US424550A - Safety-machine - Google Patents
Safety-machine Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US424550A US424550A US424550DA US424550A US 424550 A US424550 A US 424550A US 424550D A US424550D A US 424550DA US 424550 A US424550 A US 424550A
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- US
- United States
- Prior art keywords
- wire
- clutches
- machine
- rope
- safety
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Expired - Lifetime
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- 239000002965 rope Substances 0.000 description 34
- 206010022114 Injury Diseases 0.000 description 4
- 241000723418 Carya Species 0.000 description 2
- 210000002683 Foot Anatomy 0.000 description 2
- 200000000001 labour Diseases 0.000 description 2
- 230000004048 modification Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000006011 modification reaction Methods 0.000 description 2
- 230000001376 precipitating Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000000284 resting Effects 0.000 description 2
- XLYOFNOQVPJJNP-UHFFFAOYSA-N water Substances O XLYOFNOQVPJJNP-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
Images
Classifications
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A62—LIFE-SAVING; FIRE-FIGHTING
- A62B—DEVICES, APPARATUS OR METHODS FOR LIFE-SAVING
- A62B1/00—Devices for lowering persons from buildings or the like
- A62B1/06—Devices for lowering persons from buildings or the like by making use of rope-lowering devices
- A62B1/14—Devices for lowering persons from buildings or the like by making use of rope-lowering devices with brakes sliding on the rope
Definitions
- Our invention relates to improvements in safety devices or machines for preventing ac cidents to persons from the falling or breaking of scaffolds and ladders upon which they may be, or accidents to persons in falling from buildings, windmills, bridges, and other structures.
- Our improvement also relates to safety devices in which the person by the use of a belt and chain or other device about his body connects himself to the safety device, and by precipitating his weight upon such connection with the safety device clutches such device upon a wire rope or cable, which is pendently attached to a sustaining object, and by such means he is suspended and held from falling; and the objects of our invention are, first, to provide means by which a person in falling from any distance where injury would naturally result or into water is arrested, held, or suspended, and the injury averted, and, second, to afford facilities for moving the device up and down with the person as he may ascend or descend in the discharge of his duties or labors.
- FIG. 1 is a front view of our safety-machine with its wire or cable supported at its upper end from a beam, together with means for suspending such device or machine at any required height.
- Fig. 2 is a side view of our safetynnaclrine, drawn upon an enlarged scale, the chains, wires, or straps being omitted.
- Fig. 3 is a front view, the out-er plate being removed. ig. a is an end view of the outer plate and movable plate, and Fig. 5 is a front view of a vertical section of the pondent bar for sliding the safety device down ward upon its wire or cable.
- FIG. 3 is the rear plate of the safety deviceor machine provided with upper projecting s de rims 7, and S and 9 are two pieces forming the front plate.
- the plates are held together parallel with each other by the rivets 10, surrounded by the collars 11, against the respective ends of which the inner faces of the plates rest.
- the upper part of plates 8 and 9 also restbetween the side rims 7.
- the hooked clutches 12 are secured at their respective angles by pivots 13 and 14: through the plates, upon which pivots the hooked clutches may rotate.
- the ends of each of said hooked clutches are notched crosswise or roughened, as at 15.
- the plates 8 and 9, when secured to the rear plate, have an intervening space centrally and in vertical line between them.
- a movable plate 17, having an inner vertical projection 18 and a cross aperture or slot 19, is placed againstthe outer surface of the pieces 8 and 9 forming the front plate, so that the projection 18 fits into the intervening space between such pieces, and its cross aperture er slot registers with the aperture through the piece 9 for the pivot 14, which projects sufficiently through such cross aperture to receive a thumbnut 16, the end of such pivot and the interior of said nut bein g screw-threaded.
- a wire, wire cable, or rope 20 is pendcntly attached to a sustaining object.
- Fig. 1 it is illustrated as being secured to a hook and the hook secured into a staple in a cross timber or beam.
- the wire, wire cable, or rope may extend to the ground and be there secured in any manner or may hang loosely.
- the method of attaching the upper end of such wire, wire cable, or rope must necessarily depend upon circumstanees-as, forinstance, it may, when a person is working upon a building, be attached to any portion of the building which will cause it to be safe and convenient to the person. So, too, any means of attachment insuring permanency and safety may be adopted.
- the thumb-nut 16 is unscrewed sufficiently to permit the projection 18 of the movable plate to be taken out of the inter vening space between the pieces 8 and 9 and permit the wire, wire cable, or rope 20 to pass ICO into such miervening space and between the hooked clutches 12.
- the projection 18 is then replaced in such intervening space and the thumb-nut screwed up so as to hold the movable plate 17 in position.
- the operator or person is provided with a belt 21 around his body or other device, to which is secured chains, ropes, or chain-links '22, the opposite end of one of each being secured to the outer ends of. the arms of said clutches.
- the weight of the plates, hooked clutches, and belt-connecting chain is such that the device will slide downward on the wire, wire cable, or rope 20; hence it is desirable to provide mechanism for holding the device in a desired position.
- WVe accomplish this result by providing a pendent bar 23, which may be an extension of the rear plate, at the bottom of'which is a hinged bar 24, the opposite end of which is curved, as at 25, and which end has hinged to it a curved iece 26, the front end of which is provided with a hook or clasp 27, which may be passed through a longitudinal aperture 28 in pendent bar 23, the inner end of the hook bearing against the outer surface of said pendent bar below said aperture, thus holding bar 24.- and curved piece 26 in the position shown in Fig.
- An arm 29 is loosely pivoted on the front face of pendent bar 23, so that its end may rest beneath the hook or clasp 27 when passed through the aperture 28, as shown in Figs. 1, 2, and 5, and at the outer end of said arm is attached a rope, chain, or strap 30, the oppo' site end of which is attached to the belt-connection 22.
- the safety device or machine may be caused to slide or move downward on the wire, wire cable, or rope 20 against its tendency to move upward by means of the weight attachment, which we will now de scribe.
- a weight 31 is attached to a rope 32 of sufficent length and passed over a pulley 33, which is secured in proper position to some permanent object above the safety device or machine, and its non-weighted end secured to the top of the rear plate 6 or to a ring 34, attached thereto.
- the weight 31 may be provided with side projections,with vertical perforations to accommodate wires or ro'pes 35, the upper end of which may be secured to a perman ent object sufficiently above the weight and in line therewith, and its lower ends secured to the ground or other permanent obform guides for said weight in its movement upward and downward.
- the weight tends to draw the safety device or machine upward, and the operator by means of the curved piece 26 pulls it downward, as he may desire.
- the arm 29 has its front end resting beneath the hook or clasp 27, and if the operator falls his weight upon the rope or chain 30 throws the hook or clasp 27 out of the aperture 28, and piece 26 and bar 24, through their hinges, drop downward, thus throwing the weight of the operator on the belt-connection 22, cansing the hooked clutches to grasp the wire, wire cable, or rope 20 and arresting the operator from falling.
- a spring 36 may be arranged around a pivot 37 on the interior plate 6, and carried forward around and to the rear of the lower collar 11, so that its rear end may rest against hooked clutch 12 to force such hooked clutch against the wire, wire cable, or rope 20.
- hooked clutch 12 Such mechanism is illustrated in Fig. 3 as applied to one hooked clutch; but in practice both hooked clutches are to be so supplied with springs.
- a safety device or machine the combination, with a rope, wire, or cable pendently attached to a sustaining object, of a rear plate, two hooked clutches with horizontal oppositely-extending arms pivotallyattached to "such plate, a front plate in two pieces, with a central vertical space intervening, secured to such rear plate with'said clutches interposed between such rear and front plates, a rope, strap, or chain secured to the outer end of each clutch-arm and the free ends secured to a belt arranged to be secured to the person of the operative, a plate arranged to close the intervening central'space between the two IOO pieces forming the front plate, means for at- 2.
- a safety device 01* machine having a 29, and rope, chain, or strap 30, substantially cable pendently attached to a sustaining obas described.
- ject, and pivotal clutches t0 fixedly grasp such T T cable when sustaining the weight of the 0perative, in combination with a weight and mechanism to move the clutches upward, the Vitnesses: pendent bar 23, hinged bar24, hinged curved CHAS. IIIBBARD, piece 26,1100]: 27, aperture 28, pivoted arm GEO.
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- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Business, Economics & Management (AREA)
- Emergency Management (AREA)
- Emergency Lowering Means (AREA)
Description
H. T. HAHN & J. SGHRUDER.
(No Model.)
SAFETY MACHINE.
No. 424,560. Patented Apr. 1,1890.
nllllllllllllllllllllllllli UNITED TATES PATENT OFFICE.
HENRY T. HAHN AND JOHN SCl-IRQDER, OF HICKORY GROVE, SCOTT COUNTY, IOlVA.
SAFETY-MACHIN E.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 424,550, dated. April 1, 1890.
Application filed July 6, 1889. Serial No. 316,729. (No model.)
To ctZZ whom it may concern.-
Be it known that we, HENRY T. HAHN and JOHN SCHRoDER, citizens of the United States, residing in Hickory Grove township, in the county of Scott and State of Iowa, have invented a new and useful Safety-Machine, 'of which the following is a specification.
Our invention relates to improvements in safety devices or machines for preventing ac cidents to persons from the falling or breaking of scaffolds and ladders upon which they may be, or accidents to persons in falling from buildings, windmills, bridges, and other structures.
Our improvement also relates to safety devices in which the person by the use of a belt and chain or other device about his body connects himself to the safety device, and by precipitating his weight upon such connection with the safety device clutches such device upon a wire rope or cable, which is pendently attached to a sustaining object, and by such means he is suspended and held from falling; and the objects of our invention are, first, to provide means by which a person in falling from any distance where injury would naturally result or into water is arrested, held, or suspended, and the injury averted, and, second, to afford facilities for moving the device up and down with the person as he may ascend or descend in the discharge of his duties or labors. \Ve attain these objects by the mechanism illustrated in the accompanying drawin in whicl1- Figure l is a front view of our safety-machine with its wire or cable supported at its upper end from a beam, together with means for suspending such device or machine at any required height. Fig. 2 is a side view of our safetynnaclrine, drawn upon an enlarged scale, the chains, wires, or straps being omitted. Fig. 3 is a front view, the out-er plate being removed. ig. a is an end view of the outer plate and movable plate, and Fig. 5 is a front view of a vertical section of the pondent bar for sliding the safety device down ward upon its wire or cable.
Similar figures refer to similar, parts throughout the several views.
3 is the rear plate of the safety deviceor machine provided with upper projecting s de rims 7, and S and 9 are two pieces forming the front plate. The plates are held together parallel with each other by the rivets 10, surrounded by the collars 11, against the respective ends of which the inner faces of the plates rest. The upper part of plates 8 and 9 also restbetween the side rims 7. The hooked clutches 12 are secured at their respective angles by pivots 13 and 14: through the plates, upon which pivots the hooked clutches may rotate. The ends of each of said hooked clutches are notched crosswise or roughened, as at 15. The plates 8 and 9, when secured to the rear plate, have an intervening space centrally and in vertical line between them. A movable plate 17, having an inner vertical projection 18 and a cross aperture or slot 19, is placed againstthe outer surface of the pieces 8 and 9 forming the front plate, so that the projection 18 fits into the intervening space between such pieces, and its cross aperture er slot registers with the aperture through the piece 9 for the pivot 14, which projects sufficiently through such cross aperture to receive a thumbnut 16, the end of such pivot and the interior of said nut bein g screw-threaded.
A wire, wire cable, or rope 20 is pendcntly attached to a sustaining object. In the drawing Fig. 1 it is illustrated as being secured to a hook and the hook secured into a staple in a cross timber or beam. The wire, wire cable, or rope may extend to the ground and be there secured in any manner or may hang loosely. The method of attaching the upper end of such wire, wire cable, or rope must necessarily depend upon circumstanees-as, forinstance, it may, when a person is working upon a building, be attached to any portion of the building which will cause it to be safe and convenient to the person. So, too, any means of attachment insuring permanency and safety may be adopted. \Vhen so attached, the thumb-nut 16 is unscrewed sufficiently to permit the projection 18 of the movable plate to be taken out of the inter vening space between the pieces 8 and 9 and permit the wire, wire cable, or rope 20 to pass ICO into such miervening space and between the hooked clutches 12. The projection 18 is then replaced in such intervening space and the thumb-nut screwed up so as to hold the movable plate 17 in position.
The operator or person is provided with a belt 21 around his body or other device, to which is secured chains, ropes, or chain-links '22, the opposite end of one of each being secured to the outer ends of. the arms of said clutches.
The weight of the body of a person upon the chains 22 forces downward the arms of the clutches and throw inward the outer ends of the hooks, so that the wire,wire cable, or rope 20 is grasped between said hooked clutches at their notched or roughened surfaces sufficiently tight to suspend the person.
Ordinarily the weight of the plates, hooked clutches, and belt-connecting chain is such that the device will slide downward on the wire, wire cable, or rope 20; hence it is desirable to provide mechanism for holding the device in a desired position. WVe accomplish this result by providing a pendent bar 23, which may be an extension of the rear plate, at the bottom of'which is a hinged bar 24, the opposite end of which is curved, as at 25, and which end has hinged to it a curved iece 26, the front end of which is provided with a hook or clasp 27, which may be passed through a longitudinal aperture 28 in pendent bar 23, the inner end of the hook bearing against the outer surface of said pendent bar below said aperture, thus holding bar 24.- and curved piece 26 in the position shown in Fig. 2. An arm 29 is loosely pivoted on the front face of pendent bar 23, so that its end may rest beneath the hook or clasp 27 when passed through the aperture 28, as shown in Figs. 1, 2, and 5, and at the outer end of said arm is attached a rope, chain, or strap 30, the oppo' site end of which is attached to the belt-connection 22. By pulling downward on the curved piece 26 the safety device or machine may be caused to slide or move downward on the wire, wire cable, or rope 20 against its tendency to move upward by means of the weight attachment, which we will now de scribe.
A weight 31 is attached to a rope 32 of sufficent length and passed over a pulley 33, which is secured in proper position to some permanent object above the safety device or machine, and its non-weighted end secured to the top of the rear plate 6 or to a ring 34, attached thereto. The weight 31 may be provided with side projections,with vertical perforations to accommodate wires or ro'pes 35, the upper end of which may be secured to a perman ent object sufficiently above the weight and in line therewith, and its lower ends secured to the ground or other permanent obform guides for said weight in its movement upward and downward.
The weight tends to draw the safety device or machine upward, and the operator by means of the curved piece 26 pulls it downward, as he may desire. To avoid accidents, the arm 29 has its front end resting beneath the hook or clasp 27, and if the operator falls his weight upon the rope or chain 30 throws the hook or clasp 27 out of the aperture 28, and piece 26 and bar 24, through their hinges, drop downward, thus throwing the weight of the operator on the belt-connection 22, cansing the hooked clutches to grasp the wire, wire cable, or rope 20 and arresting the operator from falling.
In addition to the mechanism described for holding the device in position, a spring 36 may be arranged around a pivot 37 on the interior plate 6, and carried forward around and to the rear of the lower collar 11, so that its rear end may rest against hooked clutch 12 to force such hooked clutch against the wire, wire cable, or rope 20. Such mechanism is illustrated in Fig. 3 as applied to one hooked clutch; but in practice both hooked clutches are to be so supplied with springs.
If the weight of the arms of the hooked clutches are such as to throw the hooked clutches together and grasp the cable too tightly, so that the weight 31 does not act with sufficient force to raise the safety device or machine, springs may be arranged upon such safety device or machine to bear upward against the arms, and concaved pulleys may be arranged between the rear and front plates to guide the cable 20 and avoid friction and misplacement. Many other changes and modifications may be made in our machine without departing from the scope of our invention.
From the description here given the mode of operation of our machine may be readily understood without further statement.
What we claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
' 1. In a safety device or machine, the combination, with a rope, wire, or cable pendently attached to a sustaining object, of a rear plate, two hooked clutches with horizontal oppositely-extending arms pivotallyattached to "such plate, a front plate in two pieces, with a central vertical space intervening, secured to such rear plate with'said clutches interposed between such rear and front plates, a rope, strap, or chain secured to the outer end of each clutch-arm and the free ends secured to a belt arranged to be secured to the person of the operative, a plate arranged to close the intervening central'space between the two IOO pieces forming the front plate, means for at- 2. In a safety device 01* machine having a 29, and rope, chain, or strap 30, substantially cable pendently attached to a sustaining obas described. ject, and pivotal clutches t0 fixedly grasp such T T cable when sustaining the weight of the 0perative, in combination with a weight and mechanism to move the clutches upward, the Vitnesses: pendent bar 23, hinged bar24, hinged curved CHAS. IIIBBARD, piece 26,1100]: 27, aperture 28, pivoted arm GEO. E. GOULD.
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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US424550A true US424550A (en) | 1890-04-01 |
Family
ID=2493464
Family Applications (1)
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US424550D Expired - Lifetime US424550A (en) | Safety-machine |
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Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4546851A (en) * | 1982-11-03 | 1985-10-15 | Brennan Daniel F | Tree climbing apparatus |
US20090008188A1 (en) * | 2007-07-03 | 2009-01-08 | Zedel | Ascender device on a double rope |
-
0
- US US424550D patent/US424550A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Cited By (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4546851A (en) * | 1982-11-03 | 1985-10-15 | Brennan Daniel F | Tree climbing apparatus |
US20090008188A1 (en) * | 2007-07-03 | 2009-01-08 | Zedel | Ascender device on a double rope |
US8794379B2 (en) * | 2007-07-03 | 2014-08-05 | Zedel | Ascender device on a double rope |
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