US740747A - Swage for insertible saw-teeth. - Google Patents

Swage for insertible saw-teeth. Download PDF

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Publication number
US740747A
US740747A US11644602A US1902116446A US740747A US 740747 A US740747 A US 740747A US 11644602 A US11644602 A US 11644602A US 1902116446 A US1902116446 A US 1902116446A US 740747 A US740747 A US 740747A
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holder
swage
bit
casing
swaging
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US11644602A
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John F Finnegan
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23DPLANING; SLOTTING; SHEARING; BROACHING; SAWING; FILING; SCRAPING; LIKE OPERATIONS FOR WORKING METAL BY REMOVING MATERIAL, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23D63/00Dressing the tools of sawing machines or sawing devices for use in cutting any kind of material, e.g. in the manufacture of sawing tools
    • B23D63/06Upsetting the cutting edges of saw teeth, e.g. swaging

Definitions

  • the invention relates to an implement for renewing the cutting edges of insertible sawbits by swaging.
  • edges when dull are sometimes repaired by hand-swaging and sometimes by filing; but neither method has been found satisfactory, although requiring expensive skilled labor to produce even moderately successful results.
  • My implement is not only completely successful in quickly swaging new cutting edges, but also produces a better-lasting edge even than the original, and its operation requires no high degree of skill, the adjustments being easily made and the actual swaging operation being so far automatic as to dispense with skill in carrying it out.
  • FIG. 1 is a front elevation of the machine.
  • Fig. 2 is a vertical section on a: w of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 3 is a cross-section of the swaging roll or shaft on y y of Fig. .4.
  • Fig. 4 isan elevation of said shaft.
  • Fig. 5 is a side elevation of an adjust able bit-holder.
  • Fig. 6 is a front elevation of the same.
  • Fig. 7 is a top planof the anvil.
  • Fig. 8 is an elevation of the same.
  • Fig. 9 is an elevation of the shaft and eccentric for locking the bit to its holder.
  • Fig. 10 is an end view of the same. I
  • 1 represents a support for the implement comprising a bedplate having vertical guides 2 and adapted to be secured to a bench, for which purpose screws 3 are shown.
  • a chamber 6 which extends through the front and top andis of awidth to receive the bit-holder 7.
  • This holder is recessed at its front end to provide a curved and inclined seat 8 for the bit 9, the side elevation of which, Fig. 5, is completed by the dotted line of said seat.
  • the bit is held in the holder by a spring 10. The bottom of the holder rests upon the solid metal of the casing, and the.
  • holder is adjusted inwardly to proper position by a screw 11, working through the wall of the casing, which is here formed by the removable plate 12, on which the projecting part of the holder rests, Fig. 2.
  • the holder carrying the bit is locked down solidly to the casing by a cam 13 on the end of the shaft 14, which projects into the casing and is turned by an external handle 15.
  • the cam bears upon the bit and so looks it and the holder which carries it.
  • the style of bit illustrated has a recess 16, which is entered by the cam.
  • the bit held and looked as described and resting in the holder and upon the anvil is swaged between the anvil and a swaging-section on the movable shaft or roll 23. Bearings are formed for this shaft in the walls of the casing.
  • the swaging-section 26 is simply a flattened face of the round shaft by which an edge is formed adjacent to the anvil.
  • the projecting end of the shaft is squared or flattened on two sides to receive the operatinglever 27.
  • the swagingsection 26 is long bear in a corresponding female cone in the casing.
  • anvil held in a vertical bore therein and having a groove in its top, and having also a beveled face fitting against a corresponding incline on the casing, a holder for thetooth, a swage cooperating with the anvil, and a screw threaded in said bore for adjusting the anvil vertically, substantially as described.

Description

PATENTED 001 ,1903.
F. FINNEGANL SWAGE FOR INSERTIBLE SAW TEETH. APPLICATION FILED JULY 2]. 1&02
, [/VVENTUR;
5 @a/Q M,
W/7'NE55 R0 MODEL.
UNITED STATES Patented October 6, 1903.
PATENT OFFICE.
SWAG E FORINS EFTIBLE SAW-TEETH.
SPECIFICATION forming part of" Letters Patent No. 740,747, dated Octoberfi, 1903.
Application filed July 21, 1902. Serial 1%. 116.4%. (N0 model.)
To all whom it may concern.-
Be it known that I, JOHN F. FINNEGAN, a citizen of the United States,residing.at lgerna, in the county of Siskiyou and State of California, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Swages for Insertible Saw- Teeth, of which the following is a specification. 1
The invention relates to an implement for renewing the cutting edges of insertible sawbits by swaging. In present practice such edges when dull are sometimes repaired by hand-swaging and sometimes by filing; but neither method has been found satisfactory, although requiring expensive skilled labor to produce even moderately successful results. My implement is not only completely successful in quickly swaging new cutting edges, but also produces a better-lasting edge even than the original, and its operation requires no high degree of skill, the adjustments being easily made and the actual swaging operation being so far automatic as to dispense with skill in carrying it out.
The invention is desi ned onlv for swa in D u b L! insertible saw-bits when removed from the saw, and the embodiment of the invention shown in the accompanying drawings is designed for swaging a standard shape of bit well known in the art and trade; but the bitholding devices can be modified in shape to In the accompanying drawings, Figure 1 is a front elevation of the machine. Fig. 2 is a vertical section on a: w of Fig. 1. Fig. 3 is a cross-section of the swaging roll or shaft on y y of Fig. .4. Fig. 4 isan elevation of said shaft. Fig. 5 is a side elevation of an adjust able bit-holder. Fig. 6 is a front elevation of the same. Fig. 7 is a top planof the anvil. Fig. 8 is an elevation of the same. Fig. 9 is an elevation of the shaft and eccentric for locking the bit to its holder. Fig. 10 is an end view of the same. I
Referring to Figs. 1 and 2, 1 represents a support for the implement comprising a bedplate having vertical guides 2 and adapted to be secured to a bench, for which purpose screws 3 are shown. The casing 4, which contains or supports the swaging devices, is
set between the guides 2, held there in any suitable way, as by the keys 5, and extends above such-guides. In the upper part of the casin g is a chamber 6, which extends through the front and top andis of awidth to receive the bit-holder 7. This holder is recessed at its front end to provide a curved and inclined seat 8 for the bit 9, the side elevation of which, Fig. 5, is completed by the dotted line of said seat. The bit is held in the holder by a spring 10. The bottom of the holder rests upon the solid metal of the casing, and the.
holder is adjusted inwardly to proper position by a screw 11, working through the wall of the casing, which is here formed by the removable plate 12, on which the projecting part of the holder rests, Fig. 2. The holder carrying the bit is locked down solidly to the casing by a cam 13 on the end of the shaft 14, which projects into the casing and is turned by an external handle 15. As shown in Fig. 2, the cam bears upon the bit and so looks it and the holder which carries it. The style of bit illustrated has a recess 16, which is entered by the cam.
with a bore in the casing communicating with the upper chamber I therein and extending through the bottom. It is adjusted to position in this bore and then held by set-screw 21. The bed-plate should have a hole 22 to make the bolt-head accessible.
The bit held and looked as described and resting in the holder and upon the anvil is swaged between the anvil and a swaging-section on the movable shaft or roll 23. Bearings are formed for this shaft in the walls of the casing. The swaging-section 26 is simply a flattened face of the round shaft by which an edge is formed adjacent to the anvil. The projecting end of the shaft is squared or flattened on two sides to receive the operatinglever 27. The swagingsection 26 is long bear in a corresponding female cone in the casing.
All parts being rigidly locked and held, as shown in Fig. 2, the operator, by means of the lever, turns the swaging-shaft so as to pinch and compress the foot of the bit between the swaging edge and the anvil. The shaft having a circular motion, the swaging edge produces a circular indentation in the foot of the bit above the edge, as is perceptibly indicated in Fig. 2. The dull edge is removed and a new edge formed, the metal being so compressed and condensed as to have greater resistance to wear than the original edge, and although the bit is shortened its usefulness is in no wise impaired. In practice the custom would be to swage a complete set of bits for a saw, leaving them of uniform length, and the swaging operation can be repeated until the foot of the bit has been substantially removed.
I do not limit myself to the exact construction and arrangement herein described and shown in the drawings, as I desire to avail myself of such modifications and equivalents as fall properly within the spirit of my invention.
Having thus fully described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
1. In combination with a casing, an anvil held in a vertical bore therein and having a groove in its top, and having also a beveled face fitting against a corresponding incline on the casing, a holder for thetooth, a swage cooperating with the anvil, and a screw threaded in said bore for adjusting the anvil vertically, substantially as described.
2. In combination, a casing, an anvil, a swage, a holder having a groove for holding a tooth, means carried by the holder for retaining the tooth therein and means carried by the casing for aiding in retaining the tooth in the holder, substantially as described.
In combination, a casing, an anvil therein, a swage, a holder having a groove for the JOHN F. FINNEGAN.
\Vitnesses A. C. KAISER, GEORGE THoMBs.
US11644602A 1902-07-21 1902-07-21 Swage for insertible saw-teeth. Expired - Lifetime US740747A (en)

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