US7397A - Machinery - Google Patents

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US7397A
US7397A US7397DA US7397A US 7397 A US7397 A US 7397A US 7397D A US7397D A US 7397DA US 7397 A US7397 A US 7397A
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rollers
mandrels
tube
tubes
copper
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B21MECHANICAL METAL-WORKING WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
    • B21BROLLING OF METAL
    • B21B27/00Rolls, roll alloys or roll fabrication; Lubricating, cooling or heating rolls while in use
    • B21B27/06Lubricating, cooling or heating rolls
    • B21B27/10Lubricating, cooling or heating rolls externally

Definitions

  • Fig.4 is a perspective View of the mold in which the cylinder of copper is molded that is designed to form the tube.
  • Fig. 5 is an elevation of the mold in an open position showing the tapered mandrel that is to form the bore of the cylindrical ingot.
  • Fig. 6 is one of the mandrels on which the tube is rolled.
  • Fig. 7 is a transverse section of one of the conductors and heat retainers.
  • the machine that I use to make copper tubes from cast ingots that require to be heated in the process of manufacture consists of four or more pairs of channeled rollers 1", Figs. 1 and 3, for rolling or stretchingthe cylindrical ingots of copper on the conical mandrels, Fig. 6, arranged in and supported by housings or pedestals j, of the usual form and arrangement employed in common rolling mills, placed at a convenient distance apart, say about seven feet, having arranged between.
  • rollers are geared together by cog wheels A in the usual manner, except that the axles of the lower rollers are provided with bevel wheels Z geared to bevel wheels Z on a main driving shaft is by. which all the rollers are caused to revolve together at the same degree of velocity by the application of any convenient power to said driving shaft.
  • each roller there are to be three or more parallel channels 6, f, g, of different diameters made around each roller each being a semi-circle inthe cross section so that when the peripherles of each pair of rollers are brought together and in close contact, which must be done in every case, the form of each channel at the touching points of the rollers will be that of a circle corresponding in diameter with that of the required diameter of the tube after being passed through, between the rollersthe channels 6 being about onesixteenth of an inch less in diameter than the cylindrical ingot when it comes from the mold; and the channel 9 (when three chan-' nels are used) being the outside diameter of the tube when finished.
  • the channels in the conductors and heat screwed to the lower plate or secured in any convenient way.
  • the several ingots to be rolled down into thin tubes, being properly cast and placed on the mandrels are caused to pass through the heat retaining conducting tubes, and between the rollers, large end foremost, by keeping up a continuous row of mandrels and ingots in the channel, so that the succeeding mandrels shall push the preceding mandrels forward by the friction of the rollers on the ingots.
  • the object of rolling and stretching the tube on conical mandrels instead of cylindrical rods by passing the mandrels between the rollers, with the large end foremost, is to form the tube without flaws or imperfect places, or injuring the metal; the tapered form of the mandrel allowing room for the metal to spread, or be stretched without 7 crowdingthe particles of metalagainst each other to such a degree as to injure the tube.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Metal Rolling (AREA)

Description

'E. HAMILTON. MACHINE FOR MAKING COPPER TUBES;
No. 7,397. Patented May 28, 1850.
UNITED sTA'rEsPATENT orFroE.
EDWARD HAMILTON, OF BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT.
" M-ACHINERYgFOR MAKING- GOPPER TUBES.
Specification of Letters Patent No. 7,397, dated May 28, 1850. i
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, EDWARD HAMILTON, of the town of Bridgeport, in the county of F airfield and State of Connecticut, have invented a new and useful Mode of Retaining the Heat of the Copper Tubes inPassing ing a pair of drawing rollers and a set of gear wheels for turning the same. F1g. 3,
is an elevation of the end of the machine, at which the cylindrical piece of copper is introduced that is to be rolled into a tube. Fig.4 is a perspective View of the mold in which the cylinder of copper is molded that is designed to form the tube. Fig. 5 is an elevation of the mold in an open position showing the tapered mandrel that is to form the bore of the cylindrical ingot. Fig. 6 is one of the mandrels on which the tube is rolled. Fig. 7 is a transverse section of one of the conductors and heat retainers.
Similar letters in the several figures refer to corresponding parts.
The machine that I use to make copper tubes from cast ingots that require to be heated in the process of manufacture consists of four or more pairs of channeled rollers 1", Figs. 1 and 3, for rolling or stretchingthe cylindrical ingots of copper on the conical mandrels, Fig. 6, arranged in and supported by housings or pedestals j, of the usual form and arrangement employed in common rolling mills, placed at a convenient distance apart, say about seven feet, having arranged between. them horizontal channeled conductors and heat retainers p for conduct ing the heated ingots of copper and the mandrels in the center of the same successively to the several pairs of rollers during the operation of rolling or stretching them into thin tubes, and for retaining them in a heated state, by confining the heat in said conductors during the said operation.
The rollers are geared together by cog wheels A in the usual manner, except that the axles of the lower rollers are provided with bevel wheels Z geared to bevel wheels Z on a main driving shaft is by. which all the rollers are caused to revolve together at the same degree of velocity by the application of any convenient power to said driving shaft.
There are to be three or more parallel channels 6, f, g, of different diameters made around each roller each being a semi-circle inthe cross section so that when the peripherles of each pair of rollers are brought together and in close contact, which must be done in every case, the form of each channel at the touching points of the rollers will be that of a circle corresponding in diameter with that of the required diameter of the tube after being passed through, between the rollersthe channels 6 being about onesixteenth of an inch less in diameter than the cylindrical ingot when it comes from the mold; and the channel 9 (when three chan-' nels are used) being the outside diameter of the tube when finished.
The channels in the conductors and heat screwed to the lower plate, or secured in any convenient way.
The several ingots to be rolled down into thin tubes, being properly cast and placed on the mandrels are caused to pass through the heat retaining conducting tubes, and between the rollers, large end foremost, by keeping up a continuous row of mandrels and ingots in the channel, so that the succeeding mandrels shall push the preceding mandrels forward by the friction of the rollers on the ingots.
The object of rolling and stretching the tube on conical mandrels instead of cylindrical rods by passing the mandrels between the rollers, with the large end foremost, is to form the tube without flaws or imperfect places, or injuring the metal; the tapered form of the mandrel allowing room for the metal to spread, or be stretched without 7 crowdingthe particles of metalagainst each other to such a degree as to injure the tube.
Having thus fully described my mode of making seamless copper tubes, what I claim In testimony whereof I have hereunto as my invention and desire to secure by signed my name before two subscribing 10 Le gclers Patient is, f h h h witnesses.
e emp 0 ment 0 t e orizontal eat 5 retaining coni lucting tubes 10, in combina- EDWARD HAMILTON tion with the grooved rollers 7, arranged Witnesses: and operating in the manner, and for the WM. P. ELLIOT, purpose herein set forth. E. F. BISHOP.
US7397D Machinery Expired - Lifetime US7397A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6959470B2 (en) 1999-08-20 2005-11-01 Pigtail Fastener Company Pigtail fastener

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6959470B2 (en) 1999-08-20 2005-11-01 Pigtail Fastener Company Pigtail fastener

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