may be entirely conventional and because it may be any one of several known types of such mechanisms.
  • Examples of expansible chamber mechanisms are found in US. Pat. No. 2,095,255 which discloses types having radially and axially movable pistons, US. Pat. No. 3,272,142 which discloses a rotary piston or gerotor type and US. Pat. No. 2,169,456 which discloses axially movable pistons.
  • Casing section 11 is adjacent the expansible chamber mechanism housed by casing section 10 and is referred to herein as a valve block 11.
  • Casing section 12 adjacent valve block 11 is cylindrically and annularly shaped and forms, with cover plate 14, a valve chamber 18 which houses a cylindrically shaped valve 20.
  • the motor or expansible chamber device has a central, longitudinally extending axis 21 and valve block 11 has a longitudinally extending bore 22 having an axis which is coaxial with the axis 21.
  • Valve block 11 has a plurality of axially extending feeding and exhausting passages 24 to 30 which are circumferentially arranged relative to the axis 21 and which have port openings in the annularly shaped fluid transfer surface 32 of valve block 11.
  • the passage arrangement comprising the passages 24 to 30 is in itself old and is commonly used for feeding and exhausting fluid to and from expansible chamber devices. Each such passage alternately has fluid flowing therethrough to the left to an expanding chamber and subsequently therethrough to the right while that same chamber is contracting or collapsing. Passages 24 to 30 will be referred to more in detail further on herein in connection with an explanation of the valve 20.
  • a shaft 34 is rotatably disposed within valve block bore 22 and is connected to valve 20 in driving relation thereto.
  • Valve 20 has a valve face 36 which engages the valve block fluid transfer surface 32.
  • Valve 20 is illustrated as being rotatably about the axis 21 but, as will be explained further on, valve 20 may have different forms of motions as well as different configurations, within the scope of the invention. As illustrated, however, a spline connection 38 is provided between valve 20 and shaft 34 which facilitates the joint rotation of the shaft and valve but allows the valve to be biased into sealing engagement with the valve block 11 without any hindrance from the shaft.
  • a rotatable shaft 39 is drivingly connected to the expansible chamber means (not shown) housed in the casing section 10 and may or may not, depending on the type of expansible chamber device being utilized, be directly connected to the shaft 34.
  • Valve block 11 has radially extending inlet and outlet ports 40 and 41 which are reversible in the sense that either port 40 or 41 may be the inlet port so that the expansible chamber device will be operated in one direction or the other so that shaft 39 may be rotated in either direction as desired.
  • Axially extending passages 44 and 45 respectively intersect ports or passages 40 and 41 and have port openings in the annular fluid transfer surface 32 of valve block 11 at different radial distances from the axis 21.
  • Valve 20 is illustrated with a known type of fluid flow distribution pattern (referred to herein for convenience as FFDP) formed in the valve face 36 as may be best seen in FIG. 2.
  • FFDP fluid flow distribution pattern
  • the FFDP of any valve used must have separate and distinct fluid feeding and exhausting sections and either of such sections will be the feeding section (and the other the exhausting section) depending upon which of the ports 40 or 41 is the inlet port.
  • feeding and exhausting sections are formed with two sections 50 and 51 which are recessed relative to the valve face 36. Assuming port 40 to be the inlet port, section 50 will be the feeding section and section 51 will be the exhausting section.
  • Feeding section 50 is formed by the circular wall 52, and the radially offset semicircular walls 53 and 54, and includes feeding port 44 within its confines.
  • Exhausting section 51 is formed by the walls 53 and 54 and the central circular wall 55 which surrounds the end of shaft 34. Exhausting sec tion 51 includes exhausting port 45 within its confines.
  • valve block passages 40 and 44 and valve section 50 form fluid inlet path means; concomitantly valve section 51 and valve block passages 45 and 41 form fluid outlet path means.
  • valve block passages 41 and 45 and valve section 51 form fluid inlet path means, concomitantly valve section 50 and valve block passages 44 and 40 form fluid outlet path means.
  • valve section 51 would be the feeding section.
  • pressurized fluid admitted through port 40 and 41 would flow to the recessed valve section 50 or 51 and the pressure exerted on the recessed area would tend to force the valve to the right in a direction away from the valve block 11.
  • means are provided for admitting fluid to the chamber or space 18 between the valve 20 and the cover plate 14 which results in a larger net force, by reason of a relatively larger area of the back side 58 of the valve being acted upon by pressurized fluid, which biases the valve in the direction of the valve block 11.
  • the spacing between the back side 58 of the valve 20 and the cover plate 14 is shown as being relatively large for the purpose of illustration but in practice such spacing may be as small as a few thousandths of an inch or even less than a thousandth of an inch.
  • valve block passages 40 and 44 and valve section 50 form fluid inlet path means; concomitantly valve section 51 and valve block passages 45 and 41 form fluid outlet path means.
  • valve block passages 41 and 45 and valve section 51 form fluid inlet path means, concomitantly valve section 50 and valve block passages 44 and 40 form fluid outlet path means.
  • valve section 50 In the operation of a motor pressurized fluid through branch pipe 108 and fitting 104 is introduced through port 40 and 41 depending on the direction of rotation desired for shaft 39. If the fluid is introduced through inlet port 40, valve section 50 is pressurized and, with the valve in its position as shown in FIG. 2, pressurized fluid would flow through passages to 27 to expanding chambers of the ex ansible chamber device housed m casing section 1 Concomitantly, fluid would flow from contracting chambers of said device through passages 28 to 30 to the valve section 51 from which it would flow through the passage 45 to the outlet port 41.
  • Shaft 34 and valve 20 rotate in synchronism with the operation of the expansible chamber device and, as may be visualized by reference to FIG. 2, each of the passages 24 to 30 communicates alternately with the valve sections 50 and 51 and the passages 24 to 30 are sequentially fed and exhausted by the valve sections 50 and 51.
  • pressurized fluid through the branch pipe 108 would be admitted to the inlet port 41 and pressurized fluid would still be admitted to valve chamber 18 through branch pipe 109 and port 100 as described above.
  • a fluid pressure operated device of the expansible chamber type comprising a casing, a valve block having a fluid transfer surface, said valve block having a plurality of expansible chamber feeding and exhausting passages having openings in said transfer surface, a valve having a first surface engaging said transfer surface, said valve first surface being recessed to form reversible feeding and exhausting sections, reversible inlet and outlet ports in said valve block having openings in said transfer surface and respective constant fluid communication with said feeding and exhausting sections of said valve, said valve being cyclically movable relative to said transfer surface with said feeding and exhausting sections thereof sequentially feeding and exhausting said expansible chamber passages, said valve having a second surface on the opposite side thereof from said first surface, a valve biasing pressure chamber formed by said casing and said second valve surface, a port in said casing having fluid communication with said pressure chamber for admitting pressurized fluid to said pressure chamber for statically biasing said valve towards said valve block transfer surface, said pressure chamber having no openings other than said port in said casing, and drive means attached to said
  • a fluid pressure device including a piping assembly having a main line and two branch lines, one of said branch lines being connectable to one of said reversible ports and the other of said branch lines being connectable to said casing port.

Abstract

The invention relates to an expansible chamber type of device which is especially adapted for use with high pressure operating fluids. The device has a valve which directs pressurized fluid from an inlet port to the expanding chambers thereof and nonpressurized fluid from the contracting chambers thereof to an outlet port. A valve sealing arrangement is provided whereby pressurized fluid is utilized to bias the valve into sealing engagement with a valve block which contains passages leading to the expanding and contracting chambers. A main feature is that the inlet and outlet ports are reversible from the standpoint that either port may be used as the inlet port to obtain a desired direction of rotation without adversely affecting the operativeness of the sealing arrangement.

Description

United States Patent [151 3,687,571
Easton 1 Aug. 29, 1972 [54] HIGH PRESSURE EXPANSIBLE CHAMBER DEVICE Wayne B. Easton, 3007 W. 96th St. Circle, Bloomington, Minn. 55431 Filed: Jan. 13, 1971 Appl. No.: 106,048
Inventor:
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS Kohtaki ..9l/180 Ainsworth ..91/ 180 Adams ..4l8/133 Primary ExaminerCarlton R. Croyle Assistant Examiner-Richard J. Sher Attorney-Wayne B. Easton [5 7] ABSTRACT The invention relates to an expansible chamber type of device which is especially adapted for use with high pressure operating fluids. The device has a valve which directs pressurized fluid from an inlet port to the expanding chambers thereof and non-pressurized fluid from the contracting chambers thereof to an outlet port. A valve sealing arrangement is provided whereby pressurized fluid is utilized to bias the valve into sealing engagement with a valve block which contains passages leading to the expanding and contracting chambers. A main feature is that the inlet and outlet ports are reversible from the standpoint that either p011 may be used as the inlet port to obtain a desired direction of rotation without adversely affecting the operativeness of the sealing arrangement.
2 Claims, 2 Drawing Figures HIGH PRESSURE EXPANSIBLE CHAMBER DEVICE The invention relates to an expansible chamber type of device which is especially adapted for use with high pressure operating fluids. Such devices commonly have a valve which directs pressurized fluid from an inlet port to the expanding chambers thereof and non-pressurized or spent fluid from the contracting chambers thereof to an outlet port.
A sealing arrangement must be provided for and in connection with such a valve to prevent or deter the short circuiting of pressurized fluid from the high pressure side to the low pressure side or from the high pressure side through a shaft seal to a point externally of the device.
The expansible chamber device of the present invention is provided with a sealing arrangement in which (1) the high pressure fluid is transferred across only one pair of relatively movable surfaces which are the surfaces of a valve, (2) the valve surfaces are biased together by the pressurized operating fluid, and (3) the inlet and outlet ports are reversible from the standpoint that either port may be used as the inlet port to obtain a desired direction of rotation without adversely affecting the operativeness of the sealing arrangement.
The object of the invention is to provide an expansible chamber type of device having a new and improved valve biasing and sealing arrangement.
Other objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following specification, drawings and appended claims.
In the drawings:
FIG. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of an expansible chamber type of motor, pump, metering device or the like having a new and improved valving arrangement in accordance with the invention, taken on line 1-1 of FIG. 2;
FIG. 2 is a transverse sectional view taken on line 2- 2 OF FIG. 1;
The drawing illustrates an expansible chamber type of device which will be referred to herein as a motor, for convenience, but which may be, within the scope of the invention, a motor, a pump, a metering device, or any other type of device of the expansible chamber The illustrated motor comprises three cylindrically shaped casing sections 10, 11 and 12 and disk shaped end cover plates 13 and 14, these parts being secured together by bolt means 15.
Casing section houses an expansible chamber mechanism which is not specifically illustrated because it may be entirely conventional and because it may be any one of several known types of such mechanisms. Examples of expansible chamber mechanisms are found in US. Pat. No. 2,095,255 which discloses types having radially and axially movable pistons, US. Pat. No. 3,272,142 which discloses a rotary piston or gerotor type and US. Pat. No. 2,169,456 which discloses axially movable pistons.
Casing section 11 is adjacent the expansible chamber mechanism housed by casing section 10 and is referred to herein as a valve block 11. Casing section 12 adjacent valve block 11 is cylindrically and annularly shaped and forms, with cover plate 14, a valve chamber 18 which houses a cylindrically shaped valve 20.
The motor or expansible chamber device has a central, longitudinally extending axis 21 and valve block 11 has a longitudinally extending bore 22 having an axis which is coaxial with the axis 21. Valve block 11 has a plurality of axially extending feeding and exhausting passages 24 to 30 which are circumferentially arranged relative to the axis 21 and which have port openings in the annularly shaped fluid transfer surface 32 of valve block 11. The passage arrangement comprising the passages 24 to 30 is in itself old and is commonly used for feeding and exhausting fluid to and from expansible chamber devices. Each such passage alternately has fluid flowing therethrough to the left to an expanding chamber and subsequently therethrough to the right while that same chamber is contracting or collapsing. Passages 24 to 30 will be referred to more in detail further on herein in connection with an explanation of the valve 20.
A shaft 34 is rotatably disposed within valve block bore 22 and is connected to valve 20 in driving relation thereto. Valve 20 has a valve face 36 which engages the valve block fluid transfer surface 32. Valve 20 is illustrated as being rotatably about the axis 21 but, as will be explained further on, valve 20 may have different forms of motions as well as different configurations, within the scope of the invention. As illustrated, however, a spline connection 38 is provided between valve 20 and shaft 34 which facilitates the joint rotation of the shaft and valve but allows the valve to be biased into sealing engagement with the valve block 11 without any hindrance from the shaft.
A rotatable shaft 39 is drivingly connected to the expansible chamber means (not shown) housed in the casing section 10 and may or may not, depending on the type of expansible chamber device being utilized, be directly connected to the shaft 34. Valve block 11 has radially extending inlet and outlet ports 40 and 41 which are reversible in the sense that either port 40 or 41 may be the inlet port so that the expansible chamber device will be operated in one direction or the other so that shaft 39 may be rotated in either direction as desired. Axially extending passages 44 and 45 respectively intersect ports or passages 40 and 41 and have port openings in the annular fluid transfer surface 32 of valve block 11 at different radial distances from the axis 21.
Valve 20 is illustrated with a known type of fluid flow distribution pattern (referred to herein for convenience as FFDP) formed in the valve face 36 as may be best seen in FIG. 2. The FFDP of any valve used must have separate and distinct fluid feeding and exhausting sections and either of such sections will be the feeding section (and the other the exhausting section) depending upon which of the ports 40 or 41 is the inlet port. In valve 20, feeding and exhausting sections are formed with two sections 50 and 51 which are recessed relative to the valve face 36. Assuming port 40 to be the inlet port, section 50 will be the feeding section and section 51 will be the exhausting section. Feeding section 50 is formed by the circular wall 52, and the radially offset semicircular walls 53 and 54, and includes feeding port 44 within its confines. Exhausting section 51 is formed by the walls 53 and 54 and the central circular wall 55 which surrounds the end of shaft 34. Exhausting sec tion 51 includes exhausting port 45 within its confines.
If port 40 is used as the inlet port, valve block passages 40 and 44 and valve section 50 form fluid inlet path means; concomitantly valve section 51 and valve block passages 45 and 41 form fluid outlet path means. If port 41 is used as the inlet port, valve block passages 41 and 45 and valve section 51 form fluid inlet path means, concomitantly valve section 50 and valve block passages 44 and 40 form fluid outlet path means.
Upon valve 20 being rotated, and assuming port 40 is the inlet port, the passages 24 to 30 which are within the confines of feeding section 50, will convey fluid from the port 40 to expanding chambers of the expansible chamber device housed by casing section likewise the passages 24 to 30 which are within the confines of exhausting section 51 will convey fluid from the collapsing chambers of the expansible chamber device to the port 41.
It will be understood that the above described flow conditions would be reversed if port 41 were the inlet port and in that case the valve section 51 would be the feeding section.
The description of the invention which follows is equally applicable to various other types of valve arrangements such as those disclosed in my pending patent application Ser. No. 670,962 filed Sept. 27, 1967 in which each of three valves disclosed therein has a difierent type or form of FFDP. Likewise shafts for driving the valve having other forms than the disclosed shaft 34 may be utilized in well known ways depending on the particular form of valve chosen. As a criteria it is only essential that the valve be free to be biased by pressure against the valve block surface 32.
It may be observed that pressurized fluid admitted through port 40 and 41 would flow to the recessed valve section 50 or 51 and the pressure exerted on the recessed area would tend to force the valve to the right in a direction away from the valve block 11. in accordance with the invention, means are provided for admitting fluid to the chamber or space 18 between the valve 20 and the cover plate 14 which results in a larger net force, by reason of a relatively larger area of the back side 58 of the valve being acted upon by pressurized fluid, which biases the valve in the direction of the valve block 11. The spacing between the back side 58 of the valve 20 and the cover plate 14 is shown as being relatively large for the purpose of illustration but in practice such spacing may be as small as a few thousandths of an inch or even less than a thousandth of an inch.
If port 40 is used as the inlet port, valve block passages 40 and 44 and valve section 50 form fluid inlet path means; concomitantly valve section 51 and valve block passages 45 and 41 form fluid outlet path means. If port 41 is used as the inlet port, valve block passages 41 and 45 and valve section 51 form fluid inlet path means, concomitantly valve section 50 and valve block passages 44 and 40 form fluid outlet path means.
In the operation of a motor pressurized fluid through branch pipe 108 and fitting 104 is introduced through port 40 and 41 depending on the direction of rotation desired for shaft 39. If the fluid is introduced through inlet port 40, valve section 50 is pressurized and, with the valve in its position as shown in FIG. 2, pressurized fluid would flow through passages to 27 to expanding chambers of the ex ansible chamber device housed m casing section 1 Concomitantly, fluid would flow from contracting chambers of said device through passages 28 to 30 to the valve section 51 from which it would flow through the passage 45 to the outlet port 41. Shaft 34 and valve 20 rotate in synchronism with the operation of the expansible chamber device and, as may be visualized by reference to FIG. 2, each of the passages 24 to 30 communicates alternately with the valve sections 50 and 51 and the passages 24 to 30 are sequentially fed and exhausted by the valve sections 50 and 51.
Pressurized fluid from branch pipe 109 flows through port into valve chamber 18 between the back side 58 of the valve and cover platel4. The pressurized fluid acting on valve surface 58 biases the valve into sealing engagement with the valve block 11. As the area of each of the valve sections 50 and 51 is less than the area of valve side 58, there will always be a net force biasing the valve in the direction of the valve block 11 even though the fluid pressure for valve sections 50 and 51 is substantially the same as the fluid pressure in valve chamber 18.
If it were desired to reverse the direction of rotation for shaft 39, pressurized fluid through the branch pipe 108 would be admitted to the inlet port 41 and pressurized fluid would still be admitted to valve chamber 18 through branch pipe 109 and port 100 as described above.
I claim:
1. A fluid pressure operated device of the expansible chamber type comprising a casing, a valve block having a fluid transfer surface, said valve block having a plurality of expansible chamber feeding and exhausting passages having openings in said transfer surface, a valve having a first surface engaging said transfer surface, said valve first surface being recessed to form reversible feeding and exhausting sections, reversible inlet and outlet ports in said valve block having openings in said transfer surface and respective constant fluid communication with said feeding and exhausting sections of said valve, said valve being cyclically movable relative to said transfer surface with said feeding and exhausting sections thereof sequentially feeding and exhausting said expansible chamber passages, said valve having a second surface on the opposite side thereof from said first surface, a valve biasing pressure chamber formed by said casing and said second valve surface, a port in said casing having fluid communication with said pressure chamber for admitting pressurized fluid to said pressure chamber for statically biasing said valve towards said valve block transfer surface, said pressure chamber having no openings other than said port in said casing, and drive means attached to said valve and extending in a direction away from said pressure chamber, said second valve surface being between said drive means and said chamber.
2. A fluid pressure device according to claim 1 including a piping assembly having a main line and two branch lines, one of said branch lines being connectable to one of said reversible ports and the other of said branch lines being connectable to said casing port.

Claims (2)

1. A fluid pressure operated device of the expansible chamber type comprising a casing, a valve block having a fluid transfer surface, said valve block having a plurality of expansible chamber feeding and exhausting passages having openings in said transfer surface, a valve having a first surface engaging said transfer surface, said valve first surface being recessed to form reversible feeding and exhausting sections, reversible inlet and outlet ports in said valve block having openings in said transfer surface and respective constant fluid communication with said feeding and exhausting sections of said valve, said valve being cyclically movable relative to said transfer surface with said feeding and exhausting sections thereof sequentially feeding and exhausting said expansible chamber passages, said valve having a second surface on the opposite side thereof from said first surface, a valve biasing pressure chamber formed by said casing and said second valve surface, a port in said casing having fluid communication with said pressure chamber for admitting pressurized fluid to said pressure chamber for statically biasing said valve towards said valve block transfer surface, said pressure chamber having no openings other than said port in said casing, and drive means attached to said valve and extending in a direction away from said pressure chamber, said second valve surface being between said drive means and said chamber.
2. A fluid pressure device according to claim 1 including a piping assembly having a main line and two branch lines, one of said branch lines being connectable to one of said reversible ports and the other of said branch lines being connectable to said casing port.
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Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2756726A (en) * 1951-08-29 1956-07-31 Wayne Pump Co Volumetric meter suitable for gasoline dispensers
US2970578A (en) * 1957-06-24 1961-02-07 Kohtaki Teizo Oil pressure motor
US3012511A (en) * 1958-04-22 1961-12-12 Cecil E Adams Fluid pressure energy translating device

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2756726A (en) * 1951-08-29 1956-07-31 Wayne Pump Co Volumetric meter suitable for gasoline dispensers
US2970578A (en) * 1957-06-24 1961-02-07 Kohtaki Teizo Oil pressure motor
US3012511A (en) * 1958-04-22 1961-12-12 Cecil E Adams Fluid pressure energy translating device

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