US406566A - dudley - Google Patents

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US406566A
US406566A US406566DA US406566A US 406566 A US406566 A US 406566A US 406566D A US406566D A US 406566DA US 406566 A US406566 A US 406566A
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wood
hole
spike
pores
preservative
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B27WORKING OR PRESERVING WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIAL; NAILING OR STAPLING MACHINES IN GENERAL
    • B27KPROCESSES, APPARATUS OR SELECTION OF SUBSTANCES FOR IMPREGNATING, STAINING, DYEING, BLEACHING OF WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIALS, OR TREATING OF WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIALS WITH PERMEANT LIQUIDS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL TREATMENT OF CORK, CANE, REED, STRAW OR SIMILAR MATERIALS
    • B27K3/00Impregnating wood, e.g. impregnation pretreatment, for example puncturing; Wood impregnation aids not directly involved in the impregnation process
    • B27K3/02Processes; Apparatus
    • B27K3/08Impregnating by pressure, e.g. vacuum impregnation
    • B27K3/10Apparatus
    • B27K3/105Injection apparatus
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10S428/907Resistant against plant or animal attack
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/4935Impregnated naturally solid product [e.g., leather, stone, etc.]
    • Y10T428/662Wood timber product [e.g., piling, post, veneer, etc.]

Definitions

  • the object of my invention is to provide a method of preserving ties and other spiked and bolted timbers which is so simple and inexpensive that it may be successfully used in the hands of ordinary track-layers, and which the entrance of water and spores to the injured Wood. great that an ordinary tie will not bear more ithan a second spiking before it is injured so much from the spike that afurther spiking is This injury to the wood is so of little service. V
  • the marked injury to the wood may be obviated by boring holes for the spikes, which lextend transversely across the grain, and the adhesion of the spike will also be materially increased.
  • 1 have found that while the adhesion in white oak of the ordinary five and one-half inch spike nine-sixteenths of an inch square is from four thousand to four thousand five hundred pounds, the adhesion of the same spike when driven into a half-inch bored hole is from six thousand to six thousand six hundred pounds.
  • the wood may be preserved from decay by applying thereto through the bored holes paint or other preservative compounds or substances, and a convenient and simple way of accomplishing this is to *fill or partly fill the hole with the preservative compound and then drive thereinto a spike having its body of such substantially round or circular transverse section as will cause it to tightly fill the hole, and by preventing the escape of the compound will force the latter into the pores of the wood as the spike is driven in.
  • a spike which may advantageously be used for this purpose is shown and described in my pending application for Letters; Patent, Serial No. 222,374, filed of even date herewith.
  • Figure 1 represents a sectional view of a portion of a tie into which a spike of the ordinary form has been driven in the ordinary way.
  • Fig. 2 is a similar section showing a spike driven into the wood and illustrating the effect of my treatment of the wood
  • Fig. 3 is a transverse section showing the extent to which preservative substance has penetrated the wood.
  • A designates the wood of a tie, and b, Fig. 1, shows the hole into which an ordinary spike has been driven without first boring a hole for its reception.
  • the fibers of the wood are greatly mutilated and injured and their layers are separated, as shown at 0.
  • Such injury to the wood may be greatly lessened by first boring a hole (1, (see Fig. 2,) and then driving thereinto a spike B but little larger than the hole.
  • the spike B has a substantially circular or round body, as shown and described in my aforesaid application, and fills the hole into which it is driven.
  • the preservative fluid or substance may, by pressure applied to it, be forced into the pores or cells of the wood around the hole d, and will extend therefrom in all directions, but chiefly lengthwise of the fibers, as shown by the darker lines extending from the hole 61 in Figs. 2 and 3.
  • a very 'eifective and yet simple way of applying the necessary pressure to the preservative fluid or substance is to first fill or partly fill the hole 01, and then drive the spike 13 directly thereinto. If the spike fits the hole snugly, it will prevent the fluid from escaping at the mouth of the hole, and the continued driving in of the spike will gradually displace the fluid and cause it to penetrate the wood. The moisture and spores entering around the spike will then have but little efiectin producing decay.
  • Patent No. 108,659 granted October 25, 1870, to E. Webb, and do not desire to include in my invention the method of preserving wood therein described.
  • a hole is bored lengthwise serving posts and other timbers a hole is bored lengthwise parallel with the grain ,and after being filled withpreservative compound is plugged up with a long taper wedge, which will give pressure to force the preservative into the pores of the wood.
  • My first step is to bore a hole for the spike transverse to the length of the grain, and which will cut through the pores of the Wood and expose their ends, so that when the hole isfilled with preservative compound and pressure applied, as by driving the spike, the preservative throughout the length of the hole will enter readily into the exposed cut ends of the pores and impregnate the wood for a comparatively long distance.
  • the preservative compound will readily enter and penetrate wood when applied with pressure to the ends of the grain and pores, and will enter but very little if applied with even great pressure to wood transversely to the length of the pores or grain.
  • I By first boring a hole for the spike transversely to the length of the grain, I expose the ends of the pores through the depth of the hole, and then by introducing the preservative compound by pressure through this hole I enable it to readilypenetrate the wood through the cut and exposed ends of the pores.
  • my invention had a tie or other timber been bored with a hole transverse to the length of the pores and grain, the hole then filled with preservative compound, and the spike or bolt finally driven in, filling the hole.
  • the improvement in the art of preserving railway-ties and other spiked and bolted timbers consisting in first boring a hole in the Wood transverse to the length of the pores and grain and which exposes the ends of the pores, in then applying a preservative compound in the hole, where it has access to the exposed ends of the pores, and in finally driving a spike or bolt to substantially fill the hole and force the preservative compound into the wood upon all sides, substantially as herein described.

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  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Forests & Forestry (AREA)
  • Chemical And Physical Treatments For Wood And The Like (AREA)

Description

(No Model.)
' P; H. DUDLEY.
PRESERVING RAILWAY TIES.
No. 406,566. Patented July 9, 1889.
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE,
PLIMMON H. DUDLEY, on NEW roman, Y.
PRESERVING RAILWAY-TIES.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent N 0. 406,566, dated July 9, 1889,
Application filed December 23, 1886. Serial No.2 22,875. (No model.) i
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, PLIMMON H. DUDLEY, of the city and county of New York, in the State of New York, have invented a new and useful Improvement in the Art of Preserving Railway-Ties and other Spiked and Bolted Timbers, of which the following is a specification,
In most species of Wood used for railwayties incipient decay starts first in the injured wood fibers penetrated by the spike, which, according to the nature of the wood, may be due to either of two causes or both combined: first, by the cell contents of the wood uniting with the iron of the spike, forming compounds which permit fermentations to take place in the changed contents of the wood more readily than take place in the natural or unchanged compounds of the woods, and, second, by the admission of moisture and spores of fungi to the injured wood fibers, whose cell contents do not unite with the iron of the spike, and which by their germination and resulting growth induce fermentation and decay.
As soon as decay starts around the spike it extends in all directions, but most rapidly in the longitudinal direction of the fibers, and soon extends under the rails. The Wood fibers are first softened and then rendered brittle by the changes taking place, which lessens the adhesion of the spikes;- and the rails become loose, and mechanical abrasion of the fibers and layers of wood takes place on the passage of trains. The more extensive the area of infected Wood the more rapid the abrasion and cutting into the ties by the rails, and in many woods this cutting of the ties becomes so extensive that the ties have to be renewed on this account while their ends and centers are still sound.
,From extended investigations and experiments on many railways it has been found that methods which prevent the decay of the wood around the spikes extend the service of the ties from one-half to three times the ordinary life of ties which are untreated, the gain depending somewhat upon the kind of wood and amount of traffic.
preserving ties at present in use are, however, so complicated and expensive that, although successful for accomplishing the purpose in The methods of the hands of experts, they have not been sue cessful in the hands of ordinary labor, and the advantage secured has not been suflicientto warrant the cost.
The object of my invention is to provide a method of preserving ties and other spiked and bolted timbers which is so simple and inexpensive that it may be successfully used in the hands of ordinary track-layers, and which the entrance of water and spores to the injured Wood. great that an ordinary tie will not bear more ithan a second spiking before it is injured so much from the spike that afurther spiking is This injury to the wood is so of little service. V
The marked injury to the wood may be obviated by boring holes for the spikes, which lextend transversely across the grain, and the adhesion of the spike will also be materially increased. 1 have found that while the adhesion in white oak of the ordinary five and one-half inch spike nine-sixteenths of an inch square is from four thousand to four thousand five hundred pounds, the adhesion of the same spike when driven into a half-inch bored hole is from six thousand to six thousand six hundred pounds. i
The wood may be preserved from decay by applying thereto through the bored holes paint or other preservative compounds or substances, and a convenient and simple way of accomplishing this is to *fill or partly fill the hole with the preservative compound and then drive thereinto a spike having its body of such substantially round or circular transverse section as will cause it to tightly fill the hole, and by preventing the escape of the compound will force the latter into the pores of the wood as the spike is driven in. A spike which may advantageously be used for this purpose is shown and described in my pending application for Letters; Patent, Serial No. 222,374, filed of even date herewith.
In the accompanying drawings, Figure 1 represents a sectional view of a portion of a tie into which a spike of the ordinary form has been driven in the ordinary way. Fig. 2 is a similar section showing a spike driven into the wood and illustrating the effect of my treatment of the wood, and Fig. 3 is a transverse section showing the extent to which preservative substance has penetrated the wood.
7 Similar letters of reference designate corresponding parts in the several figures.
A designates the wood of a tie, and b, Fig. 1, shows the hole into which an ordinary spike has been driven without first boring a hole for its reception. By such driving the fibers of the wood are greatly mutilated and injured and their layers are separated, as shown at 0. Such injury to the wood may be greatly lessened by first boring a hole (1, (see Fig. 2,) and then driving thereinto a spike B but little larger than the hole. I
The spike B has a substantially circular or round body, as shown and described in my aforesaid application, and fills the hole into which it is driven.
After boring the hole (1 I supply to the wood around the hole a preservative substance or compound of any suitable or well-known character, which has the efiect of preventing decay.
The preservative fluid or substance may, by pressure applied to it, be forced into the pores or cells of the wood around the hole d, and will extend therefrom in all directions, but chiefly lengthwise of the fibers, as shown by the darker lines extending from the hole 61 in Figs. 2 and 3.
A very 'eifective and yet simple way of applying the necessary pressure to the preservative fluid or substance is to first fill or partly fill the hole 01, and then drive the spike 13 directly thereinto. If the spike fits the hole snugly, it will prevent the fluid from escaping at the mouth of the hole, and the continued driving in of the spike will gradually displace the fluid and cause it to penetrate the wood. The moisture and spores entering around the spike will then have but little efiectin producing decay.
I prefer to tin or galvanize the spikes or bolts or to provide them with some other protecting coating which will prevent the formation of compounds of ironsuch as sesquioxide-and, inasmuch as the tannic acid of the Wood cannot combine with such compounds, the discoloration of the wood will be prevented and decay thereof will be retarded. v
I am aware of Patent No. 108,659, granted October 25, 1870, to E. Webb, and do not desire to include in my invention the method of preserving wood therein described. According to that patent a hole is bored lengthwise serving posts and other timbers a hole is bored lengthwise parallel with the grain ,and after being filled withpreservative compound is plugged up with a long taper wedge, which will give pressure to force the preservative into the pores of the wood. I do not seek to include anything above described as old in my invention. My first step is to bore a hole for the spike transverse to the length of the grain, and which will cut through the pores of the Wood and expose their ends, so that when the hole isfilled with preservative compound and pressure applied, as by driving the spike, the preservative throughout the length of the hole will enter readily into the exposed cut ends of the pores and impregnate the wood for a comparatively long distance.
The preservative compound will readily enter and penetrate wood when applied with pressure to the ends of the grain and pores, and will enter but very little if applied with even great pressure to wood transversely to the length of the pores or grain. By first boring a hole for the spike transversely to the length of the grain, I expose the ends of the pores through the depth of the hole, and then by introducing the preservative compound by pressure through this hole I enable it to readilypenetrate the wood through the cut and exposed ends of the pores. I am not aware that ever before my invention had a tie or other timber been bored with a hole transverse to the length of the pores and grain, the hole then filled with preservative compound, and the spike or bolt finally driven in, filling the hole.
What I claim as myinvention, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is-
The improvement in the art of preserving railway-ties and other spiked and bolted timbers, consisting in first boring a hole in the Wood transverse to the length of the pores and grain and which exposes the ends of the pores, in then applying a preservative compound in the hole, where it has access to the exposed ends of the pores, and in finally driving a spike or bolt to substantially fill the hole and force the preservative compound into the wood upon all sides, substantially as herein described.
P. H. DUDLEY. WVitn esses:
O. HALL, FRED I-IAYNEs.
IIO
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Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2690879A (en) * 1948-05-25 1954-10-05 Snyder Jacob Rush Metal-to-wood fastening for railway ties
US2690877A (en) * 1948-09-03 1954-10-05 Snyder Jacob Rush Fastening for railway rails
US2690878A (en) * 1950-05-27 1954-10-05 Snyder Jacob Rush Method and means for reclaiming spike holes for rail fastenings
US2728120A (en) * 1950-08-22 1955-12-27 Snyder Jacob Rush Treating abandoned spike holes in wood railway ties
US2777641A (en) * 1951-10-24 1957-01-15 Snyder Jacob Rush Rehabilitation of enlarged spike holes in rail fastenings
US4265958A (en) * 1977-03-29 1981-05-05 Hoeka Sierpleisters En Muurverven B.V. Method for the treatment of wood by a wood preserving agent, as well as wood treated with such a wood preservative agent

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2690879A (en) * 1948-05-25 1954-10-05 Snyder Jacob Rush Metal-to-wood fastening for railway ties
US2690877A (en) * 1948-09-03 1954-10-05 Snyder Jacob Rush Fastening for railway rails
US2690878A (en) * 1950-05-27 1954-10-05 Snyder Jacob Rush Method and means for reclaiming spike holes for rail fastenings
US2728120A (en) * 1950-08-22 1955-12-27 Snyder Jacob Rush Treating abandoned spike holes in wood railway ties
US2777641A (en) * 1951-10-24 1957-01-15 Snyder Jacob Rush Rehabilitation of enlarged spike holes in rail fastenings
US4265958A (en) * 1977-03-29 1981-05-05 Hoeka Sierpleisters En Muurverven B.V. Method for the treatment of wood by a wood preserving agent, as well as wood treated with such a wood preservative agent

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