US753497A - Burnishing-wheel - Google Patents

Burnishing-wheel Download PDF

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US753497A
US753497A US753497DA US753497A US 753497 A US753497 A US 753497A US 753497D A US753497D A US 753497DA US 753497 A US753497 A US 753497A
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wheel
burnishing
ring
strands
holder
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B24GRINDING; POLISHING
    • B24DTOOLS FOR GRINDING, BUFFING OR SHARPENING
    • B24D9/00Wheels or drums supporting in exchangeable arrangement a layer of flexible abrasive material, e.g. sandpaper
    • B24D9/02Expansible drums for carrying flexible material in tubular form, e.g. expanded by centrifugal force
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47LDOMESTIC WASHING OR CLEANING; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47L11/00Machines for cleaning floors, carpets, furniture, walls, or wall coverings
    • A47L11/40Parts or details of machines not provided for in groups A47L11/02 - A47L11/38, or not restricted to one of these groups, e.g. handles, arrangements of switches, skirts, buffers, levers
    • A47L11/4036Parts or details of the surface treating tools
    • A47L11/4038Disk shaped surface treating tools
    • 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
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/47Burnishing

Definitions

  • burnishing-wheels In finishing the heels and bottoms of shoes it is customary to cover these surfaces with a compound of wax, blacking, and other substances and then to produce a high polish upon the surface thus treated by rubbing the same with a burnishing-wheel.
  • burnishing-wheels Various forms of burnishing-wheels have been produced and employed for this purpose, and one of the most commonly employed devices of this character is known as a rag-wheel, such device usually comprising a body or holder covered with cloth. These cloth coverings soon become worn or burned by contactwith the work, so that it is necessary to renew them frequently, and such renewal causes the loss of considerable time to the operator, and the cost of new coverings is an important item of expense.
  • the object of my invention is to provide a form of burnishing-wheel which is constructed so that it will not only satisfactorily perform the functions of an ordinary ragwheel, but which is of such a nature that it will wear for a long time, and much longer than any construction of rag-wheel of which I am aware, which may be pressed with considerable force against the work and may become highly heated without injury to 5 when one of the surfaces become worn, and
  • Figure '1 is an edge elevation
  • Fig. 2 is a'front view, of a burnishing-wheel made according to my invention
  • Fig. 3 is a diametrical section on the line a m of Fig. 2.
  • the rotating shaft or is provided with a twopart holder 6, the sections thereof each being of disk form and having their edges oppositely beveled inwardly toward each other and slightlyconcaved, so as to provide an approximately semicircular groove when the sections of the holder are adjustably clamped together by bolts cor other suitable means.
  • a ring or rim d, composed of three or more spirallytwisted strands, is arranged in the groove of said holder, each strand being composed of a plurality of spirally-twisted hemp or manila fibers, as in an ordinary rope.
  • the ring may be made practically continuous and of approximately uniform size by tapering the ends of the strands and splicing them together, by winding a strand or a rope of small size about itself until a ring ofthe desired thickness is produced, by twisting several strands together so that each spans the meeting ends of the other, or in any other manner so that the ends of the twisted strands interlock with the other strands and prevent enlargement of the ring beyond the ordinary stretching and so that when the holdersections are drawn together the ring will be tightly drawn about the holder and will be firmly held in this position without the aid of cement or other fastening means.
  • the hemp or manila fiber of which the ring is made is capable of withstanding a comparatively high degree of heat and will not become burned or discolored by the heat generated when the work is pressed against it even with as much force as the ordinary operator is able to apply. The advantages thereby attained are several and important.
  • the ring of fiber becomes highly heated at its working surface, thereby applying the heat to the polishing compound requisite to produce a high polish, and the force with which the work is pressed against the work produces a hard firm finish which is not easily marred and does not readily lose its luster.
  • My device thus has the combined advantage of a ragwheel and a metal wheel without their disadvantages, for a metal wheel will not polish satisfactorily or distribute or work the wax into the pores of the leather and spaces between the heel-lifts, while the rag-wheel will become burned or torn if the workis pressed against it more than lightly, greatly impairing the luster of the polished surface.
  • the twisted fibers present a porous surface which becomes partly filled with'the polishing compound, so that the polished surface does not become covered with a continuous coating of wax, as will an ordinary rag-wheel; but the fibers act directly on the surface to be polished atall times and yet at the same time hold the polishing compound in the pores formed between them, removing the surplus compound and supplying it where deficient.
  • the corrugations formed by the main strands cause the surface of the work to receive a rapid succession-of blows, which greatly increase the hard- Iiess of the finishv
  • These corrugations also prevent all possibility of a continuous waxcovered working surface being formed, the formation of such a surface making it necessary to discard the burnishing-covering.
  • the burnishing-ring As the whole body of the burnishing-ring is approximately circular in cross-section and is also so flexible that it may be bent in any direction if theworking surface becomes worn to too great an extent or worn too flat to engage satisfactorily the curved side of a heel, it is simply necessary to remove the ring from the holder and roll it or turn it inside out, as it were, so that a new working surface is presented, when it is replaced. By doing this at intervals until the whole surface of the ring is worn down asingle ring may be used for a long time, so that the expense of renewal of the rings is comparatively insignificant.
  • a burnishing-wheel for the purpose described consisting of a rotary holder having an annular seat, a circular burnishing-ring mounted on said seat comprising a plurality of spirally-twisted strands, each strand composed of a plurality of spirally-twisted fibers, substantially as described.

Description

No'. 753,497. PATENTED MAR/1,1904.
. G. W. KIMBALL.
BURNISHING WHEEL.
v APPLICATION FILED AUG. 21, 1903.
N0 MODEL.
Fig,l
Witnesses. Inventor.
"r54: unnms PETERS 00.. mmuwa. vmsnmm'ou, a c,
fPatented March 1, 1904.
PATENT OFFICE.
GEORGE W. KIMBALL, OF NEWTON, NEW HAMPSHIRE.
BURNlSHlNG-WHEZEL.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 753,497, dated March. 1, 1904.
Application filed August 21,1903. Serial No 170,245- (No model.)
To all whom it may concern.-
Be it known thatI, GEORGE W. KIMBALL, of Newton, county of Rockingham, State of New Hampshire, have invented an Improvement in Burnishing-Wheels, of which the following description, in connection with the accompanying drawings, is a specification, like characters on the drawings representing like parts.
In finishing the heels and bottoms of shoes it is customary to cover these surfaces with a compound of wax, blacking, and other substances and then to produce a high polish upon the surface thus treated by rubbing the same with a burnishing-wheel. Various forms of burnishing-wheels have been produced and employed for this purpose, and one of the most commonly employed devices of this character is known as a rag-wheel, such device usually comprising a body or holder covered with cloth. These cloth coverings soon become worn or burned by contactwith the work, so that it is necessary to renew them frequently, and such renewal causes the loss of considerable time to the operator, and the cost of new coverings is an important item of expense.
In order that a bright or highly-polished surface-and a hard and lasting finish may be produced on a heel or shoe bottom, the application of a considerable amount of heat and pressure during the polishing process is necessary when the ordinary polishing compounds are employed. This application I of heat is accomplished in various ways-for example, with a heated iron rollall of which add more or less to the expense of performing the polishing process.
The object of my invention is to provide a form of burnishing-wheel which is constructed so that it will not only satisfactorily perform the functions of an ordinary ragwheel, but which is of such a nature that it will wear for a long time, and much longer than any construction of rag-wheel of which I am aware, which may be pressed with considerable force against the work and may become highly heated without injury to 5 when one of the surfaces become worn, and
, which is of such a simple and inexpensive construction that the first cost thereof is comparatively small. I accomplish these objects by mounting on a suitable holder a polishing rim or ring composed of a series of twisted strands of hemp or manila fiber, the ends of each strand being interlocked with the other strands, so that a practically continuous working surface is produced.
In the accompanying drawings, Figure '1 is an edge elevation, and Fig. 2 is a'front view, of a burnishing-wheel made according to my invention; and Fig. 3 is a diametrical section on the line a m of Fig. 2.
The rotating shaft or is provided with a twopart holder 6, the sections thereof each being of disk form and having their edges oppositely beveled inwardly toward each other and slightlyconcaved, so as to provide an approximately semicircular groove when the sections of the holder are adjustably clamped together by bolts cor other suitable means. A ring or rim d, composed of three or more spirallytwisted strands, is arranged in the groove of said holder, each strand being composed of a plurality of spirally-twisted hemp or manila fibers, as in an ordinary rope. The ring may be made practically continuous and of approximately uniform size by tapering the ends of the strands and splicing them together, by winding a strand or a rope of small size about itself until a ring ofthe desired thickness is produced, by twisting several strands together so that each spans the meeting ends of the other, or in any other manner so that the ends of the twisted strands interlock with the other strands and prevent enlargement of the ring beyond the ordinary stretching and so that when the holdersections are drawn together the ring will be tightly drawn about the holder and will be firmly held in this position without the aid of cement or other fastening means. A burnishing-wheel having a circular working face, across which a series of corrugations extend obliquely, isthus provided, each corrugation being formed by each main. strand as it passes across the working face, and as the fibers run spirally or are twisted to form each minor strand the result is that these fibers work on the surface in different directions and thoroughly fill the cracks in the heel with wax. The hemp or manila fiber of which the ring is made is capable of withstanding a comparatively high degree of heat and will not become burned or discolored by the heat generated when the work is pressed against it even with as much force as the ordinary operator is able to apply. The advantages thereby attained are several and important. The ring of fiber becomes highly heated at its working surface, thereby applying the heat to the polishing compound requisite to produce a high polish, and the force with which the work is pressed against the work produces a hard firm finish which is not easily marred and does not readily lose its luster. My device thus has the combined advantage of a ragwheel and a metal wheel without their disadvantages, for a metal wheel will not polish satisfactorily or distribute or work the wax into the pores of the leather and spaces between the heel-lifts, while the rag-wheel will become burned or torn if the workis pressed against it more than lightly, greatly impairing the luster of the polished surface. Moreover, the twisted fibers present a porous surface which becomes partly filled with'the polishing compound, so that the polished surface does not become covered with a continuous coating of wax, as will an ordinary rag-wheel; but the fibers act directly on the surface to be polished atall times and yet at the same time hold the polishing compound in the pores formed between them, removing the surplus compound and supplying it where deficient. The corrugations formed by the main strands cause the surface of the work to receive a rapid succession-of blows, which greatly increase the hard- Iiess of the finishv These corrugations also prevent all possibility of a continuous waxcovered working surface being formed, the formation of such a surface making it necessary to discard the burnishing-covering. As the fibers of the ring are all twisted together, it will be apparent that the wearing away and consequent breaking of the fibers or even of minor strands of the ring will not impair the efficiency thereof, as their ends will be made toadhere to the main body of the .ring by the wax. However, if such broken ends project from the surface the brushing action which they will have will be advantageous rather than otherwise. As the whole body of the burnishing-ring is approximately circular in cross-section and is also so flexible that it may be bent in any direction if theworking surface becomes worn to too great an extent or worn too flat to engage satisfactorily the curved side of a heel, it is simply necessary to remove the ring from the holder and roll it or turn it inside out, as it were, so that a new working surface is presented, when it is replaced. By doing this at intervals until the whole surface of the ring is worn down asingle ring may be used for a long time, so that the expense of renewal of the rings is comparatively insignificant.
Having thus described my invention, whatI claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is 4 A burnishing-wheel for the purpose described consisting of a rotary holder having an annular seat, a circular burnishing-ring mounted on said seat comprising a plurality of spirally-twisted strands, each strand composed of a plurality of spirally-twisted fibers, substantially as described.
In testimony whereof I have signed my name to this specification in the presence of twosubscribing witnesses.
GEORGE W. KIMBALL.
Witnesses:
LOUIS H. HARRIMAN, H. B. DAVIS.
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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2429670A (en) * 1943-08-06 1947-10-28 Sam L Bingham S Son Mfg Co Printer's roller
DE1081342B (en) * 1955-11-08 1960-05-05 Eisen U Metall Kommandit Ges Sanding mat
US3512204A (en) * 1968-03-25 1970-05-19 Hugh A Kirk Scrubber and scraper disk with rope wiper element
US5996166A (en) * 1998-07-10 1999-12-07 Newell Operating Company Surface decorating roller cover

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2429670A (en) * 1943-08-06 1947-10-28 Sam L Bingham S Son Mfg Co Printer's roller
DE1081342B (en) * 1955-11-08 1960-05-05 Eisen U Metall Kommandit Ges Sanding mat
US3512204A (en) * 1968-03-25 1970-05-19 Hugh A Kirk Scrubber and scraper disk with rope wiper element
US5996166A (en) * 1998-07-10 1999-12-07 Newell Operating Company Surface decorating roller cover

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