US675085A - Corn-shocker. - Google Patents

Corn-shocker. Download PDF

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Publication number
US675085A
US675085A US4138000A US1900041380A US675085A US 675085 A US675085 A US 675085A US 4138000 A US4138000 A US 4138000A US 1900041380 A US1900041380 A US 1900041380A US 675085 A US675085 A US 675085A
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post
corn
shock
shocker
platform
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US4138000A
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Thomas P Corwin
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01DHARVESTING; MOWING
    • A01D45/00Harvesting of standing crops
    • A01D45/02Harvesting of standing crops of maize, i.e. kernel harvesting

Definitions

  • Patented may 2s, 190
  • Thisinvention seeks to provide a simple and inexpensive apparatus by the use of which the formation and discharge of shocks will be expedited.
  • Figure l is a side elevation of my improved corn-shocker with parts in section.
  • Fig. 2 is a plan view of the same
  • Fig. 3 is a detail sectional view showing the manner of mounting the lower end of the shocking-post and taken at right angles to the plane of the section shown in Fig. l.
  • a platform A which is mounted on casterwheels B, upon which it runs over the iield.
  • the platform A may be of any convenient material or of any preferred shape.
  • a vertical shaft D At the center of the platform I journal a vertical shaft D, the upper end of which is secured rigidly in a table E, at the center of the same.
  • This table is provided at or near its edge with a series of rollers F,which run upon a track G on the platform, the said track being supported slightly above the surface of the platform to permit the driving sprocket-chain H to pass to the sprocket-wheel I on the said shaft D.
  • motion is imparted to the sprocketchain H by a pinion or sprocket-wheel J on the lower end of a vertical driving-shaft K, mounted on the platform and provided at its upper end with an operating leve1'andratchet mechanism, as indicated at L, the ratchet-wheel being secured on the shaft K, while the pawl is carried by a lever which is loosely mounted on said shaft, so as to swing on the same as a center.
  • I erect the shockingi post which consists of a lower hollow member M and an upper member N, telescoping in the lower member.
  • a pawl O On the side of the lower member is a pawl O, which plays in a slot or opening in the side of the said member, to engage a notch Pin the upper member and thereby hold the said upper member in any desired position, according to the height of the corn being harvested.
  • 'Phe lower end of the lower member is provided with trnnnions Q, by means of which it is pivoted or hinged between suitable brackets rising from the table, and it is held normally in an upright position by means of a spring R, which is secured on the table and plays in a recess S therein and bears upward against the lower end of the member M.
  • the swinging crane T consisting, essentially, of a vertical rotary post and an inwardly-extending arm carried by the upper end of the post.
  • rlhe post is,as clearly shown ,mou n ted in antifriction-bearings and is suitably braced.
  • pulleys or guide-rollers U On the upper end of the post and at the free end of the arm are pulleys or guide-rollers U, over which passes a hoisting-rope V, one end of which is attached to a dru'm or windlass W, secured on the post and operated by means of a lever-and-ratchet mechanism or other suitable devices, as shown at X.
  • the free end of the rope depends from the end of the arm of the crane and carries a hook Y, which is engaged by a ring Z at the upper ends of short ropes @,eXtending upward from the arms Z) of a shock-lifting spider, which is adapted to rest upon an annular shoulder c at the upper end of the shocking-post during the formation of the shock.
  • Two of the arms of this spider are preferably hinged, as shown at d, to facilitate the disengagement of the spider from the shock after the shock has been discharged from the platform.
  • the machine is hauled over the field in rear and to one side of the corn-harvester, and as the sheaves are cut and fed to the rear of the corn-harvester they are taken up by an operator and placed against the shocking-post and within the arms of the spider, ribs or rails e being provided on the table to prevent the sheaf from falling down.
  • the table is rotated so as to bring the next empty space into convenient reach of the operator and the sheaves placed in all of said spaces until the quantity necessary to form a shock has been gathered.
  • the table may, however, he rotated continuously and all the spaces filled simultaneously.
  • the shock is then tied and the Windlass and crane operated tolift the shock and swing it to one side, the shockingpost swinging down on its pivot or hinge as the shock is carried to the side, as indicated by the dotted lines in Fig. 2.
  • the shock is free of the shocking-post it is lowered to the ⁇ ground and the lifting-spider may be then readily disengaged therefrom by folding the hinged arms and sliding the other arms from the shock.
  • the spider is then fitted on the end of the shocking-post and the post restored to its upright position, after which the operation is repeated and another shock formed.
  • the table is preferably rotated by the manual operation of the lever-and-ratchet mechanism L, as the movement of the table is then Within the control of the operator; but it may be driven directly from the front ground-Wheel of the corn-harvester by means of a chain or belt and suitable gearing, asindicated in dotted lines at f.
  • a corn-shocker comprising a table, a shocking-post pivotally mounted on the table, and a spring secured on the table and bearing against the end of the post to hold the same normally upright.
  • a corn-shocker comprising a platform, a rotary table mounted thereon, means for rorating the table, a telescopic post pivotally mounted on the table, a crane mounted on the platform, and a shock-lifting spider car'-v ried by the crane and adapted to be removably Iitted on the upper end of the telescopic post.

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  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Environmental Sciences (AREA)
  • Catching Or Destruction (AREA)

Description

No. 675,085. Patented may 2s, 190|.
T. P. coRwlN.
CORN SHOCKER.
(Application led Dec. 28, 1900.) (No Model.) 2 Shets-Sheet 2.
UNrTnD STATES PATENT OFFICE.
THOMAS P. CORWIN, OF YELVER'ION, OHIO.
CORN-SHOCKER.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 675,085, dated May 2e, 1901.
` Application liled December 28, 1900. Serial No. 41,380. (No model.)
T0 (if/ZZ whom, it 17m/7,1 concern: A
Be it known that I, THOMAS P. CoRwIN, a citizen of the United States, residing at Yelverton, in the count-y of Hardin and State ot Ohio, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Oorn-Shockers, of which the following is a full, clear, and exact specification.
Thisinvention seeks to provide a simple and inexpensive apparatus by the use of which the formation and discharge of shocks will be expedited.
It consists in certain novel features hereinafter described and claimed.
In the accompanying drawings, which fully illustrate my invent-ion, Figure lis a side elevation of my improved corn-shocker with parts in section. Fig. 2 is a plan view of the same, and Fig. 3 is a detail sectional view showing the manner of mounting the lower end of the shocking-post and taken at right angles to the plane of the section shown in Fig. l.
In carrying out my invention I employ a platform A, which is mounted on casterwheels B, upon which it runs over the iield. The platform A may be of any convenient material or of any preferred shape. At the center of the platform I journal a vertical shaft D, the upper end of which is secured rigidly in a table E, at the center of the same. This table is provided at or near its edge with a series of rollers F,which run upon a track G on the platform, the said track being supported slightly above the surface of the platform to permit the driving sprocket-chain H to pass to the sprocket-wheel I on the said shaft D. In the preferred form of the apparatus motion is imparted to the sprocketchain H by a pinion or sprocket-wheel J on the lower end of a vertical driving-shaft K, mounted on the platform and provided at its upper end with an operating leve1'andratchet mechanism, as indicated at L, the ratchet-wheel being secured on the shaft K, while the pawl is carried by a lever which is loosely mounted on said shaft, so as to swing on the same as a center. On the upper side of the table, at the center of the same, I erect the shockingi post, which consists of a lower hollow member M and an upper member N, telescoping in the lower member. On the side of the lower member is a pawl O, which plays in a slot or opening in the side of the said member, to engage a notch Pin the upper member and thereby hold the said upper member in any desired position, according to the height of the corn being harvested. 'Phe lower end of the lower member is provided with trnnnions Q, by means of which it is pivoted or hinged between suitable brackets rising from the table, and it is held normally in an upright position by means of a spring R, which is secured on the table and plays in a recess S therein and bears upward against the lower end of the member M.
On the platform A at a proper point for the convenient operation of the machine I erect the swinging crane T, consisting, essentially, of a vertical rotary post and an inwardly-extending arm carried by the upper end of the post. rlhe post is,as clearly shown ,mou n ted in antifriction-bearings and is suitably braced. On the upper end of the post and at the free end of the arm are pulleys or guide-rollers U, over which passes a hoisting-rope V, one end of which is attached to a dru'm or windlass W, secured on the post and operated by means of a lever-and-ratchet mechanism or other suitable devices, as shown at X. The free end of the rope depends from the end of the arm of the crane and carries a hook Y, which is engaged by a ring Z at the upper ends of short ropes @,eXtending upward from the arms Z) of a shock-lifting spider, which is adapted to rest upon an annular shoulder c at the upper end of the shocking-post during the formation of the shock. Two of the arms of this spider are preferably hinged, as shown at d, to facilitate the disengagement of the spider from the shock after the shock has been discharged from the platform.
The construction and arrangement of the several parts of the apparatus being thus made known, it is thought the operation will be readily understood.
The machine is hauled over the field in rear and to one side of the corn-harvester, and as the sheaves are cut and fed to the rear of the corn-harvester they are taken up by an operator and placed against the shocking-post and within the arms of the spider, ribs or rails e being provided on the table to prevent the sheaf from falling down. As the ICO spaces of the spider are lled the table is rotated so as to bring the next empty space into convenient reach of the operator and the sheaves placed in all of said spaces until the quantity necessary to form a shock has been gathered. The table may, however, he rotated continuously and all the spaces filled simultaneously. The shock is then tied and the Windlass and crane operated tolift the shock and swing it to one side, the shockingpost swinging down on its pivot or hinge as the shock is carried to the side, as indicated by the dotted lines in Fig. 2. After the shock is free of the shocking-post it is lowered to the` ground and the lifting-spider may be then readily disengaged therefrom by folding the hinged arms and sliding the other arms from the shock. The spider is then fitted on the end of the shocking-post and the post restored to its upright position, after which the operation is repeated and another shock formed. The table is preferably rotated by the manual operation of the lever-and-ratchet mechanism L, as the movement of the table is then Within the control of the operator; but it may be driven directly from the front ground-Wheel of the corn-harvester by means of a chain or belt and suitable gearing, asindicated in dotted lines at f.
Other modifications may be made in the minor details Without involving a departure from the invention.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is-
l. A corn-shocker comprising a table, a shocking-post pivotally mounted on the table, and a spring secured on the table and bearing against the end of the post to hold the same normally upright.
2. A corn-shocker comprisinga platform, a rotary table mounted thereon, means for rorating the table, a telescopic post pivotally mounted on the table, a crane mounted on the platform, and a shock-lifting spider car'-v ried by the crane and adapted to be removably Iitted on the upper end of the telescopic post.
In testimony whereof I have signed this Y
US4138000A 1900-12-28 1900-12-28 Corn-shocker. Expired - Lifetime US675085A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2578092A (en) * 1949-06-01 1951-12-11 Edward H Rehn Corn shocker with divided former

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2578092A (en) * 1949-06-01 1951-12-11 Edward H Rehn Corn shocker with divided former

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