US639617A - Shoot-plane. - Google Patents

Shoot-plane. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US639617A
US639617A US61528096A US1896615280A US639617A US 639617 A US639617 A US 639617A US 61528096 A US61528096 A US 61528096A US 1896615280 A US1896615280 A US 1896615280A US 639617 A US639617 A US 639617A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
plane
work
edge
knife
shoot
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
Application number
US61528096A
Inventor
Vernon Royle
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US61528096A priority Critical patent/US639617A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US639617A publication Critical patent/US639617A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65GTRANSPORT OR STORAGE DEVICES, e.g. CONVEYORS FOR LOADING OR TIPPING, SHOP CONVEYOR SYSTEMS OR PNEUMATIC TUBE CONVEYORS
    • B65G65/00Loading or unloading
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23QDETAILS, COMPONENTS, OR ACCESSORIES FOR MACHINE TOOLS, e.g. ARRANGEMENTS FOR COPYING OR CONTROLLING; MACHINE TOOLS IN GENERAL CHARACTERISED BY THE CONSTRUCTION OF PARTICULAR DETAILS OR COMPONENTS; COMBINATIONS OR ASSOCIATIONS OF METAL-WORKING MACHINES, NOT DIRECTED TO A PARTICULAR RESULT
    • B23Q7/00Arrangements for handling work specially combined with or arranged in, or specially adapted for use in connection with, machine tools, e.g. for conveying, loading, positioning, discharging, sorting
    • B23Q7/03Arrangements for handling work specially combined with or arranged in, or specially adapted for use in connection with, machine tools, e.g. for conveying, loading, positioning, discharging, sorting by means of endless chain conveyors

Definitions

  • NrrEn TATES NrrEn TATES
  • My invention relates to an improvementin shoot-planes in which provision is made for presenting the edge of the plane-knife at different angles to the work which it engages.
  • Figure 1 is a view of the plane in side elevation looking toward t-he side on which the material to be planed is presented to the cutting edge of' the knife.
  • Fig. 2 is a top plan view.
  • Fig. 3 is a viewin side elevation looking toward the opposite side of the plane from that presented in Fig. 1.
  • Fig. i is an end view looking toward the end from which the plane begins its cutting or advance stroke,
  • Fig. 5 is a transverse section through line 5 5 of Fig. 1.
  • My invention is particularly directed to means for supporting and guiding the plane to prevent fouling, to means for interchanging knives, to means for changing the position of the edge of the material to he operated upon relatively to the cutting edge of the knife, either by changing the angle of the work-support with respect to the path of the plane or by changing the angle of the cutting edge of the knife relatively to the position of the work, or both, and the providing of a handle which will permit the plane to be firmly grasped and operated without cramping the hand of the operator.
  • the plate or board along which the plane travels is denoted by A, and it is provided with a grooved way for the reception of a depending tongue on the bottom of the plane and with a smooth-faced way to, also forming a support for the bottom of the plane and located in a position beneath the path of the cutting-blade of the plane.
  • the Work-supporting table B To the baseplate or board A is hinged the Work-supporting table B, in the present instance by means of a depending lug or socket-piece b, which embraces a pivotal pin or shaft I), mounted in suitable bearings in the table at the end of the board or base-plate A.
  • the work-supporting table B rests normally on and parallel with the base-plate A and is provided at its free end with an adjusting-screw G, which has a screw-threaded engagement with the end of the table, the free end '0 of the screw bearing in a socket a in the face of the base-plate A, so that by turning the screw 0 the free end of the work.- support 13 will be lifted from the base-plate A, causing it to assume various angles relative to the base-plate within the limits of the adj Listing-screw, as may be desired.
  • the work-supporting table B is provided near its free end with a stop D, the face of which extends across the surface of the table Eat right angles to the pat-h in which the plane moves along the edge of the table, the said stop being held truly in position by means of guide-pins d d at its opposite ends and provided with a set-screw 61 which extends through an elongated slot (1 in the stop D and into the table B for locking the stop 1) in the desired adjustment toward and away from the path in which the plane travels.
  • the plane consists of an upright portion E and a base portion E, offset in the present instance at right angles to the upright and eX- tending from the upright in a direction opposed to that in which the work is fed to the plane, thereby leaving a clearance for the chips and protecting the way from becoming fouled by them.
  • the portion E is provided with a depending rib or tongue 6, adapted to loosely fit the groove in the bed-plate bearing a to guide the plane in its movement along the support.
  • the upright portion E carries the cutting-knife with its edge standing in a plane at right angles to the work-support B.
  • the knife F is held in a disk G, which is made removable from the body of the plane and which is permitted a limited rocking movement with respectto the upright E.
  • a central or hub portion G of the disk G extends through a circular opening in the upright E and is provided with a suitable opening g in the upright for the projection of the edge of the knife.
  • the knife-edge at a suitable angle with respect to the work it may be caused to make a shearing cut as it travels along the edge of the material, the acuteness of the angle with which it engages the work being regulated to suit the hardness of the material operated upon.
  • the removable feature of the disk and knife therein renders it feasible to keep at hand several disks with knives of the same or different forms set therein, which may be interchanged with celerity by simply removing the set-screws g g
  • the handle for operating the plane is denoted by H as a whole.
  • a shoot-plane comprising a base-plate having bearings for supporting the plane, a work'support located above the bearings 011 the base-plate, and a plane having its base extended bodily in a direction away from its working face between the base plate and work-support, the said extended base of the plane and the base-plate being provided the one with a tongue and the other with a groove for holding the plane in position on the baseplate, substantially as set forth.
  • a shoot-plane provided with a handle having the usual horn for engaging the hand, the thumb and forefinger and a bulge at its side shaped to cause the fingers of the hand to follow a curve downwardly and outwardly from the side of the plane and thence inwardly and upwardly toward the side of the plane, substantially as set forth.
  • a shoot-plane provided with an opening extending longitudinally along its body and from its face to its back for the clearance of dust and chips, substantially as set forth.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Knives (AREA)

Description

' N0. 639,6!7. Patented Dec. I9, 399.. v. BOYLE. SHOOT PLANE.
(Application filed Dec. 11, 1896.)
2 Sheets-Sheet ll (No Model.)
[WW am 59% Wzesses; Wi
Patented Dec. l9, I899. V. BOYLE.
SHUUT PLANE.
(Application filed Dec. 11, 1896 2 S hQetsSheet 2.
(No Model.)
NrrEn TATES.
VERNON BOYLE, OF PATERSON, NElV JERSEY.
SHOOT-PLANE.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 639,617, dated December 19, 1899.
Application filed December 11, 1896. Serial No. 615,280. (No model.)
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, VERNON BOYLE, of Paterson, in the county of Passaic and State of New Jersey, have-invented a new and useful Improvement in Shoot-Planes, of which the following is a specification.
My invention relates to an improvementin shoot-planes in which provision is made for presenting the edge of the plane-knife at different angles to the work which it engages.
A practical embodiment of my invention is represented in the accompanyingdrawings, in which Figure 1 is a view of the plane in side elevation looking toward t-he side on which the material to be planed is presented to the cutting edge of' the knife. Fig. 2 is a top plan view. Fig. 3 is a viewin side elevation looking toward the opposite side of the plane from that presented in Fig. 1. Fig. iis an end view looking toward the end from which the plane begins its cutting or advance stroke,
and Fig. 5 is a transverse section through line 5 5 of Fig. 1.
My invention is particularly directed to means for supporting and guiding the plane to prevent fouling, to means for interchanging knives, to means for changing the position of the edge of the material to he operated upon relatively to the cutting edge of the knife, either by changing the angle of the work-support with respect to the path of the plane or by changing the angle of the cutting edge of the knife relatively to the position of the work, or both, and the providing of a handle which will permit the plane to be firmly grasped and operated without cramping the hand of the operator.
The plate or board along which the plane travels is denoted by A, and it is provided with a grooved way for the reception of a depending tongue on the bottom of the plane and with a smooth-faced way to, also forming a support for the bottom of the plane and located in a position beneath the path of the cutting-blade of the plane. To the baseplate or board A is hinged the Work-supporting table B, in the present instance by means of a depending lug or socket-piece b, which embraces a pivotal pin or shaft I), mounted in suitable bearings in the table at the end of the board or base-plate A. r
The work-supporting table B rests normally on and parallel with the base-plate A and is provided at its free end with an adjusting-screw G, which has a screw-threaded engagement with the end of the table, the free end '0 of the screw bearing in a socket a in the face of the base-plate A, so that by turning the screw 0 the free end of the work.- support 13 will be lifted from the base-plate A, causing it to assume various angles relative to the base-plate within the limits of the adj Listing-screw, as may be desired.
The work-supporting table B is provided near its free end with a stop D, the face of which extends across the surface of the table Eat right angles to the pat-h in which the plane moves along the edge of the table, the said stop being held truly in position by means of guide-pins d d at its opposite ends and provided with a set-screw 61 which extends through an elongated slot (1 in the stop D and into the table B for locking the stop 1) in the desired adjustment toward and away from the path in which the plane travels.
The plane consists of an upright portion E and a base portion E, offset in the present instance at right angles to the upright and eX- tending from the upright in a direction opposed to that in which the work is fed to the plane, thereby leaving a clearance for the chips and protecting the way from becoming fouled by them. The portion E is provided with a depending rib or tongue 6, adapted to loosely fit the groove in the bed-plate bearing a to guide the plane in its movement along the support. The upright portion E carries the cutting-knife with its edge standing in a plane at right angles to the work-support B. The knife F is held in a disk G, which is made removable from the body of the plane and which is permitted a limited rocking movement with respectto the upright E. This is provided for by forming elongated curved slots 9 g through the disk G and inserting set-screws g 9 through the slots 9 g, respectively, into the upright E. A central or hub portion G of the disk G extends through a circular opening in the upright E and is provided with a suitable opening g in the upright for the projection of the edge of the knife.
By rocking the disk G, and with it the knife F, after the set-screws g 9 have been looscned, and then setting the screws again to clamp the knife in position, its edge may he held at any desired angle in a vertical plane with respect to the position which the material to be operated upon occupies when resting upon the work-support B. This angular adjustment of the cutting edge of the knife, as well as the angular adjustment of the worksupport and the material resting thereon, renders it feasible to so set the work that the edge of the cutting-blade will begin to out near one corner and will gradually bring succes'sive portions of its cutting edge into action as it travels along the edge of the work-table until the cutting is completed by the opposite corner of the edge of the knife, thereby obviating the wearing away or dulling of the knife edge at one end more than at another. At the same time by setting the knife-edge at a suitable angle with respect to the work it may be caused to make a shearing cut as it travels along the edge of the material, the acuteness of the angle with which it engages the work being regulated to suit the hardness of the material operated upon. The removable feature of the disk and knife therein renders it feasible to keep at hand several disks with knives of the same or different forms set therein, which may be interchanged with celerity by simply removing the set-screws g g The handle for operating the plane is denoted by H as a whole. It has a usual horn 7t for the purpose of engaging the hand between the thumb and forefinger; but its novelty lies in the bulge portion h, which extends outwardly from the upright E in curved form, downwardly, and then upwardly toward the face of the upright E, as clearly indicated in Figs. 3, 4., and 5. This affords the palm Along the body of the plane, at the base of the upright portionof the hody,there is formed a series of openings M, extending from its face to its back for the escape of dust and chips which fall from the edge of the material be ing operated upon.
What I claim is- 1. A shoot-plane comprising a base-plate having bearings for supporting the plane, a work'support located above the bearings 011 the base-plate, and a plane having its base extended bodily in a direction away from its working face between the base plate and work-support, the said extended base of the plane and the base-plate being provided the one with a tongue and the other with a groove for holding the plane in position on the baseplate, substantially as set forth.
' 2. A shoot-plane provided with a handle having the usual horn for engaging the hand, the thumb and forefinger and a bulge at its side shaped to cause the fingers of the hand to follow a curve downwardly and outwardly from the side of the plane and thence inwardly and upwardly toward the side of the plane, substantially as set forth.
A shoot-plane, provided with an opening extending longitudinally along its body and from its face to its back for the clearance of dust and chips, substantially as set forth.
VERNON BOYLE.
\Vitnesses:
JonN RoYLE, J r., SIDNEY FAR-BAR.
US61528096A 1896-12-11 1896-12-11 Shoot-plane. Expired - Lifetime US639617A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US61528096A US639617A (en) 1896-12-11 1896-12-11 Shoot-plane.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US61528096A US639617A (en) 1896-12-11 1896-12-11 Shoot-plane.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US639617A true US639617A (en) 1899-12-19

Family

ID=2708204

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US61528096A Expired - Lifetime US639617A (en) 1896-12-11 1896-12-11 Shoot-plane.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US639617A (en)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US639617A (en) Shoot-plane.
US54681A (en) Improvement in machines for cutting cloth
US1063871A (en) Dieing-out machine.
US700141A (en) Button-fly-scalloping machine.
US298040A (en) John swenson
US2228055A (en) Block sawing machine
US2193864A (en) Scoring machine
US395728A (en) Ferdinand wesel
US2083435A (en) Safety wedge cutter
US1155655A (en) Trimmer for dieing-machines.
US1250057A (en) Machine for use in repairing boot and shoe soles.
US273000A (en) Feed-table gage for curved work
US1227156A (en) Work-holder for machines for trimming electrotype-blocks or the like.
US236120A (en) Machine for trimming boxes
US1129531A (en) Veneer trimmer and gage.
US9964A (en) Improved machine for cutting and beveling printers rules
US678591A (en) Tool for shaving lacing-strips.
US121198A (en) Improvement in photograph-cutters
US1223324A (en) Surface-trimming machine.
US1025308A (en) Means for trimming burs from the cut ends of printers' rules.
US3025602A (en) Scribing tool
US788434A (en) Attachment for woodworking-machines.
US1137251A (en) Cutting-machine.
US735197A (en) Tool for cutting elliptical or other curved picture-mats, stencils, &c.
US684277A (en) Leather-trimming tool.