US650220A - Feeding mechanism for carding-engines. - Google Patents

Feeding mechanism for carding-engines. Download PDF

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Publication number
US650220A
US650220A US71574999A US1899715749A US650220A US 650220 A US650220 A US 650220A US 71574999 A US71574999 A US 71574999A US 1899715749 A US1899715749 A US 1899715749A US 650220 A US650220 A US 650220A
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gear
shaft
carriage
rolls
bevel
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US71574999A
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Eddo V Bates
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GEORGE A JUDSON
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GEORGE A JUDSON
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D01NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
    • D01GPRELIMINARY TREATMENT OF FIBRES, e.g. FOR SPINNING
    • D01G15/00Carding machines or accessories; Card clothing; Burr-crushing or removing arrangements associated with carding or other preliminary-treatment machines
    • D01G15/02Carding machines
    • D01G15/12Details
    • D01G15/14Constructional features of carding elements, e.g. for facilitating attachment of card clothing
    • D01G15/20Feed rollers; Takers-in
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H2701/00Handled material; Storage means
    • B65H2701/30Handled filamentary material
    • B65H2701/31Textiles threads or artificial strands of filaments

Definitions

  • My invention is an improvement of my patent of February 19, 1895, No. 534,418, and also of my patent of October 11, 1898, No. 612,303, relating to feeding mechanism for carding-engines; and it consists in the simplification thereof and addition of new and useful improvements thereon. Its objects are to lower the driving mechanism and the sprocket-chain, to permit greater range of adjustment of the parts for laying a shorter or longer sliver, to decrease the weight of all the parts, to permit greater facility of access to all parts, and'to providea compact and positive-action distributingcarriage. I attain these objects by means of the mechanism illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which similar letters and numerals refer to similar parts, and in which Figure 1 is a front perspective View of the whole apparatus.
  • Fig. 2 is a rear perspective view.
  • Fig. 3 is an elevation of one of my end standards.
  • Fig. 4 is a sectional view of the fluted and plain rolls in the distributing-carriage.
  • Fig. 5 is a section through the line 2 z of Fig. 7.
  • Fig. 6 is a transverse sectional view of a portion of the sleeve 1" and shaft, together with its support; and
  • Fig. 7 is a top view of the adjustable driving mechanism for the sprocket-chain and distributing-carriage.
  • the base-plate 10 supports at its ends the standards y 11 Figs. 1, 2, and 3, which are firmly connected by rods Z and m and carry shaft 2' in suitable bearings q q.
  • the support a attached by collars n and Set-screws to the rods Z and m, forms a collar or bearing and carries the shaft-connecting sprocket e and bevel-gear c and also forms a U-shaped projection, along which may be moved the collar 1* by means of shoulder s and set-screw t. (See Figs. 5 and 6.)
  • Power is transmitted to the apparatus by shaft a, carrying bevel-gear b, which meshes with bevel-gear 0, thus giving motion to the shaft, on which are affixed gear d and sprocket e, as well as bevel-gear 0.
  • Gear 01 meshes with gear f, which through a connecting-shaft bearing in the collar 7' transmits power to the bevel-gear g at the other end of the shaft.
  • This gear f is attached to the shaft by means of a set-screw or in any other suitable manner and may be replaced by a larger or smaller gear at pleasure, the collar r and gear 9 being adapted to slide on support a and to be held in place by means of spur s and set screw 15, and thus keep gears f and d enmeshed.
  • Bevel-gear g meshes with bevel-gear h, which may be so adjusted on the 'splined shaft 11 by means of a set-screw or other suitable device as to always mesh with g when gear f is changed.
  • the endless chain 19 traversesand is propelled by sprocket c and also traverses sprocket e and moves the distributing-carriage backward and forward by means of a projecting pm which engages throughout its course the slotted tongue 8, firmly attached to the back of the carriage in the same manner as in my patents of February 19, 1895, No. 534,418, and of October 11, 1898, No. 612,303.
  • the bearings of sprocket e are supported by collars 'n on rods Z and m, and by set-screws or other suitable appliances may be adjusted at any point along rods Z and m to correspond with the chain 19 when it is desired to increase ordiminish the length of the path of the distributing-carriage by adding links to or removing links from the chain 12.
  • the supports 92 n are merely to give stifiness to the apparatus and serve as braces between rods Z and m.
  • the distributing-carriage is similar to the head described in my patent of February 19,
  • This distributing-carriage consists in loosely mounting the plain rolls jj, which are smaller than the fluted rolls 70 it, upon the shafts'uw direotlylabove; rolls; 70 k and in aposition to roll upon the face of base-plate 10 while the carriage is in motion, thus acting as guides to it, while fluted rolls k k extend partially under the base-plate 10, and thus carry the sliver from the guide fi and deliveritimmediately under the said 7 plate 10 upon thefeed-table.
  • the advantages of my device are a lighter;- lower, and more compact frame and more coinpactvworkingv parts, dispensing with the intermediate driving-gear formerly used and bringingdown 'the'chain' to a level with "the driving shaft 7;, this permitting the operator to more conveniently keep the apparatus in order and to more easily reach over the whole deviceto the feed-table, facility inchanging thespeed of the feed-rollers by'changing the gearf forone larger or smaller and adj usting collar r and'gear: h to correspond, and facility in changingthe range of feed upon the feed- I table by lengthening or shortening chain p and adjusting sprocket e along rodsl and m.
  • v I f mower-distributing mechanism consisting of '25 "In a'cardmg-engine, a frame consisting ibev'el-gear a, gear cl,sprocket e,( conne"ctingshaft, upon which said bevel-gear a, gear d jrying a fixed bevel-gear and a detachable igear, a distributing-carriage for feeding the.
  • sprockets e and e and adapted to move and sprocket e are rigidly afiixed, detachable gear f meshing with gear (1, bevel-gear g, shaft connecting gears f and g, sleeve rwhich supports said shaft and rests on slotted support a and is adjustable thereon by means of set-screw t, support u, sleeve bevel-gear h adjustable along shaft 7; to always mesh withv bevel-gear g, and shaft 43 adapted to transmit motion to the feed-rollers of the distributingcarriage by suitable devices, with sprocket 6 carried by collars n adjustably attached to the rods Z and m whereby it may correspond with chain 1) when it is lengthened or shortened, sprocket-chain p traversing sprockets carriage, as described and for the purpose specified.
  • a traveling distributing-carriage having fluted rolls for feeding the sliver; revoluble plain rolls loosely mounted upon the same shafts with the fluted rolls to guide the carriage, and a bottom plate for rotating the plain rolls by frictional contact therewith as the carriage travels backward and forward, substantially as described.
  • a traveling distributing-carriage having fluted rolls for feeding the sliver extending partially underneath the base-plate, plain rolls loosely mounted upon the same shafts, above and smaller than the fluted rolls, and a fixed base-plate against the face of which the plain rolls rest in such a way as to be revolved by frictional contact as the carriage moves.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Preliminary Treatment Of Fibers (AREA)

Description

' No. 650,220. Patented May 22, I900.
E. V. BATES.
FEEDING MECHANISM FOR CAI-'HIINfi ENGINES.
(Application filed m a, 1899. v
(No Model.)
m: uonms wzrzns co. Pnumu'rua. WASNXNGTON. n. c.
UNI-TED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
EDDO V. BATES, OF DRAOUT, MASSACHUSETTS, ASSIGNOR OF ONE-HALF TO GEORGE A. JUDSON, OF LOWELL, MASSACHUSETTS.
FEEDING MECHANISM FOR CARDlNG-ENGINES.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 650,220, dated May 2.2, 190d Application filedMay 5, 1899. Serial No- 715,'749. (No model.)
To all whmn it may concern:
Be it known that I, EDDO V. BATES, a citizen of the United States, and a resident of Dracut, in the county of Middlesex and State of Massachusetts, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Feeding Mechanism for Carding-Engines, of whichthe following is a specification.
My invention is an improvement of my patent of February 19, 1895, No. 534,418, and also of my patent of October 11, 1898, No. 612,303, relating to feeding mechanism for carding-engines; and it consists in the simplification thereof and addition of new and useful improvements thereon. Its objects are to lower the driving mechanism and the sprocket-chain, to permit greater range of adjustment of the parts for laying a shorter or longer sliver, to decrease the weight of all the parts, to permit greater facility of access to all parts, and'to providea compact and positive-action distributingcarriage. I attain these objects by means of the mechanism illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which similar letters and numerals refer to similar parts, and in which Figure 1 is a front perspective View of the whole apparatus. Fig. 2 is a rear perspective view. Fig. 3 is an elevation of one of my end standards. Fig. 4 is a sectional view of the fluted and plain rolls in the distributing-carriage. Fig. 5 is a section through the line 2 z of Fig. 7. Fig. 6 is a transverse sectional view of a portion of the sleeve 1" and shaft, together with its support; and Fig. 7 is a top view of the adjustable driving mechanism for the sprocket-chain and distributing-carriage.
The base-plate 10 supports at its ends the standards y 11 Figs. 1, 2, and 3, which are firmly connected by rods Z and m and carry shaft 2' in suitable bearings q q.
The support a, attached by collars n and Set-screws to the rods Z and m, forms a collar or bearing and carries the shaft-connecting sprocket e and bevel-gear c and also forms a U-shaped projection, along which may be moved the collar 1* by means of shoulder s and set-screw t. (See Figs. 5 and 6.)
Power is transmitted to the apparatus by shaft a, carrying bevel-gear b, which meshes with bevel-gear 0, thus giving motion to the shaft, on which are affixed gear d and sprocket e, as well as bevel-gear 0. Gear 01 meshes with gear f, which through a connecting-shaft bearing in the collar 7' transmits power to the bevel-gear g at the other end of the shaft. This gear f is attached to the shaft by means of a set-screw or in any other suitable manner and may be replaced by a larger or smaller gear at pleasure, the collar r and gear 9 being adapted to slide on support a and to be held in place by means of spur s and set screw 15, and thus keep gears f and d enmeshed. Bevel-gear g meshes with bevel-gear h, which may be so adjusted on the 'splined shaft 11 by means of a set-screw or other suitable device as to always mesh with g when gear f is changed.
The endless chain 19 traversesand is propelled by sprocket c and also traverses sprocket e and moves the distributing-carriage backward and forward by means of a projecting pm which engages throughout its course the slotted tongue 8, firmly attached to the back of the carriage in the same manner as in my patents of February 19, 1895, No. 534,418, and of October 11, 1898, No. 612,303. The bearings of sprocket e are supported by collars 'n on rods Z and m, and by set-screws or other suitable appliances may be adjusted at any point along rods Z and m to correspond with the chain 19 when it is desired to increase ordiminish the length of the path of the distributing-carriage by adding links to or removing links from the chain 12. The supports 92 n are merely to give stifiness to the apparatus and serve as braces between rods Z and m.
The distributing-carriage is similar to the head described in my patent of February 19,
1895, No. 534,418, except that the slotted tongue 8 is attached lower down than in said patent to correspond with the lower position of chain p in this device. Motion is transmitted to the fluted rolls k k, which turn in- 5 lar devices to those shown in'my patent of I00 February 19, 1895, No. 534,418, taking motion from shaft 1 by sleeve bevel-gear 9, which slides upon the splined shaft 71, as there shown. The novel feature of this distributing-carriage consists in loosely mounting the plain rolls jj, which are smaller than the fluted rolls 70 it, upon the shafts'uw direotlylabove; rolls; 70 k and in aposition to roll upon the face of base-plate 10 while the carriage is in motion, thus acting as guides to it, while fluted rolls k k extend partially under the base-plate 10, and thus carry the sliver from the guide fi and deliveritimmediately under the said 7 plate 10 upon thefeed-table. M V
The advantages of my device are a lighter;- lower, and more compact frame and more coinpactvworkingv parts, dispensing with the intermediate driving-gear formerly used and bringingdown 'the'chain' to a level with "the driving shaft 7;, this permitting the operator to more conveniently keep the apparatus in order and to more easily reach over the whole deviceto the feed-table, facility inchanging thespeed of the feed-rollers by'changing the gearf forone larger or smaller and adj usting collar r and'gear: h to correspond, and facility in changingthe range of feed upon the feed- I table by lengthening or shortening chain p and adjusting sprocket e along rodsl and m. By'placing the two plain loose guide-rollsjj' upon the shafts v w and by having them smaller than the fluted feed-rolls kit the said rolls It It extend under the plate 10 and deriagetthan the rolls-used on the rocking arm inmy patent numbered 612,303, of October 11, 1898.. J7"
we In formgerdevices trouble'has arisen from pieces-of sliver or waste getting away'from' the'feed-roll's and winding upon'their shafts,
and this my plain rolls prevent, for if pieces should'wind upon them while traveli'ngone way as soon'as they reverse upon the return triplo'f the carriage these pieces are unwound and" thrown ofl. 'In case the sliver, or part of it; should work up above the fluted rolls. no harm is done, nor is it broken, for the plain rolls allow it to run by them and under the plate 10 without winding orbreaking it.
1 What I claim, and desire tosecure by L ttersPatent, i i
' In a carding enginea traveling distrib-' uting-carriage, having fluted rolls for feeding the sliver, plain rolls loosely mounted on the 3 same shafts, above and'smaller than the fluted 'roll's,an'd a-fixed bottom plate against the face of which? the plainrolls rest in such a way as to be revolved by frictional contact as the car-' riag'etmoves."
ofa bottom plate, two end stands and two rods connecting the end stands, combined with suitable power-distributing mechanism supported by the two rods, for moving the distributing-carriage back and forth, said distributing-carriage supported by a main shaft, and the said main shaft which is-supported ,by bearingsin the; endistands and derives motion from the power-distributing mechanism and transmits it to the feed-rolls of th distributing-carriage, as described.
3. In a carding-engine, the combination of two fixed rods, a sprocket carried by bearings adapted tobe adjusted upon and along said rods,an endless chain traversing said sprocket and adapted to move the distributing carriage back and forth, a second sprocket which transmits to the endless chain, power derived from the main'power-shaft'through" meshing gears and ashort connecting-shaft,with inech anism adapted to rotate the feed-rolls'of the distributing-carriage, and said carriage as described.
4. In a carding-engine, the combinationof a. driving-shaft and bevel-gear, 'with'a short shaft carrying a bevel-gear, a sprocket and a plain gear, together with a second sliaftcan plain gear, a collar carrying the second shaft and adjustable along a U-shaped support by means of a set screw, to'and from the first- ;nam'ed shaft, asleeve bevel=gear adjustable along' the driving-shaft 'which actuates the feed-rolls of the distributing-carriage, so as Ztcalways mesh with the last-namedbevel is'liver, and'a sprocket'and endlesschai'n traversing this and thefirst-named sprocket for imparting the backward and forwardmotion to said carriage as described;
5. In a carding-engine, the base-plate 10, standards y, y,'and rods Z and m connecting the standards y,-y, forming the supporting frame of the mechanism, combinedwith power=shaft a bevel-gear Z7 carriedbysaid power shaft a, bevel gear 0 meshing with bevel gear b, gear 01 meshing with detachable gearf, detachable gear f, bevel-gear'g carried by same shaft which carries detachablegear f, collar 1" which carries said last-namedshaft, 'its support '8, set-screw t, and the'fixe'd support it, wherebycollar r shaft and gear f may Ismaller gear f may be used,sleeve bevel gear ,ih adjustable along shaft '5 which'tra'nsmits ipower to the feed rolls, so as to'always mesh {with bevel-gear g, sprocket e carried by the ?same shaft with gears c and d, sprocket e lsupported by collars 91 upon and adjustable along rods Z and'm and endless chain 19, trav- 1the'distributing-carriage back and forth. 6. In a carding-engine, the combination of la" frame consisting of a'base -plate 10, end {stands 3 y and connecting-rods Z-and m,with
v I f mower-distributing mechanism consisting of '25 "In a'cardmg-engine, a frame consisting ibev'el-gear a, gear cl,sprocket e,( conne"ctingshaft, upon which said bevel-gear a, gear d jrying a fixed bevel-gear and a detachable igear, a distributing-carriage for feeding the.
be adjusted to or from gear d and a larger or distributing lersing sprockets e and e and adapted to move and sprocket e are rigidly afiixed, detachable gear f meshing with gear (1, bevel-gear g, shaft connecting gears f and g, sleeve rwhich supports said shaft and rests on slotted support a and is adjustable thereon by means of set-screw t, support u, sleeve bevel-gear h adjustable along shaft 7; to always mesh withv bevel-gear g, and shaft 43 adapted to transmit motion to the feed-rollers of the distributingcarriage by suitable devices, with sprocket 6 carried by collars n adjustably attached to the rods Z and m whereby it may correspond with chain 1) when it is lengthened or shortened, sprocket-chain p traversing sprockets carriage, as described and for the purpose specified.
7. In a carding-engine, a traveling distributing-carriage having fluted rolls for feeding the sliver; revoluble plain rolls loosely mounted upon the same shafts with the fluted rolls to guide the carriage, and a bottom plate for rotating the plain rolls by frictional contact therewith as the carriage travels backward and forward, substantially as described.
8. In a carding-engine, a traveling distributing-carriage, having fluted rolls for feeding the sliver extending partially underneath the base-plate, plain rolls loosely mounted upon the same shafts, above and smaller than the fluted rolls, and a fixed base-plate against the face of which the plain rolls rest in such a way as to be revolved by frictional contact as the carriage moves.
In testimony whereof I have affixed my. signature in presence of two witnesses.
EDDO V. BATES.
Witnesses:
FISHER I-I. PEARSON, JOHN J. DEvINE.
US71574999A 1899-05-05 1899-05-05 Feeding mechanism for carding-engines. Expired - Lifetime US650220A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8599241B2 (en) 2009-04-08 2013-12-03 Sony Corporation Information processing apparatus, information processing method, program, and recording medium

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8599241B2 (en) 2009-04-08 2013-12-03 Sony Corporation Information processing apparatus, information processing method, program, and recording medium

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