US409850A - Horseshoe-bar - Google Patents

Horseshoe-bar Download PDF

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US409850A
US409850A US409850DA US409850A US 409850 A US409850 A US 409850A US 409850D A US409850D A US 409850DA US 409850 A US409850 A US 409850A
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bar
horseshoe
shoe
face
angle
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B21MECHANICAL METAL-WORKING WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
    • B21KMAKING FORGED OR PRESSED METAL PRODUCTS, e.g. HORSE-SHOES, RIVETS, BOLTS OR WHEELS
    • B21K15/00Making blacksmiths' goods
    • B21K15/02Making blacksmiths' goods horseshoes; appurtenances therefor

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  • This invention consists of a novel form of iron bar, which may be produced by rolling, as an article of manufacture adapted to be used in making horseshoes of a form shown in the pending application of Neil Cudney,filed July 5, 1888, Serial No. 279,03i.
  • Figure l is a transverse section of the bar.
  • Fig. 2 is a perspective of a piece of such bar.
  • the peculiarity of the shoe which is to be formed out of this bar is that it has a continuous calk about the entire periphery, instead of adetached call: at heel and toe and, further, that the nails can be entered and the shoe adapted to have them entered from the inside and directed outward, so that they come out through the surface of the hoof without special skill to cause them to do so, and therefore without so much danger of injuring the foot in attaching the shoe.
  • the surface A which constitutes the upper surface of the shoe when made, being considered as horizontal
  • the lateral edge B which constitutes the outer edge of the shoe, forms an acute angle withthe surface A, and is preferably, also, slightly convex outward, as shown.
  • the bar would be, in general, triangular in cross-section, having the two sides described and a third interior side, but for the nail groove or chan nel C, which is formed in what would otherwise be the third side of the triangle, eonstitutin g a re-entrant angle, one face of which 0 intersects the third side D of the triangle nearly at right angles, while the other side C of said re-entrant angle intersects the side B.
  • this groove being primarily to afford lodgment for the heads of the nails by which the shoe is attached, and incidentally to guide the mechanic or the tool of an automatic machine in punching the holes for the nails, the angle between the two sides 0 and G is such that the plane bisecting it and produced on through the bar will be in the desired direction for the nailholesthat is to say, such direction that the nails following them will emerge from the surface of the hoof at a proper and moderately short distance above the lower edge of the hoof; and while the precise direction of the sides of the angle and their precise relation to the exterior surfaces of the bar may not be material, it is desirable that the said bisecting plane of said re-entrant angle shall not be very far from the general direction of the side B, and shall therefore emerge above the surface A, making an acute angle with it on the side toward the plane of the face B.

Description

(No Model.)
H. G. MAGNUSSON.
HORSESHOE BAR.
No. 409,850. Patented Aug. 27, 1889.
WW AM Q UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE,
HOIVARD O. MAGNUSSON, OF CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.
HORSESHOE-BAR.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 409,850, dated August 2'7, 1889.
Application filed September 12, 1888- Serial No. 285,254. (No model.)
To all whom, it may concern.-
Be it known that I, HOWARD C. MAeNUssoN, a citizen of the United States, residing at Ohicago, county of Cook, and State of Illinois, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Horseshoe-Bars, which are fully set forth in the following specification, reference being had to the accom 'mnying drawings, forming a part thereof.
This invention consists of a novel form of iron bar, which may be produced by rolling, as an article of manufacture adapted to be used in making horseshoes of a form shown in the pending application of Neil Cudney,filed July 5, 1888, Serial No. 279,03i.
In the drawings, Figure l is a transverse section of the bar. Fig. 2 is a perspective of a piece of such bar.
The peculiarity of the shoe which is to be formed out of this bar is that it has a continuous calk about the entire periphery, instead of adetached call: at heel and toe and, further, that the nails can be entered and the shoe adapted to have them entered from the inside and directed outward, so that they come out through the surface of the hoof without special skill to cause them to do so, and therefore without so much danger of injuring the foot in attaching the shoe. I11 order to adapt the bar to be formed into such a shoe, it is made with the following peculiarities of form: The surface A, which constitutes the upper surface of the shoe when made, being considered as horizontal, the lateral edge B, which constitutes the outer edge of the shoe, forms an acute angle withthe surface A, and is preferably, also, slightly convex outward, as shown. The bar would be, in general, triangular in cross-section, having the two sides described and a third interior side, but for the nail groove or chan nel C, which is formed in what would otherwise be the third side of the triangle, eonstitutin g a re-entrant angle, one face of which 0 intersects the third side D of the triangle nearly at right angles, while the other side C of said re-entrant angle intersects the side B. The function of this groove being primarily to afford lodgment for the heads of the nails by which the shoe is attached, and incidentally to guide the mechanic or the tool of an automatic machine in punching the holes for the nails, the angle between the two sides 0 and G is such that the plane bisecting it and produced on through the bar will be in the desired direction for the nailholesthat is to say, such direction that the nails following them will emerge from the surface of the hoof at a proper and moderately short distance above the lower edge of the hoof; and while the precise direction of the sides of the angle and their precise relation to the exterior surfaces of the bar may not be material, it is desirable that the said bisecting plane of said re-entrant angle shall not be very far from the general direction of the side B, and shall therefore emerge above the surface A, making an acute angle with it on the side toward the plane of the face B.
I claim A horseshoe-bar bounded by the upper face A, exterior face B, interior'face D, and the faces 0' and C constituting a re-entrant angle or groove in the face D, the face C of said groove making an acute angle with the lower edge of the exterior face B, substantially as shown and described, and for the purpose set forth.
HOIVARD O. MAGNUSSON.
Witnesses:
Cues. S. BURTON, JEAN ELLIOTT.
US409850D Horseshoe-bar Expired - Lifetime US409850A (en)

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