US487682A - rhoades - Google Patents

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US487682A
US487682A US487682DA US487682A US 487682 A US487682 A US 487682A US 487682D A US487682D A US 487682DA US 487682 A US487682 A US 487682A
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gear
speed
winding
drum
wheel
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H54/00Winding, coiling, or depositing filamentary material
    • B65H54/02Winding and traversing material on to reels, bobbins, tubes, or like package cores or formers
    • B65H54/28Traversing devices; Package-shaping arrangements
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D03WEAVING
    • D03DWOVEN FABRICS; METHODS OF WEAVING; LOOMS
    • D03D49/00Details or constructional features not specially adapted for looms of a particular type
    • D03D49/04Control of the tension in warp or cloth
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H2701/00Handled material; Storage means
    • B65H2701/30Handled filamentary material
    • B65H2701/31Textiles threads or artificial strands of filaments

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Warping, Beaming, Or Leasing (AREA)

Description

(No Model.) 2 Sheets-Sheet 1.
A. E. RHOADES.
WARPING MACHINE.
No. 487,682. Patented Dec. 6, 1892.
ALONZO E. RHOADES, OF HOPEDALE, MASSACHUSETTS, ASSIGNOR TO THE HOPEDALE MACHINE COMPANY, OF SAME PLACE.
WARPING-MACHINE.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 487,682, dated December 6, 1892. Application filed June 28,1892. Serial No. 438,264. (No model.)
To all whom it may concern.-
Be it known that I, ALONZO E. RHOADES, of Hopedale, county of Worcester, State of Massachusetts, have invented an Improvementin Warping-Machines, of which the following description, in connection with the accompanying drawings,is a specification, like letters and numerals on the drawings representing like parts.
This invention has for its object to improve the action of warping-machines, especially the parts employed for winding the yarn on the beam, so that the rotation of the drivingdrum may be varied, accordingto the increase in diameter of the yarn wound on the beam.
In accordance with my invention, I have combined with the winding-drum asystem of speed-changing gearing, whereby at intervals by or through the action of the controlling device governed by the varying diameter of the yarn on the beam a slower speed to the winding-drum is gradually brought into action.
Figure 1 is a partial end elevation of asufficient portion of a warping-machine, the driving-pulleys at the left of the dotted line 00, Fig. 2, being omitted, to enable my invention to be understood. Fig. 2 is a partial elevation of the device shown in Fig. 1, looking at the same in the direction of the arrow, Fig. 1. Fig. 3 is a partial section in the line on, Fig. 1; and Fig. 4 is a partial plan view of the speed-changing gearing and some of its cooperating parts.
The framework A, the winding-drum A, and the winding-beam A having a journal, as 2, at each end, are and may be all as common in warping-machines. The shaft of the drum A has fast upon it a toothed gear B, which is adapted to be driven by either of a series of pinions a b c d, mounted loosely upon studs, as a b c d of a larger pinion e, each of said pinions in succession having connected to or forming part of it pinions, as a b 0 01 The pair of pinions a and a vary in size, as do also the pairs of pinions b and b 0 and c and d and d their Variations being such as to provide for differences in speed of rotation of the toothed gear B. The pinions a b 0 (Z are all in mesh with a pinion f, fast upon a shaft f, which in practice will be pro vided with suitable fast and loose pulleys, which receive upon them their driving-belt employed to rotate the machine. The pinion e is loose on the shaft f and is engaged bya pinion 6 fast on a shaft 6 having suitable arms 6 6 extended in opposite directions and set one at one side, the other in a vertical plane. Substantially parallel to the shaft 6 is a stud g, on which is mounted an escapewheel 9', having attached to or forming a part of it a cord-drum 9 the said escape-wheel having portions of its periphery, as herein shown, at ninety degrees apart, cut away for ninety degrees and at opposite sides of the escape-wheel, so that a pocket and a pro ection lie practically side by side. One arm, as e, co-operates with one line of projections and notches or pockets, while the arm 6 cooperates with another round of projections and pockets.
The cord-drum 9 receives about it a cord h, shown as provided with a weight 71, at its lower end, the cord being passed upwardly about a sheave 7L supported upon a suitable stand, as h and having its end extended down through a hole, as M, in the weighted end of the lever h pivoted at It, said cord at its end below said lever having, as herein represented, a second weight or projection, as 727. The lever h is slotted at h to receive a bolt or stud m, extended through a slot in a link m jointed at m to a lever m pivoted at m on a suitable stand or bracket attached to the frame, the said lever m there being one at each side of the fra1nc-having suitable bearings for the journals 2 of the warpbeam upon which is to be wound the warp.
In the drawings the fastest speed of the speed-changing mechanism shown is represented as operatingthat is, the pinion f in mesh with the pinion a effects the rotation of the pinion a, which in engagement with the gear B rotates the winding-drum A at its fastest speed, as when the warp is being first wound on the spool or beam A Now as the beam increases in diameter the links m acting through the lever 71 will pull upon the cord h and gradually rotate the escape-wheel, it being supposed that the said wheel in the drawings has been rotated nearly ninety degrees. In the further rotation of the escape-wheel in the direction of the arrow upon it in Fig. 1 the arm a will dip into the pocket at the outer side of the escape-wheel,and thus leave the gear (2 free to be rotated for ninety degrees or until the arm 6 strikes the periphery of the escape-wheel opposite the pocket in which the arm (2 entered.
Inasmuch as it will appear that the gear e is loose on the shaftf carrying the pinionf used to rotate the pinion a and gear B, the said gear 6 in engagement with the gear 6 is held by the latter pinion in place and the gear 6 is held in place by the escape-wheel. As soon, however, as the arm e comes opposite the pocket referred to, then the strain upon the gearing, the gear e being no longer held positively, starts and effects the rotation of the gear 6 for ninety degrees, or until the arm 6 again strikes the locking-plate. This quarter-rotation of the gears e and Q will permit the pinion b to comeinto driving engagement with the gear B, and so long as the arm 6 acts upon the periphery of the escape-wheel so long will the pinion b be the driver, but at a slower speed,forthe gearB. Atthe completion of the second quarter-rotation of the escapewheel the arm a will enter the pocket at the rear side of the wheel and the gear 6 will at once start rotating the gate 6 until the arm (2 again comes in contact with the peripheryof the wheel, and at such second rotation the pinion cbecomes the driver for the gear B. At the next release of the arm 6 the same operation will take place and the pinion d will become the driver for the gear B, and consequently at that time the speed of the drum will be the slowest.
Prior to my invention I am not aware that a warping-machine has everbeen constructed in such manner that the winding-drum could be driven at varying speed at different intervals as the beam was being filled, so that this invention is not limited to the particular form shown for the speed-changing gearing, and instead I may employ any other usual or suitable gearing whereby differences in speed of the gear B may be effected automatically.
To enable the arms 6 e to beheld in proper position when it is desired to rotate the escapement-wheel, I have provided the machine with a rod 71, having a handlen, and at its lower end the rod has a shoe 3, which bears upon the arm 6 or e, and by partially rotating the rod n the shoe 3 maybe made to stand across the arm 6 or 6 whichever may be near it,
thus preventing the rotation of the shaft 6 and gear 6 This invention is notlimited to the particular form shown for the escapement-wheel, and instead I may employ any usual orequivalent wheel or a device of the Geneva stop-motion order. The gear 6 constitutes a carrier for the series of pinions of varying diameters.
Having described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is-
1. The combination, with a winding-drum and its gear, of a speed-changing gear and an escapement, the escapement enabling the speed-changing gear to be operated to effect differences in the speed of the winding-drum, substantially as described.
2. A winding-beam, a winding-drum therefor, a gear 1, and a series of intermediate pinions of different diameters driven thereby, means for moving the series of pinions bodily, whereby by bringing either series of pinions between the gearfand gear of the windingdrum the speed of rotation of the windingdrum maybe varied, and connections between the winding-beam and said means for moving the series of pinions, substantially as described.
A winding-beam, a winding-drum and its gear B, a shaft provided with a gear, as f, a series of gears of varying diameters adapted to be interposed singly between the said gear fand gear B, a carrier upon which the said pinions of varying diameter are mounted, and mechanism, including an escapement, to intermittingly rotate said carrier, and connections between said escapement and windingbeam, to operate substantially as described.
4. A winding-beam, a winding-drum therefor, a shaft having an unvariable motion,'
variable-speed devices conveying rotation from the shaft to the drum, by which the said drum may be intermittingly driven at different speeds, an esoapement to enable the speed of said devices to be varied, and connections between the beam and said escapement, whereby the speed of said devices is directly controlled by the beam, substantially as described.
In testimony whereof I have signed my name to this specification in the presence of two subscribing witnesses.
ALONZO E. RHOADES. Witnesses:
MYRON J. BIGELoW, C. F. Rornn.
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