US386300A - Wilbub p - Google Patents

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US386300A
US386300A US386300DA US386300A US 386300 A US386300 A US 386300A US 386300D A US386300D A US 386300DA US 386300 A US386300 A US 386300A
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thread
arm
spring
controlling
tension
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D05SEWING; EMBROIDERING; TUFTING
    • D05BSEWING
    • D05B47/00Needle-thread tensioning devices; Applications of tensometers

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  • This invention has for its object to improve and simplify the tension and slack-thread controlling mechanism of sewing-machines, my invention being intended as an improvement on the apparatus described in United States application Serial No. 0,170, filed March 9, 1887.
  • Figure 1 in front elevation, shows the faceplate of a sewingmachine with my improved tensioudevice and slack-thread controllingarm attached, the said figure also showing parts of the presser-bar and take-up.
  • Fig. 2 is a section in the line 00, Fig. 1; Fig. 3, a par tial section in the line a7, Fig. 2; Fig. 4, an innerside view of the lower end of the face-plate and attached parts, a pin supposed to be attached to the presser-bar being shown in section.
  • Fig. 5 is a detail showing the stop 15 by itself.
  • Fig. 6 is a view of one of the tension plates or disks with the lip, to be described.
  • Fig. 7 shows byitself the spring-rest.
  • the faceplate 1) held in place on the head of sewing-machines by a screw, as a, thepresserbar H, the extension 19 of the faceplate slotted for the passage of the take-up on, the sleevelike projection a at the front side of the face plate, the stud n having an enlarged hub, as 35, the stud 2G, projecting from the presserbar and entering a slot in the toothed plate a, mounted loosely upon the screw-stud a, screwed into the rear of the face-plate, the toothed plate a engaged by the toothed plate or, the screw-stud a, on which the toothed plate a is mounted, the finger a extended from the toothed plate if", through a slot in the face-plate and entering a notch, 77, at the periphery of a stop, 15, having a shoulder, 12, the spring, and the nut 20 are all substantially as shown and described in the application referred to.
  • I employ two independent thin plates or disks, I) b, which are mounted loosely upon the screwstud a and are prevented from turning thereon by means of a pin or projection, 1)", herein shown as extended from the face-plate outwardly through holes made in the said plates or disks.
  • the tension on the needle-thread is regulated by rotating the nut 20.
  • the application referred to shows a spring, 12?, which at its inner end is connected to a screw-stud, a the opposite end of the spring being bent radially outward to form an arm, with a guide or eye for the needlethreads, the normal tendency of the spring-arm being to bear against a tended, as in the said application; but there after the said wire is bent to form and leave an open loop or eye, 6, and beyond said loop or eye the wire is carried back and bent about a stud located substantially at the center line of the coiled part of the said spring-arm to form a lock, the said backwardly-bent portions being represented as entering and moving in the open space between the outer concaved side of the plate or disk 12 and the inner coneaved side of the plate b.
  • the thread-controlling arm is free to move under the strain V of the thread; but the arm cannot be bent or strained toward the face-plate, so as to place the eye 6 out of its correct operative position, for the end of the wire of which the arm is made cooperating with the stud or screw referred to, prevents such strain of the springarm as to injure the coiled portion thereof.
  • the needle thread having been passed through the guide 28 at the top of the faceplate, is led down at the left-hand side of the tension device, between the flaring edges of the plates b b, and the operator, yet holding the thread between the fingers, I pulls the same up at the right-hand side of the stud 12 but between the tension-plates, until the thread bears against the under side of the loop 6 and carries it up until the thread slips into the groove in the top of the lip If.
  • the strain on the thread is then relaxed, allowing the loop 6 to return to the position shown in Fig. 1. Thence the operator passes the thread into the usual eye of the take-up.
  • the lip 12 may be omitted, if desired, for if the thread be passed directly from the tension-plates to the take-up the loop 6 will still exert a strain thereon; but preferably the thread will be passed over said lip in the manner described.
  • the thread As the thread is passed about the tension device, as stated, and drawn up to the takeup, the thread also enters the loop or eye 6, thus leaving the springarm of the threadcontroller bearing upon the needle-thread between the take-up and the tension device.
  • the direction in which the spring a" is coiled is such as to normally force the spring thread-controlling arm having the lip or eye 6 toward the shoulder 12 of the stop 15, the thread-controlling a'rm being drawn back from the said shoulder 12 more or less, according to the strain upon the needle-thread by the take-up, the latter being more or less according to the thickness of the material under the presserfoot.
  • the outermost disk or plate, I is shown as provided with a lip, I), which extends across the path of the thread, the actuating 'end of the said lip I) in practice keeping the thread descending from the eye 28 within definite bounds.
  • I claim- 1 The take-up for the needle-thread and a tension device, combined with a spring-actu ated thread-controlling arm having an open eye,6,between its ends, and at one end a lock, and a stud engaged by the lock to operate substantially as described.
  • springactnated thread-controlling arm having an open eye 6, between its ends, and at ⁇ VILBUR DIAL one end a lock, and a stud engaged by the lock -Witnesses: to operate substantially as described.
  • ISAAC HOLDEN

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Sewing Machines And Sewing (AREA)

Description

(No Model.)
W. F. DIAL.
THREAD CONTROLLING MECHANISM FOR SEWING MACHINES. No. 386,300.
Patented July 1'7, 1888.
War f7 Nirnn TATES \VILBUR F. DIAL, OF BRIDGEIORT, CONN., ASSIGNOR TO THE \VHEELER 8s \VILSON MANUFACTURING COMPANY, OF SAME PLACE.
THREAD-CONTROLLING MECHANISM FOR SEWING MACHINES.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 386,300, dated July 17, 1888.
Application filed August 15, 1887. Serial No. 246,996. (No model.)
To aZZ whom it may concern.-
Be it known that I, XVIL'BUR F. DIAL, of Bridgeport, county of Fairfield, and State of Connecticut, have invented an Improvement in Tension and Thread Controlling Mechau ism for Sewing-llIachines, of which the following description, in connection with the accompanying drawings, is a specification, like letters on the drawings representing like parts.
This invention has for its object to improve and simplify the tension and slack-thread controlling mechanism of sewing-machines, my invention being intended as an improvement on the apparatus described in United States application Serial No. 0,170, filed March 9, 1887.
In the practical use of the devices described in the said application diiiiculty has been experienced in the action, more especially of the slack-thread-controllin g spring-arm, that arm when subjected to excessive strain, the wire of which it is composed being very light, being bent out of shape or drawn toward the faceplate, thus placing the eye of the thread-controlling spring out of its proper relation to the center line of the thread-tension mechanism which acts upon the ncedle-thread. To remedy this objection and prevent the possibility of straining the arm constituting the thread-controlling spring by the pull upon it of the nee die-thread to such an extent as to alter the shape of the coiled part of the arm and thus impair its efficiency or alter its action upon the thread from what was intended, I have shaped the outer end of the said arm to embrace or engage a stud or projection located substantially in the line of the center of the coiledspring portion of the arm, the outer end of the said arm cooperating with the said stud to form a look, as I determine it, for the outer end of the arm.
By confining the outer end of the arm the strain of the needle-thread upon the open loop or eye of the arm between its ends will not bend or strain out of position the coiled spring-like portion of the arm, and hence the arm acts uniformly.
Figure 1, in front elevation, shows the faceplate of a sewingmachine with my improved tensioudevice and slack-thread controllingarm attached, the said figure also showing parts of the presser-bar and take-up. Fig. 2 is a section in the line 00, Fig. 1; Fig. 3, a par tial section in the line a7, Fig. 2; Fig. 4, an innerside view of the lower end of the face-plate and attached parts, a pin supposed to be attached to the presser-bar being shown in section. Fig. 5 is a detail showing the stop 15 by itself. Fig. 6 is a view of one of the tension plates or disks with the lip, to be described. Fig. 7 shows byitself the spring-rest.
The faceplate 1), held in place on the head of sewing-machines by a screw, as a, thepresserbar H, the extension 19 of the faceplate slotted for the passage of the take-up on, the sleevelike projection a at the front side of the face plate, the stud n having an enlarged hub, as 35, the stud 2G, projecting from the presserbar and entering a slot in the toothed plate a, mounted loosely upon the screw-stud a, screwed into the rear of the face-plate, the toothed plate a engaged by the toothed plate or, the screw-stud a, on which the toothed plate a is mounted, the finger a extended from the toothed plate if", through a slot in the face-plate and entering a notch, 77, at the periphery of a stop, 15, having a shoulder, 12, the spring, and the nut 20 are all substantially as shown and described in the application referred to.
Instead of using a grooved wheel for part of the tension device, as in the said patent, I employ two independent thin plates or disks, I) b, which are mounted loosely upon the screwstud a and are prevented from turning thereon by means of a pin or projection, 1)", herein shown as extended from the face-plate outwardly through holes made in the said plates or disks.
Outside the plate or disk I) is placed a concavo-convexed spring-rest, Z)", cut away for a portion of its periphery, as best shown in Fig. 7, so as not to interfere with the movement of the thread-controlling spring-arm, to be described. The plate or disk b receives against it the inner end of the spring 19.
The tension on the needle-thread is regulated by rotating the nut 20. The application referred to shows a spring, 12?, which at its inner end is connected to a screw-stud, a the opposite end of the spring being bent radially outward to form an arm, with a guide or eye for the needlethreads, the normal tendency of the spring-arm being to bear against a tended, as in the said application; but there after the said wire is bent to form and leave an open loop or eye, 6, and beyond said loop or eye the wire is carried back and bent about a stud located substantially at the center line of the coiled part of the said spring-arm to form a lock, the said backwardly-bent portions being represented as entering and moving in the open space between the outer concaved side of the plate or disk 12 and the inner coneaved side of the plate b. By this construction it will be seen that the thread-controlling arm is free to move under the strain V of the thread; but the arm cannot be bent or strained toward the face-plate, so as to place the eye 6 out of its correct operative position, for the end of the wire of which the arm is made cooperating with the stud or screw referred to, prevents such strain of the springarm as to injure the coiled portion thereof.
The needle thread, having been passed through the guide 28 at the top of the faceplate, is led down at the left-hand side of the tension device, between the flaring edges of the plates b b, and the operator, yet holding the thread between the fingers, I pulls the same up at the right-hand side of the stud 12 but between the tension-plates, until the thread bears against the under side of the loop 6 and carries it up until the thread slips into the groove in the top of the lip If. The strain on the thread is then relaxed, allowing the loop 6 to return to the position shown in Fig. 1. Thence the operator passes the thread into the usual eye of the take-up.
The lip 12 may be omitted, if desired, for if the thread be passed directly from the tension-plates to the take-up the loop 6 will still exert a strain thereon; but preferably the thread will be passed over said lip in the manner described.
As the thread is passed about the tension device, as stated, and drawn up to the takeup, the thread also enters the loop or eye 6, thus leaving the springarm of the threadcontroller bearing upon the needle-thread between the take-up and the tension device.
It isvery desirable to have the needle- I thread pass between the tension devices and emerge from between them under like circumstances, so I have added to the described mechanism a thread-arresting lip, b (shown in Figs. 1 and 6,) the said lip applied to one member of the tension device projecting horizontally across the path of movement of the thread on its way to the take-up, the said lip being beveled, as shown in Fig. 6, so that as the needle-thread is drawn, as described, into the portion 6 of the thread-controlling springarm the needle thread passes beyond and rests upon the said lip b it serving as a point from which the thread'controlling arm draws upon the needle-thread on its way to the said arm forming the tension device.
The direction in which the spring a" is coiled is such as to normally force the spring thread-controlling arm having the lip or eye 6 toward the shoulder 12 of the stop 15, the thread-controlling a'rm being drawn back from the said shoulder 12 more or less, according to the strain upon the needle-thread by the take-up, the latter being more or less according to the thickness of the material under the presserfoot.
Herein, as in the said application, as the material under the presser-foot increases inthickness'the presser-bar is lifted, and through the pin or projection 26,toothed plates n' and n, and finger n the stop 15 is turned to cause the shoulder 12 to lift the thread-controlling arm, more or less, thus winding the spring more closely upon the hub and limiting the length of the throw of the said arm.
I do not desire to limit my invention to a thread-controlling springarm shaped exactly as herein shown, for it is obvious that the outer end of the said arm might be otherwise constructed or shapedwithout departing from this invention, the gist of which is to confine not only the inner but also the outer end of the said spring-arm in place, so that the open loop part or eye 6 thereof, which receives the needle-thread, cannot be drawn upon with such force during the regular operations of the machine as to pull the outer end of the said spring-arm from the stud engaged by it in such manner as to materially alter the shape of the coiled part of the spring, and thus de stroy its efficiency and change its action from that established for it.
Although I prefer to use the independent tension plates or disks 1) b, yet I desire it to be understood that the spring thread-controlling arm, constructed as herein described, might be used to advantage in connection with a solid tension-wheel, such as shown in the said application.
Referring to Figs. 1 and 3, the outermost disk or plate, I), is shown as provided with a lip, I), which extends across the path of the thread, the actuating 'end of the said lip I) in practice keeping the thread descending from the eye 28 within definite bounds.
I claim- 1. The take-up for the needle-thread and a tension device, combined with a spring-actu ated thread-controlling arm having an open eye,6,between its ends, and at one end a lock, and a stud engaged by the lock to operate substantially as described. I
2. The take-up for the needle-thread, ate
sion device, and the lip applied to one memto this specification in the presence of two snbber of the tension device, combined with the scribing witnesses. springactnated thread-controlling arm having an open eye 6, between its ends, and at \VILBUR DIAL one end a lock, and a stud engaged by the lock -Witnesses: to operate substantially as described. ISAAC HOLDEN,
In testimony whereofI have signed my name JOHN HOLDEN.
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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2554895A (en) * 1948-12-20 1951-05-29 Mefina Sa Sewing machine
US2764366A (en) * 1954-01-27 1956-09-25 White Sewing Machine Corp Thread tensioning device for sewing machines

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2554895A (en) * 1948-12-20 1951-05-29 Mefina Sa Sewing machine
US2764366A (en) * 1954-01-27 1956-09-25 White Sewing Machine Corp Thread tensioning device for sewing machines

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