US699066A - Cooking-crane. - Google Patents

Cooking-crane. Download PDF

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Publication number
US699066A
US699066A US6491401A US1901064914A US699066A US 699066 A US699066 A US 699066A US 6491401 A US6491401 A US 6491401A US 1901064914 A US1901064914 A US 1901064914A US 699066 A US699066 A US 699066A
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utensil
cooking
support
staff
arms
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US6491401A
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Thomas J Baskett
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B63SHIPS OR OTHER WATERBORNE VESSELS; RELATED EQUIPMENT
    • B63BSHIPS OR OTHER WATERBORNE VESSELS; EQUIPMENT FOR SHIPPING 
    • B63B29/00Accommodation for crew or passengers not otherwise provided for
    • B63B29/02Cabins or other living spaces; Construction or arrangement thereof
    • B63B29/04Furniture peculiar to vessels
    • B63B29/12Self-levelling mountings

Definitions

  • a further object is to present a cookingcrane that may be readily taken apart for purposes oftransp'ortation andwhen dismembered will occupy'but small space.
  • a further object is to present simple and effective means for sustaining'cooking utensils in proper operative position with relation to their supports.
  • FIG. 2 is a view in plan of; 'the skillet-support. tudinal section of the support shown in Fig. 2.
  • Fig. 4 is a 'view' in transverse section,
  • Fig. 3 is a view in longitaken on the line 4 4, Fig. 1, showing the manner in which the eyes that are engaged by the utensil-supports are associated with the staff.
  • 1 designates the staff of the crane, the same in this instance being constructed of two pieces of tubular metal, such-as gas-pipe, detachably connected at or near their center by a threaded couped, as at 6, thereby to permit the stafl being driven into the groundto support the same in vertical position.
  • Each member is provided with a plurality of eyes 7, of which there may be any preferred number, these eyes being associated'with the stafl members in any suitable manner,as by being riveted to or having a screw-threaded connection therewith, so as tov 'form bearing-seats for the detachable reception of the utensil-support.
  • utensil-supportcrse-one form 8 for 1, the eyes of the lower member of the staff supporting cooking utensils having bails attached--such as pots,kettles,buckets,and the like--and the otherform 9 for supporting frying-pans, skillets,and the like.
  • the utensilsupport 8 comprises an arm 10, havingat its upper edge a plurality of niches or recesses 11 to be engaged bythe hail of the utensil to be suspended, the arm being secured to a standard 12,the connection between the arm and standard being rendered rigid by a brace 13, assembled with the arm and standard by bolt or rivets 14.
  • the standard is provided at its upper and lower end with a pintle 15 and 16, respectively, the pintle 15, which is arranged at the upper end of the standard,being longer than the pintle 16 in order to permit the sup port 8 being lifted thereby to throw the pintle 16 out of engagement with the eye with which it engages to permit separation of the support 8 from the staff.
  • the support 8 comprises the arm, standard, and brace, each a separate element, and the whole being assembled by rivets, as described; but it is to be understood that, if preferred, the arm and standard may be of one piece, with the brace 13 assembled therewith,or the support may be made ofa single piece of malleable cast metal.
  • the other support 9 comprises a circular head 17 and two arms 18, arranged practically in parallel relation to each other and secured at their rear ends to a standard 19, the arms 18 being held rigidlyassembled with the standard 19 against sagging by a brace 20,suitably bolted 'or riveted to the arms 18 and standards 19 at 21 and 22.
  • the head 17 is by preference integral with the arms 18, although it may be a separate structure assembled therewith,- and has its inner walls inclined, as at 23, to fit the contour of cooking utensils resting therein, suitable cross-bars 24, firmly riveted or otherwise secured to the head,serving as supports upon which a utensil smaller in diameter than the head will rest.
  • a handle-rest 25 Pivoted between the arms 18 at a point intermediate of their ends is a handle-rest 25, the connection between the arms and the handlerest being efiected through the medium of a rivet or bolt 26.
  • the upper end of the rest is provided with an approximately semicircular crotch 27, in which the handle of the utensil supported on the head 17 will bear.
  • the standard 19 is provided with two pintles 28 and 29, respectively, the pintle 28 being longer than the pintle 29 for the same reason as described in connection with the support 8.
  • the staff is driven into the ground contiguous to the fire, and the pintles of the supports 8 and 9 are brought into engagement with the pairs of eyes 7 of the staff situated at the desired height above the fire.
  • the utensil, pot, or kettle is then hung upon the arm 8, and other utensils, as a coffee-pot or a frying-pan or skillet, are placed upon the head 17 of the support 9.
  • the operator may swing either of the supports away from the fire and examine the contents of the utensil supported thereby, this being readily effected without danger of burning the attendant.
  • W hen the articles are properly cooked the supports may be swung entirely away from the fire, or, if desired, to keep the cooked articles warm the supports may be detached from those eyes nearest the flame and brought into engagement with those farthest removed from the fire.
  • bearing-seats 7 are arranged in pairs to correspond with the bearing-pintles of the utensil-supports in order that the latter may be removed from one pair of seats and applied to any other pair thereof.
  • the device of the present invention is composed of but few number of parts and these are so constructed and associated as to be at once clearly effective, cheap of construction, and highly efficient in use, and,
  • a cooking-crane comprising a staff and a utensil-support having swinging connection with the staff, the support comprising a standard, arms connected therewith and having an enlarged open-work head for supporting a frying-pan and the like, and a rest pivotally ⁇ with the staff, and having. an enlarged head connected with the arms and having a crotch for supporting a frying-pan. or ,the like, and
  • a cooking-crane comprising a staff, an having a crotch with which the handleof the arm connected at one end tosaid staff and proutensil engages.
  • a cooking-crane comprising a staff, and F. D. DEARTH,

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Ocean & Marine Engineering (AREA)
  • Cookers (AREA)
  • Frying-Pans Or Fryers (AREA)

Description

No. 699,066. Patented Apr. 29, I902.
T.. J. BASKETT.
COOKING CRANE.
(Application filed June 17, 1901.)
(No Model.)
THE norms PETERS c0 wom-uwa, wnsumcnqm u. c.
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
THOMAS J. BASKETT, 'OF DEXTER, MAINE.
COOKING-CRANE.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 699,066, dated April 29, 1902.
Application filed June 17, 1901. $erial No. 64,914. (No model.)
To aZZ whom it may concern/.
Be it known that I, THOMAS J. BASKETT, a citizen of the United States, residing at Dexter, in the county of Penobscot and State of *Maine, have invented a new and useful Cookshall be eifective both for suspending and sustaining cooking utensils, and in which the suspending and sustaining means maybe readily swung away from the fire without danger of burning the attendant, thereby to permit inspection of or removal from such means of the utensils containing articles being cooked.
A further object is to present a cookingcrane that may be readily taken apart for purposes oftransp'ortation andwhen dismembered will occupy'but small space.
A further object is to present simple and effective means for sustaining'cooking utensils in proper operative position with relation to their supports. I V
With these and other objects in View, as will appear as the nature of the invention is better understood,'the same consists in the novel construction and combination of parts of a cookingcrane, as will be hereinafter fully described, illustrated, and particularly pointed out in the claims.
In the accompanying drawings, forming a part of this specification, and in which like numerals of reference indicate corresponding parts, I have illustrated a form of' embodiment of my invention capable of carrying the .same into efiect, it being understood that the precise arrangement, construction, and proportion of the parts herein shown may be varied or changed without departing from the spirit of the invention, and in these draw- 1ngsi Figure 1 is a view in perspective exhibiting a cooking-crane constituting my invention, the utensil-supporting portions of the device having associated therewith'certain, cooking utensils, the same being exhibited shown or otherwise.
in dotted lines. Fig. 2 is a view in plan of; 'the skillet-support. tudinal section of the support shown in Fig. 2. Fig. 4 is a 'view' in transverse section,
Fig. 3 is a view in longitaken on the line 4 4, Fig. 1, showing the manner in which the eyes that are engaged by the utensil-supports are associated with the staff.
I Referring to the drawings, 1 designates the staff of the crane, the same in this instance being constructed of two pieces of tubular metal, such-as gas-pipe, detachably connected at or near their center by a threaded couped, as at 6, thereby to permit the stafl being driven into the groundto support the same in vertical position. Each member is provided with a plurality of eyes 7, of which there may be any preferred number, these eyes being associated'with the stafl members in any suitable manner,as by being riveted to or having a screw-threaded connection therewith, so as tov 'form bearing-seats for the detachable reception of the utensil-support. As shown in Fig.
and those on the lower portion of the upper member are arranged, close together on one side thereof and in staggered order, this arrangement being adapted to permit the different cooking utensils to occupy practically the same plane-with relation to the fire and to permit the supporting means, hereinafter to be described, to occupy a practically parallel relation'to each other; but it is to :be understood that I do not limit the invention to the precise arrangement of the supporting eyes, as these may be arranged in the order The eyes carried by the upper portion of the upper member of the staff are arranged one above the other in vertical alinement,these latter eyes serving more particularly to support the utensil -holders over the fire and at such distancethere'from as to keep the cooked articles'warni without any danger of burning.
In the present instance I have shown two forms of utensil-supportcrse-one form 8 for 1, the eyes of the lower member of the staff supporting cooking utensils having bails attached--such as pots,kettles,buckets,and the like--and the otherform 9 for supporting frying-pans, skillets,and the like. The utensilsupport 8 comprises an arm 10, havingat its upper edge a plurality of niches or recesses 11 to be engaged bythe hail of the utensil to be suspended, the arm being secured to a standard 12,the connection between the arm and standard being rendered rigid by a brace 13, assembled with the arm and standard by bolt or rivets 14. The standard is provided at its upper and lower end with a pintle 15 and 16, respectively, the pintle 15, which is arranged at the upper end of the standard,being longer than the pintle 16 in order to permit the sup port 8 being lifted thereby to throw the pintle 16 out of engagement with the eye with which it engages to permit separation of the support 8 from the staff. As here shown, the support 8 comprises the arm, standard, and brace, each a separate element, and the whole being assembled by rivets, as described; but it is to be understood that, if preferred, the arm and standard may be of one piece, with the brace 13 assembled therewith,or the support may be made ofa single piece of malleable cast metal. The other support 9 comprises a circular head 17 and two arms 18, arranged practically in parallel relation to each other and secured at their rear ends to a standard 19, the arms 18 being held rigidlyassembled with the standard 19 against sagging by a brace 20,suitably bolted 'or riveted to the arms 18 and standards 19 at 21 and 22. The head 17 is by preference integral with the arms 18, although it may be a separate structure assembled therewith,- and has its inner walls inclined, as at 23, to fit the contour of cooking utensils resting therein, suitable cross-bars 24, firmly riveted or otherwise secured to the head,serving as supports upon which a utensil smaller in diameter than the head will rest. Pivoted between the arms 18 at a point intermediate of their ends is a handle-rest 25, the connection between the arms and the handlerest being efiected through the medium of a rivet or bolt 26. The upper end of the rest is provided with an approximately semicircular crotch 27, in which the handle of the utensil supported on the head 17 will bear. By having the rest pivotally connected with the arms the rest may be adjusted to and from the arms, thereby to vary the plane occupied by the handle with relation to the arms so that the body portion of the cooking utensil may be caused at all times to occupy a horizontal plane. The standard 19 is provided with two pintles 28 and 29, respectively, the pintle 28 being longer than the pintle 29 for the same reason as described in connection with the support 8.
In operation the staff is driven into the ground contiguous to the fire, and the pintles of the supports 8 and 9 are brought into engagement with the pairs of eyes 7 of the staff situated at the desired height above the fire. The utensil, pot, or kettle is then hung upon the arm 8, and other utensils, as a coffee-pot or a frying-pan or skillet, are placed upon the head 17 of the support 9. As cooking progresses, the operator may swing either of the supports away from the fire and examine the contents of the utensil supported thereby, this being readily effected without danger of burning the attendant. W hen the articles are properly cooked, the supports may be swung entirely away from the fire, or, if desired, to keep the cooked articles warm the supports may be detached from those eyes nearest the flame and brought into engagement with those farthest removed from the fire.
It will of course'be understood that the bearing-seats 7 are arranged in pairs to correspond with the bearing-pintles of the utensil-supports in order that the latter may be removed from one pair of seats and applied to any other pair thereof.
From the foregoing description it will be seen that the device of the present invention is composed of but few number of parts and these are so constructed and associated as to be at once clearly effective, cheap of construction, and highly efficient in use, and,
moreover, by the simplicity of their construction should a part become destroyed it may be readily replaced by a mechanic of ordinary ability. By reason of the fact that the 7 staff is in two sections held associated by a threaded coupling the sections may be readily dismembered, thereby to cause the device to occupy but half the space that it occupies when in use.
It is to be understood that I do not confine my invention to the staff made in two sections, as, if preferred, it may be made of but one piece of tubing, or, if desired, of a solid bar of metal. Furthermore, I do not limit the invention to the precise construction of the two different forms of utensil-supports herein shown or to the exact manner in which they are held associated with the stafi, as these ideas maybe carried into effect in other ways, so long as the salient features presented by the present device are retained.
From the foregoing it is thought that the construction, operation, and many advan tages of the herein-described invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art with-- out further description, and it will be understood that various changes in the size, shape, proportion, and minor details of construction may be resorted to without departing from the spirit or sacrificing any of the advantages of the invention.
WhatI claim is- 1. A cooking-crane comprising a staff and a utensil-support having swinging connection with the staff, the support comprising a standard, arms connected therewith and having an enlarged open-work head for supporting a frying-pan and the like, and a rest pivotally {with the staff, and having. an enlarged head connected with the arms and having a crotch for supporting a frying-pan. or ,the like, and
with which the handle of the utensil engages. a rest pivotally connected with the arms and 15 2. A cooking-crane comprising a staff, an having a crotch with which the handleof the arm connected at one end tosaid staff and proutensil engages.
vided at its other endJvithav support fora In testimony thatl ,claimthe foregoing as pan, and vertically-adjustable means intermy own I have hereto affixed my signature "in mediate the support and the connectionvfor the presence of two witnesses.
engaging the handle of a utensil carried by THOMAS J BASKETT.
the support. Witnesses:
3. A cooking-crane comprising a staff, and F. D. DEARTH,
a ntensil-support-having swinging connection W. S. BROWN.
US6491401A 1901-06-17 1901-06-17 Cooking-crane. Expired - Lifetime US699066A (en)

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Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2446973A (en) * 1943-05-08 1948-08-10 Gen Motors Corp Magnetic chuck and loading device therefor
US2520412A (en) * 1947-12-17 1950-08-29 George O Jensen Swinging cooker
US2603440A (en) * 1946-12-16 1952-07-15 Le Vesconte Plate and cup supporting device
US2740397A (en) * 1954-09-02 1956-04-03 Schaefer Paul Fireplace cooking grate and crane
US2795336A (en) * 1953-03-11 1957-06-11 Robert W Erenberg Refuse can support
US2977953A (en) * 1957-10-07 1961-04-04 Dowdy J Y Miller Portable grill
US3076557A (en) * 1960-12-13 1963-02-05 Gadget Of The Month Club Inc Portable, foldable support
US4065085A (en) * 1976-09-30 1977-12-27 Gellatly Walter L Fire pit hanger
US5848584A (en) * 1997-05-27 1998-12-15 Brog; Ernest Device for holding an outdoor cooking vessel over a campfire
US6736358B2 (en) * 2001-05-11 2004-05-18 Freddie E. Johnson Device for holding camping items
US20080283031A1 (en) * 2007-05-18 2008-11-20 David Korab Tripod griddle
US20100294907A1 (en) * 2008-09-10 2010-11-25 Charles Kocher Multi-purpose grill stand
RU186591U1 (en) * 2018-10-16 2019-01-24 Иван Васильевич Володин STAND FOR COOKING IN HIKING CONDITIONS
US10342184B2 (en) * 2015-04-20 2019-07-09 TCW Holdings, LLC Plant support system and method of use

Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2446973A (en) * 1943-05-08 1948-08-10 Gen Motors Corp Magnetic chuck and loading device therefor
US2603440A (en) * 1946-12-16 1952-07-15 Le Vesconte Plate and cup supporting device
US2520412A (en) * 1947-12-17 1950-08-29 George O Jensen Swinging cooker
US2795336A (en) * 1953-03-11 1957-06-11 Robert W Erenberg Refuse can support
US2740397A (en) * 1954-09-02 1956-04-03 Schaefer Paul Fireplace cooking grate and crane
US2977953A (en) * 1957-10-07 1961-04-04 Dowdy J Y Miller Portable grill
US3076557A (en) * 1960-12-13 1963-02-05 Gadget Of The Month Club Inc Portable, foldable support
US4065085A (en) * 1976-09-30 1977-12-27 Gellatly Walter L Fire pit hanger
US5848584A (en) * 1997-05-27 1998-12-15 Brog; Ernest Device for holding an outdoor cooking vessel over a campfire
US6736358B2 (en) * 2001-05-11 2004-05-18 Freddie E. Johnson Device for holding camping items
US20080283031A1 (en) * 2007-05-18 2008-11-20 David Korab Tripod griddle
US20100294907A1 (en) * 2008-09-10 2010-11-25 Charles Kocher Multi-purpose grill stand
US8272601B2 (en) * 2008-09-10 2012-09-25 Charles Kocher Multi-purpose grill stand
US10342184B2 (en) * 2015-04-20 2019-07-09 TCW Holdings, LLC Plant support system and method of use
RU186591U1 (en) * 2018-10-16 2019-01-24 Иван Васильевич Володин STAND FOR COOKING IN HIKING CONDITIONS

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