US48875A - Improvement in sawing-mach ines - Google Patents

Improvement in sawing-mach ines Download PDF

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US48875A
US48875A US48875DA US48875A US 48875 A US48875 A US 48875A US 48875D A US48875D A US 48875DA US 48875 A US48875 A US 48875A
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Prior art keywords
saw
rolls
shaft
board
feed
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B27WORKING OR PRESERVING WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIAL; NAILING OR STAPLING MACHINES IN GENERAL
    • B27BSAWS FOR WOOD OR SIMILAR MATERIAL; COMPONENTS OR ACCESSORIES THEREFOR
    • B27B5/00Sawing machines working with circular or cylindrical saw blades; Components or equipment therefor
    • B27B5/29Details; Component parts; Accessories
    • B27B5/30Details; Component parts; Accessories for mounting or securing saw blades or saw spindles
    • B27B5/34Devices for securing a plurality of circular saw blades on a single saw spindle; Equipment for adjusting the mutual distance
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/647With means to convey work relative to tool station
    • Y10T83/6584Cut made parallel to direction of and during work movement
    • Y10T83/6587Including plural, laterally spaced tools
    • Y10T83/6588Tools mounted on common tool support
    • Y10T83/659Tools axially shiftable on support
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/647With means to convey work relative to tool station
    • Y10T83/6584Cut made parallel to direction of and during work movement
    • Y10T83/6635By feed roller
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/768Rotatable disc tool pair or tool and carrier
    • Y10T83/7872Tool element mounted for adjustment
    • Y10T83/7876Plural, axially spaced tool elements

Definitions

  • My invention consists,first, in combining with one of each pair offeed-rolls, which are hung in hinged frames or roller-caps, a lifting-lever or its equivalent for raising and lowering said rolls to release and to apply their pressure to the board to be acted upon, as the case may be.
  • My invention further consists in combining with the yielding one of a pair of feed -rollers a rigid cap or frame that will cause said roll to always maintain a proper working position to feed the board straight through, and to prevent either end of said roll from rising or falling independent of the other end, or making unequal pressure on the board; and my invention further consists in moving the saw (or one of the saws, if two or more are used) on its shaft by means of a lever, bell-crank, slide, slot, and feather, as contradistinguished from a turning screw-shaft and its'appliances, by which I am enabled to shift the saw instantaneously, and thus economize much time in the operation.
  • A mounts a saw-shaft, B, which may be driven by an endless belt from any rst-moving power passing around its pulley C.
  • B mounts one permanent saw, D, and one movable saw, E-that is to say, permanent and movable as regards the shaft lengthwise, but both rotating with said shaft.
  • the saw-shaft B has along slot or groove, a, cut in it, in which a feather on the hub F of the movable saw works,in the usual well-known manner, for the purpose of causing the saw to revolve with said shaft, and to admit at the same time of shifting it thereon, as occasion may require
  • a forked arm, b, made adjustable, as at o, straddles a neck, r1, on the hub I of the movable saw, andv this arm, to cause it to move freely without cramping or binding, is connected by a frame or carriage, f, to a guide-rod underneath the frame, to make it move in a true line.
  • To this carriage fis connected, by a link, g, one arm, h, of.
  • a bellcrank lever pivoted to the main frame at e', and the other arm,j, of the bell-crank is pivoted to a connecting-rod, G, the rear end ot" which is fastened to a vertical, or nearly so, pivoted hand-lever, H, near the operators stand, so that he can from his position shift the saw E on the saw-shaft at pleasure, and hold it there, it' necessary, by any of the ordinary known fastenings or supports, though in practice I find that the friction between the feather (which works in the slot a, and which feather I make of considerable length) and the slot in the saw-shaft, when the saw is cutting, is sufficient of itself to hold thesaw from moving, but additional means of holding the saw may be applied, as above intimated, to the lever H, by which it is moved when found necessary.
  • a Y-shaped piece, K at one side of the main frame, and in suitable guides, ZZ, so that it may raise and lower in a true line and not bind.
  • the arms m of this piece K take respectively under the arms I of the top rolls of the pairs, and by means of a lever, L, pivoted to the main frame at a, and extending to the stand or operator-s position, these top or yielding rolls may be raised up and held up by a pin, stop, or catch at o, to take their pressure from the board and allow it to be run back to be shifted for the next kerf, or to be removed, as will be described in connection with the feed motion.
  • W are rollers on which the board is placed that is to Vbe operated upon.

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  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Forests & Forestry (AREA)
  • Sawing (AREA)

Description

UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
MARTIN NEWMAN, OF UNADILLA, NEW YORK, ASSIGNOR 'lOl HIMSELF AND CLARK I. HAYES,
OF SAME PLACE.
IMPROVEMENT IN sAwlNG-MACHINES.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 48,875, dated `luly 18, 1865.
fo all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, MARTIN NEWMAN, of Unadilla, in the county of Otsego and State of New York, have in vented certain new and useful Improvements in Machines for Edging or Slitting Boards; and I do hereby declare the following to be a full,'clear, and exact description of the same, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, making a part of this specification, in which- Figure l represents a view from one side of the machine. Fig. 2 represents a view of the opposite side thereof. Fig. 3 represents a top plan of the machine.
Similar letters ofrefere11ce,where they occur in the separate figures, denote like parts of the machine in all the drawings.
My invention consists,first, in combining with one of each pair offeed-rolls, which are hung in hinged frames or roller-caps, a lifting-lever or its equivalent for raising and lowering said rolls to release and to apply their pressure to the board to be acted upon, as the case may be.
My invention further consists in combining with the yielding one of a pair of feed -rollers a rigid cap or frame that will cause said roll to always maintain a proper working position to feed the board straight through, and to prevent either end of said roll from rising or falling independent of the other end, or making unequal pressure on the board; and my invention further consists in moving the saw (or one of the saws, if two or more are used) on its shaft by means of a lever, bell-crank, slide, slot, and feather, as contradistinguished from a turning screw-shaft and its'appliances, by which I am enabled to shift the saw instantaneously, and thus economize much time in the operation.
To enable others skilled in the art to make and use my invention, I will proceed to describe the same with reference to the drawings.
On a suitable frame, A, I mount a saw-shaft, B, which may be driven by an endless belt from any rst-moving power passing around its pulley C. On this shaft I mount one permanent saw, D, and one movable saw, E-that is to say, permanent and movable as regards the shaft lengthwise, but both rotating with said shaft. The saw-shaft B has along slot or groove, a, cut in it, in which a feather on the hub F of the movable saw works,in the usual well-known manner, for the purpose of causing the saw to revolve with said shaft, and to admit at the same time of shifting it thereon, as occasion may require A forked arm, b, made adjustable, as at o, straddles a neck, r1, on the hub I of the movable saw, andv this arm, to cause it to move freely without cramping or binding, is connected by a frame or carriage, f, to a guide-rod underneath the frame, to make it move in a true line. To this carriage fis connected, by a link, g, one arm, h, of. a bellcrank lever, pivoted to the main frame at e', and the other arm,j, of the bell-crank is pivoted to a connecting-rod, G, the rear end ot" which is fastened to a vertical, or nearly so, pivoted hand-lever, H, near the operators stand, so that he can from his position shift the saw E on the saw-shaft at pleasure, and hold it there, it' necessary, by any of the ordinary known fastenings or supports, though in practice I find that the friction between the feather (which works in the slot a, and which feather I make of considerable length) and the slot in the saw-shaft, when the saw is cutting, is sufficient of itself to hold thesaw from moving, but additional means of holding the saw may be applied, as above intimated, to the lever H, by which it is moved when found necessary.
On each side, front and rear, of the sawshaft` B, I arrange the feedrolls, as seen, by theirjournais l 2 and 3 4, respectively, in Fig. 2. The lower rolls of the two pairs, 1 3, by pref- 'erence, I make non-yielding. The upper ones of the two pairs, 2 4, are, by preference, made yielding, and are hung to the main frame by arms I pivoted at k. These arms I are connected by what I terni roller-caps77 J, so that they shall, as it were, be one solid piece, and, indeed, may be so cast or wrought, the object being to cause the rolls that are hung in them to rise and fall uniformly at each end and bear equally throughout,which is not the case when independently hung at each end; and when the pressure is not uniform the board is carried out of its proper-straight direction, because the pressure is not uniform on both of its edges; but by connecting both ends of the rolls by this rigid cap J one end cannot rise or fall without the other.
To raise and lower the yielding rolls of the pairs I arrange a Y-shaped piece, K, at one side of the main frame, and in suitable guides, ZZ, so that it may raise and lower in a true line and not bind. The arms m of this piece K take respectively under the arms I of the top rolls of the pairs, and by means of a lever, L, pivoted to the main frame at a, and extending to the stand or operator-s position, these top or yielding rolls may be raised up and held up by a pin, stop, or catch at o, to take their pressure from the board and allow it to be run back to be shifted for the next kerf, or to be removed, as will be described in connection with the feed motion.
On the end of the saw-shaft B there is a pulley, M, around Awhich and around a pulley, N, passes an endless belt, O, to give said latter pulley N its motion. The pulley or wheel N is fast on a shaft, p, that turns in an arm, l?, that is in turn made fast to a rock-shaft, Q, to which alever, R, is fastened to operate it. The shaft p carries a small metallic friction-roll, (shown in red dotted lines,Fig. 1,) which Works between the flanges q rot' a wheel, S, fastened to the lower roll, l, of the front pair of feedrolls, but so works, or is of such diameter that it can only be in working contact with one flange or the other at the same time, and it is thrown or pressed against one or the other of the anges, as the ease may be, by means ot' the lever R, which extends back to the stand or position ofthe operator,who,without changinglui nosition, can thus shift the saw on its shalt, raise up or let down the yielding feedrolls, and change the direction of the feed motion at will.
On the inside face of the wheel S there is a pulley, T, around which, and around a pulley, U, on the end of the rear non-yielding feedroll 8, passes an endless belt, V, by which the said rear feed-roll gets a motion in the same direction that the front one moves, whether that direction be to feed the board to the saws or back again. When the friction-wheel (in red lines, Fig. 1) is brought against the flange r and held there the motion of the feed-rolls is to move the board against the saws. When, however, the friction-roll is against the flange q, then the motion of the feed-rolls is reversed and the board is carried back to the place of starting. In the manner in which I have arranged the friction-wheel it requires a continued pressure or holding of the lever R to feed the board to the saws, and by simply letting go the lever the feed becomes reversed and the board runs back to the place of starting, the tendency of the belt O being to keep the friction-wheel in contact with the ange q, when there are no other controlling circumstances, and this flange, by its frictional contact with the small roll, runs the board back. This mechanism may be changed so that the general tendency of the feed-rolls shall be to feed the board to the saws, while the reverse motion may be had by applying the lever or its equivalent.
The advantage of my peculiar saw-shifting mechanism is that the saw can be moved instantaneously, and no time is lost, as is the ease where a screw-shaft and nut are used.
W are rollers on which the board is placed that is to Vbe operated upon.
I would state that I am aware that in a shingle-machine a carriage carrying the bolt has been run back and forth by means of a friction-roller andan ged wheel. This Ido not claim; but
Having thus fully described my invention, what I claim isl. Combining with the yielding rolls of a pair or pairs of feed-,rolls a lifting-piece and a lever, so that the operator from his stand may raise up, hold up, or let down said yielding rolls at will, substantially as described.
2. In combination with yielding rolls hung at both ends, the connecting of said end supports by a rigid roller-cap to prevent one end of said roll from rising or falling independent of its other end, and to make the pressure on 'the board uniform at both edges, and thus MARTIN N EWMAN.
Witnesses:
A. H. MEEKER, F. A. BoLLEs.
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