US639954A - Lithographic-stone-surfacing wheel. - Google Patents

Lithographic-stone-surfacing wheel. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US639954A
US639954A US72711199A US1899727111A US639954A US 639954 A US639954 A US 639954A US 72711199 A US72711199 A US 72711199A US 1899727111 A US1899727111 A US 1899727111A US 639954 A US639954 A US 639954A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
surfacing
wheel
stone
abrading
lithographic
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
US72711199A
Inventor
Clarendon G Warner
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 US72711199A priority Critical patent/US639954A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US639954A publication Critical patent/US639954A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B24GRINDING; POLISHING
    • B24DTOOLS FOR GRINDING, BUFFING OR SHARPENING
    • B24D7/00Bonded abrasive wheels, or wheels with inserted abrasive blocks, designed for acting otherwise than only by their periphery, e.g. by the front face; Bushings or mountings therefor
    • B24D7/16Bushings; Mountings

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the smoothing, surfacing, or polishing wheels for machines for surfacing lithographic stone or other ma- 1 terial required to be produced with a smooth plane face.
  • This invention more particularly relates to the abrading, surfacing, or polishing wheels used in the aforesaid machine for the'inter' mediate and final surfacing and polishing operations which follow the action of the roughing-wheel, having its abrading-surface of a coarser character.
  • one object of this invention is to provide the surfacing-wheels with a main body and a holder or carrier section provided with the series of members or sections of abrading or surfacing material, so that after the latter have become worn and their replacement is required the holder maybe detached.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide in the secondary surfacing-wheel sections of abrading or surfacing material having especial fitness and utility in and for the performance of the work and to provide means for the retention of the secondary-surfacing or final-polishing sections in place in the carrier therefor and for adjusting them to compensate for wear.
  • FIG. 5 is a view of a group of parts in detail-that is, at the left upper part an end View of one of the sectional surfacingblocks, and therebelow and also to the right thereof, respectivelyin plan and edge views, of one of the chisel-edged strips used in conjunction with the said blocks, which parts are hereinafter individually referred to.
  • the surfacing or secondary wheel is represented by the letter E, and the final-polishing wheel by the letter G.
  • the surfacin g and polishing wheels are both constructed with a circular body at, which may advantageously be made of cast-iron, and this body is so engaged on the lower end of the vertical shaft A therefor that it may have a slight degree of lost motion or play relatively to its shaft, whereby it may conform to the level surface of the stone being worked upon, and yet so that the rotary motion of the shaft will rotate the surfacingwheel, and also whereby a bodily lifting in a considerable extent of the shaft will elevate the surfacin g-wheel clear from its work.
  • This connection is constituted by forming the body of the surfacing-wheel with a squared mortise 0, extending vertically and centrally from its top, while the lowerend of the carrying-shaft A is constructed with a solidly formed or rigidly-connected tenon t, which is sunk within the mortise and is overlaid by the retainingcap (1.
  • the height of the tenon is slightly less than the depth of the mortise therefor, as shown.
  • the annular carrier 8 for the series of surfacing-sections of abrading material with which said carrier is provided at its under side.
  • Said carrier has dowel-andsocket engagements with the body, as indicated at retaining or set screws 5 engaging the dowels, the same being provided to penetrate the body of the carrier from its periphery.
  • the carrier of the surfacing-wheels E is constructed with the depending annular flange 70, formed with a series of radial recesses or pockets 72, opening at the bottom of said flange, and in these pockets, which also open radially at the outer periphery of the flange, are the blocks or sections 15 t of rectangular form and which may be of any material or combinations of materials to constitute an abrading medium having fitness to the purpose.
  • These blocks may advantageously be made of layers 7 3 of wood or leather or other material of fine grain or texture, having their adjoining faces surfaced with glue,which glue before the so-surfaced layers are placed together and clamped are liberally sprinkled with emery, so that the finished block t is constituted with intermediate strata lO,Which are angular to the plane of rotation of the wheel of ground emery or like gritty material,which in use exerts, in conjunction with the fibrous material, to a Very good surfacing action on a lithographic stone.
  • This block retains its good surfacing capability even after having been considerably worn away, always presenting at its working face the combination of the comparatively smooth-grained and more gritty substances.
  • These blocks are crowded into place tightly within the radial recesses 72 therefor, and are held against displacement by reason of their crowding fit, which is materially increased by the expanding eifect of the water copiously applied in the surfacingoperations of the machine.
  • the pair or set of wheels-G G which are designed to operate on the face of the surface lithographic stone after the same has previously been reduced by the roughing-Wheel and the surfacing-wheels E E, is shown as having a body n the same, and mounted on its shaft in the same manner at the body of the surfacing-wheel E, and the holder s*, which has the dowel-and-socket engagement and setscrew confinement,as before described, is here made in the form of a disk, with a small central opening j for the disposition therein of the water-pipe, and recesses 72 extend from edge to edge of the holder, and in these recesses are fitted bars or sections of the abrading material, (indicated by it) these being rubber in any of its elastic compounds, or combinations of rubber and cloth or felt or other polishing material.
  • a lithographic-stone-surfacing Wheel consisting of a circular body having at its lower portion a detachably-connected holder provided with a series of recesses and surface ing or abrading sections fitted in and projected below the bottom of said holder, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.
  • a lithographic-stone-surfacing Wheel consisting of the circular body or carriern and acircular holders having a dowel-and-socket engagement with the bottom thereof, setscrews for confining the so-engaged parts and said holder having provided in engagement with the bottom thereof a series of abrading or surfacing sections, detachable and renewable, substantially as described.
  • the holder or carrier-bottom portion of the wheel provided at its under side with the series of horizontal downwardly-opening recesses, with the beveled portion 76 at the junction of the tops of said recesses with the periphery of said part and the blocks or sections of abrading surfacing or polishing materials fitted in said recesses and extended below the bottom of the wheel, for the purpose set forth.
  • a surfacing-wheel having in the bottom portion thereof the series of downwardly-opening recesses 72 with the beyels 76 as shown, the abrading or polishing surfacing blocks or sections fitted in said recesses, and the fiat strip 75 having chisel ends fordistendingsaid blocks after having become worn away, as set forth.
  • a surfacing-wl1eel consisting of a metallic holder constructed in its lower portion with a plurality of downwardly-opening recesses several layers being angular to the plane of and having a plurality of separate blocks or rotation of the surfacing-wheel, substantially sections provided in said recesses, and extendas described. ing below the bottom of the holder, said sec- CLARENDON G. ⁇ VARNER. tions consisting of layers of material of smooth witnesseses:

Description

No. 639,954. Patented Dec. 26, i899.
C. G. WARNER.
LITHOGRAPHIG STONE SURFACING WHEEL.
ion filed Aug. 14, 1899 (No Model.)
2 73 Wzwaw:
Ewe/i375 NlTED STATES CLARENDON G. WARNER, OF HOLYOKE, MASSACHUSETTS.
LITHOGRAPHlC-STONE-SURFACING WHEEL.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 639,954, dated December 26, 1899.
Application filed August 14, 1899. Serial No. 727,111. (No model.)
To aZZ whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, CLARENDON G. WARNER, a citizen of the United States of America, and a resident of Holyoke, in the county of Hampden and State of Massachusetts, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Lithographic Stone Surfacing Wheels, of which the following is a full, clear, and exact description.
This invention relates to the smoothing, surfacing, or polishing wheels for machines for surfacing lithographic stone or other ma- 1 terial required to be produced with a smooth plane face.
In application for Letters Patent of the United States filed by me June 2, 1899, Serial No. 719,156, there is illustrated a machine in which is comprised the carrier or reciprocatory bed for the stone to be surfaced; a roughing-wheel, to the action of which the top of the stone is subjected; the further wheel or set of wheels of a somewhat finer character as to the working surface thereof, to the action of which the stone is next subjected, and there is still, f urthermore,the final polishing wheel or wheels, the second and third wheels or sets of wheels being traversed horizontally while being rotated, with their lower abrading or polishing edges in suitable pressure bearing upon the stone reciprocated relatively thereto.
This invention more particularly relates to the abrading, surfacing, or polishing wheels used in the aforesaid machine for the'inter' mediate and final surfacing and polishing operations which follow the action of the roughing-wheel, having its abrading-surface of a coarser character.
Inasmuch as these surfacing-wheels are carried at the lower end of a respectively provided shaft for rotating them and are quite heavy, for the purpose of insuring sufficient pressure bearing on the work by reason of their weight, one object of this invention is to provide the surfacing-wheels with a main body and a holder or carrier section provided with the series of members or sections of abrading or surfacing material, so that after the latter have become worn and their replacement is required the holder maybe detached.
from the body, at the bottom of which it is carried, and removed from the machine and inverted to be newly equipped with the abrading-sections, manifestly much easier than if the whole wheel, which in this class of machine may often weigh two or three hundred pounds, was removed in its entirety.
Another object of the invention is to provide in the secondary surfacing-wheel sections of abrading or surfacing material having especial fitness and utility in and for the performance of the work and to provide means for the retention of the secondary-surfacing or final-polishing sections in place in the carrier therefor and for adjusting them to compensate for wear.
To these ends the invention consists in the constructions and combinations of parts and materials, all substantially as hereinafter described, and set forth in the claims, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, in Which- Figure 1 is a substantially central vertical sectional view through one of the surfacingwheels, Fig. 2 is a plan view of the under side of the same. Figs. 3 and 4 are similarly sectional and under side plan views of the final-polishing wheel,which has certain characteristics in common with the aforenamed wheel. Fig. 5 is a view of a group of parts in detail-that is, at the left upper part an end View of one of the sectional surfacingblocks, and therebelow and also to the right thereof, respectivelyin plan and edge views, of one of the chisel-edged strips used in conjunction with the said blocks, which parts are hereinafter individually referred to.
Similar characters of reference indicate corresponding parts in all of the views.
The surfacing or secondary wheel is represented by the letter E, and the final-polishing wheel by the letter G. The surfacin g and polishing wheels are both constructed with a circular body at, which may advantageously be made of cast-iron, and this body is so engaged on the lower end of the vertical shaft A therefor that it may have a slight degree of lost motion or play relatively to its shaft, whereby it may conform to the level surface of the stone being worked upon, and yet so that the rotary motion of the shaft will rotate the surfacingwheel, and also whereby a bodily lifting in a considerable extent of the shaft will elevate the surfacin g-wheel clear from its work. This connection is constituted by forming the body of the surfacing-wheel with a squared mortise 0, extending vertically and centrally from its top, while the lowerend of the carrying-shaft A is constructed with a solidly formed or rigidly-connected tenon t, which is sunk within the mortise and is overlaid by the retainingcap (1. The height of the tenon is slightly less than the depth of the mortise therefor, as shown.
Detachably connected with the surfacingwheel body is the annular carrier 8 for the series of surfacing-sections of abrading material with which said carrier is provided at its under side. Said carrier has dowel-andsocket engagements with the body, as indicated at retaining or set screws 5 engaging the dowels, the same being provided to penetrate the body of the carrier from its periphery.
The carrier of the surfacing-wheels E is constructed with the depending annular flange 70, formed with a series of radial recesses or pockets 72, opening at the bottom of said flange, and in these pockets, which also open radially at the outer periphery of the flange, are the blocks or sections 15 t of rectangular form and which may be of any material or combinations of materials to constitute an abrading medium having fitness to the purpose. These blocks may advantageously be made of layers 7 3 of wood or leather or other material of fine grain or texture, having their adjoining faces surfaced with glue,which glue before the so-surfaced layers are placed together and clamped are liberally sprinkled with emery, so that the finished block t is constituted with intermediate strata lO,Which are angular to the plane of rotation of the wheel of ground emery or like gritty material,which in use exerts, in conjunction with the fibrous material, to a Very good surfacing action on a lithographic stone. This block retains its good surfacing capability even after having been considerably worn away, always presenting at its working face the combination of the comparatively smooth-grained and more gritty substances. These blocks are crowded into place tightly within the radial recesses 72 therefor, and are held against displacement by reason of their crowding fit, which is materially increased by the expanding eifect of the water copiously applied in the surfacingoperations of the machine.
Inasmuch as the abrading sections or blocks, the lower edges of which protrude beyond the base of the flange 7 0, become finally uniformly reduced and worn away they are downwardlycrowded to compensate for the wear by inserting thin strips 75 of Wood or other suitable material in the top walls of the recesses- 72, and in order to render this easy the outer corners of the recesses are beveled, as shown at 7 6, and the said strips are formed with their entering ends beveled or chisel-shaped, as seen at 80, Figs. 1 and 5, whereby they may be entered to their crowding action above the blocks 15.
The pair or set of wheels-G G, which are designed to operate on the face of the surface lithographic stone after the same has previously been reduced by the roughing-Wheel and the surfacing-wheels E E, is shown as having a body n the same, and mounted on its shaft in the same manner at the body of the surfacing-wheel E, and the holder s*, which has the dowel-and-socket engagement and setscrew confinement,as before described, is here made in the form of a disk, with a small central opening j for the disposition therein of the water-pipe, and recesses 72 extend from edge to edge of the holder, and in these recesses are fitted bars or sections of the abrading material, (indicated by it) these being rubber in any of its elastic compounds, or combinations of rubber and cloth or felt or other polishing material.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
1. A lithographic-stone-surfacing Wheel, consisting of a circular body having at its lower portion a detachably-connected holder provided with a series of recesses and surface ing or abrading sections fitted in and projected below the bottom of said holder, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.
2. A lithographic-stone-surfacing Wheel, consisting of the circular body or carriern and acircular holders having a dowel-and-socket engagement with the bottom thereof, setscrews for confining the so-engaged parts and said holder having provided in engagement with the bottom thereof a series of abrading or surfacing sections, detachable and renewable, substantially as described.
3. In a surfacing-wheel, the holder or carrier-bottom portion of the wheel, provided at its under side with the series of horizontal downwardly-opening recesses, with the beveled portion 76 at the junction of the tops of said recesses with the periphery of said part and the blocks or sections of abrading surfacing or polishing materials fitted in said recesses and extended below the bottom of the wheel, for the purpose set forth.
4. A surfacing-wheel having in the bottom portion thereof the series of downwardly-opening recesses 72 with the beyels 76 as shown, the abrading or polishing surfacing blocks or sections fitted in said recesses, and the fiat strip 75 having chisel ends fordistendingsaid blocks after having become worn away, as set forth.
5. A surfacing-wl1eel consisting of a metallic holder constructed in its lower portion with a plurality of downwardly-opening recesses several layers being angular to the plane of and having a plurality of separate blocks or rotation of the surfacing-wheel, substantially sections provided in said recesses, and extendas described. ing below the bottom of the holder, said sec- CLARENDON G. \VARNER. tions consisting of layers of material of smooth Witnesses:
grain or texture, and intermediate layers of W'M. S. BELLOWs,
emery or other like gritty material, the said M. A. CAMPBELL.
US72711199A 1899-08-14 1899-08-14 Lithographic-stone-surfacing wheel. Expired - Lifetime US639954A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US72711199A US639954A (en) 1899-08-14 1899-08-14 Lithographic-stone-surfacing wheel.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US72711199A US639954A (en) 1899-08-14 1899-08-14 Lithographic-stone-surfacing wheel.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US639954A true US639954A (en) 1899-12-26

Family

ID=2708540

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US72711199A Expired - Lifetime US639954A (en) 1899-08-14 1899-08-14 Lithographic-stone-surfacing wheel.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US639954A (en)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2309819A (en) Art of grinding and polishing glass and apparatus therefor
US1862103A (en) Surfacing apparatus
US639954A (en) Lithographic-stone-surfacing wheel.
US843624A (en) Marble-polishing machine.
US1029406A (en) Buffing-roll.
US895641A (en) Polishing-wheel.
US1749709A (en) Sandpapering machine
US1027536A (en) Abrading-wheel.
US1415331A (en) Grinding wheel
US881621A (en) Abrasive tool and mounting.
US5756A (en) Pulp-machine
US904805A (en) Polishing-head.
US766079A (en) Surfacing-wheel.
US642355A (en) Rubber for surfacing stone, marble, & c.
US2929176A (en) Method and apparatus for surfacing glass sheets
DE557416C (en) On the surface to be ground, including the machine frame that carries the grinding tool, moving back and forth
US1616889A (en) Wheel for grinding heads
US409419A (en) John mcenerney
US1377119A (en) Machine for shaping sharpening-stones
US2208801A (en) Floating and troweling machine
JP3077211U (en) Stone polishing machine disc
US886640A (en) Grindstone for grinding or smoothing lithographic stones.
US224623A (en) Wood-grinder for making paper-pulp
DE862266C (en) Rotating grinding tool
AT63457B (en) Wood ripper.