US523002A - neydeck - Google Patents

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US523002A
US523002A US523002DA US523002A US 523002 A US523002 A US 523002A US 523002D A US523002D A US 523002DA US 523002 A US523002 A US 523002A
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disk
stones
grinding
paper
wheel
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B24GRINDING; POLISHING
    • B24BMACHINES, DEVICES, OR PROCESSES FOR GRINDING OR POLISHING; DRESSING OR CONDITIONING OF ABRADING SURFACES; FEEDING OF GRINDING, POLISHING, OR LAPPING AGENTS
    • B24B5/00Machines or devices designed for grinding surfaces of revolution on work, including those which also grind adjacent plane surfaces; Accessories therefor
    • B24B5/02Machines or devices designed for grinding surfaces of revolution on work, including those which also grind adjacent plane surfaces; Accessories therefor involving centres or chucks for holding work
    • B24B5/04Machines or devices designed for grinding surfaces of revolution on work, including those which also grind adjacent plane surfaces; Accessories therefor involving centres or chucks for holding work for grinding cylindrical surfaces externally

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  • Precious stones are used extensively in the works of watches as bearings for the arbors and in the escapements, and in their preparat1on for this use the precious stones are divided into slabs having approximately parallel planes or faces.
  • lhis invention relates particularly to mechanism employed for grinding truing and pol 1sh1ng the slabs of precious stones, or in other words, the parallel faced jewels, in the most perfect manner and with great rapidity and regularity.
  • the gems or stones to be ground, trued and polished are fixed to a plate that is rotated gradually, and a rapidly revolving wheel the perlphery of which is provided with black d amonds or comminuted particles of white d amonds embedded in its periphery or with diamond dust and oil, is employed for grinding, truing and polishing the stones upon the revolving disk.
  • Figure 1 is a side elevation of the apparatus.
  • Fig. 2 is a front elevation.
  • Fig. 3 shows the opposite side to Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 4 represents the mechanism employed for connecting the paper that carries the stones to be ground to the disk, a portion of the devices of this figure being in section.
  • Flg. 5 is a section in larger size of the disk that supports the precious stones, near one edge thereof.
  • Fig. 6 is aplan of the disk employed in placing the precious stones in position, and
  • Fig. 7 represents the paper and indicates the position occupied by the precious stones and the adhesive material supporting the same. 7
  • the grinding wheel B is upon an axis or shaft 12 that is rotated at the proper speed by a belt to a pulley b, and this shaft or axis 19 is in a frame B that rests upon the bed piece B, there being suitable slide-ways upon the bed piece supporting the frame B, so that such frame B can be slid back and forth upon the bed piece B by the lever K pivoted at It and connected to the frame B. This movement is given by hand in bringing the grinding wheel B into action as hereinafter described.
  • the grinding Wheel B is to be of any Well known character, preferably carrying cutting diamonds or diamond particles or coated with diamond dust and oil.
  • such pattern I having a segmental slot 71 cut in the same, there being a blank space between the ends of the slot, as shown at h, and this disk of paper is concentric to the disk a and I lay in the segmental slot in the pattern I the slabs of precious stones that are to be ground and polished and apply shellac or similar adhesive material in a powdered condition so as to fill in the slot 11 and surround the slabs of stones that are to be treated, and this paper a is then laid upon a plate which is sufficiently warm to cause the shellac to melt and to hold the slabs of precious stones firmly in position on the disk of paper a and it is preferable to remove the pattern I previous to heating the shellac to melt the same.
  • a hollow or bell-shaped die J is brought down so as to press the edges of the disk of paper a downwardly around the disk A, and to effect this a screw J is advantageously employed, and a suitable rubber band or clamp a is made use of to hold the paper of the disk a firmly into the peripheral groove a around the disk A; and it is advantageous to make the exterior of the die J with peripheral ribs of progressively larger diameter, as shown in Fig. 4:, so that the rubberband a can be stretched progressively from one ledge to the other and finally passed over the edge of the die J so that it contracts around the paper of the disk a to hold the same and the stones to be ground firmly in position.
  • the paper a is preferably impermeable, so that the gum-lac is not perceptibly absorbed and also so that the paper does not become soft by water or other material that maybe supplied upon the wheel B at its junction with the stones to b ground or polished.
  • the paper a is cut out to separate the segmental band H, containing the stones, and
  • this device may be made use of for polishing precious stones as well as for grinding and truing them.
  • This machine is described with the axis of the disk A, vertical and the axisof the grinding Wheel B horizontal, but the machine can be turned over to bring the axis of the disk A horizontal and of the wheel B vertical if desired.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Grinding Of Cylindrical And Plane Surfaces (AREA)

Description

(No Model.) 4 Sheets-Sheet 1.
A. NEYDEGK; TOOL FOR GRINDING 0R POLISHING Pmzoxous STONES.
No. 523,002. Patented July 17, 1894.
1-H: mums versus co.. Puma-undo" wmimumn, u. c.,
('No Model.) 4 Sheets-Sheet 2.
V A. NEYDEGK.
TOOL FOR GRINDING 0R POLISHING PRECIOUS STONES.
No. 523,002. Patentd July' 17, 1894.
I IIIIII l l I l t I I I II Mill! (No Model.) 4 Sheets-Sheet 3.
. A; NEYDEOK.
TOOL FOR GRINDING 0R POLISHING PRECIOUS STONES.
No. 523,002. Patented July 17, 1894.
4' Sheets-Sheet 4.
(No Model.)
A. NEYDEOK. TOOL FOR GRINDING 0R POLISHING PRECIOUS STONES.
No. 523,002. Patented July 17, 1894.
ac: Q
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE- ALFRED NEYDEOK, OF GENEVA, SWITZERLAND.
TOOL FOR GRINDING 0R POLISHING PRECIOUS STONES.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 523,002, dated July 17, 1894. Application filed November 13, 1893. Serial No. 490,734. (No model.)
To aZZ whom it may concern.-
Be 1t known that I, ALFRED NEYDECK, manufacturer, of Geneva, Switzerland, have invented Improved Tools for Grinding and Pohshmg Precious Stones, of which the followlng is a specification.
Precious stones are used extensively in the works of watches as bearings for the arbors and in the escapements, and in their preparat1on for this use the precious stones are divided into slabs having approximately parallel planes or faces.
lhis invention relates particularly to mechanism employed for grinding truing and pol 1sh1ng the slabs of precious stones, or in other words, the parallel faced jewels, in the most perfect manner and with great rapidity and regularity.
The gems or stones to be ground, trued and polished are fixed to a plate that is rotated gradually, and a rapidly revolving wheel the perlphery of which is provided with black d amonds or comminuted particles of white d amonds embedded in its periphery or with diamond dust and oil, is employed for grinding, truing and polishing the stones upon the revolving disk.
In the drawings, Figure 1 is a side elevation of the apparatus. Fig. 2 is a front elevation. Fig. 3 shows the opposite side to Fig. 1. Fig. 4 represents the mechanism employed for connecting the paper that carries the stones to be ground to the disk, a portion of the devices of this figure being in section. Flg. 5 is a section in larger size of the disk that supports the precious stones, near one edge thereof. Fig. 6 is aplan of the disk employed in placing the precious stones in position, and Fig. 7 represents the paper and indicates the position occupied by the precious stones and the adhesive material supporting the same. 7
The grinding wheel B is upon an axis or shaft 12 that is rotated at the proper speed by a belt to a pulley b, and this shaft or axis 19 is in a frame B that rests upon the bed piece B, there being suitable slide-ways upon the bed piece supporting the frame B, so that such frame B can be slid back and forth upon the bed piece B by the lever K pivoted at It and connected to the frame B. This movement is given by hand in bringing the grinding wheel B into action as hereinafter described.
Upon the front of the bed piece B is a slide-Way O supporting a carriage C and this carriage 0 receives a movement back and forth. by the connecting rod (1 extending to a crank pin on a disk D at the end of the shaft D, which shaft is rotated preferably bya belt to the pulley D Upon the face of the carriage C is a vertical dovetailed slide-way receiving the bearing 0 for the shaft a of the disk A to which the stones to be ground or polished are affixed, as hereinafter described, and upon the shaft a is a worm wheel A with which the screw pinion E engages, and such screw pinion E is driven by a pulley E and a belt a that passes over the guide pulleys F and f to one of the pulleys in the cone of pulleys D so that the disk A is rotated gradually by a movement derived from the rotation of the shaftD and simultaneously the bearing 0 and the carriage O 'are reciprocated bodily, moving the disk A horizon-tally and in a direction parallel to the axis 1) of the grinding wheel B.
It is necessary to adjust the bearingC and the disk A bodily and vertically, and with this object in view there is on the lower side of the bearing 0 a projection coming above the disk G which is supported by a pivot upon a carriage G which is movable vertically in slideways in the foot piece of the carriage, there being an adjusting screw' G to act upon the said carriage G to move the same bodily, and in the periphery of the disk G there are studs that project more or less from the periphery of the disk G, as indicated in Fig. 2, where such studs are numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and it will now be understood that when the projection at the lower end of the bearing@ rests upon the periphery of the disk G, the disk A will be in its lowest position and farthest from the grinding wheel B, and the bearing 0 and disk A can be raised the desired amount according to the thickness that may be required in the stones that are ground, trued and polished by the action of the wheel B by turning the disk Gso as to bring one or the other of the studs in contact with the projection at the lower end of the bearing 0, and this adjustment is not changed during one grinding operation be,- cause the bearing 0, the disk G and the car riage C move together as they are reciprocated by the action of the connecting rod (1 and crank pin.
The grinding Wheel B is to be of any Well known character, preferably carrying cutting diamonds or diamond particles or coated with diamond dust and oil.
In preparing the disk A for supporting the slabs of precious stones or parallel faced jewels to be ground and polished, I take a disk of suitable paper a that is of larger diameter than the disk A, and upon the surface thereof I lay a pattern of paper or similar material represented in Fig. 6, such pattern I having a segmental slot 71 cut in the same, there being a blank space between the ends of the slot, as shown at h, and this disk of paper is concentric to the disk a and I lay in the segmental slot in the pattern I the slabs of precious stones that are to be ground and polished and apply shellac or similar adhesive material in a powdered condition so as to fill in the slot 11 and surround the slabs of stones that are to be treated, and this paper a is then laid upon a plate which is sufficiently warm to cause the shellac to melt and to hold the slabs of precious stones firmly in position on the disk of paper a and it is preferable to remove the pattern I previous to heating the shellac to melt the same. It will now be observed that the slabs of stones that are to be ground, trued and polished are held firmly in the segment of a circle upon the paper a and they are represented sectionally in Fig. 5 at H and in the plan view Fig. 7. This disk of paper a with the slabs of stones adhering thereto is laid upon a disk a of india rubber or similar material which intervenes between the metal disk A, and such disk of paper a and the parts are rendered concentric preferably by a point in the center of the disk A, represented sectionally in Fig. 4, and a hollow or bell-shaped die J is brought down so as to press the edges of the disk of paper a downwardly around the disk A, and to effect this a screw J is advantageously employed, and a suitable rubber band or clamp a is made use of to hold the paper of the disk a firmly into the peripheral groove a around the disk A; and it is advantageous to make the exterior of the die J with peripheral ribs of progressively larger diameter, as shown in Fig. 4:, so that the rubberband a can be stretched progressively from one ledge to the other and finally passed over the edge of the die J so that it contracts around the paper of the disk a to hold the same and the stones to be ground firmly in position.
In applying this improvement it is preferable to afiix the disk A upon the end of the shaft (1, usually by screwing it on and to adjust the height of the disk to the proper position in relation to the wheel B, and the wheel B comes over the segmental line of stones H as fastened upon the paper a and the parts should be placed in such a manner that the blank space h is beneath the wheel B at the time the grinding, truing and polishing operation is commenced, and the disk A is turned continuously but not rapidly as the grinding, truing and polishing is performed, and the general position which the wheel B occupies to the stones that are being treated is indicated by the dotted lines in Fig. 7, and such wheel B can be moved back and forth during the operation by the hand lever K, so that the slabs of stones secured upon the paper disk a are reduced to a uniform level.
It is to be understood that the paper a is preferably impermeable, so that the gum-lac is not perceptibly absorbed and also so that the paper does not become soft by water or other material that maybe supplied upon the wheel B at its junction with the stones to b ground or polished.
After the slabs of stones have been ground, 7
trued and polished as aforesaid on one surface, the paper a is cut out to separate the segmental band H, containing the stones, and
this is turned over with their trued faces.
upon a new disk of paper and the slabs of stonesare caused to adhere firmly thereto in any suitable manner, such as sufficient heatand pressure, to cause the gum-lac in which" old paper is removed in any suitable manner and the stones subjected to a second grinding operation whereby they will be ground, trued and polished with two parallel faces as usually required in the making of watch jewels; and the projecting screws or pegs around the disk'G are conveniently used as gages for the thicknesses. of the slabs of stones that are ground, trued and polished.
It will be understood that by communicating to the frame B and grinding wheel B a reciprocating movement across the surfaceof the diskA during the grinding and polishing operation and in the two directions indicated by the double arrow Fig. 7, the grinding and polishing operation is rendered uniform, and should one of the stones become loose accidentally, it will be thrown out of the'machine and not carried away under the grinding wheel.
According to the character of the surface of the wheel B, so this device may be made use of for polishing precious stones as well as for grinding and truing them.
This machine is described with the axis of the disk A, vertical and the axisof the grinding Wheel B horizontal, but the machine can be turned over to bring the axis of the disk A horizontal and of the wheel B vertical if desired.
I claim as my invention- 1. The combination with arapidly rotating grinding wheel, of the disk A and mechanism for rotating the same, the sheet a to which the stones to be ground and polished are affixed, and means for securing the same to the disk A, substantially as set forth.
2. The combination with a rapidly rotating grinding wheel, of the disk A having a grooved periphery, the elastic disk a and the disk or sheet a to the surface of which the stones to be ground and polished are fas- 1 toned, and the elastic band a for holding the as specified for rotating the disk, substan tially as set forth.
4. The combination in a machine for grinding, truing and polishing slabs of precious stones, of a grinding Wheel and its supporting frame, mechanism for reciprocating the frame in a plane parallel to the surfaces to be ground, a disk upon the surface of which the stones to be ground, trued and polished are secured, a shaft and bearing for the disk,
a screw pinion and wheel for slowly rotating the disk, a carriage for supporting the hearing and means for reciprocating the carriage, bearing and disk bodily, substantially as set forth.
5. The combination in a machine for grinding, truing and polishing slabs of precious stones, of a grinding wheel and its supporting frame, mechanism for reciprocating the frame in a plane parallel to the surfaces to be ground, a disk upon the surface of which the stones to be ground, trued and polished are secured, a shaft and bearing for the disk, ascrew pinion and wheel for slowly rotating the disk, a carriage for supporting the hearing, means for reciprocating the carriage, bearing, and disk bodily, and mechanism for adjusting the bearing and regulating the distance between the grinding wheel and the disk to which the stones are connected, substantially as set forth.
In testimony whereof I have signed my name to this specification in the presence of two subscribing witnesses.
E. IMER SCHNEIDER, TH. IMER.
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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3378961A (en) * 1966-10-21 1968-04-23 Marton Miksa Disc sanding apparatus

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3378961A (en) * 1966-10-21 1968-04-23 Marton Miksa Disc sanding apparatus

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