US68240A - Improvement in wool-packers - Google Patents

Improvement in wool-packers Download PDF

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US68240A
US68240A US68240DA US68240A US 68240 A US68240 A US 68240A US 68240D A US68240D A US 68240DA US 68240 A US68240 A US 68240A
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cylinder
sack
wool
improvement
rack
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N1/00Sampling; Preparing specimens for investigation
    • G01N1/02Devices for withdrawing samples
    • G01N1/10Devices for withdrawing samples in the liquid or fluent state
    • G01N1/18Devices for withdrawing samples in the liquid or fluent state with provision for splitting samples into portions

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  • ABSALOM SAEGER OF MEADVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA. Letters Patent lVo. 68,240, elated August 27, 1867.
  • Figure 1 is a side view of my machine in a position ready for packing.
  • A is a'cylinder of iron or other suitable material, in which the wool is placed to be packed.
  • this cylinder is filled it is then'turned on a pin, O, in the position shown, Figure 2.
  • Figure 5 shows a rnck-cylinder, (see G, iig. 1.)
  • This cylinder is constructed of seven staves, four of which are shown, 1 2 3 4. There muy-be more or less thanv seven stares, only it is better to have an unequal number, so that a space on one side of. the cylinder may he opposite a stave on the other, for reasons hereinafter set forth.
  • Over this l'aclocylinder the wool-sack K11 is drawn, with the closed end towards A. Over this sack is placed the rubber band N, to hold the' sack in its place.
  • the rack-cylinder G is now placed in the machinein the position shown, figs. 1 and 2.
  • the cylinder A is now turned in theposition shown in fig.
  • This bevel offers a slight resista-nce to the wool, as the opening of the hoop is smaller than the inside of the cylinder'A; and as the wool passes through this hoop it suddenly expands in the bag or sack, pressing-the sack out between the stavesl 2 34 of the rack-cylinder G; and the inside of the hoop WV having a perpendiculaisurface to oppose its expansion towards A, the wool, by this means, is retained in the sack, when the follower is thrown back to have the cylinder A refilled.
  • Figure 3 shows the bottom of the frame, ou which rack-cylinder G rests, with the wheels D D and pinions and cranks on each side of the machine.
  • 8 9- are two rollers, and 6 7, fig. 4, two corresponding rollers in theV hoop W, which rest on each other with the wool-sack between when the sack is drawn over the rackcylinder G. This will permit the wool-sack to move freely as it is drawn by the pressure of the wool into the inside of the rack-cylinder G.

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  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
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Description

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ABSALOM SAEGER, OF MEADVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA. Letters Patent lVo. 68,240, elated August 27, 1867.
IMPROVEMENT IN WOOL-PACKRSl dige .ttehule ontzet tu iutlgrsretters ntent admitting pmt nf tige time.
TO ALL WHOM IT HAY CONCERN:
vBe it known that I, ABSALO-M SARGER, of the city of Meadville-V, in the county of Crawford, State of Penn- Sylvania, have invent'cda new Improvement to a Wool-Packer invented and patented by me, which patent bears the date of February 20, 1866; and I do hereby'vdeclare that the following is a full and exact description of the same, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, and the letters of reference marked thereon. I
Figure 1 is a side view of my machine in a position ready for packing.
A is a'cylinder of iron or other suitable material, in which the wool is placed to be packed. When this cylinder is filled it is then'turned on a pin, O, in the position shown, Figure 2.
Figure 5 shows a rnck-cylinder, (see G, iig. 1.) This cylinder is constructed of seven staves, four of which are shown, 1 2 3 4. There muy-be more or less thanv seven stares, only it is better to have an unequal number, so that a space on one side of. the cylinder may he opposite a stave on the other, for reasons hereinafter set forth. Over this l'aclocylinder the wool-sack K11 is drawn, with the closed end towards A. Over this sack is placed the rubber band N, to hold the' sack in its place. The rack-cylinder G is now placed in the machinein the position shown, figs. 1 and 2. The cylinder A is now turned in theposition shown in fig. 2, the cogged rack B dropping on the pinion-wheel E, on which is a crank, F. This pinion E gears into a larger wheel, D. This wheelis o n a shaft, which passes under th'e cylinder G, with a similar wheel on its other end, and a similar pinion toE; also a similar cogged rack, B; z'. c., both sides of thc machine are constructed exactly alike.
There is a sl-ot, m, running lengthwise of the packing-cylinder' A, (see fig. 2,) (2'. e., one on both sidcs,) with a. follower, Figure 11. To this follower the rack B is attached; also the one on the opposite side. This follower is smaller than the diameter of the cylinder A, and is drawn through the said cylinder by the racks B and pinions E. This forces theV wool into the sack H K, fig. 1 showing the sack half filled.
All this is in the manner described in my former patent of February 20, 1866. In fact my machine herein described is very similar to my former one, only diii'ering as follows, to wit: In my first machine it was found that, when the packing-cylinder was one-e discharged into the sack H K, and was thrown into the position shown, fig. 1, to be again refilled, the wool would not stay packed, i. e., it would expand towards the mouth of the sack. This is remedied by the following construction, to wit: The hoop W, fig. 5, is constructed with a bevel on its outer end, as shown by the dotted lines at W, so that the follower, 'Figure 12, will tit closely therein. This bevel offers a slight resista-nce to the wool, as the opening of the hoop is smaller than the inside of the cylinder'A; and as the wool passes through this hoop it suddenly expands in the bag or sack, pressing-the sack out between the stavesl 2 34 of the rack-cylinder G; and the inside of the hoop WV having a perpendiculaisurface to oppose its expansion towards A, the wool, by this means, is retained in the sack, when the follower is thrown back to have the cylinder A refilled. It is this principle of construction that renders the machine successful in its operations, as `by this means the wool is packed in the cylinder A; and when received in the sack it expands by forcing the sack between the staves 1 2 3 4, andis thusretained in a packcdcondition.
When the'sack is filled, as shown fig. 2, and before the cylinder A is removed, a pin of steel, S, Figure 6,
is thrust through two holes in the hoop W, (see Figure 4,) and also through the sack I-I K, as shown at S, iig. 2.
This holds the wool in the sack; and 'when the cylinder A'is removed, and the mouth of the sack brought together andpinned or tied, the pin S is then with/drawn, and the sack filled is drawn from the back end of th machine. The rack-cylinder is then lifted from the frame', another sack placed thereon, and the operation renewed :is before.
Figure 3 shows the bottom of the frame, ou which rack-cylinder G rests, with the wheels D D and pinions and cranks on each side of the machine. 8 9- are two rollers, and 6 7, fig. 4, two corresponding rollers in theV hoop W, which rest on each other with the wool-sack between when the sack is drawn over the rackcylinder G. This will permit the wool-sack to move freely as it is drawn by the pressure of the wool into the inside of the rack-cylinder G.
What I claim as my invention, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is as follows, to wit:
The construction of the rackecylinder, fig. 5, in combination with the hoop W, constructed with its outer end b'evelled and larger than its inner end, in combination with the packing-cylinder A, the follower x, the pin S,- thc racks B, and the gear-wheels D and E, the-rollers 6 7, 8 9, when the same are constructed as described in the aforesaid combination, and for the purposes set forth.l
ABSALOM SAEGER.
Witnesses:
A. B. BIcHMoND, WM. Bm'rfrY.
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