US662631A - Counterbalance for explosion-engines. - Google Patents

Counterbalance for explosion-engines. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US662631A
US662631A US644177A US1897644177A US662631A US 662631 A US662631 A US 662631A US 644177 A US644177 A US 644177A US 1897644177 A US1897644177 A US 1897644177A US 662631 A US662631 A US 662631A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
piston
gear
rack
counterbalance
shaft
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
US644177A
Inventor
Herbert B Steele
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.)
ATLANTIC MOTOR Co
Original Assignee
ATLANTIC MOTOR Co
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 ATLANTIC MOTOR Co filed Critical ATLANTIC MOTOR Co
Priority to US644177A priority Critical patent/US662631A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US662631A publication Critical patent/US662631A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16FSPRINGS; SHOCK-ABSORBERS; MEANS FOR DAMPING VIBRATION
    • F16F15/00Suppression of vibrations in systems; Means or arrangements for avoiding or reducing out-of-balance forces, e.g. due to motion
    • F16F15/22Compensation of inertia forces
    • F16F15/26Compensation of inertia forces of crankshaft systems using solid masses, other than the ordinary pistons, moving with the system, i.e. masses connected through a kinematic mechanism or gear system
    • F16F15/264Rotating balancer shafts
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02BINTERNAL-COMBUSTION PISTON ENGINES; COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL
    • F02B75/00Other engines
    • F02B75/06Engines with means for equalising torque
    • 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
    • Y10T74/00Machine element or mechanism
    • Y10T74/15Intermittent grip type mechanical movement
    • Y10T74/1526Oscillation or reciprocation to intermittent unidirectional motion
    • Y10T74/1532Rack actuator

Definitions

  • Figure 1 is a vertical sec tion of the engine, portions of the rack-covering tubes E and E and also of the rack T having been broken off and portions being broken from the gear J to reveal the mech-' anism beneath.
  • Fig. 2 is a horizontal section just above the large case E, from which a portion is broken to show the mechanism within.
  • Fig. 3 is a horizontal section, enlarged, on the plane of the shaft.
  • the cylinder E is the case, corresponding to the crankcase in certain styles of engines and to the bed-plate in others, and it surrounds and contains the lower portions of the mechanism.
  • the main shaft Q In it is borne the main shaft Q, sufficiently moved laterally from the axis of the cylinder to permit its main gear J to properly engage the rack of the piston.
  • the auxiliary shaft Q In the case also and parallel with the main shaft is carried the auxiliary shaft Q.
  • Rising from the boss E of the said case (see Fig. 1) is the cylinder E, which is provided with a combustion-chamberI-I and a piston composed of the head J, the
  • the rack J extends downward from the central portion of the piston in length somewhat greater than the movement thereof and engages a gear J, carried free on the shaft Q, so that it can be rotated back and forth on the shaft by the rack as it is reciprocated back and forth by the piston.
  • the rack J On the opposite side the rack J is supported by a bearing-roll Q mounted by ball-bearing upon the flange Q of the shaft Q.
  • the gear J engages a rack T, similar to the rack J
  • the rack T is also supported by a friction-roll T bearing on the side of the rack opposite to the gear and which roll is carried freely on a shaft revoluble in the case E.
  • a weight T Upon the upper end of the rack T and fast thereto is a weight T,of any convenient shape, and this weight is guided by a frictionroll T carried nearthe upper end thereof and revolving unrestrained by the weight. Throughout its reciprocation the roll T bears and. runs upon the interior of the tube E, which surrounds the counterweight and which tube is fast at its lower end in a raised boss of the case E. It is obvious that as the piston reciprocates the gear J turns back and forth with it and also that the counterweight has an equal and opposite motion imparted to it by the said gear. This being so, the engine is balanced from shaking when the counter weight is made equal to the weight of the piston and one-half the Weight of the spring K added.
  • the counterweight may be located on the bottom end of the rack T and offset therefrom, so that it moves back and forth in the axis of the cylinder, or two counterweigh'ts, one on each side of the cylinder and each of one-half the normal weight, may be used, each offset from its rack, so that the cylinder F is brought on a straight line between them.
  • the gear J 4 is carried on the shaft Q by ballbearings which revolve on the cones 7t and 7c, fast on the shaft at the ends of the gear, and the outside cups are fast in the sleeve J upon and structurally a part of which the gear J is.
  • I communicate rotary motion to the shaft Q by means of a ratchetwheel screwed fast thereon, and a pawl S, carried by a pawl-carrier J oscillated back and forth by and with the gear J.
  • This pawl-carrier is borne upon ball-bearings formed upon the exteriors of the cone-piece 7c and the ratchet k screwed firmly against the same, and the cup is formed by a groove made in the interior of the pawl-carrier J Motion is given to the pawl-carrier J by pins J and J", extending from the said pawl-carrier and the gear J (see Fig. 3) and engaging each other.
  • the pawl S might just as well be carried directly by the gear J as the carrier J has no motion distinct therefrom.
  • the pawl is made to engage the teeth of the ratchet by a spring 8 on one motion and slide over them on the reverse.
  • the shaftQ is carried at one end in ball-bearings in a case 70 carried by the spider Q which is screwed into the case E by the thread h, and at the other end within the bearing-case U, which is strained into the case E by screws, as u.
  • the shaft Q is carried at one end in a spider Q, screwing by threads at it into and at the other in a boss raised from the case E. Over the spiders I place a cap-plate E held by screws 6.
  • the common crank and connecting-rod-and other means than the gear J may be used to connect the piston and counterweight-as, for instance, a lever pivoted in the center and having a connecting-rod at one end reaching to the piston and another at the other end reaching to the counterweight-and other means of guiding the rack-stems of the piston and counterweight may be usedas, for instance, a plain block bearing against them where now are the friction-rolls Q and T
  • the case E may be provided with the usual flanged base for resting upon a foundation; butI have shown it with a seat at B by which also it may be attached to a pedestal or other support if it is desired so to do.

Description

No. 662,635. Patented Nov. 27, I900" H. B. STEELE.
' GDUNTERBALANCE FOR EXPLOSION ENGINES.
(Application filed July 12, 1897.)
(No Model.) 2 Shaats8haet I.
[ r F l TN: J5 T2 1: n
s G I I M I E Z, 1 T A/ITNEEIE E Ah/ENTER CQMAXQW m: NORRIS PETERS co PNOTO-UTHQ, WASHWGTON, o c
No. 662,631. Patented Nov. 27, won. H. B. STEELE.
(No Model.) 2 Sheets-Sheet :2. I
J5 75 2 z QZ 78 Fig. 2.,
\A/ITNEEE-EE g. INVENTUR m, ;;Z;%4
THE Noam: pz'rzns ca, woYo-uma, WASHINGTON. D. 4:v
naniwr price.
HERBERT B. STEELE, OF MALDEN, MASSACHUSETTS, ASSIGNOR TO THE ATLANTIC MOTOR COMPANY, OF PORTLAND, MAINE.
COUNTERBALANCE IFOR EXPLOSiON -ENGINES.
SPECIFICATION forming partof Letters Patent N 0. 662,631, dated November 27, 1900.
Original application filed January 18, 1897, Serial No. 619,545. Divided and this application filed July 12, 1897. Serial No. 644,177. LNo model.)
To all whom, it may concern:
Be it known that I, HERBERT B. STEELE, a citizen of the United States, residing at Malden, in the county of Middlesex and State of Massachusetts, have invented a new and useful Oounterbalance for Explosion-Engines, of which the following is a full, clear, and exact description, reference being had to the accompanyingdrawings,f0riningapart of this specification, in explaining its nature.
In the following description my invention is shown as applied to an engine of the freepiston type and such as is fully described in my application Serial No. 619,545, now on file in the Patent Office; but I do not limit myself to its use with such engine.
In the drawings, Figure 1 is a vertical sec tion of the engine, portions of the rack-covering tubes E and E and also of the rack T having been broken off and portions being broken from the gear J to reveal the mech-' anism beneath. Fig. 2 is a horizontal section just above the large case E, from which a portion is broken to show the mechanism within. Fig. 3 is a horizontal section, enlarged, on the plane of the shaft. v
In a general way the construction and mode of operation of the engine is the same as that of the engine described in my before-mentioned application.
E is the case, corresponding to the crankcase in certain styles of engines and to the bed-plate in others, and it surrounds and contains the lower portions of the mechanism. In it is borne the main shaft Q, sufficiently moved laterally from the axis of the cylinder to permit its main gear J to properly engage the rack of the piston. In the case also and parallel with the main shaft is carried the auxiliary shaft Q. Rising from the boss E of the said case (see Fig. 1) is the cylinder E, which is provided with a combustion-chamberI-I and a piston composed of the head J, the
lar mode of supplying and exploding the gaseous charge and of expanding and discharging it may be that previously set forth in my said application or any other. Likewise a spring, as K, may be used for accomplishing the nonmotive stroke,orany other well-known means. The rack J extends downward from the central portion of the piston in length somewhat greater than the movement thereof and engages a gear J, carried free on the shaft Q, so that it can be rotated back and forth on the shaft by the rack as it is reciprocated back and forth by the piston. On the opposite side the rack J is supported by a bearing-roll Q mounted by ball-bearing upon the flange Q of the shaft Q. Upon the opposite side the gear J engages a rack T, similar to the rack J The rack T is also supported by a friction-roll T bearing on the side of the rack opposite to the gear and which roll is carried freely on a shaft revoluble in the case E.
Upon the upper end of the rack T and fast thereto is a weight T,of any convenient shape, and this weight is guided by a frictionroll T carried nearthe upper end thereof and revolving unrestrained by the weight. Throughout its reciprocation the roll T bears and. runs upon the interior of the tube E, which surrounds the counterweight and which tube is fast at its lower end in a raised boss of the case E. It is obvious that as the piston reciprocates the gear J turns back and forth with it and also that the counterweight has an equal and opposite motion imparted to it by the said gear. This being so, the engine is balanced from shaking when the counter weight is made equal to the weight of the piston and one-half the Weight of the spring K added. I find in practice this construction gives a suiiiciently-pertect balance for all ordinary uses. sult'be desired, the counterweight may be located on the bottom end of the rack T and offset therefrom, so that it moves back and forth in the axis of the cylinder, or two counterweigh'ts, one on each side of the cylinder and each of one-half the normal weight, may be used, each offset from its rack, so that the cylinder F is brought on a straight line between them.
Should a still more perfect re- 7 Now as a matter of improved construction the gear J 4 is carried on the shaft Q by ballbearings which revolve on the cones 7t and 7c, fast on the shaft at the ends of the gear, and the outside cups are fast in the sleeve J upon and structurally a part of which the gear J is. I communicate rotary motion to the shaft Q by means of a ratchetwheel screwed fast thereon, and a pawl S, carried by a pawl-carrier J oscillated back and forth by and with the gear J. This pawl-carrier is borne upon ball-bearings formed upon the exteriors of the cone-piece 7c and the ratchet k screwed firmly against the same, and the cup is formed by a groove made in the interior of the pawl-carrier J Motion is given to the pawl-carrier J by pins J and J", extending from the said pawl-carrier and the gear J (see Fig. 3) and engaging each other. For its present purpose the pawl S might just as well be carried directly by the gear J as the carrier J has no motion distinct therefrom. The pawl is made to engage the teeth of the ratchet by a spring 8 on one motion and slide over them on the reverse. The shaftQ is carried at one end in ball-bearings in a case 70 carried by the spider Q which is screwed into the case E by the thread h, and at the other end within the bearing-case U, which is strained into the case E by screws, as u. The shaft Q is carried at one end in a spider Q, screwing by threads at it into and at the other in a boss raised from the case E. Over the spiders I place a cap-plate E held by screws 6.
Other means than the ratchet and pawl may be used to rotate the shaft-as, for instance, the common crank and connecting-rod-and other means than the gear J may be used to connect the piston and counterweight-as, for instance, a lever pivoted in the center and having a connecting-rod at one end reaching to the piston and another at the other end reaching to the counterweight-and other means of guiding the rack-stems of the piston and counterweight may be usedas, for instance, a plain block bearing against them where now are the friction-rolls Q and T If so desired, the case E may be provided with the usual flanged base for resting upon a foundation; butI have shown it with a seat at B by which also it may be attached to a pedestal or other support if it is desired so to do.
I disclaim any and all matter herein shown and described, but claimed in my application of January 18, 1897, Serial No. 619,545, and of which this application is a division.
Having thus fully described my invention, I claim and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States- 1. The combination in an explosion-engine of the gear J 4 engaged by the piston as specified, and the counterbalance T having an antifriction-roll T and connected with the said gear J by a rack.
ceaeei 2. The combination of the gear J engaged by the piston as specified, the counterbalance T, and its rack T and a roll bearing against the back of the rack to keep it in engagement with the said gear.
3. The combination in an explosion-engine of the piston J, the spring K, the rack J the gear J and the rack T bearing a counterbalance, as and for the purposes described.
4. In an explosive-engine, the combination with an explosion-cylinder, of a free flying piston therein, an equilibrating weight or counterbalance having a free rectilinear movement parallel with and opposite to that of said piston, a main shaft operatively connected with and intermittently rotated by said piston, and a freely-rotatable gear-wheel mounted on said main shaft and interconnecting said piston and weight; whereby movement of said piston will impart a reverse movement to said weight.
5. In an explosive-engine, the combination with an explosion-cylinder, of a free flying piston therein, an equilibrating weight or counterbalance having a free rectilinear movement parallel with and opposite to that of said piston, a main shaft operatively con nected with and intermittently rotated by said piston, a freely-rotatable gear-wheel mounted on said main shaft and interconnecting said piston and weight; whereby movement of said piston will impart a reverse movement to said weight, and a spring to resist the flight of said piston and coact with said counterbalance.
6. The combination in an explosion-engine of the piston, the spring K, the rack J the gear J and the rack T bearing a counterbalance, and means of converting the reciproeating motion of the piston'to rotary motion.
7. The combination in an explosion-engine of the piston, the spring K, the rack J the gear J the rack T bearing the counterbalance T and a ratchet 70 connected to a shaft as Q, and a pawl as S engaging with said ratchet.
8. In an explosive-engine, the combination with an explosion-cylinder, of a free flying piston therein, an equilibrating weight or counterbalance mounted in parallelism with said piston and having reverse rectilinear movements relative thereto, a rotary shaft between said piston. and counterbalance, a gear-wheel loosely mounted on said shaft and connecting said piston and counterbalance so as to impart the movements of the one to the other in opposite directions, and a clutch fixed on said shaft and so connected with said gear-wheel and piston as that intermittentimpulses are imparted to the said rotary shaft.
HERBERT B. STEELE.
Witnesses:
F. F. RAYMOND, 2d, J. M; DOLAN.
US644177A 1897-01-18 1897-07-12 Counterbalance for explosion-engines. Expired - Lifetime US662631A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US644177A US662631A (en) 1897-01-18 1897-07-12 Counterbalance for explosion-engines.

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US1897619545A 1897-01-18 1897-01-18
US644177A US662631A (en) 1897-01-18 1897-07-12 Counterbalance for explosion-engines.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US662631A true US662631A (en) 1900-11-27

Family

ID=2731194

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US644177A Expired - Lifetime US662631A (en) 1897-01-18 1897-07-12 Counterbalance for explosion-engines.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US662631A (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3610217A (en) * 1969-10-21 1971-10-05 Anton Braun Balanced-free piston engine
US3610216A (en) * 1969-11-14 1971-10-05 Anton Braun Balanced-free piston engine
US3610214A (en) * 1970-01-30 1971-10-05 Anton Braun Unsymmetrical, double-acting free piston engine
US3859966A (en) * 1973-02-16 1975-01-14 Anton Braun Linear balanced free piston machines
DE3627184A1 (en) * 1986-08-11 1988-02-18 Albert Wagner Two-stroke diesel engines with opposing free pistons and buffer chambers
WO2012020184A1 (en) * 2010-08-12 2012-02-16 Etudes Constructions Metalliques Et Mecqniques (E.C.M.M.) Force transmission device for a piston engine, and piston engine comprising such a device

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3610217A (en) * 1969-10-21 1971-10-05 Anton Braun Balanced-free piston engine
US3610216A (en) * 1969-11-14 1971-10-05 Anton Braun Balanced-free piston engine
US3610214A (en) * 1970-01-30 1971-10-05 Anton Braun Unsymmetrical, double-acting free piston engine
US3859966A (en) * 1973-02-16 1975-01-14 Anton Braun Linear balanced free piston machines
DE3627184A1 (en) * 1986-08-11 1988-02-18 Albert Wagner Two-stroke diesel engines with opposing free pistons and buffer chambers
WO2012020184A1 (en) * 2010-08-12 2012-02-16 Etudes Constructions Metalliques Et Mecqniques (E.C.M.M.) Force transmission device for a piston engine, and piston engine comprising such a device
FR2963805A1 (en) * 2010-08-12 2012-02-17 Const Metalliques Et Mecaniques E C M M Et EFFORT TRANSMISSION DEVICE FOR A PISTON ENGINE AND PISTON MOTOR COMPRISING SUCH A DEVICE

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US662631A (en) Counterbalance for explosion-engines.
KR900005949B1 (en) Balancing device for press
US460642A (en) Variable crank-motion
US637450A (en) Gasolene-engine.
US4109539A (en) Dynamic power booster
DE50305235D1 (en) Drive system for a cold pilger mill
US1147896A (en) Mechanical movement.
US1207429A (en) Means for equalizing piston displacement.
US1309257A (en) Martens
CN207879467U (en) Eccentric gear gear ring type variable compression ratio engine
US20100117462A1 (en) Damper Power-Generating System
US4004469A (en) Piston-crank mechanism for internal combustion engines
GB2306578A (en) Vibration compensation for IC engine - uses balance weights and compensation weights moving in different planes on single balancing shaft
DE3169038D1 (en) Directional vibrator
US1762860A (en) Balancer for reciprocating engines
US2263647A (en) Internal combustion engine
JPS57173655A (en) Oscillating stroke adjusting device in oscillating motion mechanism
US773900A (en) Mechanical movement.
US1243522A (en) Internal-combustion engine.
US670383A (en) Ratchet device.
Goodeve The elements of mechanism
US417966A (en) Arnold willmer
US419836A (en) david p
US100592A (en) Improvement in redttcing-g-ear for steam-engine indicators
US689955A (en) Stamp mill or battery.