US545255A - Wire fence - Google Patents

Wire fence Download PDF

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US545255A
US545255A US545255DA US545255A US 545255 A US545255 A US 545255A US 545255D A US545255D A US 545255DA US 545255 A US545255 A US 545255A
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fence
wire
frame
drum
rod
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E04BUILDING
    • E04HBUILDINGS OR LIKE STRUCTURES FOR PARTICULAR PURPOSES; SWIMMING OR SPLASH BATHS OR POOLS; MASTS; FENCING; TENTS OR CANOPIES, IN GENERAL
    • E04H17/00Fencing, e.g. fences, enclosures, corrals
    • E04H17/02Wire fencing, e.g. made of wire mesh
    • E04H17/06Parts for wire fences
    • E04H17/08Anchoring means therefor, e.g. specially-shaped parts entering the ground; Struts or the like
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16GBELTS, CABLES, OR ROPES, PREDOMINANTLY USED FOR DRIVING PURPOSES; CHAINS; FITTINGS PREDOMINANTLY USED THEREFOR
    • F16G11/00Means for fastening cables or ropes to one another or to other objects; Caps or sleeves for fixing on cables or ropes
    • F16G11/12Connections or attachments, e.g. turnbuckles, adapted for straining of cables, ropes, or wire

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improvements in wire fences; and the objects of my improve ments are, first, to regulate the tension on the fence-wires, and, second, to detachably connect the palings with said wires.
  • the invention consists in the peculiar construction of the tension-governor and of the clasps connecting the palings with the fencewires, as hereinafter fully described, and then specifically pointed out in the claims.
  • FIG. 1 is a side elevation of a portion of a panel of a fence embodying my improvements; Fig. 2, an enlarged top view of one of the tension-governors, and Fig. 3 a side view of one end thereof.
  • Fig. 4 is a transverse section on broken line a: a; of Fig. 2.
  • Fig. 5 is a face view of a connection between a fence-Wire and a paling and of a vertical sectional view of the same on the broken line y y, and Fig. 6 a similar face and sectional view of a modified connection between a paling and afencewire.
  • A indicates a fence-post of any suitable construction, and A the fence-wires.
  • Each tension-governer comprises a U-shaped frame, between the arms I) l) of which is located a coiled spring S, one end of which rests against the cross-bar b of the frame and the other end against a movable bearing-plate D, having horizontal ears (1 at the four corners embracing or lapping the upper and lower edges of arms I) b, as shown in Fig. 4:.
  • the ends c of a doubled fastening-wire E pass through openings (1 in bearing-plate D, through coiled spring S, and out through perforations in crossbar b the loop e, formed by the doubling of wire E, embracing the metal between openings 61 of the bearing-plate.
  • Ends e are taken around opposite sides of post A and fastened together behind it orsecured to bolts a, as may seem best.
  • the free ends of arms I) b are tied by a rod F, one end of which engages and is movably secured in a slotf in arm 6 for a purpose to be described, theother end being pivotally secured in arm 1;.
  • a drum H is journaled in arms b b, the end adjacent to arm I) being squared, as shown at h, to afford a wrenchhold for turning the drum, the other end having a ratchet-wheel 71. formed thereon.
  • Drum H is locked in position by the engagement of rod F with the teeth of ratchetwheel h, said rod being clamped in position in or out of engagement with the ratchetwheel by nutf.
  • Fig. 5 the fence-wire is shown as grasped by a hook Z, having a shank Z extending through an opening in the paling and held in place by a nut Z screwed thereon.
  • Fig. 6 illustrates a different form of clasp and the one I preferably use.
  • This clasp coinprises a flat plate M, which rests against the face of the picket and has a hook or on one end thereof that takes over fence-wire A.
  • the other end of plate M is perforated, and through said perforation and a corresponding perforation in the picket the clasp is secured thereto by a screw-bolt N and nut n.
  • This construction of clasp allows a fence-wire to be readily attached and detached from the picket, and is especially convenient when it is necessary to replace either a fence-wire or a picket.
  • My tension-governors are peculiarly well adapted to the regulation of a yielding tension on the individual wires of a fence, as the drum ineach case is directly connected with the fence-wire and the spring connection with the post acts independently of the drum.
  • My device by which the revolution of the drum is controlled differs from others in this respect, and is especially convenient, for while the strain of the drum on the locking-rod is carried by both sides of the frame, yet the drum can be freed for any length of time from the control of said rod by disen gaging the same from the ratchet, whereby a person working on the fence between the end posts can, by first disengaging the lockingrods from the ratchets, obtain any amount of slack in the fence-wires he may desire with ontreturning to the post to let out additional wire.
  • the construction of the yielding connection between the drum and the fence-post is particularly convenient for disconnecting the parts to replace those broken or worn out and for again reassembling them.
  • the parts are separated by disconnecting the ends 6 of wires E from the post and then withdrawing that wire by pulling upon loop c.
  • wire E is detached, all connection between the frame and the spring is broken, the bearing-plate being readily removed by turning it in place between the side bars of the frame. To reassemble the parts the operation is reversed, as will readily be understood.
  • a ratchet-wheel on the end of the drum adja and the other end threaded'and passing through said slot, said rod being adapted to engage the ratchet-wheel, a nut on the threaded end of the rod, and a connection between said frame and a post, substantially as and for the purpose specified.

Description

(No Model.)
H. S. STAUFPER.
WIRE FENCE.
No. 545,255. Patented Aug. 27,1895.
M I M I. Z/
UNi'rnD STATES PATENT ()FFICE.
HENRY S. S"AUFFER, OF FARMERSVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA.
WIRE FENCE.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 545,255, dated August 27, 1895.
Application filed October 13, 1894. Serial No.525fl'79- (No model.)
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, HENRY S. STAUFFER, a citizen of the United States, residing at Farmersville, in the county of Lancaster, State of Pennsylvania, have invented certain lm provements in ire Fences, of which the following is a specification.
This invention relates to improvements in wire fences; and the objects of my improve ments are, first, to regulate the tension on the fence-wires, and, second, to detachably connect the palings with said wires.
The invention consists in the peculiar construction of the tension-governor and of the clasps connecting the palings with the fencewires, as hereinafter fully described, and then specifically pointed out in the claims.
I accomplish the objects of my invention by the mechanism illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which- Figure 1 is a side elevation of a portion of a panel of a fence embodying my improvements; Fig. 2, an enlarged top view of one of the tension-governors, and Fig. 3 a side view of one end thereof. Fig. 4 is a transverse section on broken line a: a; of Fig. 2. Fig. 5 is a face view of a connection between a fence-Wire and a paling and of a vertical sectional view of the same on the broken line y y, and Fig. 6 a similar face and sectional view of a modified connection between a paling and afencewire.-
Similar letters indicate like parts throughout the several views.
Referring to the details of the drawings, A indicates a fence-post of any suitable construction, and A the fence-wires.
B Bare tension-governors connecting the fence-wires with the post. Each tension-governer comprises a U-shaped frame, between the arms I) l) of which is located a coiled spring S, one end of which rests against the cross-bar b of the frame and the other end against a movable bearing-plate D, having horizontal ears (1 at the four corners embracing or lapping the upper and lower edges of arms I) b, as shown in Fig. 4:. The ends c of a doubled fastening-wire E pass through openings (1 in bearing-plate D, through coiled spring S, and out through perforations in crossbar b the loop e, formed by the doubling of wire E, embracing the metal between openings 61 of the bearing-plate. Ends e are taken around opposite sides of post A and fastened together behind it orsecured to bolts a, as may seem best. The free ends of arms I) b are tied by a rod F, one end of which engages and is movably secured in a slotf in arm 6 for a purpose to be described, theother end being pivotally secured in arm 1;.
Inside of rod F a drum H is journaled in arms b b, the end adjacent to arm I) being squared, as shown at h, to afford a wrenchhold for turning the drum, the other end having a ratchet-wheel 71. formed thereon.
To the drum is connected one end of a fence-wire. This wire passes beneath rod F and beneath, up behind, and over the top of drum H, and has one end formed as a hook and engaged with a socket h in said drum. As will be readilyunderstood, the tension on the line-wire is regulated or controlled by the revolution of the drum. 7
Drum H is locked in position by the engagement of rod F with the teeth of ratchetwheel h, said rod being clamped in position in or out of engagement with the ratchetwheel by nutf.
K indicates the pickets. These are connected with the fence-wires A by clasps.
In Fig. 5 the fence-wire is shown as grasped by a hook Z, having a shank Z extending through an opening in the paling and held in place by a nut Z screwed thereon.
Fig. 6 illustrates a different form of clasp and the one I preferably use. This clasp coinprises a flat plate M, which rests against the face of the picket and has a hook or on one end thereof that takes over fence-wire A. The other end of plate M is perforated, and through said perforation and a corresponding perforation in the picket the clasp is secured thereto by a screw-bolt N and nut n. This construction of clasp allows a fence-wire to be readily attached and detached from the picket, and is especially convenient when it is necessary to replace either a fence-wire or a picket.
My tension-governors are peculiarly well adapted to the regulation of a yielding tension on the individual wires of a fence, as the drum ineach case is directly connected with the fence-wire and the spring connection with the post acts independently of the drum.
I am aware that the use of drums for taking up the slack of fence-wires and controlled by detents adapted to engage ratchets thereon is old; but with such devices the wires can only be uncoiled from the drums interniittingly, and the attention of an attendant is required during the entire operation of uncoiling. My device by which the revolution of the drum is controlled differs from others in this respect, and is especially convenient, for while the strain of the drum on the locking-rod is carried by both sides of the frame, yet the drum can be freed for any length of time from the control of said rod by disen gaging the same from the ratchet, whereby a person working on the fence between the end posts can, by first disengaging the lockingrods from the ratchets, obtain any amount of slack in the fence-wires he may desire with ontreturning to the post to let out additional wire.
The construction of the yielding connection between the drum and the fence-post is particularly convenient for disconnecting the parts to replace those broken or worn out and for again reassembling them. The parts are separated by disconnecting the ends 6 of wires E from the post and then withdrawing that wire by pulling upon loop c. When wire E is detached, all connection between the frame and the spring is broken, the bearing-plate being readily removed by turning it in place between the side bars of the frame. To reassemble the parts the operation is reversed, as will readily be understood.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
1. The combination, in a wire-fence, of an open-ended U -shaped frame, a drum journaled in the arms of the frame and adapted to have a fence-wire attached thereto, a ratchetwheel on one end of the drum, a rod having one end thereof pivoted to the arm of the frame opposite the ratchet-wheel, the other end of said rod engaging the arm of the frame adjacent to the ratchet-wheel and being constructed to be moved parallel with the longitudinal edge of said arm, to be engaged with or disengaged from the ratchet-wheel, a movable bearing-plate disconnected from the drummechanism and located within the arms of the frame between said drum and the closed end of said frame, ears on the bearing-plate lapping the arms of the frame, a coiled spring bearing on said plate and on a hearing at the closed end of the frame, and a double wire having its ends passing through separate openings in said bearing-plate, said ends passing through the coiled-spring and the bearing at the closed end of the frame and being adapted to be secured to a post, substantially as and for the purpose specified.
2. The combination, in a wire-fence, of a frame having a slot in an arm thereof paral lel with the longitudinal edge of said arm, a drum journaled in the arms of said frame and adapted to have a fence-wire attached thereto,
a ratchet-wheel on the end of the drum adja and the other end threaded'and passing through said slot, said rod being adapted to engage the ratchet-wheel, a nut on the threaded end of the rod, and a connection between said frame and a post, substantially as and for the purpose specified.
The combination, in a wire-fence, of an open-ended U-shaped frame, one of the arms i of said frame having a slottherein parallel with the longitudinal edge thereof,.a drum journaled in the arms of the frame and adapted to have a fence-wire attached thereto, a ratchet-wheel on the end of the drum adjacent to the arm of the frame having the slot therein, a rod havingone end pivoted in the arm of the frame opposite the slot and the other end threaded and passing through said slot, said rod being adapted to engage the ratchet- Wheel, a nut on the threaded end of the rod, means for rotating the drum, a movable bearing plate engaging said arms between the drum and the closed end of the frame, a coiledspring bearing on said plate and the crosspiece closing the end of the frame, a doubled Wire having its ends passing through openings in the bearing-plate, said ends extending through the coiled-spring and the closed end of the frame and being adapted to be secured to a post, substantially as and for the purpose specified.
HENRY S. S'IAUFFER.
'YVitnesses:
LIZZIE S. BURKHOLDER, E. II. BURKHOLD.
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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3051410A (en) * 1959-04-06 1962-08-28 Clair E Miles Cable take-up device
US6431487B1 (en) 2000-06-28 2002-08-13 John R. Wall Spooler
WO2020176936A1 (en) * 2019-03-07 2020-09-10 Wireman Pty Limited A tension board for straining wire netting

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3051410A (en) * 1959-04-06 1962-08-28 Clair E Miles Cable take-up device
US6431487B1 (en) 2000-06-28 2002-08-13 John R. Wall Spooler
WO2020176936A1 (en) * 2019-03-07 2020-09-10 Wireman Pty Limited A tension board for straining wire netting
GB2594666A (en) * 2019-03-07 2021-11-03 Wireman Pty Ltd A tension board for straining wire netting

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