US423398A - Half to isaac m - Google Patents

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US423398A
US423398A US423398DA US423398A US 423398 A US423398 A US 423398A US 423398D A US423398D A US 423398DA US 423398 A US423398 A US 423398A
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engine
cylinders
valve
shaft
valves
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F01MACHINES OR ENGINES IN GENERAL; ENGINE PLANTS IN GENERAL; STEAM ENGINES
    • F01LCYCLICALLY OPERATING VALVES FOR MACHINES OR ENGINES
    • F01L5/00Slide valve-gear or valve-arrangements
    • F01L5/14Slide valve-gear or valve-arrangements characterised by the provision of valves with reciprocating and other movements

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  • My invention relates to an improvement in multiple-cylinder engines.
  • the object is to provide an engine which shall be very compact, perfectly balanced, and at the same time simple and economical.
  • Figure l is a View of the engine in end elevation.
  • Fig. 2 is a view of the same in side elevation.
  • Fig. 3 is a vertical longitudinal section through the cylinders and easing.
  • Fig.4 is avertical transverse section through one of the cylinders and valves.
  • Fig. 5 is a horizontal section through the cylinders, and Figs. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12 are enlarged views of parts in detail.
  • journal-boxes a represent a hollow base, in the ends of which journal-boxes a are secured for the support of the engine-shaft B, journaled therein.
  • the journal-boxes a are provided with bushings b,of brass or other suitable metal, which may be renewed from time to time as they become worn.
  • the engine-shaft B is provided with three cranks C, the shaft being further supported between the cranks by pillars c, fixed to or formed integral with the base A.
  • the several bearings for the engine-shaft are bored true and are perfectly aligned.
  • the casting which comprises the cylinders and exhaustchambers is provided at top and bottom with a laterally-projecting flange d which serves as a convenient means for its attachment to the adjacent parts.
  • a casting E is secured, the same bein g provided with seats for three rotary valves F F F and with ports f and f, leading, respectively, to the cylinders and exhaustchambers.
  • the ports f and f are in each instance separate from each oth er and lead from diiterent portions of the valve-seat, the one'to the end of the cylinder and the other to the exhaust-chamber between the cylinders.
  • the two exhaust-ports f from the seats of the valves F and F lead to the same exhaustchamber, the one between the cylinders.
  • valves F F F are slightly tapered and are pressed gently into their tapered seats by springs G, inserted between their heads and the inner ends of the male glands g of the stridingboxes, in which the valve-stems are seated, while too great pressure is guarded against by set-screws g, which extend through the glands of the stuffing-boxes at the opposite ends of the valves and bear against the ends of the valve-stems.
  • set-screws g which extend through the glands of the stuffing-boxes at the opposite ends of the valves and bear against the ends of the valve-stems.
  • Each of the taper rotary valves F F F is provided with a steam-inlet port H and steamexhaust port h, extending transversely there through, as shown, and so located that as the valve is rocked in its seat the ports therethrough will alternately open communication between the steam chest and port leading to the cylinder and close the exhaust and open communication between the exhaust-chamber and port leading to the cylinder and close the steam-inlet.
  • the casting in which the valves are seated is inclosed within a side casing I, through which the valve-stems 01 extend and to which the stuffing-boxes are secured, and a top plate K is bolted to the casing I, forming a steamchest common to all the valves.
  • a steam-inlet pipe 7t enters the top plate K, and a valve under the influence of a governor k of any well-known or approved construction is provided to control the admission of steam to the chest.
  • the valve-operating shaft L is journaled in suitable brackets Z, extending upwardly from the base, and is provided with three cranks Z, set in radial planes one hundred and twenty degrees apart. On the wrist-pins of the cranks Z the heads m of the connecting-rods M are journaled.
  • the engine-shaft communicates its revolutions to the valve-operating shaft by means of three intermeshing gearwheels O 0 0 the wheels 0 0 being secured on the engine and valve-operating shafts, respectively, and the wheel 0' being mounted on a stud-axle fixed to the base.
  • the gear-Wheel O is fixed to a sleeve-hub 0, which is adapted to slide upon the shaft L, but which is locked against a rotary motion thereon by means of a lug 0' or other suitable locking device fixed to the shaft.
  • the end of the sleeve-hub 0 is provided with two slots or recesses 0 adapted to receive the lugs 0 and located at such a distance apart that when the gear-wheel O is turned from a position where one of the slots engages the lug to a position where the other of the slots engages the lug the relative positions of the valves and pistons will be such as to reverse the motion of the engine.
  • the wheel 0 is held in its normal position by means of a spring-cushion P on the outer end of the shaft L, and the engine'may at any time be reversed by simply sliding the 'wheel 0 out against the spring-cushion P,
  • valveoperating shaft is provided with a pulley p, from which a band 1) extends to the governorshaft.
  • the pistons Q Q Q in the respective cylinders D D D are of cup form and have an extended bearing within the cylinders, their exterior surfaces extending nearly or quite 1 two-thirds the length of the cylinder, thereby admitting of an effective steam-tight joint without great friction due to packing, and also elfectually preventing a wabbling n10- tion. WVithin the piston proper a cup-shaped i bushing 41 isscrewed and locked by a small screw q, tapped through the face of the piston.
  • the piston-rods R R R are loosely mounted at their upper ends on pins r, which extend through the walls of the pistons and bushings, the opposite sides of the piston-rod about the pins having a close fit against the inner walls of the bushings.
  • the wear may thus be taken up by renewing the bushings q, and the pistons, being driven from points at or above the centers of their bearing-faces, are entirely free from any tendency to cramp.
  • the lower ends of the piston-rods are fastened to the wrist-pins on the cranks by half-bearings held together and to the main rod by clamp-nuts r on the threaded ends of stayrods or pins r
  • a balance-wheel S is secured to the end of the engine-shaft, as is usual.
  • An outlet 8 is provided in the base for the overflow of the drip.
  • the three valves arranged to follow one anothers motions at one-third of a revolution apart will cause one of the three pistons to be receiving the full effect of the live steam, another to be receiving the effect of the steam working expansively, the live steam having been cut off, and the third to be returning with exhaust full open, and this will be the constant condition of the three, with but slight variations, so long as the engine is run, for, as soon as the steam has been cut off from the piston mentioned above as working under live steam, the piston returning and exhausting will have begun to receive live steam, and the piston working under expansion will have begun to return and exhaust, and so on.
  • the engine as thus constructed is well adapted as a street-car motor, or whenever compactness and high power combined with perfect balancing and durability are desirable.
  • valve-operating shaft connected with the valves and a sliding gearwheel on the valve-operating shaft in gear with the engine-shaft, the said sliding gearwheel having a rotary and longitudinallysliding movement on the shaft, and means forlocking the wheel to the shaft in different rotary adjustments relatively thereto to reverse the engine, substantially as set forth.
  • the herein-described engine consisting, essentially, of the hollow base provided with an outlet-overflow, the series of cylinders supported upon the base with the exhaust-chambers between them, the casting containing the valve-seats and ports secured to the tops of the cylinders, the steam-chest inclosing the said casting, the engine-shaft journaled on the base and supported between the cranks, the valve-operating shaft geared to the engine-shaft, and the valves connected with cranks on the valve-operating shaft, substantially as set forth.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Cylinder Crankcases Of Internal Combustion Engines (AREA)

Description

(No Model.) 4 Sheets-Sheet 1. G. L. SNYDER. MULTIPLE CYLINDER ENGINE.
No. 423,398. Patented Mar. 11, 1890.
.umlimllnh (No Model.)
4 Sheets-Sheet 2.
O. L. SNYDER. MULTIPLE UYLINDER ENGINE.
Patented Mar. 11, 1890.-
Q N W g I Q Q III! M \IIHI|!M a I |l1| u Q Q E 1 M Q a A Q R N\ 7 Q p w N t M m Q a .un MN w v m m 3 \R \X u E w. .x X w x wt K Q @N x I Ev F: LN MN 4 Sheets-Sheet 3.
(No Model.)
0. L. SNYDER.
MULTIPLE CYLINDER ENGINE.
No. 423,398. Patented Mar. 11, 1890.
Limognplwr, wuhmgia", 0:6.
(No Model.) 4 Sheets-Sheet 4.
0. L. SNYDER. MULTIPLE CYLINDER ENGINE.
No. 423,398. Patented Mar. 11, 1890.
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
CHARLES L. SNYDER, OF KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI, ASSIGNOR OF ONE- I-IALF TO ISAAC M. RIDGE, OF SAME PLACE.
MULTIPLE-CYLINDER ENGINE.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 423,398, dated March 11, 1890.
Application filed April 20, 1889- Serial No. 308,020. (No model.)
T0 at whom it may concern.-
Be it known that I, CHARLES L. SNYDER, of Kansas City, in the county of Jackson and State of Missouri, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Multiple-Cylinder Engines; and I do hereby declare the fol lowing to be a full, clear, and exact description of the invention, such as will enable others skilled in the art to which it appertains to make and use the same.
My invention relates to an improvement in multiple-cylinder engines.
The object is to provide an engine which shall be very compact, perfectly balanced, and at the same time simple and economical.
Vith these ends in view my invention consists in certain features of construction and combinations of parts, as will be hereinafter described, and pointed out in the claims.
In the accompanying drawings, Figure l is a View of the engine in end elevation. Fig. 2 is a view of the same in side elevation. Fig. 3 is a vertical longitudinal section through the cylinders and easing. Fig.4 is avertical transverse section through one of the cylinders and valves. Fig. 5 is a horizontal section through the cylinders, and Figs. 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12 are enlarged views of parts in detail.
A represents a hollow base, in the ends of which journal-boxes a are secured for the support of the engine-shaft B, journaled therein. The journal-boxes a are provided with bushings b,of brass or other suitable metal, which may be renewed from time to time as they become worn.
The engine-shaft B is provided with three cranks C, the shaft being further supported between the cranks by pillars c, fixed to or formed integral with the base A. The several bearings for the engine-shaft are bored true and are perfectly aligned.
To the top of the base A a casting coniprising three upright cylinders D D D is bolted. Chambers d are left between the cylinders, which serveas eXhaust-cl1ambers,the two communicating with a common exhaust-pipe cl.
The casting which comprises the cylinders and exhaustchambers is provided at top and bottom with a laterally-projecting flange d which serves as a convenient means for its attachment to the adjacent parts.
To the top of the casting comprising the cylinders a casting E is secured, the same bein g provided with seats for three rotary valves F F F and with ports f and f, leading, respectively, to the cylinders and exhaustchambers. The ports f and f are in each instance separate from each oth er and lead from diiterent portions of the valve-seat, the one'to the end of the cylinder and the other to the exhaust-chamber between the cylinders. The two exhaust-ports f from the seats of the valves F and F lead to the same exhaustchamber, the one between the cylinders. D and D, and the exhaust-port f from the seat of the valve F leads to the exhaust-chamber between the cylinders D and D The valves F F F are slightly tapered and are pressed gently into their tapered seats by springs G, inserted between their heads and the inner ends of the male glands g of the stridingboxes, in which the valve-stems are seated, while too great pressure is guarded against by set-screws g, which extend through the glands of the stuffing-boxes at the opposite ends of the valves and bear against the ends of the valve-stems. The valves are thus held in the most delicate adjustment and undue frictional wear is entirely avoided.
Each of the taper rotary valves F F F is provided with a steam-inlet port H and steamexhaust port h, extending transversely there through, as shown, and so located that as the valve is rocked in its seat the ports therethrough will alternately open communication between the steam chest and port leading to the cylinder and close the exhaust and open communication between the exhaust-chamber and port leading to the cylinder and close the steam-inlet.
The casting in which the valves are seated is inclosed within a side casing I, through which the valve-stems 01 extend and to which the stuffing-boxes are secured, and a top plate K is bolted to the casing I, forming a steamchest common to all the valves. A steam-inlet pipe 7t enters the top plate K, and a valve under the influence of a governor k of any well-known or approved construction is provided to control the admission of steam to the chest.
The valve-operating shaft L is journaled in suitable brackets Z, extending upwardly from the base, and is provided with three cranks Z, set in radial planes one hundred and twenty degrees apart. On the wrist-pins of the cranks Z the heads m of the connecting-rods M are journaled.
()n the projecting ends of the valve-stem 2'- operating-arms N, terminating in a pair of curved clamping-jaws n, are secured by means of a set-screw n, for drawing the jaws together snugly about the stems, and on the opposite ends of the arms Nconnecting-heads n are mounted, preferably by lock-nuts 07. The connecting-rods M have a loose connection at each end with the heads on and 11 to compensate for the varying positions which the rods assume as the valve-operating shaft L is rotated. s
The engine-shaft communicates its revolutions to the valve-operating shaft by means of three intermeshing gearwheels O 0 0 the wheels 0 0 being secured on the engine and valve-operating shafts, respectively, and the wheel 0' being mounted on a stud-axle fixed to the base. The gear-Wheel O is fixed to a sleeve-hub 0, which is adapted to slide upon the shaft L, but which is locked against a rotary motion thereon by means of a lug 0' or other suitable locking device fixed to the shaft. The end of the sleeve-hub 0 is provided with two slots or recesses 0 adapted to receive the lugs 0 and located at such a distance apart that when the gear-wheel O is turned from a position where one of the slots engages the lug to a position where the other of the slots engages the lug the relative positions of the valves and pistons will be such as to reverse the motion of the engine. The wheel 0 is held in its normal position by means of a spring-cushion P on the outer end of the shaft L, and the engine'may at any time be reversed by simply sliding the 'wheel 0 out against the spring-cushion P,
turning it to bring the other slot into engagement with the locking-lug, and allowing it to slide back. The opposite end of the valveoperating shaft is provided with a pulley p, from which a band 1) extends to the governorshaft.
The pistons Q Q Q in the respective cylinders D D D are of cup form and have an extended bearing within the cylinders, their exterior surfaces extending nearly or quite 1 two-thirds the length of the cylinder, thereby admitting of an effective steam-tight joint without great friction due to packing, and also elfectually preventing a wabbling n10- tion. WVithin the piston proper a cup-shaped i bushing 41 isscrewed and locked by a small screw q, tapped through the face of the piston.
The piston-rods R R R are loosely mounted at their upper ends on pins r, which extend through the walls of the pistons and bushings, the opposite sides of the piston-rod about the pins having a close fit against the inner walls of the bushings. The wear may thus be taken up by renewing the bushings q, and the pistons, being driven from points at or above the centers of their bearing-faces, are entirely free from any tendency to cramp. The lower ends of the piston-rods are fastened to the wrist-pins on the cranks by half-bearings held together and to the main rod by clamp-nuts r on the threaded ends of stayrods or pins r A balance-wheel S is secured to the end of the engine-shaft, as is usual.
An outlet 8 is provided in the base for the overflow of the drip. v
The three valves arranged to follow one anothers motions at one-third of a revolution apart will cause one of the three pistons to be receiving the full effect of the live steam, another to be receiving the effect of the steam working expansively, the live steam having been cut off, and the third to be returning with exhaust full open, and this will be the constant condition of the three, with but slight variations, so long as the engine is run, for, as soon as the steam has been cut off from the piston mentioned above as working under live steam, the piston returning and exhausting will have begun to receive live steam, and the piston working under expansion will have begun to return and exhaust, and so on.
The engine as thus constructed is well adapted as a street-car motor, or whenever compactness and high power combined with perfect balancing and durability are desirable.
Having thus fully described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is-
1. The combination, with several cylinders placed side by side, and exhaust-chambers between them, of a casting secured over the ends of the cylinders, valve-seats formed in the casting, one for each cylinder, independent ports leading from the valve-seats to the cylinders and exhaust-chambers, steam-inlet ports leading from without into the valveseats, and the rotary valves provided with steam-inlet and steam-exhaust ports, substantially as set forth.
2.. The combination, with several cylinders placed side by side, and exhaust-chambers located between the cylinders, of a casting secured over the ends of the cylinders, taper valve-seats within the casting, taper rotary valves fitted to the seats, a steam-tight casing inclosing the said casting, independent ports leading from the valve-seats to the cylinder and exhaust-chambers, independent ports through each of the valves, and ports from without through'the casting to the valveseats, substantially as set forth.
3. The combination, with several cylinders placed side by side, and exhaust-chambers located between the cylinders, of a casting secured over the ends of the cylinders, taper valve-seats within the casting, tapered valves seated therein, pressure mechanism tending to force the valve into its seat, and adjusting mechanism bearing against the opposite ends of the valves against said pressure, substantially as set forth.
4. The combination, with the several cylinders, the engine-shaft, and the pistons con.- nected with the shafts, of a series of rotary valves seated over the heads of the cylinders, a valve-operating shaft geared with the engine-shaft, cranks on the valveoperating shaft radiating therefro1n,arms on the valvestems, and connecting-rods loosely connected with the cranks and valve-stems, whereby the valves are rocked at regular intervals during the rotation of the valve-operating shaft, substantiallyas set forth.
5. The combination, with the several cylinders, their piston, and the engine-shaft, of the several valves, the valve-operating shaft connected with the valves and a sliding gearwheel on the valve-operating shaft in gear with the engine-shaft, the said sliding gearwheel having a rotary and longitudinallysliding movement on the shaft, and means forlocking the wheel to the shaft in different rotary adjustments relatively thereto to reverse the engine, substantially as set forth.
6. The combination, with the cylinder and the engine-shaft, of a piston provided with an interior cup-bushing, a cross-pin extending centrally through the piston about midway between its ends, and a piston-rod journaled on the pin at one'end and on the engine-shaft at the opposite end, substantially as set forth.
7. The herein-described engine, consisting, essentially, of the hollow base provided with an outlet-overflow, the series of cylinders supported upon the base with the exhaust-chambers between them, the casting containing the valve-seats and ports secured to the tops of the cylinders, the steam-chest inclosing the said casting, the engine-shaft journaled on the base and supported between the cranks, the valve-operating shaft geared to the engine-shaft, and the valves connected with cranks on the valve-operating shaft, substantially as set forth.
In testimony whereof I have signed this specification in the presence of two subscribing witnesses.
CHARLES L. SNYDER.
WVitnesses:
M H. BROWN, A. H. Nrnss.
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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2724183A (en) * 1945-12-27 1955-11-22 Calibron Products Inc Remotely controlled precision drive and calculating systems

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2724183A (en) * 1945-12-27 1955-11-22 Calibron Products Inc Remotely controlled precision drive and calculating systems

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