US375940A - Waltee knight - Google Patents

Waltee knight Download PDF

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US375940A
US375940A US375940DA US375940A US 375940 A US375940 A US 375940A US 375940D A US375940D A US 375940DA US 375940 A US375940 A US 375940A
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wheel
spokes
metal
wood
hub
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60BVEHICLE WHEELS; CASTORS; AXLES FOR WHEELS OR CASTORS; INCREASING WHEEL ADHESION
    • B60B5/00Wheels, spokes, disc bodies, rims, hubs, wholly or predominantly made of non-metallic material
    • B60B5/04Wheels, spokes, disc bodies, rims, hubs, wholly or predominantly made of non-metallic material made of wood

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  • N 0.' 375, 940. Patented Jan. '3, 1888.
  • This invention relates to wagon or other vehicle wheels having wooden hubs and fellies but metal spokes set inclining or staggering in relation with each other, which combined wood and metal wheels are more capable of enduring without injury those inequalities of weather, such as the heat of summer and dampness of winter in highly variable climates and to stand which wagon-wheels made wholly of metal are not satisfactory and liable to break, while the common wooden ones are soon destroyed, whereas the combined wood and metal wheels have a compensating effect, theiron or steel expanding in hot weather and the wood shrinking, and in damp weather the metal shrinking while the wood expands, thus adding to the durability of the wheel.
  • the invention consists in a novel combination of parts in a combined wood and metal wheel as above, substantially as hereinafter described and pointed out in the claims, whereby great simplicity, durability, and strength are secured, and the wheel may be easily repaired when required.
  • Figure 1 represents a side view of a wagonwheel embodying my invention.
  • Fig. 2 is a transverse section of the same upon the line was in Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 3 is a section upon the line y y in Fig. 1, showing the tire and felly in part, and means of securing the same; and
  • Fig. 4 is a longitudinal view of one of the spokes of the wheel, in part, with a washer, in section, applied to the outer end thereof.
  • A is the hub of the wheel, made of wood, and of uniform size throughout its length and free from all mortises, whereby it is less liable to split or wear out, and is cheaper and better than the ordinary wooden hubs now in use.
  • This whole or nnmut-ilated cylindrical wooden hub is bound at its opposite ends by metal bands I) b.
  • B B are the spokes of the'wheel. These v spokes are of iron or steel, and are each made witha shoulder near its opposite ends. The reduced inner terminal portions of these spokes are fitted to enter and pass through the hubbands I) b, and so that their shoulders at said ends rest on the hub-bands and receive or carry the weight. Said reduced ends or tenons 0 pass through the hub-bands into the wood of the hub the necessary distance to hold the spokes and hub-bands to their places without cutting the wood of the hub to weaken or de stroy its usefulness and strength.
  • the wheel has two rows or sets of spokes, B B, set inclining toward each other in an outward direction and arranged in staggering or intermediate relation with each other from opposite ends of the hub, and serving, when united with the felly of the wheel, to brace each other.
  • C is the folly of the wheel, and D its tire, which may be laterally bound and united with each other by riveted clip-plates d.
  • the felly O is made of wood, and it and the main body of the hub both being of wood gives the tire D a chance to draw the wheel tight together, and there being little or comparatively no shrinkage in the metal spokes the wheel will remain in good condition much longer than wheels of a different construction.
  • the tenons c at the outer ends of the metal spokes have washers e fitted over them, the tenons themselves projectinginto the felly, while the washers 0 lie between the outer shoulders of the spokes and the wooden felly and prevent said shoulders from entering too far into the wood of the felly, so that the latter is neither crushed nor its strength destroyed by the outer shoulders of the spokes.
  • the combination of wood and metal in the wheel is such that a Very superior wheel for general use is produced and the full benefits of the two different materials are obtained.

Description

(No Model.)
W. KNIGHT.
VEHICLE WHEEL.
N=0.' 375, 940. Patented Jan. '3, 1888.
WITNESSES: INVEE'I'OR:
ATTORNEYS. I
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
\VALTER KNIGHT, OF SAN ANDREAS, CALIFORNIA.
VEHICLE-WHEEL.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letteis Patent No. 375,940, dated January 3, 1858 Application filed August 31, 1887. Serial No 24?,366. I (No model.)
To all whom it may concern.-
Be it known that I, WALTER KNIGHT, of San Andreas, in the county of Galaveras and State of California, have invented anew and useful Improvement in WVheels for \Vagous and other Vehicles, of which the following is a full, clear, and exact description.
This invention relates to wagon or other vehicle wheels having wooden hubs and fellies but metal spokes set inclining or staggering in relation with each other, which combined wood and metal wheels are more capable of enduring without injury those inequalities of weather, such as the heat of summer and dampness of winter in highly variable climates and to stand which wagon-wheels made wholly of metal are not satisfactory and liable to break, while the common wooden ones are soon destroyed, whereas the combined wood and metal wheels have a compensating effect, theiron or steel expanding in hot weather and the wood shrinking, and in damp weather the metal shrinking while the wood expands, thus adding to the durability of the wheel.
The invention consists in a novel combination of parts in a combined wood and metal wheel as above, substantially as hereinafter described and pointed out in the claims, whereby great simplicity, durability, and strength are secured, and the wheel may be easily repaired when required.
Reference is to be had to the accompanying drawings, forming a part of this specification, in which similar letters of reference indicate corresponding parts in all the figures.
Figure 1 represents a side view of a wagonwheel embodying my invention. Fig. 2 is a transverse section of the same upon the line was in Fig. 1. Fig. 3 is a section upon the line y y in Fig. 1, showing the tire and felly in part, and means of securing the same; and Fig. 4 is a longitudinal view of one of the spokes of the wheel, in part, with a washer, in section, applied to the outer end thereof.
A is the hub of the wheel, made of wood, and of uniform size throughout its length and free from all mortises, whereby it is less liable to split or wear out, and is cheaper and better than the ordinary wooden hubs now in use. This whole or nnmut-ilated cylindrical wooden hub is bound at its opposite ends by metal bands I) b.
B B are the spokes of the'wheel. These v spokes are of iron or steel, and are each made witha shoulder near its opposite ends. The reduced inner terminal portions of these spokes are fitted to enter and pass through the hubbands I) b, and so that their shoulders at said ends rest on the hub-bands and receive or carry the weight. Said reduced ends or tenons 0 pass through the hub-bands into the wood of the hub the necessary distance to hold the spokes and hub-bands to their places without cutting the wood of the hub to weaken or de stroy its usefulness and strength. The wheel has two rows or sets of spokes, B B, set inclining toward each other in an outward direction and arranged in staggering or intermediate relation with each other from opposite ends of the hub, and serving, when united with the felly of the wheel, to brace each other. C is the folly of the wheel, and D its tire, which may be laterally bound and united with each other by riveted clip-plates d. The felly O is made of wood, and it and the main body of the hub both being of wood gives the tire D a chance to draw the wheel tight together, and there being little or comparatively no shrinkage in the metal spokes the wheel will remain in good condition much longer than wheels of a different construction. The tenons c at the outer ends of the metal spokes have washers e fitted over them, the tenons themselves projectinginto the felly, while the washers 0 lie between the outer shoulders of the spokes and the wooden felly and prevent said shoulders from entering too far into the wood of the felly, so that the latter is neither crushed nor its strength destroyed by the outer shoulders of the spokes.
Constructed as described, the combination of wood and metal in the wheel is such that a Very superior wheel for general use is produced and the full benefits of the two different materials are obtained. There may be any number of spokes in the wheel, preferably from thirty to forty, and these may be of any desired diameter-say from five-eighths of an inch to one inch each; but my invention is not restricted in these and other respects.
Having thus described my invention, what ends and tenons c c, fitted to enter respectively I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters into the hub through the bands 1; thereof and [0 Patent, is i into the felly, and the washers e, essentially as The combination of the cylindrical wooden shown and described. 5 hub A, having outer opposite end metal bands, \VALTER KNIGHT;
b b, the wooden felly O, with its metal tire D, Witnesses: the double series ofinclined metal spokes B B, I ALFRED L. WYLLIE,
constructed with shoulders near their opposite SAMUEL E. REDMOND.
US375940D Waltee knight Expired - Lifetime US375940A (en)

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