US682428A - Station-indicator. - Google Patents

Station-indicator. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US682428A
US682428A US2702500A US1900027025A US682428A US 682428 A US682428 A US 682428A US 2702500 A US2702500 A US 2702500A US 1900027025 A US1900027025 A US 1900027025A US 682428 A US682428 A US 682428A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
shaft
pinion
brake
roller
cord
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
US2702500A
Inventor
Edwin Albertus Russell
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 US2702500A priority Critical patent/US682428A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US682428A publication Critical patent/US682428A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B61RAILWAYS
    • B61DBODY DETAILS OR KINDS OF RAILWAY VEHICLES
    • B61D41/00Indicators for reserved seats; Warning or like signs; Devices or arrangements in connection with tickets, e.g. ticket holders; Holders for cargo tickets or the like

Definitions

  • FIG. 1 is a front view of the apparatus, the front of the containing-case being cut away and parts of the apparatus broken out to show other parts more clearly.
  • Fig. 2 is a vertical section on line m 00 of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 3 is a vertical section on line m 00 of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 4 is an enlarged perspective view of the preferred form of contact-shoe used by me
  • Fig. 5 is a diagram- Q matical illustration of the reversing mechanism.
  • the apparatus is inclosed in a casing 1, having a sight-opening 2, which may be protected by a pane of glass, as shown in Fig. 2.
  • the names of the streets or stations are printed upon a belt 3, which winds on and off of two rollers l and 5, journaled in the casing.
  • the rollers are so located that one of the names appearing on the belt will come opposite the sight-opening 2 at each position of rest of the mechanism.
  • the rollers 4t and 5 are alternately rotated, so as to wind the belt 3 off of one and onto the other and then in the opposite direction by means of gearing (best shown in Figs.
  • Intermittent motion may be given to the driving-shaft 10 in any one of a number of ways; but I preferablyem ploy an electric-motorapparatus,which may be of the construction shown, in which a double solenoid 15 has a double core or armature 16 006 peratin g therewith, to which armature a flexible cord or v band 17 is connected, the other end thereof being wound upon and fastened to a drum 18 on the driving-shaft 10.
  • a second cord or band 19 is fastened to said drum 18, being wound thereon in an opposite direction to that in which the cord 17is Wound, and the other end of the second cord 19 is connected to any suitable spring 20,which is supported from the casing, as by the screw-eye 21.
  • Athird cord 22 is wound upon and fastened to the drum 18, being wound thereon in the same direction as is the motor-cord 17.
  • This third cord 22 preferably extends through an opening in p the casing at the back and has a handle 23 attached to its free end in a position to be conveniently grasped by the conductor or other operator.
  • I preferably employ a system of brakes for the rollers 4t and 5 which will limit-their revolution to a definite amount on each pull of the motor-cord.
  • One form of such brake (illustrated in the drawings) consists of the brake-wheels 23 23, attached to the pinion 7 and the reversing-pinion 8, respectively.
  • Each of these brake-wheels has a series of recesses or notches 24* 24c spaced at regular intervals about the periphery.
  • Brake-levers 25 25 are pivoted to the main frame or casing and have projections 26 26% adapted to engage with the recesses 24. 24.
  • These brake-levers are springpressed by the springs 27 27 in a direction to produce such engagement. Normally, however, these levers are 3 and 4t.
  • the current for intermittently exciting the solenoid 15 may be derived frointhe motorcurrent of the car in any one of a number of manners; but I preferably employ a contactshoe 29, supported from the trolley wireand hanger 3,0 and having a vertical portion 31 bent outwardly at the ends, as shown in Figs. This shoe cooperates with a spring contact-piece 32, carried by one fork 33 of the trolley-pole 34c. 35 represents the trolley-wire in cross-section, and 36 is the usual trolley-wheel cooperating therewith.
  • the method of operation of my invention is as follows:-One of the contact-shoes 29 is placed on a hanger 30 near each of the streets or stations whose names are printed on the belt 3, said shoe being in electric connection with the trolley-wire 35. As the car comes along the spring con tact-piece 32 rubs against the inner face 31 of the shoe 20 and the cur rent is carried down through a conductor 37 and through the solenoid 15 to the ground connection in any convenient manner. The solenoid 15 being excited pulls upon the core 16, which causes the motor-cord 17 to unwind 'from the drum 18, giving the driving-shaft 10 a partial rotation. This rotation is transmitted to the gear 9 through the pawl 12 and with the parts arranged in the position shown in Fig.
  • the advantages of my invention comprise its simplicity in reversing action, arising from the fact that the mechanism can be reversed by merelyshifting the motor-shaft 10, as described, and this shifting action is rendered possible without disengaging the connections by the use of the flexible motorcords shown; also, the certainty of action arising from the brake system, which insures the exactlycorrect length of belt being moved at each operation and keeps the portion of the belt between two rollers taut. Furthermore, the possibility of setting the indicator by hand or advancing it a sufficient distance to have it catch up in case one or more of the.
  • contact-shoes fails to act prevents the entire disarrangement of the apparatus by any such accident.
  • the contact arrangement shown, by which the contact-strip is carried by one fork of the trolley-pole, is also particularly compact and does not add any unsightly at tachment to the present trolley apparatus.
  • the combination of the station indicator for electric cars consisting of a belt with names printed thereon, and two rollers from one to the other of which the belt may be wound, means by which said rollers may be automatically rotated at intervals by a shuntcurrent from the motor-circuit of the car, and means whereby the said rollers may be operated by hand
  • said first-mentioned means consisting of an electromagnet and armature, a shaft, apparatus by which the rectilinear motion of the armature isconverted into a rotary movementof the shaft, and a ratchet wheel and pawl connection from the shaft to one of the rollers
  • said last-mentioned means consists of a cord wound around the shaft and having a free end adapted to be grasped by the operator.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Transportation (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Braking Arrangements (AREA)

Description

No. 682,428. Patntedfiept. l0, I90I.
E. A. RUSSELL.
STATION INDICATOR.
(Application filed Aug. 16. 1900.)
2 Sheets-Shad l.
INVENTOR, Cabin/A ficmseZZ,
ATTORNEY (No Model.)
No. 682,428. Patented Sept. I0, I90I. E. A. RUSSELL.
STATION INDICATOR.
(Application filed Aug. 16, 1900.) (No Model.) 2 Sheets-Sheet 2.
WITNESSLESK'L I INVENTOB,
EdwmAJPumeZZ,
MMf 27 7 ATTORNEY EEicE.
PATENT EDYVIN ALBERTUS RUSSELL, OF NEl/VARK, OHIO.
STATION-INDICATOR.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 682,428, dated September 10, 1901.
Application filed August 16, 1900. Serial No. 27,025. (No model.)
and positively-operated form of mechanism for producing this result on cars operated by electricity.
My invention further presents certain points of advantage which will be more fully described hereinafter.
The preferred form of apparatus embody- I ing my invention is illustrated in the accompanying two sheets of drawings, in which- Figure 1 is a front view of the apparatus, the front of the containing-case being cut away and parts of the apparatus broken out to show other parts more clearly. Fig. 2 is a vertical section on line m 00 of Fig. 1. Fig. 3
is a detail View of the upper end of the trolley-pole with a portion of the trolley wire and hanger, showing the preferred form of apparatus for producing the electrical contact to operate my apparatus. Fig. 4 is an enlarged perspective view of the preferred form of contact-shoe used by me, and Fig. 5 is a diagram- Q matical illustration of the reversing mechanism.
Throughout the drawings like reference figures indicate like parts.
The apparatus is inclosed in a casing 1, having a sight-opening 2, which may be protected by a pane of glass, as shown in Fig. 2. The names of the streets or stations are printed upon a belt 3, which winds on and off of two rollers l and 5, journaled in the casing. The rollers are so located that one of the names appearing on the belt will come opposite the sight-opening 2 at each position of rest of the mechanism. The rollers 4t and 5 are alternately rotated, so as to wind the belt 3 off of one and onto the other and then in the opposite direction by means of gearing (best shown in Figs. 1 and 2) comprising the pinion 6 on the roller 4 and pinion 7 on the roller 5, the reversing-pinion 8,anr the driving-gear 9, which is carried on a drivingshaft 10, but is loosely mounted thereon, its motion being given to it by means of the ratchet-crank 11, carried by said shaft 10, and the pawl 12, carried by said crank. The driving-shaft 10 and the gear 9 are capable of being so shifted that the gear will engage with the pinion 7 or the reversing-pinion 8, and this is preferably accomplished by journaling the cone-shaped end of the shaft 10 in an eccentric journal-bearing 13, controlled by the lever 14. (See Fig. 5.)
Intermittent motion may be given to the driving-shaft 10 in any one of a number of ways; but I preferablyem ploy an electric-motorapparatus,which may be of the construction shown, in which a double solenoid 15 has a double core or armature 16 006 peratin g therewith, to which armature a flexible cord or v band 17 is connected, the other end thereof being wound upon and fastened to a drum 18 on the driving-shaft 10. A second cord or band 19 is fastened to said drum 18, being wound thereon in an opposite direction to that in which the cord 17is Wound, and the other end of the second cord 19 is connected to any suitable spring 20,which is supported from the casing, as by the screw-eye 21. Athird cord 22 is wound upon and fastened to the drum 18, being wound thereon in the same direction as is the motor-cord 17. This third cord 22 preferably extends through an opening in p the casing at the back and has a handle 23 attached to its free end in a position to be conveniently grasped by the conductor or other operator.
I preferably employ a system of brakes for the rollers 4t and 5 which will limit-their revolution to a definite amount on each pull of the motor-cord. One form of such brake (illustrated in the drawings) consists of the brake-wheels 23 23, attached to the pinion 7 and the reversing-pinion 8, respectively. Each of these brake-wheels has a series of recesses or notches 24* 24c spaced at regular intervals about the periphery. Brake-levers 25 25 are pivoted to the main frame or casing and have projections 26 26% adapted to engage with the recesses 24. 24. These brake-levers are springpressed by the springs 27 27 in a direction to produce such engagement. Normally, however, these levers are 3 and 4t.
-wheels 23 23.
held out of engagement by a double cam 28 on the driving-shaft. When said drivingshaft turns, the cams allow the brake-levers to press against the brake-wheels under the action of the springs 27 27, and when the pinions have turned far enough the projections 26 26 will drop into one of the notches 24 24 and prevent further rotation of the rollers and further movement of the belt 3.
The current for intermittently exciting the solenoid 15 may be derived frointhe motorcurrent of the car in any one of a number of manners; but I preferably employ a contactshoe 29, supported from the trolley wireand hanger 3,0 and having a vertical portion 31 bent outwardly at the ends, as shown in Figs. This shoe cooperates with a spring contact-piece 32, carried by one fork 33 of the trolley-pole 34c. 35 represents the trolley-wire in cross-section, and 36 is the usual trolley-wheel cooperating therewith.
The method of operation of my invention is as follows:-One of the contact-shoes 29 is placed on a hanger 30 near each of the streets or stations whose names are printed on the belt 3, said shoe being in electric connection with the trolley-wire 35. As the car comes along the spring con tact-piece 32 rubs against the inner face 31 of the shoe 20 and the cur rent is carried down through a conductor 37 and through the solenoid 15 to the ground connection in any convenient manner. The solenoid 15 being excited pulls upon the core 16, which causes the motor-cord 17 to unwind 'from the drum 18, giving the driving-shaft 10 a partial rotation. This rotation is transmitted to the gear 9 through the pawl 12 and with the parts arranged in the position shown in Fig. 2 is transmitted from said gear to the pinion 7 and the roller 5, causing a given length of the belt 3 to be wound onto the roller 5 and off of the roller 4, thus causing the name of one street or station to disappear a-nd that of the next one to appear. After the contact-strip 32 passes the shoe 29 the solenoid 15 becomes dead and the spring 20- reacts, pulling the shaft 10 back into its original position, the pawl 12 running idly over the teeth of the gear 9 and transmitting no motion thereto. When in this position of rest, the cam 28 holds the brake-levers in the position shown in full lines in Fig. 2, out of engagement with the brake-wheels. After the solenoid has pulled the shaft 10 around a little way, however, the cam releases the brake-levers and the projections 26 26 bear down upon the peripheries of the brake- Accordingly when the rotation of the parts has proceeded far enough to allow the said projections to drop into the next set of notches 245, which is the desired distance to cause a second street-name to ap pear, said projections on the brake-levers drop into said notches and check further movement of the belt. When the solenoid becomes dead, the spring 20 acts to pull the shaft back to its original position, the cam 28 lifts the gear 9 out of engagement with the pinion 7 and throws it into engagement with the reversing-pinion 8, which is in engagement with the pinion 6 on the roller 4. Accordingly every motor impulse, whether from the cord 17 or from the cord 22, will cause the roller 4 to wind the belt 3 up onto it and off from the other roller 5.
The advantages of my invention comprise its simplicity in reversing action, arising from the fact that the mechanism can be reversed by merelyshifting the motor-shaft 10, as described, and this shifting action is rendered possible without disengaging the connections by the use of the flexible motorcords shown; also, the certainty of action arising from the brake system, which insures the exactlycorrect length of belt being moved at each operation and keeps the portion of the belt between two rollers taut. Furthermore, the possibility of setting the indicator by hand or advancing it a sufficient distance to have it catch up in case one or more of the.
contact-shoes fails to act prevents the entire disarrangement of the apparatus by any such accident. The contact arrangement shown, by which the contact-strip is carried by one fork of the trolley-pole, is also particularly compact and does not add any unsightly at tachment to the present trolley apparatus.
Of course various changes could be. made in the details of construction shown in the drawings without departing from the spirit and scope of my invention so long as the underlying principles above described are preserved in the modified construction. The current might be taken from other forms of electric apparatus, the reversing-gear might be modified, and other motor apparatus substituted for that shown. The brake mechanism might be altered and other details of mechanism substituted. It may also at times be desirable to employ a bell as a means of attracting attention to the indicator at the moment the name of the street is changed; but as the construction and arrangement of such an addition are obvious and would not involve any change in either the mechanism orlzhe relation of parts I do not deem it nec- "essary'to illustrate or further describe the same.
Having, therefore, described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to protect by Letters Patent, is
1. The combination of the station indicator for electric cars consisting of a belt with names printed thereon, and two rollers from one to the other of which the belt may be wound, means by which said rollers may be automatically rotated at intervals by a shuntcurrent from the motor-circuit of the car, and means whereby the said rollers may be operated by hand, said first-mentioned means consisting of an electromagnet and armature, a shaft, apparatus by which the rectilinear motion of the armature isconverted into a rotary movementof the shaft, and a ratchet wheel and pawl connection from the shaft to one of the rollers, while said last-mentioned means consists of a cord wound around the shaft and having a free end adapted to be grasped by the operator.
2. The combination of the belt and roller, a pinion on said roller, a brake-wheel having recesses cut in its periphery at equal distances, a brakelever having a projection adapted to engage any one of said recesses, and spring-pressed in the direction to produce such engagement, a driving-shaft, a loose gear on said shaft meshing with the pinion, a crank and pawl carried by the shaft and adapted to rotate the gear-wheel in one 'direction, a cam on the driving-shaft which holds the brake lever out of engagement while the parts are at rest, but which allows the projection on the brake-lever to press against the periphery of the brake-wheel as soon as the parts have moved ashort distance, and means for giving the driving-shaft a frac tion of a rotation and then returning it to its original position of rest.
5. The combination of the two rollers and the pinion on each roller, the reversing-pinion meshing with the pinion on one roller, the driving-shaft having one end journaled in a shifting bearing, the gear-wheel carried by and rotated from the driving-shaft and adapted to mesh with the pinion on one roller or the reversing-pinion geared to the other roller according as the shaft-bearing is shifted, the drum on the shaft, the motor apparatus, the cord wound on the drum and connected to the motor apparatus,- and the second cord wound in the opposite direction on the drum and having its other end connected to a spring.
4. The combination of the two rollers and the belt wound in opposite directions thereon, the pinion on each roller, the reversing-pinion meshing with the pinion on one roller, the driving-shaft having one end journaled in a shifting bearing, the gear-wheel carried by and rotated from the driving-shaft and adapted to mesh with the pinion on one roller or the reversing-pinion geared to the other roller according as the shaft-bearing is shift ed, the drum on the shaft, the motor apparatus, the cord wound on the drum and connected to the motor apparatus, and the second cord wound in the opposite direction on the drum and having its other end connected to a spring, together with the third cord wound on the drum in the same direction as the motor-cord and having a free end adapted to be grasped by the operator.
Signed at Newark this 27th day of July,
EDWIN ALBERTUS RUSSELL. Witnesses:
J. B. JONES, C. L. STURGEON.
US2702500A 1900-08-16 1900-08-16 Station-indicator. Expired - Lifetime US682428A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US2702500A US682428A (en) 1900-08-16 1900-08-16 Station-indicator.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US2702500A US682428A (en) 1900-08-16 1900-08-16 Station-indicator.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US682428A true US682428A (en) 1901-09-10

Family

ID=2750971

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US2702500A Expired - Lifetime US682428A (en) 1900-08-16 1900-08-16 Station-indicator.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US682428A (en)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US682428A (en) Station-indicator.
US1487409A (en) Station indicator
US257306A (en) Michael farley
US697308A (en) Street-indicator for street-cars.
US610844A (en) Station-indicator
US895308A (en) Constant-speed mechanism.
US1484493A (en) Portable light
US1205968A (en) Reversing-gear mechanism.
US941354A (en) Indicator.
US735944A (en) Street or station indicator.
US733053A (en) Electric advertising device and street-indicator.
US930318A (en) Indicator for cars.
US1315501A (en) Street-iitdicatob
US1108652A (en) Street and station indicator.
US1834700A (en) Advertising display device for elevators
US1148572A (en) Street and station annunciator.
US994530A (en) Street and station indicator.
US359329A (en) Station-indicator
US1346758A (en) Indicator
US514649A (en) Station-indicator
US583304A (en) goetz
US400327A (en) Noel b
US1083063A (en) Street or station indicator.
US291970A (en) James a
US1466067A (en) Selector for gear-shifting mechanism