US501025A - Central-draft lamp - Google Patents

Central-draft lamp Download PDF

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US501025A
US501025A US501025DA US501025A US 501025 A US501025 A US 501025A US 501025D A US501025D A US 501025DA US 501025 A US501025 A US 501025A
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wick
tube
inner air
chimney
standards
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23DBURNERS
    • F23D3/00Burners using capillary action

Definitions

  • My invention relates to central draft oil burning lamps and has for its general object to simplify and improve their construction and to increase their durability in use.
  • FIG. 1 is a central vertical section of my improved lamp, the inner air distributer and the wick raising mechanism being in elevation and the inner air tube and wick partly in elevation;
  • Fig. 2 an elevation of the body of the burner the chimney gallery being at its normal position;
  • Fig. 3 a section of the body and the base, the wick tube being in elevation, and the chimney gallery in elevation and at the raised position;
  • Fig. 4 an elevation of the wick tube and theburner base detached;
  • Fig. 5 a plan View of the body detached;
  • Fig. 6 a plan view of the chimney springs and ring as blanked out;
  • Fig. 7 a section of the chimney gallery; Fig. 8, an elevation of the inner air distributer detached; Fig. 9, an elevation of the inner air tube detached; Fig. 10, an elevation of the removable sleeve detached, and Fig. 11 is an elevation of the chimney gallery, standards and holding ring detached.
  • I forml radial corrugations 13 in the bottom of the reservoir which extend around the outer edge anda short distance up theside of the reservoir and which also extend a short distance upward into collar 12 which surrounds the opening in the bottom and receives the inner air tube.
  • the wick raiser is provided with perforations 15 which are engaged by pins 16 on the periphery of a wheel 17 carried by wick raising shaft 18.
  • the outer end of shaft 18 is supported in a cap 19 which is threaded to engage a hub 20 and is provided with a finger piece 21 for convenience in operation.
  • the wick raising shaft extends downward into the reservoir diagonally, its lower end being journaled in an arm 22 extending outward from a collar 23 which is rigidly secured to the inner air tube.
  • the inner air tube is soldered in place as already described thereby making a very iirin structure that will stand any reasonable amount of hard usage without injury. It willl of course be apparent that rotation of shaft 1S will raise or lower the wick carrier and Wick with a spiral movement.
  • the upper end of the inner air tube is slightly reduced in diameter and is provided with an internal and external thread 24 which is engaged by a corresponding thread on inner air distributer l1. I find in practice that it is a great advantage to have this inner air distributer retained in place by a thread.
  • wick tube I By threading the wick tube I gain an additional advantage in that a channel or gutter indicated by 30, see Fig. l, is provided between the wick and the sleeve for the oil to run down, as the wick in practice does not sink down into the depressions in the sleeve. 'Ihe lower end of the sleeve ordinarily in use rests upon a shoulder 25 on the inner air tube.
  • the burner as a whole is secured to the reservoir by means of lugs 27 on the inner sides of the burner collar which pass through slots 28 in the base and engage curved slots 29 in the body.
  • the base fits closely within collar 2 and is held against turning by the engagement o'f lugs 27 with slots 28. It will be seen that when lugs 27 are in engagement with slots 29, the body and base are both locked firmly to the reservoir. Rotation of the body backward causes lugs 27to ride down the inclines of the slots thereby disengaging the body and leaving the base in position. Should it be required at any time to remove the base it can easilybe done by lifting it straight out. ln practice however the removal of the body does not disturb the base and the locking of the body locks the base also firmly in place.
  • 3l denotes the chimney gallery, 32 standards extending downward therefrom, and 33 a ring at the lower end of the standards which slides over the wick tube thereby keeping the chimney gallery and standards perfectly firm in use so that the gallery and chimney carried thereby may be lifted up and down easily and smoothly and all looseness and wahbling Amotion of the gallery and chimney is prevented.
  • the outer air distributer fits closely within the body at its upper end, said parts being rigidly secured together and slots 34 being provided to receive the standards. This air distributer as a matter of fact has three functions.
  • FIG. 35 denotes the chimney springs which are blanked out integral with a ring 36, said springs being formed from the scrap metal within the ring.
  • the chimney gallery, standards and ring 33 are :formed from a single drawn shell, the mpper end of this shell being turned outward at right angles to the standards to form the gallery and then turned downward at right angles again and curved about the edge of ring 36 thereby locking the latter in place as clearly shown in Figs. l and 7.
  • Slots 37 are formed in the chimney gallery and the chimney springs are bent upward from the position shown in Fig. 6 and passed through these slots, and then bent to the required shape to hold a chimney as clearly shown in Fig. 7.
  • a very important feature of my improved burner is that standards 32 are provided with perforations 38 which correspond exactly with perforations 9 in the body when the chimney gallery is at the lowered position as in Figs. l and 2.
  • This registration of perforations 9 and 38 I find to be very important in practice as it enables me to use any reasonable number of standards so long as sufficient room is left to insert a match in lighting, thereby insuring the greatest possible strength and rigidity, while at the same time it wholly prevents marking ot' the iiame as it is called, owing to imperfect combustion where the outer air supply is interfered with. For this reason all other burners so far as I IOO IIO
  • a channel is formed between the wick and the sleeve as and for the purpose set forth.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Non-Portable Lighting Devices Or Systems Thereof (AREA)

Description

(No Model.)v a sneess-sneet 1.
P. RHIND. CENTRAL DRAFT LAMP.
No; 501,025. l y Patented July 4, 1893.
uw D00 000 l loo noo ooonnn ancona ooo une oouooounl nnb ooooooan (No Model.)
. 3 Sheets-Sheet 2. F. RHIN'D.
CENTRAL DRAFT-LAMP.
Patented July 4, 1893.
0 0 0 0 0 o oo e a o o n o o o 0 oo W0 ;NOAOAOAQAO 0 0 0 00 (No Model.)
P. RHIND. A
1;- rGzEANTRAL DRAFT LAMP. No. 501,025. Patented July 4, 189s.
Y z/f 3 Sheets-Sheet 3.
UNITED STATES PATErlQmIQn FRANK RHIND, OF MERIDEN, ASSIGNOR OFv ONE-HALF TO THE BRIDGEPORT BRASS COMPANY, OF BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT.
CENTRAL-DRAFT LAM P.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 501,025, dated July 4, 1893.
Application filed December 28, 1892. Serial No. 456.567. (No model.)
To all whom it may concern.-
Be it known that I, FRANK RHIND, a citizen of the United States, residing at Meriden, in the county of New Haven and State of Connecticut, have invented certain'new and useful Improvements in Central-Draft Lamps; and I do hereby declare the following to bea full, clear, and exact description of the invention, such as will enable others skilled in the art to which it appertains to make and use the same.
My invention relates to central draft oil burning lamps and has for its general object to simplify and improve their construction and to increase their durability in use.
Vith these ends in view I have devised the improved lamp which I will now describe referring by numbers to the accompanying drawings forming part of this specitication in which- Figure 1 is a central vertical section of my improved lamp, the inner air distributer and the wick raising mechanism being in elevation and the inner air tube and wick partly in elevation; Fig. 2, an elevation of the body of the burner the chimney gallery being at its normal position; Fig. 3, a section of the body and the base, the wick tube being in elevation, and the chimney gallery in elevation and at the raised position; Fig. 4, an elevation of the wick tube and theburner base detached; Fig. 5, a plan View of the body detached; Fig. 6, a plan view of the chimney springs and ring as blanked out; Fig. 7, a section of the chimney gallery; Fig. 8, an elevation of the inner air distributer detached; Fig. 9, an elevation of the inner air tube detached; Fig. 10, an elevation of the removable sleeve detached, and Fig. 11 is an elevation of the chimney gallery, standards and holding ring detached.
1 denotes an oil reservoir.
I have shown my improvements as applied to the oil reservoir or fount of an ordinary 45 vase lamp, a single illustration being deemed sufficient for the purposes of this speciication. It should be' understood however that my improvements are equally applicable to lamps in which the oil reservoir is not re- 50 movable but is fixed to a vase or standard.
2 denotes the burner collar, 3 the inner air tube, 4 the. wick, 5 the wick raiser, 6 the wick tube which has formed integral with it or rigidly secured thereto an outwardly extending flange designated by 7 which I term the burner base, 8 the burner body which is provided with perforations 9 constituting the outer air supply, 10 the outer air distributer, and 11 the inner air distribnter. In the bottom of the reservoir is the usual opening in which the lower end of the inner air tube is secured. In the present instance the metal of the reservoir is shown as turned inward forming a collar 12 which surrounds and supports the inner air tube.
In order to strengthen the base of the reservoir and to more firmly brace and support the inner air tube, and in order furthermore to provide air passages leading into the inner air tube so that the burner may be lighted if required when the reservoir is not in a vase but standing on a table, I forml radial corrugations 13 in the bottom of the reservoir which extend around the outer edge anda short distance up theside of the reservoir and which also extend a short distance upward into collar 12 which surrounds the opening in the bottom and receives the inner air tube. After the parts are assembled the inner air tube is secured in place by solderas at 14.
The wick raiser is provided with perforations 15 which are engaged by pins 16 on the periphery of a wheel 17 carried by wick raising shaft 18. The outer end of shaft 18 is supported in a cap 19 which is threaded to engage a hub 20 and is provided with a finger piece 21 for convenience in operation. The wick raising shaft extends downward into the reservoir diagonally, its lower end being journaled in an arm 22 extending outward from a collar 23 which is rigidly secured to the inner air tube. This construction and arrangement of parts does away with one of the most serious difliculties in assembling the parts of this class of lamps as heretofore constructed.
In assembling the parts of my improved lamp it is simply necessary to place the lower end of shaft 18 in its bearing in arm 22 and to turn the inner air tube until the shaft,
wheel and pins are in the required position.
the parts are in this position the inner air tube is soldered in place as already described thereby making a very iirin structure that will stand any reasonable amount of hard usage without injury. It willl of course be apparent that rotation of shaft 1S will raise or lower the wick carrier and Wick with a spiral movement. The upper end of the inner air tube is slightly reduced in diameter and is provided with an internal and external thread 24 which is engaged by a corresponding thread on inner air distributer l1. I find in practice that it is a great advantage to have this inner air distributer retained in place by a thread.
It is of course Well understood that in use and even when not in use there is a tendency for oil to run up the wick by capillary attraction. As burners are ordinarily constructed oil that rises to the top of the wick in excess of the quantity that can be consumed will pass over and down the inner side of the inner air tube frequently causing serious damage to table cloths, dto. In order to overcome this objection some makes of lamps have been provided with a sleeve outside of the inner air tube, said sleeve lying between said air tube and the wick. These sleeves overcome the objection as the oil will not pass a chasm, but when a passage is provided between the air tube and the wick the surplus oil will run down said passage. As heretofore constructed these sleeves have either been held in place by frictional contact or have been soldered in place. The former plan is objectionable for the reason that the sleeve is frequently lifted up with the wick in raising thelatter, and the latter plan is obj ectionable for the reason that when the tube is soldered in place the passage between it and the air tube quickly becomes stopped up with dirt and practically useless. In my improved lamp I provide a sleeve 26 upon which I form a thread which loosely engages thread 24: on the inner air tube. I thus secure the sleeve iirmly in place and prevent-its being lifted in raising the wick, and also permit it to be readily removed at any time for cleaning, and as readily replaced. By threading the wick tube I gain an additional advantage in that a channel or gutter indicated by 30, see Fig. l, is provided between the wick and the sleeve for the oil to run down, as the wick in practice does not sink down into the depressions in the sleeve. 'Ihe lower end of the sleeve ordinarily in use rests upon a shoulder 25 on the inner air tube.
The burner as a whole is secured to the reservoir by means of lugs 27 on the inner sides of the burner collar which pass through slots 28 in the base and engage curved slots 29 in the body. The base fits closely within collar 2 and is held against turning by the engagement o'f lugs 27 with slots 28. It will be seen that when lugs 27 are in engagement with slots 29, the body and base are both locked firmly to the reservoir. Rotation of the body backward causes lugs 27to ride down the inclines of the slots thereby disengaging the body and leaving the base in position. Should it be required at any time to remove the base it can easilybe done by lifting it straight out. ln practice however the removal of the body does not disturb the base and the locking of the body locks the base also firmly in place.
3l denotes the chimney gallery, 32 standards extending downward therefrom, and 33 a ring at the lower end of the standards which slides over the wick tube thereby keeping the chimney gallery and standards perfectly firm in use so that the gallery and chimney carried thereby may be lifted up and down easily and smoothly and all looseness and wahbling Amotion of the gallery and chimney is prevented. The outer air distributer fits closely within the body at its upper end, said parts being rigidly secured together and slots 34 being provided to receive the standards. This air distributer as a matter of fact has three functions. In addition to serving as an air distributer it forms a rigid support for the upper end ot' the wick tube thereby keeping said wick tube perfectly central in the lamp which is especially important in a burner having alifting chimney gallery, and moreover serving as a cover to exclude cinders, burned matches, dsc., from the chamber in the base, that is to say it prevents anything from passing down between the wick tube and the body.
35 denotes the chimney springs which are blanked out integral with a ring 36, said springs being formed from the scrap metal within the ring. The chimney gallery, standards and ring 33 are :formed from a single drawn shell, the mpper end of this shell being turned outward at right angles to the standards to form the gallery and then turned downward at right angles again and curved about the edge of ring 36 thereby locking the latter in place as clearly shown in Figs. l and 7. Slots 37 are formed in the chimney gallery and the chimney springs are bent upward from the position shown in Fig. 6 and passed through these slots, and then bent to the required shape to hold a chimney as clearly shown in Fig. 7.
I have already described the burner body as provided with perforations 9.
A very important feature of my improved burner is that standards 32 are provided with perforations 38 which correspond exactly with perforations 9 in the body when the chimney gallery is at the lowered position as in Figs. l and 2. This registration of perforations 9 and 38 I find to be very important in practice as it enables me to use any reasonable number of standards so long as sufficient room is left to insert a match in lighting, thereby insuring the greatest possible strength and rigidity, while at the same time it wholly prevents marking ot' the iiame as it is called, owing to imperfect combustion where the outer air supply is interfered with. For this reason all other burners so far as I IOO IIO
IZO
am aware, having chimney galleries which lift straight up have had only two supports for the gallery which have been made as small as possible and placed as far inward as possible so` that t-he raising and lowering of the gallery has been unsteady, and even then these standards have marked the fiame. In the present instance by using more standards and making them wider I am enabled to perforate the standards to correspond with the perforations of the'body thereby wholly .lar 23 vsecured to said air tube, an arm 22 extending from said collar, and a wick raising shaft the lower end of which is journaled in said arm.
2. The combination with a wick raiser and a wick raising shaft carrying a wheel engaging said wick raiser, of an oil reservoir, an inner air tube, a collar 23 secured to said tube, and an arm extending from said collar in which the lower end of the wick raising shaft is journaled.
3. The combination with an inner air tube having at its upper end an internal and an external screw thread, of an inner air distributer threaded to engage the internal thread, and a sleeve threaded to engage the external thread and lying between the wick and the air tube sothat neither' sleeve nor air distributer can be raised bythe wick and a channel is left for oil to run down between the wick and the depressions in the sleeve substantially as described.
4t. The combination with an inner air tube having an internal and external thread, of an inner air distribu'ter enga-ging said thread from the inner side, and a sleeve engaging said thread from the outer side substantially as described.
5. The combination with an inner air tube having aY shoulder v25 and thread 24, of an inner air distributer engaging said thread from the inner side, and a sleeve engaging said thread from the outer side and resting upon said shoulder.
6. The combination with an inner air tube having a thread 24, of aninner air distributer and a sleeve 26 lying outside of said tube, a
.space being left between said tube and sleeve a channel is formed between the wick and the sleeve as and for the purpose set forth.
7. The combination with the wick tube, the
chimney gallery, the standards and ring l33 engaging the wick tube, of the body, and an outer air distributer secured to the body and tting closely between the body and the wick tube whereby the latter is su pported and retained in its central position.
8. The combination' with the wick tube, the bodyT having slots 34, and an outer air distributer lying between the body and the wick tube, of a chimney gallery, standards depend ing therefrom and passing through said slots, and a ring at the lower end of the standards which slides on the wick tube whereby said, parts are held firmly against other than vertical movement.
9. The combination with the body having perforations 9, of a chimney galleryhaving standards depending therefrom said standards being free to move vertically in the body` but held against rotary movement, and having perforations 38 which register with the perforations in the body when the gallery is at its normal position.
l0. The combination with the wick tube, the outer air disiributer and the body having slots 34 and perforations 9, of a chimney gallery having standards depending therefrom and said standards being free to move vertically in the body but held against rotary movement and having perforations 38 which register with perforations 9 when the collar is lowered, and a ring at the lower end of the standards which engages the wick tube.
1l. The combination with a chimney gallery having slots 37 of ring 36 having chimney springs blanked out from the metal within the ring, said springs passing upward through said slots and the metal of the chimney gallery curving over the edge of the ring, thereby 'securing the parts together.
In testimony whereof I affix my signature in presence of two witnesses.
FRANK RHIND.
Witnesses:
GEO. F. HULL, A. M. WoosTER.
IOO
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