US42714A - Improvement in mode of appyling lubricating substances - Google Patents

Improvement in mode of appyling lubricating substances Download PDF

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US42714A
US42714A US42714DA US42714A US 42714 A US42714 A US 42714A US 42714D A US42714D A US 42714DA US 42714 A US42714 A US 42714A
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appyling
improvement
mode
lubricating
lubricating substances
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B61RAILWAYS
    • B61FRAIL VEHICLE SUSPENSIONS, e.g. UNDERFRAMES, BOGIES OR ARRANGEMENTS OF WHEEL AXLES; RAIL VEHICLES FOR USE ON TRACKS OF DIFFERENT WIDTH; PREVENTING DERAILING OF RAIL VEHICLES; WHEEL GUARDS, OBSTRUCTION REMOVERS OR THE LIKE FOR RAIL VEHICLES
    • B61F17/00Lubrication specially adapted for axle-boxes of rail vehicles
    • B61F17/02Lubrication specially adapted for axle-boxes of rail vehicles with oil
    • B61F17/04Lubrication by stationary devices
    • B61F17/06Lubrication by stationary devices by means of a wick or the like
    • B61F17/08Devices for pressing the wick or the like against the rotating axle

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  • hay or straw on i account of its enameled surfaces and its porous nature, when packed together forms an excellent conductor of lubricating matters, and consequently does not absorb and retain the sediments formed, but allows them to fall through to the bottom of the journal-box, leaving the conducting material clean and free from dirt.
  • Hay or straw also,when in a body possesses an elasticity which keeps its surface always in immediate contact with the axle, whereas cotton waste or sponge soon becomes densely packed by the pressure upon, and thus leaves a space between it and the journal. I have found,then, that hay or straw, employed as above described, requires only about three-fifths of the quantity of lubricant used for cotton waste or sponge.
  • Figure l is a central longitudinal vertical section of the axle-box.
  • Fig. 2 is a transverse section of the same.
  • a a in the drawings represent the opening to which is at b b.
  • 00 is the axle, under which is packed hay or straw dd, or both combined, as shown in the drawings, in the place of the ordinary waste or sponge.
  • the lubricating material is applied in the usual manner, so as to keep the hay or straw saturated.

Description

J. DUUGALL.
Can-Axie Box.
Patented May 10, 1864.
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
JAMES DOUGALL, OF STEBLINGSHIRE, SCOTLAND.
IMPROVEMENT IN MODE OF APPYLING LUBRICATING SUBSTANCES.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 42,714, dated May 10, 1864; antedatcd May 3, 1864. I
,To all whom it may concern.-
Be it known that I, JAMES DOUGALL, of Sterlingshire, Scotland, but at present temporarily residing in Montreal, Canada, and a subject of the Queen of Great Britain, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in the Method of Applying Lubricating Substances; and I do hereby declare that the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, hereinafter referred to, forms a full and exact specification of the same, wherein I have set forth the nature and principles of my said improvements, whereby my invention may be distinguished from all others of a similar class, together with what I claim and desire to have secured to me by Letters Patent.
The method heretofore employed of conveying lubricating-matter to the axles ot'railwaycarriages, 850., has usually consisted in employing cotton waste or sponge in the oilboxes, the cotton waste or sponge absorbing and retaining the oil and bearing against the axle; but it has been found that the use of these materials is attended with many serious disadvantages, as, being of too dense a nature, they absorb and retain all the dirt and sediment that fall from the bearings, which cause in a short time grinds out the bearings and heats them to a dangerous extent. More over, cotton waste and sponge are not of a sufficiently elastic nature to keep well up to good conductors of the axle, neither are they lubricating materials.
In seeking for a substitute for the ordinary method of applying lubricators it has been my object, first, to obtain a much cheaper and better conductor of oils than those heretofore used; second, a more elastic and spongy material; third, a substance sufficicntly loose in its bulk to permit the free passage through it of such dirt and sediment as necessarily collect in journal-boxes. After experimenting with many different substances 1 have found that hay or straw or hay and straw mixed, l
and other similar substances, applied in the oil-boxes of axles, &c., combine all the advantages desired.
It will be observed that hay or straw, on i account of its enameled surfaces and its porous nature, when packed together forms an excellent conductor of lubricating matters, and consequently does not absorb and retain the sediments formed, but allows them to fall through to the bottom of the journal-box, leaving the conducting material clean and free from dirt. Hay or straw,also,when in a body possesses an elasticity which keeps its surface always in immediate contact with the axle, whereas cotton waste or sponge soon becomes densely packed by the pressure upon, and thus leaves a space between it and the journal. I have found,then, that hay or straw, employed as above described, requires only about three-fifths of the quantity of lubricant used for cotton waste or sponge.
The accompanying drawings represent my improvemen s as applied to the axle-box of a railway-car.
Figure l is a central longitudinal vertical section of the axle-box. Fig. 2 is a transverse section of the same.
a a in the drawings represent the opening to which is at b b. 00 is the axle, under which is packed hay or straw dd, or both combined, as shown in the drawings, in the place of the ordinary waste or sponge.
The lubricating material is applied in the usual manner, so as to keep the hay or straw saturated.
the oil-box,
The operation of the parts, being well known, l need not be herein more particularly described.
The above-described combination of the axle, axlebox, the lubricating materials, and the new packing employed, produces the novel results hereinabove fully set forth.
Having thus described myimprovements, what I claim as my invention, and desire to have secured to me by Letters Patent, is-
The method hereinabove described of applying lubricating-matters, the same consisting in using in axle-boxes for railway-carriages, &c., hay or straw, or both combined, substantially as hereinabove described.
JAMES DOUGALL.
\Vitnesses:
J osEPH GAVET'I, ALBERT XV. BROWN.
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