US390057A - Haeold j - Google Patents

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US390057A
US390057A US390057DA US390057A US 390057 A US390057 A US 390057A US 390057D A US390057D A US 390057DA US 390057 A US390057 A US 390057A
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mantle
fabric
mantles
cut
saturated
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F21LIGHTING
    • F21HINCANDESCENT MANTLES; OTHER INCANDESCENT BODIES HEATED BY COMBUSTION
    • F21H1/00Incandescent mantles; Selection of imbibition liquids therefor

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  • My invention hereinafter described relates to improvements in the manufacture of incandeseing devices, such as are known as mantles77 in theVelsbach system ofincandeseent gas-lighting.
  • These niantles are composed of a net-work of incombustible and infusible earthy oxides, and are made by saturating a loosely-woven fabric of cotton threads with a solution ofthe salts of the rarer metals, which produce earthy oxides, and subsequently burning out the woven foundation fabric in such a manner as to leave a skeletonlike frame or mantle composed entirely of a net-work of the earthy oxides that result from the decomposition of the metallic salts contained in the saturating or impregnating solution.
  • FIG. 1 My improvements in the manufacture of ineandeseing mantles are illustrated in the anneXed drawings, in which- Figure l represents a piece of cotton webbing woven tubular and out transversely to a length sufficient to make a predetermined number of manlles, preferably two in each piece, without waste.
  • Fig. 2 represents the same piece of webbing after it has been saturated with the impregnating solution of metallic salts, the fabric being shown somewhat shrunken by the operations of saturating and
  • Fig. 3 shows a mantle-length of fabric produced by cutting the saturated and dried piece of webbing, Fig. 2, midway its length.
  • Fig. 4 illustrates the manner of reenforcing the upper end of the mantielength by folding the upper portions inward.
  • Fig. 5 shows the mantle fabric with a platinum wire sewed or threaded through or around its re enforced or turned-in end.
  • Fig. 6 shows the mantle fabric with its upper end contracted and formed into a rounded aperture on the platinum-suspending wire.
  • Fig. 7 shows the mantle vfabric suspended on a rod or wire ready for being snb jected to heat for the purpose of destroying the foundation webbing.
  • tubularwoven netting carefully and thoroughly cleansed by washing in warm alkaline and acid solutions and rinsing, is cut into pieces' having each a length, as shown in Fig. l,sufcient for forming, preferably, two mantles.
  • rllhe netting, webbing, or tubular fabric may of course be woven in any convenient lengths, and should be thoroughly cleansed before cut'- ting into short pieces. While for convenience I prefer in the first step of my invention to have the netting cut into mantle lengths, yet a good result can be attained by cutting the netting into longer pieces,care being taken, however, that it is made of such lengths as will eut evenly into single mantles.
  • i of the desired length for, say, two mantles, is saturated with a solution of an earthy metal or metals-sncl1, for instance, as the nitrates of thorinum, lanthannm, zirconium, yttrium, or other rarer metals, either alone or in combination, the salts of such metals being used as are capable of producing on decomposition by heat an infusible earthy oxide or oxides that will be capable of emitting light by incandescence.
  • the piece of network or foundation fabric a is dried by exposure to the air and becomes slightly shrunken, with its ends somewhat extended, as shown in Fig.
  • the distended ends being a result very difficult, if not impossible, to obviate at the points where the fabric is cut before saturation.
  • the saturated and dried fabric Owing to the nature of the impregnating fiuid or solution the saturated and dried fabric is left in a condition which admits of its being easily molded, and so that after being pressed between-thumb and finger, or by other suitable means, it will retain its shape preparatory to cutting and folding for attaching the usual platinum-suspending wire.
  • the saturated and dried fabric a is then cut transversely into suitable and uniform mantlelengths, the division-line b b being preferably midway the length of the fabric, (shown in Fig. 2,) which, as before explained, is designed for making only two mantles.
  • the mantle fabric c when cut after saturation, has one end close and of no greater diameter than before it was cut.
  • This close or undistended end of the mantle fabric c is particularly adapted for forming the upper end of the mantle by which it is suspended.
  • the net-Work ci Fig. 1
  • the difficulty of forming the mantle is increased, owing to the comparative distention and uneven shrinkage of both ends.m
  • a platinum wire, e is now threaded through the turnedin or reenforced end d, as shown in Fig. 5, thereby securing the re-enforeed portion and affording a means for suspending the mantle.
  • rlhe re-enforced or turned-in end of the mantle is now drawn together along the platinum wire toward its center, so as to form a round aperture, j", as shown in Fig. (i, after which the ends of the wire e are twisted adjacent to thc mantle to hold it drawn, the rounded aperture f affording an exit for the products of combustion.
  • the mantle is next suspended, shown in 7, by means of the proiecling ends of the platinum wire e, from a ring, g, on the upper end of a rod, 7L, and is ready to be exposed to the heat ofa gasiiame, for the purpose of consuming the foundation fabric in the ordinary manner, as practiced in the manufacture of this class of incandescents.
  • the vertical support or rod 7L continues to suspend the mantle when reduced by combustion to a skeleton-like structure of earthy oxides, and may either be straight or follow such lines as desired.
  • the platinum wire e being threaded about the middle of the turned-in or re-enforced portion of the mantle, leaves a skirt below it as far as the turned-in portion extends, which acts as an additional support for the body of the mantle, making it much stronger than the mantle strengthened in the usual way by havingapiece of bobbinet sewed upon it. rlhis manner of re-enforcing the mantle not only dispenses with bobbinet, but also avoids any necessity for using the strengthening fiuid that is sometimes employed on the upper end of the mantle.
  • What I claim as my invention is l.. In the manufacture of mantles or devices for incandescent illumination, the method of strengthening or re-en forcing the woven foundation fabric or webbing ⁇ for the attachment of a platinum wire in the upper end of the mantle, which consists in folding or turning in the upperend of the mantle fabric after it has been saturated with a solution of metallic salts and dried, substantially as described.

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  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Woven Fabrics (AREA)

Description

(No Model.) 2 Sheets-Sheet 1. H. J. BELL.
MANUFAGTRE OF GAS INGANDESGENTS.
No. 390,057. Patented Sept. 25, 1888.
17W wf? me 2' zmef ell N. Pnzns Pnmumngmpnar. wnmngm. ne
{No.Model.) 2 sheets-#sheet 2. H. J. BELL.
MANUFAGTURB 0F GAS INGANDBSGENTSt No. 390,057. Patented Sept. 25, 1888.
N. FETKRS. PheXwL'rlhogr-abher, Wishngnn, D. C.
' drying.
' llNrrn Srarns A'rnNr Errea.
HAROLD J. BELL, OF VOODBURY, NEW JERSEY, ASSIGNOR TO THE VELS- BACH INOANDESOENT GA'S LIGHT COMPANY, OF NFV JERSEY.
MANUFACTURE OF GAS INCANDESCENTS.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 390.057, dated September 25, 1S88.
Application filed March 21, 1888.
To all whom 171mg/ concern:
Beit known that l, HAROLD J. BELL, acitizen of the United States, residing at Woodbury, in the county of Gloucester and State of New Jersey, have invented new and useful Improvements in the Manufacture of Gas Incandescents, of which the following is a specieation.
My invention hereinafter described relates to improvements in the manufacture of incandeseing devices, such as are known as mantles77 in theVelsbach system ofincandeseent gas-lighting. These niantles are composed of a net-work of incombustible and infusible earthy oxides, and are made by saturating a loosely-woven fabric of cotton threads with a solution ofthe salts of the rarer metals, which produce earthy oxides, and subsequently burning out the woven foundation fabric in such a manner as to leave a skeletonlike frame or mantle composed entirely of a net-work of the earthy oxides that result from the decomposition of the metallic salts contained in the saturating or impregnating solution.
My improvements in the manufacture of ineandeseing mantles are illustrated in the anneXed drawings, in which- Figure l represents a piece of cotton webbing woven tubular and out transversely to a length sufficient to make a predetermined number of manlles, preferably two in each piece, without waste. Fig. 2 represents the same piece of webbing after it has been saturated with the impregnating solution of metallic salts, the fabric being shown somewhat shrunken by the operations of saturating and Fig. 3 shows a mantle-length of fabric produced by cutting the saturated and dried piece of webbing, Fig. 2, midway its length. Fig. 4 illustrates the manner of reenforcing the upper end of the mantielength by folding the upper portions inward. Fig. 5 shows the mantle fabric with a platinum wire sewed or threaded through or around its re enforced or turned-in end. Fig. 6 shows the mantle fabric with its upper end contracted and formed into a rounded aperture on the platinum-suspending wire. Fig. 7shows the mantle vfabric suspended on a rod or wire ready for being snb jected to heat for the purpose of destroying the foundation webbing.
Heretofore in the manufacture of mantles it Serial No. 267.988. (No model.)
has been customary in preparing the fibrous net-work to weave it in long cylinders, which are subsequently, but before saturation, out L into lengths each suitable for only one mantle, then to sew around one end a piece ofbobbinet or other suitable material, after which the mantle is turned, and through the end around which the bobbinet has been sewed there is threaded a small platinum wire, by which this end is drawn together, leaving an aperture, and by which the mantle is subsequently attached to the rod which supports it over the gas-exit. To this method of preparing mantles there are certain objections, growing out of the fact that thev mantle is cut, and is reenforced by the bobbinet and turned before being saturated with the impregnatingtluid in course of its preparation for use as an ineandescing device. This can be done by hand only with great difficulty, care, and expense, and for purposes of economy involves the vuse of metallic machinery whose contact is injurious to the mantle. Moreover, it is very desirable to avoid sewing on the bobbinet or other reenforcing material at that end of the mantle which is to be threaded, and which will serve as its upper end, as the greater.
thickness caused thereby diminishes the illuminating power ofthe mantle. To overcome this, as well as many other objections of akindred nature, I have devised the following method of preparing the mantle up to that stage at which the saturated fibrous material is shaped or formed for burning out the foundation webbing.
According to my invention the tubularwoven netting, carefully and thoroughly cleansed by washing in warm alkaline and acid solutions and rinsing, is cut into pieces' having each a length, as shown in Fig. l,sufcient for forming, preferably, two mantles. rllhe netting, webbing, or tubular fabric may of course be woven in any convenient lengths, and should be thoroughly cleansed before cut'- ting into short pieces. While for convenience I prefer in the first step of my invention to have the netting cut into mantle lengths, yet a good result can be attained by cutting the netting into longer pieces,care being taken, however, that it is made of such lengths as will eut evenly into single mantles.
The piece of the tubular-woven nettinga, Fig.
IOO
i, of the desired length for, say, two mantles, is saturated with a solution of an earthy metal or metals-sncl1, for instance, as the nitrates of thorinum, lanthannm, zirconium, yttrium, or other rarer metals, either alone or in combination, the salts of such metals being used as are capable of producing on decomposition by heat an infusible earthy oxide or oxides that will be capable of emitting light by incandescence. After saturation with the selected impregnatingsolution of metallic salts the piece of network or foundation fabric a is dried by exposure to the air and becomes slightly shrunken, with its ends somewhat extended, as shown in Fig. 2,the distended ends being a result very difficult, if not impossible, to obviate at the points where the fabric is cut before saturation. Owing to the nature of the impregnating fiuid or solution the saturated and dried fabric is left in a condition which admits of its being easily molded, and so that after being pressed between-thumb and finger, or by other suitable means, it will retain its shape preparatory to cutting and folding for attaching the usual platinum-suspending wire. The saturated and dried fabric a is then cut transversely into suitable and uniform mantlelengths, the division-line b b being preferably midway the length of the fabric, (shown in Fig. 2,) which, as before explained, is designed for making only two mantles. It will be observed that the mantle fabric c, as shown in Fig. 3, when cut after saturation, has one end close and of no greater diameter than before it was cut. This close or undistended end of the mantle fabric c, being comparatively smooth cut and even, is particularly adapted for forming the upper end of the mantle by which it is suspended. When the net-Work ci, Fig. 1, is cut into mantlelengths before saturation, the difficulty of forming the mantle is increased, owing to the comparative distention and uneven shrinkage of both ends.m By first saturating the mantle fabric and then cutting it intomantielengths the mantle can be easily molded or manipulated, and is. now turned or folded in by hand at its small end, as shown in Fig. 4, so as to form a reenforcement, d, by which it is strengthened at its upper end. If the mantle is eutbeforesaturation, this turning in becomes a very difficult operation and cannot he done economically nor with the evenness of result attained by my method.
A platinum wire, e, is now threaded through the turnedin or reenforced end d, as shown in Fig. 5, thereby securing the re-enforeed portion and affording a means for suspending the mantle. rlhe re-enforced or turned-in end of the mantle is now drawn together along the platinum wire toward its center, so as to form a round aperture, j", as shown in Fig. (i, after which the ends of the wire e are twisted adjacent to thc mantle to hold it drawn, the rounded aperture f affording an exit for the products of combustion. The mantle is next suspended, shown in 7, by means of the proiecling ends of the platinum wire e, from a ring, g, on the upper end of a rod, 7L, and is ready to be exposed to the heat ofa gasiiame, for the purpose of consuming the foundation fabric in the ordinary manner, as practiced in the manufacture of this class of incandescents.
The vertical support or rod 7L continues to suspend the mantle when reduced by combustion to a skeleton-like structure of earthy oxides, and may either be straight or follow such lines as desired.
It will be observed that the platinum wire e, being threaded about the middle of the turned-in or re-enforced portion of the mantle, leaves a skirt below it as far as the turned-in portion extends, which acts as an additional support for the body of the mantle, making it much stronger than the mantle strengthened in the usual way by havingapiece of bobbinet sewed upon it. rlhis manner of re-enforcing the mantle not only dispenses with bobbinet, but also avoids any necessity for using the strengthening fiuid that is sometimes employed on the upper end of the mantle.
This method of manufacturing incandescent mantles effects a considerable economy of time and material, facilitates the manipulation of the mantle in its various stages, avoids many of the liabilities of injury to the mantle in the course of its manufacture, and results in the production of an incandescent device of" more than ordinary strength, durability, and efficiency.
What I claim as my invention is l.. In the manufacture of mantles or devices for incandescent illumination, the method of strengthening or re-en forcing the woven foundation fabric or webbing` for the attachment of a platinum wire in the upper end of the mantle, which consists in folding or turning in the upperend of the mantle fabric after it has been saturated with a solution of metallic salts and dried, substantially as described.
2. The herein-described method of manufae turing mantles or devices for incandescent illnniinatiomwhich consistsin cutting a woven foundation fabric into lengths sufficient for making a predetermined number of mantles, then saturating said fabric with a solution of the salts of the rarer metals that produce earthy oxides, then cutting it into mantlelengths, then folding or turning in one end of each mantle-length, then lhreadinga platinum wire through the folded-in end of each mantle, then suspending each mantle from a sup port by means of said wire, and exposing the mantle to heat for the purpose of consuming the foundation fabric and reducing the mantle to a structure of infusiblc earthy oxides, sub stanti-ally as described.
In testimony whereof'i affix my signature in presence of two witnesses.
fl'fARlOLl') J. BELL. W'itnesses:
G. R. Tauctan'r, Ro'rnm Si. (invariati.
IOC
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