US637535A - Hook and eye. - Google Patents

Hook and eye. Download PDF

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Publication number
US637535A
US637535A US71980499A US1899719804A US637535A US 637535 A US637535 A US 637535A US 71980499 A US71980499 A US 71980499A US 1899719804 A US1899719804 A US 1899719804A US 637535 A US637535 A US 637535A
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United States
Prior art keywords
hook
eye
wire
bent
flattened
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
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US71980499A
Inventor
William G Templeton
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
W J BRASFIELD
W T ADAIR
Original Assignee
W J BRASFIELD
W T ADAIR
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Publication date
Application filed by W J BRASFIELD, W T ADAIR filed Critical W J BRASFIELD
Priority to US71980499A priority Critical patent/US637535A/en
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Publication of US637535A publication Critical patent/US637535A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01KANIMAL HUSBANDRY; CARE OF BIRDS, FISHES, INSECTS; FISHING; REARING OR BREEDING ANIMALS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NEW BREEDS OF ANIMALS
    • A01K91/00Lines
    • A01K91/03Connecting devices
    • A01K91/04Connecting devices for connecting lines to hooks or lures
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T24/00Buckles, buttons, clasps, etc.
    • Y10T24/45Separable-fastener or required component thereof [e.g., projection and cavity to complete interlock]
    • Y10T24/45225Separable-fastener or required component thereof [e.g., projection and cavity to complete interlock] including member having distinct formations and mating member selectively interlocking therewith
    • Y10T24/45272Projection passes through cavity then moves toward noninserted portion of its member to complete interlock [e.g., snap hook]
    • Y10T24/45288Hook type projection member
    • Y10T24/45445Projection self-biased towards shank or mounting structure
    • Y10T24/4545Projection self-biased towards shank or mounting structure and formed solely from wire

Definitions

  • My invention relates to hooks and eyes; and it consists of the novel construction, combination, and arrangement of parts hereinafter described and claimed.
  • Figure l is a plan view of my improved hook.
  • Fig. 2 is a plan View of the eye.
  • Figs. 3 and 4 are side elevations, respectively, of the hook and eye.
  • Fig. 5 is a plan view, partly in section, illustrating the hook engaged in the eye.
  • Fig. 6 is a front elevation of the eye.
  • Fig. 7 is a sectional View taken approximately on the indicated line 7 7 of Fig. 5 and showing the eye in the position it assumes when being engaged with the hook.
  • Fig. 8 is a sectional View analogous to Fig. 7 and showing the position of the bearing portion of the eye when engaged with the hook.
  • a single length of wire is bent double, the ends of said length of wire being formed into the oppositely-arranged loops l, by means of which the hook is sewed to the goods on which it is located.
  • the end of thedoubled length of wire opposite from the loops l is bent upwardly and rearwardly, as indicated by 2, to form the circular seat 3, and the end of the bent-over portion of the wire is bent on a curve downwardly from the portion 2, as indicated by 4, and the extreme end of the wire terminates in an upwardly-curved point or beak 5.
  • the distance between the under side of the downwardly-curved portion 4 and the top of the body portion of the doubled length of Wire is much less than the inner diameter of the circularly-bent portion 2, the function of these diering distances being presently disclosed.
  • the eye of my improved construction is 'constructed of a single length of wire, which is bent into the usual form of an open eye, the ends of said length of wire being formed into the loops 6 to provide means for securing said eye to the goods upon which it is located, and in the exact center of the length of wire of which this eye is formed or at a point directly opposite a point between the loops 6 the wire is widened by being rolled or stamped for a distance equal to or slightly greater than the width of the hook, this widened portion being indicated by 7.
  • Said widened portion has its outer face flattened, as indicated by 8, while the inner face 9 is formed on a segmentl of a circle, the diameter of which is equal to the inner diameter of the circular portion 2 of the hook, as when the hook is engaged in the eye this segmentallycurved face 9 bears directly against the bearing-face 3 of said hook.
  • This flattened por; tion 7 of the hook is slightly greater in thickness than is the opening between the down wardly-curved portion 4 of the hook and the body of said hook, and at the ends of said flattened portion 7, or at the points where said portion 7 joins with the body ofthe wire of which the eye is formed, slight shoulders or osets 10 are formed and from said shoulders or offsets the body of the wire is curved outwardly at l()a and thence rearwardly to the loops 6.
  • the operator turns the eye at right angles to the hook and guides the iiattened portion 7 of said eye beneath the point or beak 5 of the hook until said flattened portion strikes against the under side of the downwardly-bent portion 4 of saidhook. Then as slight pressure is applied to said eye said flattened portion 9 will be forced beneath the downwardly-bent portion 4 and said iiattened portion will when in this position act as a wedge and the portion 4 will be sprung upwardly, as indicated bydotted lines in Fig.
  • the offsets or shoulders 10 will occupy positions directly against the sides of the circularly-bent portion 2 of said hook and said shoulders or offsets will prevent any lateral movement of the hook relative to the eye. Therefore when said hook and eye are engaged together the goods upon which said hook and eye are located will always remain in the same position and will not pull sidewise or into an undesirable position.
  • said eye is turned at right angles to the hook and forced outwardly beneath the downwardlybent portion it of said hook, and in so doing the flattened portion 7 of said eye will again act as a wedge and spring the portion 4 npwardly.
  • a hook and eye of my improved construction are applicable for all purposes where a simple and secure fastening device is desired, and said hook and eye are readily attached or detached, and when the eye has been once engaged in the hook it cannot accidentally become det-ached and must be turned at right angles to said hook before it can be removed therefrom.

Description

No. 637,535. Patented Nov. 2l, |899. W. G. TEMPLETUN.
HOOK AND EYE.
1App1cation led June B, 1899.)
(No Model.)
Nrrn STATES ATnN'r Fries.
WILLIAM G. TEMPLETON, OF COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO, ASSIGNOR OF TWO-THIRDS TO W. J. BRASFIELD AND W. T. ADAIR, OF ST.LOUIS,
MISSOURI.
HOOK AND EYE.
SPECIFICATION :forming part of Letters Patent No. 637,535, dated November 21, 1899.
Application filed June 8, 1899. Serial No. 719,804. (No model.)
To all whom t may concern.-
Be it known that I, WILLIAM G. TEMPLE- TON, of the city of Colorado Springs, El Paso county, State of Colorado, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Hooks and Eyes,of which the following is afull,clear, and exact description, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, forming a part hereof.
My invention relates to hooks and eyes; and it consists of the novel construction, combination, and arrangement of parts hereinafter described and claimed.
Figure lis a plan view of my improved hook. Fig. 2 is a plan View of the eye. Figs. 3 and 4 are side elevations, respectively, of the hook and eye. Fig. 5 is a plan view, partly in section, illustrating the hook engaged in the eye. Fig. 6 is a front elevation of the eye. Fig. 7 is a sectional View taken approximately on the indicated line 7 7 of Fig. 5 and showing the eye in the position it assumes when being engaged with the hook. Fig. 8 is a sectional View analogous to Fig. 7 and showing the position of the bearing portion of the eye when engaged with the hook.
In the construction of my improved hook a single length of wire is bent double, the ends of said length of wire being formed into the oppositely-arranged loops l, by means of which the hook is sewed to the goods on which it is located. The end of thedoubled length of wire opposite from the loops l is bent upwardly and rearwardly, as indicated by 2, to form the circular seat 3, and the end of the bent-over portion of the wire is bent on a curve downwardly from the portion 2, as indicated by 4, and the extreme end of the wire terminates in an upwardly-curved point or beak 5. The distance between the under side of the downwardly-curved portion 4 and the top of the body portion of the doubled length of Wire is much less than the inner diameter of the circularly-bent portion 2, the function of these diering distances being presently disclosed.
The eye of my improved construction is 'constructed of a single length of wire, which is bent into the usual form of an open eye, the ends of said length of wire being formed into the loops 6 to provide means for securing said eye to the goods upon which it is located, and in the exact center of the length of wire of which this eye is formed or at a point directly opposite a point between the loops 6 the wire is widened by being rolled or stamped for a distance equal to or slightly greater than the width of the hook, this widened portion being indicated by 7. Said widened portion has its outer face flattened, as indicated by 8, while the inner face 9 is formed on a segmentl of a circle, the diameter of which is equal to the inner diameter of the circular portion 2 of the hook, as when the hook is engaged in the eye this segmentallycurved face 9 bears directly against the bearing-face 3 of said hook. This flattened por; tion 7 of the hook is slightly greater in thickness than is the opening between the down wardly-curved portion 4 of the hook and the body of said hook, and at the ends of said flattened portion 7, or at the points where said portion 7 joins with the body ofthe wire of which the eye is formed, slight shoulders or osets 10 are formed and from said shoulders or offsets the body of the wire is curved outwardly at l()a and thence rearwardly to the loops 6.
' To engage the hook in the eye, the operator turns the eye at right angles to the hook and guides the iiattened portion 7 of said eye beneath the point or beak 5 of the hook until said flattened portion strikes against the under side of the downwardly-bent portion 4 of saidhook. Then as slight pressure is applied to said eye said flattened portion 9 will be forced beneath the downwardly-bent portion 4 and said iiattened portion will when in this position act as a wedge and the portion 4 will be sprung upwardly, as indicated bydotted lines in Fig. 7, to allow the flattened portion 7 to pass into the wider portion of the hook, and after said flattened portion has passed into said wider portion the eye is turned downwardly until it occupies a plane parallel with the plane occupied by the hook, and in this position the segmental or rounded bearing-surface 9 of said liattened portion 7 will bear directly against .the inner bearing-surface 3 of the circularly-bent portion 2 of the hook. Thus a pair of curved bearing-surfaces are brought into contact and to bear IOO against one another, and said hook and eye will operate very freely in either direction, and a very smooth bearing between the parts is provided.
As the flattened portion 7 of the eye is only a trifle longer than the width of the body portion of the hook, the offsets or shoulders 10 will occupy positions directly against the sides of the circularly-bent portion 2 of said hook and said shoulders or offsets will prevent any lateral movement of the hook relative to the eye. Therefore when said hook and eye are engaged together the goods upon which said hook and eye are located will always remain in the same position and will not pull sidewise or into an undesirable position.
To disengage the eye from the hook, said eye is turned at right angles to the hook and forced outwardly beneath the downwardlybent portion it of said hook, and in so doing the flattened portion 7 of said eye will again act as a wedge and spring the portion 4 npwardly.
A hook and eye of my improved construction are applicable for all purposes where a simple and secure fastening device is desired, and said hook and eye are readily attached or detached, and when the eye has been once engaged in the hook it cannot accidentally become det-ached and must be turned at right angles to said hook before it can be removed therefrom.
I claim- In a device of the class described, the combination with a hook and an eye provided with the widened portion 7at its center, which widened portion is provided with a flat outer face 8, a curvedA inner face 9, shoulders 10, formed at the ends of said widened portion, whereby lateral movement of the hook is prevented and disengagement can be effected only at said widened portion, substantiallyas specified.
In testimony whereof I affix my signature in presence of two witnesses.
WILLIAM G. TEMPLETON.
Vit-nesses:
R. R. JOHNSTON, W. W. KNowLToN.
US71980499A 1899-06-08 1899-06-08 Hook and eye. Expired - Lifetime US637535A (en)

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US71980499A US637535A (en) 1899-06-08 1899-06-08 Hook and eye.

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