US688656A - Mechanism for rotating and locking shafts. - Google Patents

Mechanism for rotating and locking shafts. Download PDF

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Publication number
US688656A
US688656A US68800A US1900000688A US688656A US 688656 A US688656 A US 688656A US 68800 A US68800 A US 68800A US 1900000688 A US1900000688 A US 1900000688A US 688656 A US688656 A US 688656A
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Prior art keywords
shaft
pawl
arm
wheel
pin
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US68800A
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Daniel M Lester
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B61RAILWAYS
    • B61HBRAKES OR OTHER RETARDING DEVICES SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR RAIL VEHICLES; ARRANGEMENT OR DISPOSITION THEREOF IN RAIL VEHICLES
    • B61H13/00Actuating rail vehicle brakes
    • B61H13/02Hand or other personal actuation
    • 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
    • Y10T74/1558Grip units and features
    • Y10T74/1565Gripper releasing devices
    • Y10T74/1566Power pawl lifter
    • Y10T74/1568Automatic
    • Y10T74/1569Idle stroke
    • Y10T74/1571Cooperating holding pawl
    • 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
    • Y10T74/1558Grip units and features
    • Y10T74/1565Gripper releasing devices
    • Y10T74/1576Holding pawl lifter

Definitions

  • This invention is in envelop machinery of the class that includes an endless-chain drier; and my purpose is to provide simple but positively-acting mechanism for driving the actuating-shaft of such adrier with an intermittent rotary motion and for locking the said shaft against rotation during the desired periods of rest.
  • Machines of this class are operated ata high rate of speed, and the drierchain must therefore be fed forward and stopped one hundred or more times per minute, and unless positivelycontrolled the momentum of the heavy moving body tends to carry the chain past the proper stoppingpoint, thus preventing the folded envelops from dropping into the pockets between the fingers of the chain.
  • Figure 1 shows in elevation and principally in dotted lines one of the side frames of an envelop-machine having a portion of the chain drier in position therein and having my newly-invented mechanism properly applied thereto.
  • Figs. 2 and 3 show my newlyinvented' mechanism detached in elevation and plan views, respectively, and on a somewhat-enlarged scale.
  • Figs. dand 5 illustrate in elevation certain elements of said mechanism and the manner in which they operate.
  • Fig. 6 illustrates a certain detail of construction.
  • the letter a denotes the side frame of an envelop-n1achine, Z) the initial driving-shaft thereof, and c the above-mentioned chain-drier shaft, which lat ter, as well as the main shaft, is supported in suitable hearings in the frames
  • the lotter 62 denotes as a whole the said chain drier, which drier is made up of a number of frames or fingers hinged together by the wire pintles d.
  • a rocker-plate 6 having a pawlf pivotally secured to one side thereof and adapted to engage with its free end the teeth of a ratchetwheel g, fixedly mounted upon the shaft 0.
  • the ratchet-wheel g is provided with a hub g, to one end of which is secured a wheel 7L, having'a notched periphery, the said notches hein g denoted by the letter h and corresponding in number with the teeth of the ratchetwheel 9.
  • the notched wheel h is adapted to be engaged by an arm 70, the free end of which bears a projection in, which under certain conditions registers with the notches 7t, as is hereinafter described.
  • the arm may be pivotally secured to any suitable fixed portion of the machine, or, as shown in the drawings, it may be mounted on a stud m, projecting from the frame 66, and so as to support the said arm 70.
  • the pawl fand arm 76 have located in their confronting faces pins f respectively,which pins extend parallel with and overlap each other and under certain conditions are adapted to engage each other.
  • n denotes a link one end of which is pivotally secured to the rockerplate 6 and whose other end engages suitable mechanism whereby the plate a is rocked upon the shaft 0 to cause the pawlf to operate with the ratohet-wheel g.
  • the shaft 0 may be freely rotated, and such positions are assumed substantially simultaneously with the engagement of the pawl with the ratchet-teeth, after which the continued forward movement of the pawl f serves to rotate the said ratchet-wheel and shaft.
  • the pin 75 is shown as thus secured to the arm 70, the said pin being mounted upon a plate 79 which latter is secured to the arm by a screw passing through a slot 70 in said plate, thus permitting an adjustment of the plate and pin within the limits of the said slot.
  • the wheel it has located therein, on opposite sides and concentric with its center, slots 7L2 for the reception of screws h by means of which the wheel is secured to the hub g, thus permitting a rotary adjustment of the wheel it within the limits of the slots 71?.
  • 1 preferably bevel the forward corner of the lower face of said projection, as at 7.7", to allow the arm to drop slightly before a notch h becomes fully coincident with the projection 70, thus preventing the said notch from passing the projection.
  • my newly-invented mechanism acts positively to rotate a shaft with an intermittent motion and also to lock the same against accidental rotation during the intervals of rest between its movements, said locking mechanism doing away entirely with power-consuming drags now often provided, which drags are more or less uncertain in their action, and it will also be seen that my newly-invented mechanism maybe very cheaply produced and may be applied in many instances to machines already built without requiring material changes in such machines.
  • I claim 1 The combination of a revoluble shaft, a sleeve thereon provided with a ratchet-disk and a notched disk spaced from each other, a stop-lever and a pawl pivotally mounted and coacting respectively with the notched disk and the ratchet-disk and disposed parallel with each other, and laterally-extending pins or projections carried by said pawl and lever, the projection of the stop-lever being disposed in the path of the projection of the pawl, substantially as described.
  • mechanism for revolving said shaft with a step-by-step movement consisting of a pawl and ratchet
  • means for stopping and locking said'shaft consisting of a notched disk and a coactin g stop-lever
  • a laterally-extending projection carried by said lever a laterally-extending projection carried by the pawl adapted to engage said projection of the lever and effect the disengagement of the latter from the notched disk, and means for effecting the adjustment of one of said projections relatively to the other, substantially as described.

Description

Patented Dec. I0, 1901. I n. m. LESTER. MECHANISM FOR ROTATING AND LOCKING SHAFTS.
(Application filed Jan. 8, 1900.)
(No ModeL) lllL.
WITNESSES A TTOHNE Y.
H NORRIS PETERS co. PHOIDLIfl-1Q .,WA5NINGTON u c UNITED Frames PATENT tries,
DANIEL M. LESTER, OF NORWICH, CONNECTICUT.
MECHANISM FOR ROTATING AND L'OCKING SHAFTS.
SPEGIFIGATION forming part of Letters Patent N 0. 688,656, dated December 10, 1901. Application filed January 8, 1900. Serial No. 688. (N model.)
To ztZZ whom, it may concern.-
Be it known that I, DANIEL M. LESTER, a
citizen of the United States, residing at Norwich, in the county of New London and State of Connecticut, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Mechanism for Rotating and Looking Shafts, of which the following is a full, clear, and exact description.
This invention is in envelop machinery of the class that includes an endless-chain drier; and my purpose is to provide simple but positively-acting mechanism for driving the actuating-shaft of such adrier with an intermittent rotary motion and for locking the said shaft against rotation during the desired periods of rest. Machines of this class are operated ata high rate of speed, and the drierchain must therefore be fed forward and stopped one hundred or more times per minute, and unless positivelycontrolled the momentum of the heavy moving body tends to carry the chain past the proper stoppingpoint, thus preventing the folded envelops from dropping into the pockets between the fingers of the chain.
To assistin explaining myinvention, I have provided the accompanying sheet of drawings, illustrating the same, as follows:
Figure 1 shows in elevation and principally in dotted lines one of the side frames of an envelop-machine having a portion of the chain drier in position therein and having my newly-invented mechanism properly applied thereto. Figs. 2 and 3 show my newlyinvented' mechanism detached in elevation and plan views, respectively, and on a somewhat-enlarged scale. Figs. dand 5illustrate in elevation certain elements of said mechanism and the manner in which they operate. Fig. 6 illustrates a certain detail of construction.
Referring to the drawings, the letter a denotes the side frame of an envelop-n1achine, Z) the initial driving-shaft thereof, and c the above-mentioned chain-drier shaft, which lat ter, as well as the main shaft, is supported in suitable hearings in the frames, The lotter 62 denotes as a whole the said chain drier, which drier is made up of a number of frames or fingers hinged together by the wire pintles d. The shaft cbears thereon a sprocketwheel 0, which is engaged and partially encircled by the drier-chain, the hinge-pins (Z' of the chain being received between the teeth of said sprocket when the latter is in motion; but inasmuch as the general construction and operation of this feature of envelop-machines is well understood no detailed illustration or description of the same is now deemed necessary.
Loosely mounted upon the shaft 0 is a rocker-plate 6, having a pawlf pivotally secured to one side thereof and adapted to engage with its free end the teeth of a ratchetwheel g, fixedly mounted upon the shaft 0. The ratchet-wheel g is provided with a hub g, to one end of which is secured a wheel 7L, having'a notched periphery, the said notches hein g denoted by the letter h and corresponding in number with the teeth of the ratchetwheel 9. The notched wheel h is adapted to be engaged by an arm 70, the free end of which bears a projection in, which under certain conditions registers with the notches 7t, as is hereinafter described. The arm may be pivotally secured to any suitable fixed portion of the machine, or, as shown in the drawings, it may be mounted on a stud m, projecting from the frame 66, and so as to support the said arm 70. The pawl fand arm 76 have located in their confronting faces pins f respectively,which pins extend parallel with and overlap each other and under certain conditions are adapted to engage each other.
The reference-letter n denotes a link one end of which is pivotally secured to the rockerplate 6 and whose other end engages suitable mechanism whereby the plate a is rocked upon the shaft 0 to cause the pawlf to operate with the ratohet-wheel g. I do not wish to confine myself to any particular mechanism for rocking the plate 6, as it will be apparent that connections could be made between said plate and any suitable moving element of the machine; but in the drawings I have shown the following described mechanism: The lower end of the link end is bifurcated, so as to straddle the main shaft h, and near said lower end a roll '22 is secured thereto, which roll is adapted to ride upon the periphery of a cam I), mounted upon the shaft h,the rotation of the said cam serving, through the roll a, to drive the link n with a reciprocating motion, and thus rock the plate 6. When the various elements of the shaft-actuating mechanism are in the positions shown by full lines in Fig. 2, (which positions, it is assumed, are their normal or starting positions,) it will be seen that the free end of the pawl flies somewhat in the rear of the ratchettooth,which it will engage upon the forward movement of the said pawl, and it will also be seen that the projection of the arm 70 is in one of the notches h of the notched wheel It, thus locking the latter and the shaft 0 against rotation. Upon the rocking of the plate the pawl f is carried forward, and its pinf, which lies in the rear of and somewhat lower than the pin 7r of the arm 70, is brought into engagement with the last-named pin and seeks to pass beneath it. As the forward movement of the pawl f continues the pin f engages the pin 76*, forcing the latter and the arm is upward until the portion 7a of said arm becomes disengaged from the notch 71 of the wheel h, as shown in dotted lines in Fig. 4. When the parts have assumed the last-named positions, the shaft 0 may be freely rotated, and such positions are assumed substantially simultaneously with the engagement of the pawl with the ratchet-teeth, after which the continued forward movement of the pawl f serves to rotate the said ratchet-wheel and shaft. When the pawl f in its forward-movement has traveled sufficiently to cause the pin f to move beyond the pin R the latter and the arm 70 at once drop by gravity until the projection 70' engages the periphery of the wheel h and rides thereupon until the next succeeding notch h travels into coincidence therewith, when the projection at once drops into said notch to again effect the locking of the Wheel h. The last-described action of the arm 70 occurs just as the pawl f completes its forward movement, the various elements being then in their respective positions shown in Fig. 2 by dotted lines. Upon the return movement of the plate 6 the pawl f rides idly over the ratchet-teeth and the pin f passes over and out of contact with the pin W, as shown in Fig. 5, said pin f dropping in the rear of and somewhat below the pin k when the pawl finally reaches its starting position, as shown in Fig. 2 and in dotted lines in Fig. 5.
To enable a fine timing of the coaction of the pins f and 7.2 one or both of the same may be adj ustably secured in position. In the drawings the pin 75 is shown as thus secured to the arm 70, the said pin being mounted upon a plate 79 which latter is secured to the arm by a screw passing through a slot 70 in said plate, thus permitting an adjustment of the plate and pin within the limits of the said slot. I also by preference adjustably secure the notched wheel h to the hub g of the ratchet-wheel g to permit of a very fine adjustment of the notches 72. relatively to the ratchet-teeth. To accomplish the result just mentioned, the wheel it has located therein, on opposite sides and concentric with its center, slots 7L2 for the reception of screws h by means of which the wheel is secured to the hub g, thus permitting a rotary adjustment of the wheel it within the limits of the slots 71?.
To guard against any possibility of the notches 7t being carried past the arm projection 7t" by momentum, 1 preferably bevel the forward corner of the lower face of said projection, as at 7.7", to allow the arm to drop slightly before a notch h becomes fully coincident with the projection 70, thus preventing the said notch from passing the projection.
It will be seen that my newly-invented mechanism acts positively to rotate a shaft with an intermittent motion and also to lock the same against accidental rotation during the intervals of rest between its movements, said locking mechanism doing away entirely with power-consuming drags now often provided, which drags are more or less uncertain in their action, and it will also be seen that my newly-invented mechanism maybe very cheaply produced and may be applied in many instances to machines already built without requiring material changes in such machines. I
Having thus described my invention, I claim 1. The combination of a revoluble shaft, a sleeve thereon provided with a ratchet-disk and a notched disk spaced from each other, a stop-lever and a pawl pivotally mounted and coacting respectively with the notched disk and the ratchet-disk and disposed parallel with each other, and laterally-extending pins or projections carried by said pawl and lever, the projection of the stop-lever being disposed in the path of the projection of the pawl, substantially as described.
2. In combination with a revoluble shaft, mechanism for revolving said shaft with a step-by-step movement consisting of a pawl and ratchet, means for stopping and locking said'shaft consisting of a notched disk and a coactin g stop-lever, a laterally-extending projection carried by said lever, a laterally-extending projection carried by the pawl adapted to engage said projection of the lever and effect the disengagement of the latter from the notched disk, and means for effecting the adjustment of one of said projections relatively to the other, substantially as described.
Signed at Norwich, Connecticut, this 18th day of December, 1899. I
DANIEL M. LESTER.
Witnesses:
ALONZO M. LUTHER, FRANK H. ALLEN.
US68800A 1900-01-08 1900-01-08 Mechanism for rotating and locking shafts. Expired - Lifetime US688656A (en)

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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2496494A (en) * 1948-01-12 1950-02-07 Teletype Corp Full stroke mechanism
US2504171A (en) * 1944-04-22 1950-04-18 Air Reduction Billet nicking machine
US2547508A (en) * 1947-03-08 1951-04-03 Clybourne Machine Corp Ticket pasting machine
US2564322A (en) * 1948-10-27 1951-08-14 Caroline E Hoover Timing device
US2618982A (en) * 1949-05-20 1952-11-25 Theodore E Mead Indexing apparatus
US2826099A (en) * 1952-07-14 1958-03-11 Harold W Scholin Indexing mechanism
US2866345A (en) * 1955-12-27 1958-12-30 North American Aviation Inc Step motor

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2504171A (en) * 1944-04-22 1950-04-18 Air Reduction Billet nicking machine
US2547508A (en) * 1947-03-08 1951-04-03 Clybourne Machine Corp Ticket pasting machine
US2496494A (en) * 1948-01-12 1950-02-07 Teletype Corp Full stroke mechanism
US2564322A (en) * 1948-10-27 1951-08-14 Caroline E Hoover Timing device
US2618982A (en) * 1949-05-20 1952-11-25 Theodore E Mead Indexing apparatus
US2826099A (en) * 1952-07-14 1958-03-11 Harold W Scholin Indexing mechanism
US2866345A (en) * 1955-12-27 1958-12-30 North American Aviation Inc Step motor

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