US486581A - Bushing for attrition-mills - Google Patents

Bushing for attrition-mills Download PDF

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US486581A
US486581A US486581DA US486581A US 486581 A US486581 A US 486581A US 486581D A US486581D A US 486581DA US 486581 A US486581 A US 486581A
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bushing
attrition
mills
mill
cylinder
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B02CRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING; PREPARATORY TREATMENT OF GRAIN FOR MILLING
    • B02CCRUSHING, PULVERISING, OR DISINTEGRATING IN GENERAL; MILLING GRAIN
    • B02C17/00Disintegrating by tumbling mills, i.e. mills having a container charged with the material to be disintegrated with or without special disintegrating members such as pebbles or balls
    • B02C17/18Details
    • B02C17/22Lining for containers

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  • My invention relates to an ilnprovement in bushings for attrition-mills, with the objects in view of preventing them from gaining upon or rotating relatively to the mass of material with which they are engaged, rendering it possible to make them of large diameter and fitting them for use as screens.
  • FIG. 1 is a face or end View of the bushing, partly in section.
  • Fig. 2 is a central section, taken in the plane of the axis of the bushing; and
  • Fig. 3 shows the application of the bushing to a mill.
  • An attrition-mill of this general character is shown and described in Letters Patent No. 316,921, granted to T. Il. Sturtevant April 28, 1885, and such portions of an improved mill of this character as will sufce to show the practical application ofthe bushing are represented in the present case by Fig. 3.
  • the bushings are run at a very high speed and their motion is transmitted to the mass of material to be operated upon by the friction of theirinner surfaces therewith. If the bushing fail to carry the mass along with it, there is a very considerable increase in Wear due to sliding friction and the life of the bushing is materially shortened.
  • I provide its interior with abutments consisting of brackets or webs arranged at intervals and gradually increasing in depth as they .extend from the open-end portion of the bushing toward its outer or closed end.
  • the bushing proper is represented as a whole by A and is secured at its closed end to a chuck or head B, fixed to the end of the drive-shaft O.
  • the brackets or webs above referred to are represented by a and are here shown as cast integral with the bushing.
  • the bushing A is shown .as formed in sections a, so formed that when placed side byside they will form a continuous Wall of a cylinder. Their ends toward the chuck or head B are extended toward'a central hub b on the head, and they are secured to the head by bolts b.
  • the sections a are further held against displacement under the strain of centrifugal force by a band D, preferably of Wrought metal, iron, or steel, shrunk or closely fitted around the periphery of the chuck or headB and projecting overthe ends of the sections a.
  • Set-screws d extend through the band D into engagement with the exterior surfaces of the Sections.
  • the sectional structure' of the bushing renders it feasible to construct it of great diameter and at the same time handle it with ease for shipment and setting up. It also admits of the removal of a badly-worn part and its replacement by a new section without the expense of providing an entirely-new bushing.
  • the slots a2 also assist the bushing in obtaining arm grip upon the mass, as their edges present a series of abutments transverse to the direction of the track of the bushing.
  • the casing of the mill is represented by P, the feed-hopper by p, the screen-blocks by S, the binders for holding the screen-blocks in positionby Q, the supports for the bushingshaft by I'I and g, the crank portion of the drive-shaft by G, and the portion of the shaft adjacent to the bushing and arranged to telescope into the shaft-section G is denoted by O.
  • the door for inclosing the bushing within the casing is denoted by M.
  • a bushing for an attrition-mill comprising an open-end cylinder provided on its inner face wit-h one or more abutments extending along the curved inner Wall of the cylinder toward the closed end of the cylinder for securing a grip upon the material being operated upon, substantially as set forth.
  • a bushing for an attrition-mill comprising an open-end cylinder having interior Webs or brackets connecting the inner curved wall of the cylinder with the closed end of the cylinder and formed integral therewith, substantially as Set forth.

Description

(No Model.) 2 Sheets-Sheet 1.
W. H. HOFFMAN. BUSHING POR 'ATTRITION MILLS.
No. 488,581. Patented Nov. 22,1892.
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(No Model.) 2 Sheets-Sheet 2.
W. H. HOFFMAN. BUSHING POR ATTRITION MILLS.
No. 486,581. Patented Nov. 22, 1892.
IlNrrnD STATES PATENT -einen.
IVILLIAM H. HOFFMAN, OF BREWSTER, NEW YORK.
BUSHING FOR ATTRlTlON-IVIILLS.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 486,581, dated November 22, 1892. Application filed December 18, 1891y Serial No. 415,454. (No model.)
To aZZ whom t may concer-71,:
Beit known that I, WILLIAM H. HOFFMAN, of Brewster,in the countyof Putnam and State of New York, have invented a new and useful Improvement in Bushings for At-trition- Mills, of which the following is a specification.
My invention relates to an ilnprovement in bushings for attrition-mills, with the objects in view of preventing them from gaining upon or rotating relatively to the mass of material with which they are engaged, rendering it possible to make them of large diameter and fitting them for use as screens.
A practical embodiment of my invention is represented in the accompanying drawings, in Which- Figure 1 is a face or end View of the bushing, partly in section. Fig. 2 is a central section, taken in the plane of the axis of the bushing; and Fig. 3 shows the application of the bushing to a mill.
The device which I have termed a bushing,7 and which is commonly known in the art at the present time by that name, is an openend cylinder used in connection with the barrel or casing of an attrition-mill for imparting to a mass of material fed into the barrel or casing a whirling motion to grind it against screen-blocks with which the barrelv or casing is faced. An attrition-mill of this general character is shown and described in Letters Patent No. 316,921, granted to T. Il. Sturtevant April 28, 1885, and such portions of an improved mill of this character as will sufce to show the practical application ofthe bushing are represented in the present case by Fig. 3.
The bushings are run at a very high speed and their motion is transmitted to the mass of material to be operated upon by the friction of theirinner surfaces therewith. If the bushing fail to carry the mass along with it, there is a very considerable increase in Wear due to sliding friction and the life of the bushing is materially shortened.
To afford the bushing a better grip upon the mass, I provide its interior with abutments consisting of brackets or webs arranged at intervals and gradually increasing in depth as they .extend from the open-end portion of the bushing toward its outer or closed end.
The bushing proper is represented as a whole by A and is secured at its closed end to a chuck or head B, fixed to the end of the drive-shaft O. The brackets or webs above referred to are represented by a and are here shown as cast integral with the bushing. The bushing A is shown .as formed in sections a, so formed that when placed side byside they will form a continuous Wall of a cylinder. Their ends toward the chuck or head B are extended toward'a central hub b on the head, and they are secured to the head by bolts b. The sections a are further held against displacement under the strain of centrifugal force by a band D, preferably of Wrought metal, iron, or steel, shrunk or closely fitted around the periphery of the chuck or headB and projecting overthe ends of the sections a. Set-screws d extend through the band D into engagement with the exterior surfaces of the Sections.
The sectional structure' of the bushing renders it feasible to construct it of great diameter and at the same time handle it with ease for shipment and setting up. It also admits of the removal of a badly-worn part and its replacement by a new section without the expense of providing an entirely-new bushing. I further provide the bushing, whether it be in a single piece, as heretofore commonly constructed,orin sections, as herein represented, with slots a2 through its wall, so that the whirling mass which projects more or less within the bushing may, as it becomes disintegrated, iind escape through the wall of the bushing and by so much relieve the screenblocks within the barrelor casing. The slots a2 also assist the bushing in obtaining arm grip upon the mass, as their edges present a series of abutments transverse to the direction of the track of the bushing.
The casing of the mill is represented by P, the feed-hopper by p, the screen-blocks by S, the binders for holding the screen-blocks in positionby Q, the supports for the bushingshaft by I'I and g, the crank portion of the drive-shaft by G, and the portion of the shaft adjacent to the bushing and arranged to telescope into the shaft-section G is denoted by O. The door for inclosing the bushing within the casing is denoted by M.
The structure and arrangement of the parts IOO of the mill exclusive of the bushing are not a part of my present invention, but forni the subject-matter of a separate application, Serial No. 415,453, filed December 18, 1891.
What I claim is- 1. A bushing for an attrition-mill, compris ing an open-end cylinder provided on its inner face wit-h one or more abutments extending along the curved inner Wall of the cylinder toward the closed end of the cylinder for securing a grip upon the material being operated upon, substantially as set forth.
2. A bushing for an attrition-mill, comprising an open-end cylinder having interior Webs or brackets connecting the inner curved wall of the cylinder with the closed end of the cylinder and formed integral therewith, substantially as Set forth.
3. A bushing for an attrition-mill, con1pris- WILLIAM H. HOFFMAN. Witnesses:
HERBERT F. ANDREWS, GEORGE BARRY.
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