US637793A - Brushing apparatus for pottery-ware. - Google Patents

Brushing apparatus for pottery-ware. Download PDF

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Publication number
US637793A
US637793A US72765299A US1899727652A US637793A US 637793 A US637793 A US 637793A US 72765299 A US72765299 A US 72765299A US 1899727652 A US1899727652 A US 1899727652A US 637793 A US637793 A US 637793A
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shaft
frame
drive
pottery
ware
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US72765299A
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Daniel Hufhand
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L21/00Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
    • H01L21/67Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere
    • H01L21/67005Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere
    • H01L21/67011Apparatus for manufacture or treatment
    • H01L21/67017Apparatus for fluid treatment
    • H01L21/67028Apparatus for fluid treatment for cleaning followed by drying, rinsing, stripping, blasting or the like
    • H01L21/6704Apparatus for fluid treatment for cleaning followed by drying, rinsing, stripping, blasting or the like for wet cleaning or washing
    • H01L21/67046Apparatus for fluid treatment for cleaning followed by drying, rinsing, stripping, blasting or the like for wet cleaning or washing using mainly scrubbing means, e.g. brushes

Definitions

  • This invention relates to certain new and useful improvements in machinery for operating brushes for pottery-ware.
  • the invention has for its object to construct a cleaner adapted to be used for removing the sand and other foreign substances from the surface of pottery-ware, metal plates, or other objects and to provide or arrange in this connection two independently-rotatab'le brushes, one of which is adapted to engage the one side of the plate or other object and the other of which engages the other side when the plate is moved into engagement therewith.
  • the invention consists of a suitable frame having a drive-shaft journaled therein and adapted to be driven by belt or other connection with an engine or other driving-power.
  • a pair of friction gears adapted to impart motion through belt or other suitable connection to the cleaning-brushes, one of said gears imparting motion to the brushes in one direction and the other of said gears the reverse motion to the brushes.
  • FIG. 1 is a side View of my improved plate-cleaner.
  • Fig. 2 is a top plan view of the same.
  • Fig. 3 is a front View
  • Fig. 4 is a rear view, of the same.
  • Fig. 5 is a vertical sectional view through the drive-shaft, showing a portion of the frame and two of the drive-gears.
  • Fig. 6 is a horizontal sectional view through the frame, showing the drivegears in top plan.
  • Fig. 7 is a rear view of a portion of the frame, showing the drive-gears in vertical section.
  • a suitable frame which comprises in its construction a pair of standards or housing 1, a pair of standards or supports 2, and a bracket or frame 3, the construction of each of which will now be specifically described.
  • the stand ard's or housing 1 are adapted to be bolted or otherwise firmly secured to the floor 4 of the building in which the cleaner is placed and may have formed integral therewith or secured to the base and sides of the standard the short braces 5 5 to effect rigidityof the upright standards.
  • At their upper ends these upright standards are formed with flanges 6 6, which are suitably apertured for the reception of securing-bolts for fastening the standards to the roof or ceiling 7.
  • bearings 15 Secured to the rear faces of the standards 1 1, near their base, are bearings 15 15, in which is journaled the horizontal drive-shaft 16, having its one end extended beyond the one of the standards and mounted thereon a belt wheel or pulley 17, which receives the belt 18, connecting with the engine or other motive power.
  • asleeve 19 Loosely mounted upon this drive-shaft 16 is asleeve 19, which has rigidly secured to its ends the bevel friction-gears and 21, non-metallic in their composition, being preferably composed of a material or substance which will have a considerable frictional engagement with the metallic gearwheel 14, the sleeve 19 being of such length that only one of the gears 20 21 may be in engagement at one time with the gear 14.
  • This sleeve 19 is moved laterally upon the drive-shaft, so as to alternate the engagement of the gears'20 21 with the gear 14 by means of a foot-lever 22, which is journaled in standards 23, secured to the floor, with its rear end engaging the sleeve, as shown in Figs. 5
  • the standards 2 2 comprise two substan tially triangular pieces set a short distance from and in alinement with the standards 1 1 y I tending upwardly through and a shortdistance above the bed-plate 24, with the cleaning-brush 28 mounted in its upper end. Rigidly mounted upon this shaft 27. between the bed-plate 24 and the'eross-brace 25 is a belt wheel or pulley 29, which is connected by a belt with the belt wheel or pulley 12 ofthe vertical shaft 10.
  • the frame or bracket 3 comprises the two end standards, which are flanged at their upper ends and seen rely bolted. or otherwise securedto the ceiling 7 and are'suspended therefrom directly above the bed-plate and 1 standards 2 2. They are connected together by cross-braces 31 31, having mounted on their forward face the bearings 32 32, in which is journaled a shaft 33, extending downward some distance below the frame or bracket,
  • the foot-lever Upon motion being communicated to the drive-shaft 16 through the pulley 17 and belt 18 the foot-lever is operated, so as to move either the frictional bevelas the lower brush 28 is adapted'for cleaning the under side of the plate as it is held and the upper plate 34 for cleaning the upper face of said plate, so that the operator may have two plates, one in the right hand in engage- These standards are ment with brush 28, and when the underside of this plate is cleaned the plate is shifted to the left hand and held in under the cleaningbrush 34 and another plate held by the right hand over brush 34. 7
  • a frame a pair of independent brush-shafts jonrnaled in the front thereof, adrive-shaft journaled in the rear thereof, a vertical shaft also journaled in the rear'oftthe frame and having a friction-gear on its lower end, belt connections between said vertical shaft and the brush-shafts, a pair of laterally-movable friction-gears mounted upon the drive-shaft in a manner that but one at a time may engage the friction-gear of the vertical shaft, means for moving said friction-gears laterally upon the drive-shaft, and

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Condensed Matter Physics & Semiconductors (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Computer Hardware Design (AREA)
  • Microelectronics & Electronic Packaging (AREA)
  • Power Engineering (AREA)
  • Brushes (AREA)

Description

No. 637,793. Patented Nov. 28, I899.
I D. HUFHAND.
BRUSHING APPARATUS FOR POTTERY WARE.
(Application filed Aug 18,1899.) (No Model.) 2 Sheets-Sheet I. W1.
WITNESSES INVENTOR ATTORNEYS.
m: nonms PETERS ca. PNOY0-LITHO.. wAsumcvougn, c.
Patented Nov. 28, I899.
D. HUFHAND. BRUSHlNG APPARATUS FOR POTTERY WARE.
(Application filed Aug. 18, 1899.)
2 Sheets$heat 2.
(No Model.)
INVENTOR ATTORNEYS.
m's noams vzrzna ca, wumu-rum msagsumn. c. c.
NITED j STATES PATENT FFICE.
DANIEL I-IUFHAND, OF MANORVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA.
BRUSHING APPARATUS FOR POTTERY-WARE.
. SPECIFICATION forming-part of Letters Patent No. 637,793, dated November 28, 1899.
Application filed August 18, 1899. Serial No. 727,652. (No model.)
To all whom it may concern.-
Be it known that I, DANIEL HUFHAND, a citizen of the United States of America, residing at Manorville, in the county of Arm strong and State of Pennsylvania, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Machinery for Operating Brushes for Pottery-Ware, of which the following is a specification, reference being had therein to the accompanying drawings.
This invention relates to certain new and useful improvements in machinery for operating brushes for pottery-ware.
The invention has for its object to construct a cleaner adapted to be used for removing the sand and other foreign substances from the surface of pottery-ware, metal plates, or other objects and to provide or arrange in this connection two independently-rotatab'le brushes, one of which is adapted to engage the one side of the plate or other object and the other of which engages the other side when the plate is moved into engagement therewith. V
Briefly described, the invention consists of a suitable frame having a drive-shaft journaled therein and adapted to be driven by belt or other connection with an engine or other driving-power. Loosely mounted upon this drive-shaft and adapted to be moved laterally thereon by suitable means is a pair of friction gears adapted to impart motion through belt or other suitable connection to the cleaning-brushes, one of said gears imparting motion to the brushes in one direction and the other of said gears the reverse motion to the brushes.
Various novel features of construction enter into my invention, and these will be hereinafter more specifically described and then particularly pointed out in the claims, and in describing the invention in detail reference is had to the accompanying drawings, forming a part of this specification, and wherein like numerals of reference will be used to designate similar parts throughout the several views of the drawings, in which' Figure 1 is a side View of my improved plate-cleaner. Fig. 2 is a top plan view of the same. Fig. 3 is a front View, and Fig. 4 is a rear view, of the same. Fig. 5 is a vertical sectional view through the drive-shaft, showing a portion of the frame and two of the drive-gears. Fig. 6 is a horizontal sectional view through the frame, showing the drivegears in top plan. Fig. 7 is a rear view of a portion of the frame, showing the drive-gears in vertical section.
To put my invention into practice, I provide a suitable frame, which comprises in its construction a pair of standards or housing 1, a pair of standards or supports 2, and a bracket or frame 3, the construction of each of which will now be specifically described. The stand ard's or housing 1 are adapted to be bolted or otherwise firmly secured to the floor 4 of the building in which the cleaner is placed and may have formed integral therewith or secured to the base and sides of the standard the short braces 5 5 to effect rigidityof the upright standards. At their upper ends these upright standards are formed with flanges 6 6, which are suitably apertured for the reception of securing-bolts for fastening the standards to the roof or ceiling 7. These two standards, forming the rear portion of the frame, are secured to the floor and ceiling a suitable distance apart and exactly opposite each other and are connected by cross-braces 8 8, one near the upper and the other near the lower end, which, besides serving as braces, are provided for the purpose of mounting thereon bearings 9 9, in which is journaled the vertical shaft 10, having mounted upon its upper end, above the cross-brace 8, a belt wheel or pulley 11 and having mounted below the lower cross-brace 8 a similar belt wheel or pulley 12. On its lower end this vertical shaft has rigidly mounted thereon a bevel friction gear 14, through which motion is communicated to said shaft.
Secured to the rear faces of the standards 1 1, near their base, are bearings 15 15, in which is journaled the horizontal drive-shaft 16, having its one end extended beyond the one of the standards and mounted thereon a belt wheel or pulley 17, which receives the belt 18, connecting with the engine or other motive power. Loosely mounted upon this drive-shaft 16 is asleeve 19, which has rigidly secured to its ends the bevel friction-gears and 21, non-metallic in their composition, being preferably composed of a material or substance which will have a considerable frictional engagement with the metallic gearwheel 14, the sleeve 19 being of such length that only one of the gears 20 21 may be in engagement at one time with the gear 14.
This sleeve 19 is moved laterally upon the drive-shaft, so as to alternate the engagement of the gears'20 21 with the gear 14 by means of a foot-lever 22, which is journaled in standards 23, secured to the floor, with its rear end engaging the sleeve, as shown in Figs. 5
' and 7, and its forward end ina position where it may be readily engaged by the operator,
the partial rotation of said lever servingto move either the gear 20 or the gear21 into engagement with the-gear 14, according to the direction in which the foot-lever has been moved. I
J The standards 2 2 comprise two substan tially triangular pieces set a short distance from and in alinement with the standards 1 1 y I tending upwardly through and a shortdistance above the bed-plate 24, with the cleaning-brush 28 mounted in its upper end. Rigidly mounted upon this shaft 27. between the bed-plate 24 and the'eross-brace 25 is a belt wheel or pulley 29, which is connected by a belt with the belt wheel or pulley 12 ofthe vertical shaft 10. v The frame or bracket 3 comprises the two end standards, which are flanged at their upper ends and seen rely bolted. or otherwise securedto the ceiling 7 and are'suspended therefrom directly above the bed-plate and 1 standards 2 2. They are connected together by cross-braces 31 31, having mounted on their forward face the bearings 32 32, in which is journaled a shaft 33, extending downward some distance below the frame or bracket,
with the brush 34 secured in its lower end,
which brush is slightly above the horizontal line of the brush 28. Rigidly secured to the upper end of this shaft 33 is a belt wheel or pulley 35, which is connected'by belt 36 with the belt wheel or pulley 11, that is mounted on the upper end of the shaft 10. Upon motion being communicated to the drive-shaft 16 through the pulley 17 and belt 18 the foot-lever is operated, so as to move either the frictional bevelas the lower brush 28 is adapted'for cleaning the under side of the plate as it is held and the upper plate 34 for cleaning the upper face of said plate, so that the operator may have two plates, one in the right hand in engage- These standards are ment with brush 28, and when the underside of this plate is cleaned the plate is shifted to the left hand and held in under the cleaningbrush 34 and another plate held by the right hand over brush 34. 7
While I have described and shown the various elements entering into the construction in. detail, yet I do not wish to unduly limit myself thereto, asit will be observed that various changes may be made in such details of construction withoutjdepar-ting from the general spirit of my invention.
Having fully described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is- 1. In a machine for cleaning pottery-Ware, metal plates, and other objects-the combination with a suitable frame, of a drive-shaft journaled therein, a rigidly-connectedpair of non-metallic friction-gears loosely mounted on said drive-shaft, a vertical shaft journaled in the frame, a metallic friction-gearmounted on the lower end of said shaft and adapted to be engaged by the friction-gears of the naled in the front of the frame and each carryinga cleaning-brush, and connections between said shafts and the vertical shaft whereby motion is transmitted from the latter to the former, substantially as described.
2. In combination, a frame with a'driveshaft journaled in the rear thereof, a laterally-movable sleeve mounted on said driveshaft, means for somoviug said sleeve, a friction-gear rigidly connected to each end of said sleeve, a vertical shaft journaled in the rear of the frame with belt-wheels 11, and 12, mounted thereon, a bevel-gear rigidly mounted on the lower end of saidshaft and adapted to be engaged by the gear-wheels of the driveshaft, brush- shafts 27 and 33, journaled in the front'of said frame with pulleys 29 and 35, mounted on said shafts, connections between the pulleys Y29 and 12, and separate connections between the pulleys 35 and 11, and means for operating said drive-shaft, substantially as described.
3. In combination, a frame, a pair of independent brush-shafts jonrnaled in the front thereof, adrive-shaft journaled in the rear thereof, a vertical shaft also journaled in the rear'oftthe frame and having a friction-gear on its lower end, belt connections between said vertical shaft and the brush-shafts, a pair of laterally-movable friction-gears mounted upon the drive-shaft in a manner that but one at a time may engage the friction-gear of the vertical shaft, means for moving said friction-gears laterally upon the drive-shaft, and
means for communicating a motion to said drive-shaft,substantially as described.
In testimony whereof I aflix my signature in the presence of two witnesses.
' V DANIEL HUFHAND.
Witnesses: Y
JOHN N OLAND, E. W. ARTHUR.
drive-shaft, a pair of independent shafts jour-.
US72765299A 1899-08-18 1899-08-18 Brushing apparatus for pottery-ware. Expired - Lifetime US637793A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20070106569A1 (en) * 2001-08-09 2007-05-10 Mcquaide Arnold C Jr Architecture for managing prepaid wireless communications services

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20070106569A1 (en) * 2001-08-09 2007-05-10 Mcquaide Arnold C Jr Architecture for managing prepaid wireless communications services

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