US517973A - Island - Google Patents

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US517973A
US517973A US517973DA US517973A US 517973 A US517973 A US 517973A US 517973D A US517973D A US 517973DA US 517973 A US517973 A US 517973A
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rack
bed
cylinder
segment
locking
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41FPRINTING MACHINES OR PRESSES
    • B41F31/00Inking arrangements or devices
    • B41F31/30Arrangements for tripping, lifting, adjusting, or removing inking rollers; Supports, bearings, or forks therefor
    • B41F31/301Devices for tripping and adjusting form rollers

Definitions

  • This invention relatesto what is known as registering gearing used in fiat bed cylinder printing machines to bring the cylinder-and bed into proper register as they come again into gear with each other after having been disengaged.
  • Thisregistering gearing conand a short toothed rack onthe bedby which the cylinder and the bed are engaged soon after the bed commences its return movement and continue so engaged during a part of the return movement of the bed.
  • the object of this invention is to prevent the thumping which very commonly occurs with such gearing as commonly constructed, at the time of the said gearing coming into engagement, by reason of slight differences in the speed of the cylinder and the bed at that time.
  • Figure 1 represents alongitudinal elevation of those parts of a perfecting printing machine necessary for the illustration of my invention, the framing being represented as broken away at one point to expose certain parts to view.
  • Fig. 2 is a side view of the registering gearing of one cylinder on a larger scale than Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 3 represents a'transverse section corresponding with Fig. 2.
  • Fig. 4 is a plan of the registering rack and attachments.
  • Fig. 5 is a side view of part of the rack and, a section of one of its attaching
  • the cylinders are represented as geared together by gears 6, 7, and as driven from the driving shaft I through a train of gearing 8,
  • Thebed is representedas driven in a well known manner by a mangle wheel J and a mangle rack K, the said wheel J being on the oscillating section L of the mangle shaft L a mutilation or gap a formed by the cutting away or omission of one or more teeth near the front end of each, that is to say, the end 7 which points in the direction of the revolution of its respective cylinder and first comes into gear with its respectiverack.
  • the gap is equal to two teeth and the spaces between, in front of and behind them.
  • the racks E E are like those commonly employed except that they have a gap bformed by the omission of a tooth near that end of each which first comes into gear with its respective segment, and there is a notch 0 formed at the bottom'of this gap, and instead of being fixedly bolted to the bed they are bolted thereto loosely by stud bolts d and nuts e f in such manner that they are capable of a limited movement only lengthwise of the bed.
  • the said stud bolts are screwed fixedly into the side of the bed and the rack is provided, for the reception of the tween them and the rack, cup-shaped elastic washers h which produce a desirable degree of friction between the bed and the racks 'while permitting the movement of the latter the nuts 6 of said bolts, the holes provided in the said plate being of a size to fit snugly on the said bolts.
  • the locking lever H has at one end a T-headj as shown in Fig. 4:, one branch of which, as shown in Fig.
  • a lateral projection represented as a pin which is to be acted upon by a tripping device on the cylinder as for example, the last tooth r or the rear portion of the segment F, for the purpose oflifting the T- head of the locking lever high enough to loosen the rack from the locking plate.
  • a pin Z which, as the lever moves up and down, passes above and belowa rounded portion of a spring m which is secured to the locking plate for the purpose of holding the locking lever either in the position shown in Fig. 2 in which the rack is free or in the position in which it is locked positively to the bed.
  • This improvement is obviously applicable to printing machines in which only one 1mpression cylinder and one form are employed.
  • What I claim as m y invention is- 1.
  • a notched rack movable lengthwise on the bed, a notched locking plate aflixed rigidly to the bed, and a locking lever attached to the bed and having a wedge-shaped portion for engaging withthe notches in the rack and locking plate to bring the said rack in proper relation to the bed and lock it in such relation, substantially as herein set forth.

Landscapes

  • Supply, Installation And Extraction Of Printed Sheets Or Plates (AREA)

Description

(No Model.)
' 2 Sheets-Sheet 1. G. P. COTTRELL.
PRINTING MAUHINE. N0 517,973. Patented Apr. 10, 1894.
000DOUG00D0000UDUUOODDOUDDUDUDUUDUUDO ms NATIONAL urlusamums COMPANY, wAsnmamn. a. c
(No Model 2 SheetsSheet 2.
' G. P. OOTTRELL.
' PRINTING MACHINE. No. 517,973. Patented Apr. 10, 1894.
- F na/eases.-
UNITED "STATES PATENT OFFI E.
CHARLES P. COTTRELL, OF STONIN GTO N, CONNECTICUT, ASSIGNOR TO THE C. B. COTTRELL & SONS COMPANY, OF WESTERLY, RHODE ISLAND, AND
NEW YORK, N. Y.
PRINTING-MACHINE.
SPECIFICATION forming part .of Letters Patent No. 517,973, dated April 10, 1894.
Application filedNovember 24,1893- Serial No. 491,842. (roman To all whom it may concern.-
Be it known that I, CHARLES P.0O11RELL, of Stonington, in the county of New London and State of Connecticut, have invented a new and useful Improvement in Printing- Machines, of which the following is a specification.
This invention relatesto what is known as registering gearing used in fiat bed cylinder printing machines to bring the cylinder-and bed into proper register as they come again into gear with each other after having been disengaged. Thisregistering gearing conand a short toothed rack onthe bedby which the cylinder and the bed are engaged soon after the bed commences its return movement and continue so engaged during a part of the return movement of the bed. I
The object of this invention is to prevent the thumping which very commonly occurs with such gearing as commonly constructed, at the time of the said gearing coming into engagement, by reason of slight differences in the speed of the cylinder and the bed at that time. I will proceed to describe my invention with reference to the accompanying drawings and afterward point out its novelty in claims.
Figure 1 represents alongitudinal elevation of those parts of a perfecting printing machine necessary for the illustration of my invention, the framing being represented as broken away at one point to expose certain parts to view. Fig. 2 is a side view of the registering gearing of one cylinder on a larger scale than Fig. 1. Fig. 3 represents a'transverse section corresponding with Fig. 2. Fig. 4 is a plan of the registering rack and attachments. Fig. 5 is a side view of part of the rack and, a section of one of its attaching The cylinders are represented as geared together by gears 6, 7, and as driven from the driving shaft I through a train of gearing 8,
9,10, 11, 12, the firstgear 8 being on the driving shaft and the last one 12 gearing with the gear 6 on the second impression cylinder 0 As this means of driving the cylinder is old and well known it needs no further description.
Thebed is representedas driven in a well known manner by a mangle wheel J and a mangle rack K, the said wheel J being on the oscillating section L of the mangle shaft L a mutilation or gap a formed by the cutting away or omission of one or more teeth near the front end of each, that is to say, the end 7 which points in the direction of the revolution of its respective cylinder and first comes into gear with its respectiverack. In the example. represented the gap is equal to two teeth and the spaces between, in front of and behind them. The racks E E are like those commonly employed except that they have a gap bformed by the omission of a tooth near that end of each which first comes into gear with its respective segment, and there is a notch 0 formed at the bottom'of this gap, and instead of being fixedly bolted to the bed they are bolted thereto loosely by stud bolts d and nuts e f in such manner that they are capable of a limited movement only lengthwise of the bed. The said stud bolts are screwed fixedly into the side of the bed and the rack is provided, for the reception of the tween them and the rack, cup-shaped elastic washers h which produce a desirable degree of friction between the bed and the racks 'while permitting the movement of the latter the nuts 6 of said bolts, the holes provided in the said plate being of a size to fit snugly on the said bolts. The locking lever H has at one end a T-headj as shown in Fig. 4:, one branch of which, as shown in Fig. 4., enters the gap 6 and notch c of the rack and the other branch enters a notch c in the plate G, the said notches 0 being tapered and the T-head of the lever being correspondingly wedge-shaped as shown in Fig. 2, so that by a downward movement of the lever the said T-head may enter tightly into both notches c c and so look the rack firmly to the plate G and thereby lock it positively to the bed in correct relation thereto, and that by an upward movement the said T-head may leave space enough between it and the notches to permit the rack to move a short distance lengthwise of the bed. Near the opposite end of the locking lever H to the T head, which end projects beyond the rack and the locking plate G, there is a lateral projection represented as a pin which is to be acted upon by a tripping device on the cylinder as for example, the last tooth r or the rear portion of the segment F, for the purpose oflifting the T- head of the locking lever high enough to loosen the rack from the locking plate. There is also near the said part of the lever which projects beyond the locking plate G, a pin Z which, as the lever moves up and down, passes above and belowa rounded portion of a spring m which is secured to the locking plate for the purpose of holding the locking lever either in the position shown in Fig. 2 in which the rack is free or in the position in which it is locked positively to the bed. The operation of this registering gearing will now be described with reference to the example in connection with the first impression cylinder 0 which is that represented in detail in Figs. 2, 8, 4, and 5. The rack and segment come together, moving in the direction of the arrows marked upon them, the first tooth 'n of the segment entering the first space 0 of the rack while the rack is loose on the bed, and if the segment and rack are not in correct relation the rack will have a sufficient though very slight longitudinal movement on the bed under the control of the se ment to bring the cylinderand'bedinto proper register without any shock. By the time the next tooth p of the segment enters the space q of the rack the untoothed portions 0, of the segment will have pushed the wedge-shaped head j of the locking lever down into the notches c c of the rack and locking plate and will have thus brought the rack solid with the bed in which condition the rack \Ylll remain during the early part of the printing. As the rack passes out of the segment the tooth r or rear portion of the latter strikes and depresses the pin in of the locking lever and thus tips or lifts the said lever 1n the notches c of the rack and locking plate high enough to free the rack for the next operation. If in the above described operation the rack should not be brought by the segment into the correct position it will be brought to that position with certainty by the act on of the wedge-like head of the locking lever in the notches of the rack and locking plate.
It will be observed by reference to Fig. 1, that the rack E and segment F of the second impression cylinder and second form have their positions reversed as compared with those of the first impression cylinder the operation of which I have just described, as they operate during the movement of the bed in the opposite direction; but their operation except as to the direction during which it takes place will be the same as that described.
This improvement is obviously applicable to printing machines in which only one 1mpression cylinder and one form are employed.
What I claim as m y invention is- 1. The combination with the rotary impression cylinder and reciprocating bed in a printing machine and means of separately driving said cylinder and bed, of a registering segment fast on the impression cylinder, a loose registering rack movable lengthwise on the bed, and a locking device for locking the said rack to the bed in such engagement with the segment as toproduce a proper register between the bed and cylinder, substantially as herein set forth.
2. The combination with the impression cylinder and the bed, of a segment on the said cylinder, a rack movably attached to the bed, a locking device for engaging the rack to the bed to register with said segment and a tripping device attached to the cylinder for tripping the said lockiug device and leaving the rack free to moveon the bed, substantially as herein set forth.
3. The combination with the impression cylinder, the bed, a segment on the cylinder,
a notched rack movable lengthwise on the bed, a notched locking plate aflixed rigidly to the bed, and a locking lever attached to the bed and having a wedge-shaped portion for engaging withthe notches in the rack and locking plate to bring the said rack in proper relation to the bed and lock it in such relation, substantially as herein set forth.
4:. The combination of the bed provided with fixed bolts (1, the notched rack E, and locking plate, substantially as and for the purnotched locking plate G, both supported on pose herein set forth.
said bolts, the rack movable and the locking l plate fixed on said bolts, the locking lever H fulcrumed in said locking plate and having wedge-shaped portions for engaging respect-- ively with the notches in the said rack and CHARLES P. OO'ITRELL.
Witnesses:
A. R. STILLMAN, B. FRANK LAKE.
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