US495452A - Sewing-machine - Google Patents

Sewing-machine Download PDF

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US495452A
US495452A US495452DA US495452A US 495452 A US495452 A US 495452A US 495452D A US495452D A US 495452DA US 495452 A US495452 A US 495452A
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thread
tension
wax
machine
clamping
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D05SEWING; EMBROIDERING; TUFTING
    • D05BSEWING
    • D05B47/00Needle-thread tensioning devices; Applications of tensometers

Definitions

  • Figure lin side elevation represents a suflicient portion of a sole sewing machine of the variety represented in United States Patent No. 412,704,butwith myimprovements added to enable this invention to be understood.
  • Fig. 2 is a view of some of the parts shown in Fig. 1 looking at said ligure from the right.
  • Fig. 3 is a section below the line w Fig. 2, said figure showing a portion of the devices instrumental in releasing the thread tension mechanism.
  • Fig. 4 is a detail View of some of the parts shown in Fig. l looking toward the said figure from the left- Fig. 5, is a top or planview showing the clamping device for the dry thread.
  • A represents a column having erected upon it a head A containing bearings to support a main or cam shaft A2, the latter shaft in practice having a series of cams substantially as provided for in United States Patent No. 412,704, said cams serving to operate the different parts of the stitch-forming and material feeding mechanism, said parts not being herein shown because not offmy invention.
  • a bracket B' On the column referred to and as shown best in Figs. l and 3, I have mounted a bracket B', it receiving a stud B2 on which is loosely mounted a tension device B3, it in practice being of that class which is rotated by the passage of the thread about it as the thread is being drawn through the machine.
  • the tension device referred to has co-operating with it a block or brake B4, said block or brake being herein represented as applied to the said stud and as having cooperating with it a spring B5, the effective force of which is regulated by means of a suitable nut as B6 screwed upon a threaded portion ofthe said stud.
  • This block or brake is loosely jointed to or suitably connected with a lever C pivoted at C, and the opposite end of the said lever is connected by achain D4 or other flexible connection with an upright arm of an elbow-shaped lever D5 attached to a suitable rock-shaft DX, the said elbow-lever as herein represented having its other arm connected by a link D10 with a suitable treadle, not shown, by which the said rock-shaft may be partially turned whenever it is desired to release the block or brake from the tension deA vice B3 of whatever form used.
  • the rock-shaft DX referred to is extended through a suitable bearing in a stand E represented as secured to the head by bolts E.
  • the said shaft has fast upon it by a suitable set screw c, a forked block E2, one arm of which, see Fig. 4, is acted upon by a suitable spring as E3, so that the other arm marked e thereof will be normally pressed against a small lug or projection on the bearing E, thus limiting the direction of movement of the rock-shaft by or through the spring, the latter yielding to permit the rock-shaft to be moved in the direction of the arrow Fig. 4.
  • the rock-shaft also has fast upon it an arm a which by chain a is connected to a part a2 of a movable clamping jaw b pivoted at b2 upon a suitable stand b4, the other member of the clamping device being a jaw b mounted on the same pivot.
  • a suitable spring as b3 acting between the rear ends of the said jaws serves to keep their front ends clamped together so as to pinch the needle thread in its dry or unwaxed condition on its way into the wax box, the said thread prior to entering1 between the clamping jaws passing through a suitable guide-eye 4t, said needle thread being taken from any suitable or usual ball or spool, as commonly practiced in this class of machine.
  • the waxed thread leaves the wax-pot F through a suitable stripper partially in Fig. l and through the hollow screw j forming part of the stripper, the thread after leaving the stripper being passed over the rotating tension device B3 and going to the stitch-forming mechanism in usual manner.
  • the wax in the wax pot will be kept warm in any usual manner and the said wax pot in practice will have a suitable rollunder which the thread will be drawn to insure its passage through the body of the wax.
  • any parts of the machine against which the wax thread passes will or may be suitably heated.
  • wax thread used in sole sewing is necessarily subgected to great strain by the hook of the needle and take-up in the process ofsetting a stitch.
  • the action of a rubbing or clamping tension ou a waxed thread distributes the wax and the liber, and very considerable difficulty has been experienced in sole sewing machines to so distribute the tension upon the thread as to hold it in the proper shape duringthe stitchforming operation.

Description

(No Model.) 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 H. E. COLE. SEWING MACHINE. No. 495,452. PatentedrApr. l1', 1893.
l s l E3 E :r/ 132/@ 131 MN' ou l \15 j* cb fl-62`O ?'T=TTIE 10 1 61 LH l 3 .fl u i j f Tf/I EL l .i L 1I yd-. ri. if 5&5. TQVEQfEll/ om legni/030026 I me Nemax. PETERS cn, QTON. n. c.
(No Model.)V 2 sheets-sheet 2.
H. E. 'COLE SEWING MACHINE.
No. 495,452. Patented Apr. 11, 189B.
WHL] E 5 5 a 5,
UNITED STATES i PATENT OEErcE.
HORATIO E. COLE, OF ROCHESTERNE\NT YORK, ASSIGNOR TO THE GOOD- YEAR SHOE MACHINERY COMPANY, OF HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT.
SEWING-MACHINE.
SPECIEICATIOIv forming part Of Letters Patent NO. 495,452, dated April 11, 1893..
Application tiled May 31, 1892. Serial No. 434,849 (No model.)
To @ZZ whom it may concern.:
Be it known that I, HoEATIo E. COLE, of Rochester, county of Monroe, State of New York, have invented an Improvement in Sewing-Machines, of which the following description, in connection with the accompanying drawings, is a specification, like letters on the drawings representing like parts.
The apparatus herein to be described and made the subject of this application has been devised for use more especially in connection with mechanism for stitching leather with a waxed thread.
In accordance with this invention I have combined with the tension device for controlling the tension of the waxed thread going to the needle, a clamping tension for said thread, the clamping tension, however, acting upon the said thread in its dry state on its way to the waxing device, and I have so constructed this clamping tension and combined it with other parts of the machine that when the usual tension device co-operatin g with the waxed part of the thread is released, the clamping tension will also be released, thus leaving the needle thread entirely free to `be drawn into and through the machine to thus enable the work to be removed.
Figure lin side elevation, represents a suflicient portion of a sole sewing machine of the variety represented in United States Patent No. 412,704,butwith myimprovements added to enable this invention to be understood. Fig. 2 is a view of some of the parts shown in Fig. 1 looking at said ligure from the right. Fig. 3 is a section below the line w Fig. 2, said figure showing a portion of the devices instrumental in releasing the thread tension mechanism. Fig. 4 is a detail View of some of the parts shown in Fig. l looking toward the said figure from the left- Fig. 5, is a top or planview showing the clamping device for the dry thread.
Referring to the drawings, A represents a column having erected upon it a head A containing bearings to support a main or cam shaft A2, the latter shaft in practice having a series of cams substantially as provided for in United States Patent No. 412,704, said cams serving to operate the different parts of the stitch-forming and material feeding mechanism, said parts not being herein shown because not offmy invention.
On the column referred to and as shown best in Figs. l and 3, I have mounted a bracket B', it receiving a stud B2 on which is loosely mounted a tension device B3, it in practice being of that class which is rotated by the passage of the thread about it as the thread is being drawn through the machine.
The tension device referred to has co-operating with it a block or brake B4, said block or brake being herein represented as applied to the said stud and as having cooperating with it a spring B5, the effective force of which is regulated by means of a suitable nut as B6 screwed upon a threaded portion ofthe said stud. This block or brake is loosely jointed to or suitably connected with a lever C pivoted at C, and the opposite end of the said lever is connected by achain D4 or other flexible connection with an upright arm of an elbow-shaped lever D5 attached to a suitable rock-shaft DX, the said elbow-lever as herein represented having its other arm connected by a link D10 with a suitable treadle, not shown, by which the said rock-shaft may be partially turned whenever it is desired to release the block or brake from the tension deA vice B3 of whatever form used.
United States Patent No. 488,505, granted December 20, 1892, shows a tension device having cooperating with it a block or brake, and means for actuating a lever to control the position of the block or brake with relation to the tension device. My invention goes farther than the invention set forth in the said patent, as I will now proceed to describe, premising, however,that notwithstanding I have illustrated the elbow-lever or rockshaft to which it is connected as being actuated through a link D10, yet the said rockshaft may receive its motion in any` other usual or suitable manner, or in other words, the lever D5 common to the said application but which in this instance is fast upon the rock-shaft may be moved as provided for in the said application, but in this application broad or specific claim is not made to releasing the tension on the waxed needle thread IOO when the main or cam shafthas been stopped and the latter partially reversed.
The rock-shaft DX referred to is extended through a suitable bearing in a stand E represented as secured to the head by bolts E. The said shaft has fast upon it by a suitable set screw c, a forked block E2, one arm of which, see Fig. 4, is acted upon by a suitable spring as E3, so that the other arm marked e thereof will be normally pressed against a small lug or projection on the bearing E, thus limiting the direction of movement of the rock-shaft by or through the spring, the latter yielding to permit the rock-shaft to be moved in the direction of the arrow Fig. 4. The rock-shaft also has fast upon it an arm a which by chain a is connected to a part a2 of a movable clamping jaw b pivoted at b2 upon a suitable stand b4, the other member of the clamping device being a jaw b mounted on the same pivot. A suitable spring as b3 acting between the rear ends of the said jaws, serves to keep their front ends clamped together so as to pinch the needle thread in its dry or unwaxed condition on its way into the wax box, the said thread prior to entering1 between the clamping jaws passing through a suitable guide-eye 4t, said needle thread being taken from any suitable or usual ball or spool, as commonly practiced in this class of machine. The waxed thread leaves the wax-pot F through a suitable stripper partially in Fig. l and through the hollow screw j forming part of the stripper, the thread after leaving the stripper being passed over the rotating tension device B3 and going to the stitch-forming mechanism in usual manner.
The wax in the wax pot will be kept warm in any usual manner and the said wax pot in practice will have a suitable rollunder which the thread will be drawn to insure its passage through the body of the wax.
In operation let it be assumed that the machine is being run and sewing is being done. Now in case the machineis stopped, the rockshaft- DX will be turned by the, operator or otherwise as provided for, and the chain D4 connected to lever C will remove the tension from the tension wheel b3 and at the same time the chain a connected to the lug a2 of one of the clamping gears normally kept closed on the dry thread only will be opened to relieve the thread going into the wax pot from all friction.
In practice, any parts of the machine against which the wax thread passes will or may be suitably heated.
I am aware that a dry thread on its way to a needle has been subjected to the action of a clamp, and also has been acted upon by a roller tension, but prior to my invention I am not aware that a wax-thread sewing machine has ever had combined with it a clamping tension to operate upon the dry thread, nor a clamping tension which is adapted to be auf represented tomatically operated and relaxed at any desired time or when the thread tension 1s relaxed from the waxed part of the thread, so my invention is notherein limited to the exact form of mechanism employed to carry out this resuit., as it is obvious the same may be variously modified bya mechanic without departing from the principle of operation of my invention.
It will be understood that the wax thread used in sole sewing is necessarily subgected to great strain by the hook of the needle and take-up in the process ofsetting a stitch. The action of a rubbing or clamping tension ou a waxed thread distributes the wax and the liber, and very considerable difficulty has been experienced in sole sewing machines to so distribute the tension upon the thread as to hold it in the proper shape duringthe stitchforming operation.
I have found by experience that the k of breaking the thread during sewing was reduced to the minimum by dividing the tension, t'. e., by dividing or distributing the tension at different points on the thread, and I found that I could get a more equable tension by acting upon the dry thread prior to its entrance into the Wax pot, by clamping tension, and acting upon the wax thread between the wax pot and the stitch-forming mechanism by a rolling tension, or a tension which rotated with the thread but was frictionally restrained in its movements derived from the thread.
Having described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
l. The combination in a sewing machine, of a clamping tension to act upon the dry thread, a wax pot into which the dry thread is led after its passage through the clamping tension, a stripper to strip the surplus wax from the waxed thread, a rolling tension device about which the waxed thread is passed, and means to frictionally restrain the rotation of the said rolling thread tension device, the combination being and'operating, substantially as described.
2. A wax-pot, a clamping tension to act upon the dry thread on its way to the waxpot, and a rolling tension to act upon the waxed thread between the wax pot and the stitchforming mechanism of a sewing machine,`
combined with connecting devices between the said clamping tension and the said rolling tension whereby the same may be automatically operated in unison to release the tension from the needle thread when the machine is stopped and it is desired the thread to rend freely through the machine.
In testimony whereof I have signed my name to this specification in the presence of two subscribing witnesses.
HORATIO E. COLE.
Witnesses:
JAMES I-I. CLARK, JOSEPH H. BUSH.
IOO
IIO
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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2647478A (en) * 1949-01-21 1953-08-04 United Shoe Machinery Corp Shoe sewing machine

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2647478A (en) * 1949-01-21 1953-08-04 United Shoe Machinery Corp Shoe sewing machine

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