US701584A - Wrench. - Google Patents

Wrench. Download PDF

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Publication number
US701584A
US701584A US9860702A US1902098607A US701584A US 701584 A US701584 A US 701584A US 9860702 A US9860702 A US 9860702A US 1902098607 A US1902098607 A US 1902098607A US 701584 A US701584 A US 701584A
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United States
Prior art keywords
blank
wrench
jaw
strips
bent
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Expired - Lifetime
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US9860702A
Inventor
Dwight B Lee
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Union Manufacturing & Specialty Co
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Union Manufacturing & Specialty Co
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Priority to US9860702A priority Critical patent/US701584A/en
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B25HAND TOOLS; PORTABLE POWER-DRIVEN TOOLS; MANIPULATORS
    • B25BTOOLS OR BENCH DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR, FOR FASTENING, CONNECTING, DISENGAGING OR HOLDING
    • B25B13/00Spanners; Wrenches
    • B25B13/10Spanners; Wrenches with adjustable jaws
    • B25B13/12Spanners; Wrenches with adjustable jaws the jaws being slidable
    • B25B13/14Spanners; Wrenches with adjustable jaws the jaws being slidable by rack and pinion, worm or gear

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the manufacture of wrenches of that type having a sliding jaw, and has particular reference to the manufacture of small wrenches known in the trade as bicyclewrenches; and the object of this invention is to produce a Wrench of this type which shall be of low cost of manufacture and which may be practically machine-made; and the invention consists in forming the sliding jaw of the wrench out of one piece of metal and in the provision of means for constructing the bearing for each end of the knurl from bent-up portions of the same blank.
  • the invention is in the nature of an improvement on that class vof Wrenches which is perhaps best illustrated by the wrench shown in the patent to Mossberg, dated November 13, 1900, numbered 661,810, in which Wrench, however, certain parts of the blank have to be bent on a very short turn substantially at right angles to other parts, whereby, unless a good quality of stock is used, certain parts of the jaw will be weakened.
  • the main objection, however, to this ⁇ type of construction lies in the fact that in bending such small parts abruptly at right angles one to the other it is not possible to make good joints.
  • my invention not only are these abrupt bends avoided, but all of the bends are formed in substantially parallel planes, thereby much simplifying the process of manufacturing the parts by machinery.
  • Figure 1 is a plan view of a blank from which a sliding jaw of the Wrench is formed.
  • Fig. 2 is a plan view of the wrenchjaw after it has been bent up to its finished condition.
  • Fig. 3 is a perspective view of the wrench -jaw in its finished condition on a somewhat larger scale and showing separated therefrom the pin which constitutes the axis of the knurl.
  • Fig. 4 is a side elevation of a y construction.
  • the blanks for the movable jaw of the wrench are vpunched out of suitable sheet-metal strips in thle form shown in Fig. 1, in which a consti- -tutes the body portion of the jaw, which is bent int-o rectangular form in cross-section, as shown lirrFig, 2, to receive the shank b of the Wrench, one end of which is provided with the usual fixed jaw c.
  • Fig. 1 On opposite sides and at one end of said blank there are formed jaw projections ol,fwhich when the blank is folded together, as shown in Fig. 2, constitute the sliding jaw proper,which is adapted to coperate with the fixed jaw-c, alias Well understood.
  • the strips h and t' are provided on the blank, projecting therefrom from each side thereof, those on one side being indicated by h and on the other side by ,'the upper edges of the strips h lying in the same plane as the lower edges of the strips fr'. Between these strips h and @l the body portion a isinarrowed down to such degree that when the blank is bent up to embrace the shank of the Wrench these vertical edges of the blank will not quite cover the edge of the shank b,
  • the wrench constructed as hereinbefore described is not only cheap, easily made, and susceptible of being finished in the manner to make it attractive, but the two sides of the sliding-jaw blank are so locked together by the riveting of the jaws and the encircling of the pin f from opposite directions by the strips 7L and t' that it is capable of sustaining severe side strains, thus making it for its weight and cost a very serviceable tool.
  • a blank for the sliding jaw of a wrench comprising a body portion adapted to be folded on itself to embrace the shank of the wrench, laterally-extending strips on said blank integral therewith, adapted to be bent into an annular shape to form bearings in which the knurl is supported, two jaw projections on said blank, and means for securing the latter together, side by side.
  • a blank for the sliding jaw of a wrench comprising a body portion adapted to be folded on itself to embrace the shank of the wrench, a laterally-extending strip on each side of the blank, that on one side thereof being bent in an opposite direction to that on the other to form an annular bearing for the knurl; projections on each side of the blank which, together, constitute the jaw proper, and means for securing these projections together.
  • a blank for the sliding jaw of a wrench comprising a body portion adapted to be folded on itself to embrace the shank of the Wrench, two laterally-extending strips on opposite sides of said blank, the lower edge of one and the upper edge of the other lying in the same plane, said strips, when bent to annular form, constituting a bearing for tho ends of a knurl.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Automatic Assembly (AREA)

Description

No. 7o|,5a4.
n. a. LEE.
WRENCH. Y
(Application Bled Mu. 17, 1902.)
Patented lune 3, |902.
(llo Model.)
lvf/
UNITED STATES PATENT' OFFICE.
DWIGHT B. LEE, OF SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS, ASSIGNOR TO UNION MANUFACTURING da 'SPECIALTY COMPANY, OF BUFFALO, NEW YORK,
A CORPORATION.
WRENCH.
SPECIFICATION forming part 0f Letters Patent N0. 701,584, dated June, 1902. Application iiled March 1.7, 1902. Serial No. 98,607. (No model.)
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, DWIGHT B. LEE, a citizen of the United States of America, residing at Springfield, in the county of Hampden and State of MassachusettsLhave invented new and useful Improvements in Wrenches, of whichthe following is a specification.
This invention relates to the manufacture of wrenches of that type having a sliding jaw, and has particular reference to the manufacture of small wrenches known in the trade as bicyclewrenches; and the object of this invention is to produce a Wrench of this type which shall be of low cost of manufacture and which may be practically machine-made; and the invention consists in forming the sliding jaw of the wrench out of one piece of metal and in the provision of means for constructing the bearing for each end of the knurl from bent-up portions of the same blank.
It may be said that the invention is in the nature of an improvement on that class vof Wrenches which is perhaps best illustrated by the wrench shown in the patent to Mossberg, dated November 13, 1900, numbered 661,810, in which Wrench, however, certain parts of the blank have to be bent on a very short turn substantially at right angles to other parts, whereby, unless a good quality of stock is used, certain parts of the jaw will be weakened. The main objection, however, to this` type of construction lies in the fact that in bending such small parts abruptly at right angles one to the other it is not possible to make good joints. By means of the construction shown in my invention not only are these abrupt bends avoided, but all of the bends are formed in substantially parallel planes, thereby much simplifying the process of manufacturing the parts by machinery.
In the drawings forming part of this application, Figure 1 is a plan view of a blank from which a sliding jaw of the Wrench is formed. Fig. 2 is a plan view of the wrenchjaw after it has been bent up to its finished condition. Fig. 3 is a perspective view of the wrench -jaw in its finished condition on a somewhat larger scale and showing separated therefrom the pin which constitutes the axis of the knurl. Fig. 4 is a side elevation of a y construction.
In carrying out my invention the blanks for the movable jaw of the wrench are vpunched out of suitable sheet-metal strips in thle form shown in Fig. 1, in which a consti- -tutes the body portion of the jaw, which is bent int-o rectangular form in cross-section, as shown lirrFig, 2, to receive the shank b of the Wrench, one end of which is provided with the usual fixed jaw c. v" On opposite sides and at one end of said blank there are formed jaw projections ol,fwhich when the blank is folded together, as shown in Fig. 2, constitute the sliding jaw proper,which is adapted to coperate with the fixed jaw-c, alias Well understood. The thickness'of the metal from which the blank shown in Fig. 1 is made is such that when these jaw projections d are bent up side by side and have been riveted together there will be thereby constituted a jaw of sufficient rigidity for any purpose to which Wrenches of this type may be applied. A hole e (shown in Fig. l2) is bored inthe under side of these j awlprojections d after they have been put together, which is screw-threaded to receive the threaded end of a pin f, which serves as the axis for the knurl g. To form a suitable support for this pin, the strips h and t' are provided on the blank, projecting therefrom from each side thereof, those on one side being indicated by h and on the other side by ,'the upper edges of the strips h lying in the same plane as the lower edges of the strips fr'. Between these strips h and @l the body portion a isinarrowed down to such degree that when the blank is bent up to embrace the shank of the Wrench these vertical edges of the blank will not quite cover the edge of the shank b,
but will leave the rack y', with which the knurl g engages, exposed, as shown in Fig. 2, whereby a better grip on the knurl is provided, as these edges do not interfere with the lingers in operating the knurl." v When the `blank is bent up in the form shown in Fig. 2, the two strips e' are bent directlyacross from onelside of the blank to the other, so as to pass behind the pin f when it is in place, and the strips 71. are bent around in the opposite direction,
ICO
thereby forming a bearing foreach end of the pinfequal to the width of 7L and t' together, and these strips passing circumferentially around the pin in opposite directions constitute for the latter a true cylindrical bearing, and said pin when it is in position constitutes, by reason of the formation of these bearings, a locking element between the two sides of the blank. After the blank has been bent up in the form shown in Figs. 2 and 3 it is slipped onto the shank b of the wrench and moved up until it covers part of the rack .7', when the knurl is placed in position in engagement with said rack and the pin j' passed u p through its bearings and screwed into the hole e, prepared foi-itin the under side of the jawin the projections d. The fact that the two strips 7L and t', constituting the end bearing for the pin f and the support of the knurl, are each bent to a cylindrical form and in parallel planes renders it possible to bend them up and set them together by pressure so closely that no rooln is left at their meeting lines for the entrance of dirt, tbc., and it is therefore possible after they are plated to give them a neatness of finish which would be otherwise not obtainable.
The wrench constructed as hereinbefore described is not only cheap, easily made, and susceptible of being finished in the manner to make it attractive, but the two sides of the sliding-jaw blank are so locked together by the riveting of the jaws and the encircling of the pin f from opposite directions by the strips 7L and t' that it is capable of sustaining severe side strains, thus making it for its weight and cost a very serviceable tool.
In Figure 5 a slight modification of the previously-described construction is shown, which consists in making a blank with only one laterally-projecting strip on each edge thereof, from which the annular bearings for the ends of the knurl are formed, and in making each of these strips substantially as wide as the two strips combined, which are shown in Fig. l. This construction will answer for certain classes of work quite as well as that form shown in Figs. l to 4.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim, and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States, is-
l. A blank for the sliding jaw of a wrench comprising a body portion adapted to be folded on itself to embrace the shank of the wrench, laterally-extending strips on said blank integral therewith, adapted to be bent into an annular shape to form bearings in which the knurl is supported, two jaw projections on said blank, and means for securing the latter together, side by side.
2. A blank for the sliding jaw of a wrench comprising a body portion adapted to be folded on itself to embrace the shank of the wrench, a laterally-extending strip on each side of the blank, that on one side thereof being bent in an opposite direction to that on the other to form an annular bearing for the knurl; projections on each side of the blank which, together, constitute the jaw proper, and means for securing these projections together.
3. A blank for the sliding jaw of a wrench comprising a body portion adapted to be folded on itself to embrace the shank of the Wrench, two laterally-extending strips on opposite sides of said blank, the lower edge of one and the upper edge of the other lying in the same plane, said strips, when bent to annular form, constituting a bearing for tho ends of a knurl.
DWIGIIT B. LEE. Witnesses:
WM. l-I. CHAPIN, K. I. CLnMoNs.
US9860702A 1902-03-17 1902-03-17 Wrench. Expired - Lifetime US701584A (en)

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