US768157A - Wheel-guide. - Google Patents

Wheel-guide. Download PDF

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Publication number
US768157A
US768157A US18572503A US1903185725A US768157A US 768157 A US768157 A US 768157A US 18572503 A US18572503 A US 18572503A US 1903185725 A US1903185725 A US 1903185725A US 768157 A US768157 A US 768157A
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Prior art keywords
guide
wheel
rails
rolls
wheels
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US18572503A
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Herbert L Stillman
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B62LAND VEHICLES FOR TRAVELLING OTHERWISE THAN ON RAILS
    • B62DMOTOR VEHICLES; TRAILERS
    • B62D1/00Steering controls, i.e. means for initiating a change of direction of the vehicle
    • B62D1/24Steering controls, i.e. means for initiating a change of direction of the vehicle not vehicle-mounted
    • B62D1/26Steering controls, i.e. means for initiating a change of direction of the vehicle not vehicle-mounted mechanical, e.g. by a non-load-bearing guide
    • B62D1/265Steering controls, i.e. means for initiating a change of direction of the vehicle not vehicle-mounted mechanical, e.g. by a non-load-bearing guide especially adapted for guiding road vehicles carrying loads or passengers, e.g. in urban networks for public transportation

Definitions

  • the object of this invention is the construction of simple, inexpensive, and practicalfb means whereby an automobile or a horsedrawn vehicle can be propelled' upon steel plates or wooden beams without danger lof its running lolf therefrom.
  • Figure 1 is a front view of the front wheels of-,awagon-having my invention applied thereto.
  • Fig. 2 is a plan view showing one of such wheels having my Fig. 3 1s a side sec-- device applied to it.
  • Fig. 4. is a detail sectional view of one of the roll-guides constituting a part of my invention.
  • the reference-numeral 1 designates one of the steel plates or wooden beams ⁇ upon which it is desiredto run vehicles; but as my invention is especially designed for use in connection with wooden timbers or'beams I show the latter only in thedrawings.
  • 10 10 are the two front wheels of a wagon, and 11 the axle, with central Aking-bolt customarily employed.
  • Inasmuc'h as steel tires i are very damaging to wooden timbers, soon spli'ntering them and rendering them useless, I particularly design my invention for rubber-l tired wheels indicated in the drawings.
  • These sockets are vertical, and in each is slidably held a rod 21, carrying at its lower extremity a roll 20;
  • Setscrews 18, tapped-through the sides of said sockets and abutting against said rods, permit the latter to be 'fastened down at such points as to present the rolls 20 to the side right-hand wheel is shown with its guide-roll 20 engaging the track-rail or wooden timber 1, while the left-hand roll is shown as free thereof.
  • said 1 other device prevents each guide-roll from dropping too low in case the set-screw should ecome loosened.
  • My purpose in locating the rods and guiderolls at the extremity of aforwardlyproject ing arm 15 is to better guide Athe wheels, inasmuch as the farther awayfrom the kingbolt, and hence from the steeringwheels tread, are the guide-rolls the more quickly do the latter swing into contact with the railtimbers and keep the wheels from further lateral divergence.
  • rIhe value of my guide-roll in comparison with a flange formed on the wheel itself is as follows:.First, a anged wheel running on a wooden rail soon splinters and wears down the-edge of the latter until the wheel climbs olf therefrom at the slightest provocation;
  • a flanged wheel running on a steel plate or a T-rail generates considerable friction between such fiange and the lateral edge of the rail or plate:
  • the guide-rolls constitute not only aperfeet kind of flange, but one which can be immediately raised out of the way to permit the wagon to run on an ordinary roadway or be lowered to permit the wagon to run with safety 0n the track-rails.
  • to run a rubber-tired wheel upon a steel plate having an upwardly-projecting flange at one edge to keep the wheel in place is to invite destruction to the rubber tire by its frequent climbing up and over such flange.
  • such plate flange is impotent to keep the wagon in place thereon; but it must be constantly steered this way and the other to keep it on the plates.
  • my invention enables rubbertired wheels to be run upon track-rails with perfect-security. Rubber-tired wheels permit of wooden timbers to be employed as track-rails.
  • the vehicle equipped with my invention is instantly convertible from a trackrunning to a pavement-running conveyance, and vice versa.
  • a teamster or farmer having his wagon equipped with my guide-rolls can have his horses drag a heavy load along the road leading to a main line of traffic provided with wooden track-rails, then having reached the latter and put the Wheel-guides into engagement with the rails can have his horses trot off briskly with the load under which they could formerly scarcely make headway, thereby saving vastly in destruction to his team and wagon and in time to both himself and the outfit.
  • the term rolls as applied to the guide-rolls is used to designate any form of wheel or similar rotating antifriction member.
  • VhatI claim as my invention, and for which I desire Letters Patent, is as follows, to wit:

Description

4,. 0 av Il ,QW 2 nul, ,U A .D E T N E T A, P
N.. E AD Mm .ma .Mm .E .LW IW .,7. 5. 1, ,8 6 7 o. N
'Anfmon'xol FILED Dnov. 1s'. 1908.
f No. 768,157.
UNITED STATES@ Patentedv August 23, 1904.
PATENT OEEICE.
rWHEEL-simple.
SPECIFICATION formingpart of Letters Patent No. 768,157, datedAugust 23, 1904. Application filed December 18, 1903. Serial No. 185,725. (No model.)
To all whom t may concern,.-
Be it known that I, HERBERT L. STILLMAN,a
' citizen of the United States, and a resident of West Acton, in the county of Middlesex, State of Massachusetts, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Wheel-Guides, of which the following is a full, clear, and exact description. The object of this invention is the construction of simple, inexpensive, and practicalfb means whereby an automobile or a horsedrawn vehicle can be propelled' upon steel plates or wooden beams without danger lof its running lolf therefrom.
Referring to the drawings forming part of this specification, Figure 1 is a front view of the front wheels of-,awagon-having my invention applied thereto. Fig. 2 is a plan view showing one of such wheels having my Fig. 3 1s a side sec-- device applied to it. l tional elevation of a front axle and wheel with my invention thereon, and Fig. 4. is a detail sectional view of one of the roll-guides constituting a part of my invention.
The reference-numeral 1 designates one of the steel plates or wooden beams` upon which it is desiredto run vehicles; but as my invention is especially designed for use in connection with wooden timbers or'beams I show the latter only in thedrawings.-
10 10 are the two front wheels of a wagon, and 11 the axle, with central Aking-bolt customarily employed. Inasmuc'h as steel tires i are very damaging to wooden timbers, soon spli'ntering them and rendering them useless, I particularly design my invention for rubber-l tired wheels indicated in the drawings.
Projecting forward from the axle 11 are the arms 15, suitably but rigidly connected thereto by the clips 16 and each having in its forward end a socket 17. These sockets are vertical, and in each is slidably held a rod 21, carrying at its lower extremity a roll 20; Setscrews 18, tapped-through the sides of said sockets and abutting against said rods, permit the latter to be 'fastened down at such points as to present the rolls 20 to the side right-hand wheel is shown with its guide-roll 20 engaging the track-rail or wooden timber 1, while the left-hand roll is shown as free thereof. As a matter of fact I design said 1 other device prevents each guide-roll from dropping too low in case the set-screw should ecome loosened.
To keep. the guide-rolls from hammering and splintering the wooden rail-timbers, as they are likely to do when made of metal, I
prefer to rubber-cover them, as indicated in Fig. 4, where 22 designates the rubber cover or tire, and 23 the metal spool provided with ball-bearings at the lower end of the rod 21.
My purpose in locating the rods and guiderolls at the extremity of aforwardlyproject ing arm 15 is to better guide Athe wheels, inasmuch as the farther awayfrom the kingbolt, and hence from the steeringwheels tread, are the guide-rolls the more quickly do the latter swing into contact with the railtimbers and keep the wheels from further lateral divergence.
In locating a timber track of the kind set forth upon a private right of way the timbers 1 arewholly above ground, and so present free lateral faces to the'guide-rolls; but when such a line crosses a public road it is necessary to plank in the space between vthe timbers, as lat 3, Fig. 1, and to leave as limited spaces as possible between such planking and the timbers 1 to keep from entrance therein the hoofs of horses and other animals. This necessitates that the guide-rolls shall be of as limited diameter as is consistent with strength andease of rotation. I am therefore obliged to make each guide-roll rather long in cornparison with its diameter, so that it may pass freely through the said space 1 between planking and timber and still give ample engagement with the lateral face of the latter.
rIhe value of my guide-roll in comparison with a flange formed on the wheel itself is as follows:.First, a anged wheel running on a wooden rail soon splinters and wears down the-edge of the latter until the wheel climbs olf therefrom at the slightest provocation;
IOO
second, a flanged wheel running on a steel plate or a T-rail generates considerable friction between such fiange and the lateral edge of the rail or plate: third, for a wagon to be run at will on an ordinary roadway or on rails flanges are out of the question, while with my device the guide-rolls constitute not only aperfeet kind of flange, but one which can be immediately raised out of the way to permit the wagon to run on an ordinary roadway or be lowered to permit the wagon to run with safety 0n the track-rails. Further, to run a rubber-tired wheel upon a steel plate having an upwardly-projecting flange at one edge to keep the wheel in place is to invite destruction to the rubber tire by its frequent climbing up and over such flange. Similarly such plate flange is impotent to keep the wagon in place thereon; but it must be constantly steered this way and the other to keep it on the plates.
To sum up, my invention enables rubbertired wheels to be run upon track-rails with perfect-security. Rubber-tired wheels permit of wooden timbers to be employed as track-rails. The vehicle equipped with my invention is instantly convertible from a trackrunning to a pavement-running conveyance, and vice versa. A teamster or farmer having his wagon equipped with my guide-rolls can have his horses drag a heavy load along the road leading to a main line of traffic provided with wooden track-rails, then having reached the latter and put the Wheel-guides into engagement with the rails can have his horses trot off briskly with the load under which they could formerly scarcely make headway, thereby saving vastly in destruction to his team and wagon and in time to both himself and the outfit. The term rolls as applied to the guide-rolls is used to designate any form of wheel or similar rotating antifriction member.
VhatI claim as my invention, and for which I desire Letters Patent, is as follows, to wit:
l. The combination with track-rails and a vehicle running thereon, of guide-rolls having vertical axes carried by the vehicle in close proximity to the lateral faces of said rails and at a substantial distance from the tread of the vehicles steering-wheels, measured along tbe track-rails, substantially as described.
2. The combination with track-rails and a vehicle running thereon, of a paii` oli' guiderolls having vertical axes, and arms rigidly projecting in advance of the vehicles steering-wheels and carrying said rolls in close juxtaposition to the lateral faces of said rails at a substantial distance in advance of said wheels treads, substantially as described.
3. The combination with track-rails and a vehicle running thereon, of a pair of arms aeting as a lever with respect to the vehicles steering-wheels, and two guide-rolls having vertical axes carried by said arms in close juxtaposition to the lateral faces of said trackrails and at a substantial distance from the tread of the steering-wheels, said arms being constructed for the vertical ad justment of said rolls, substantially as described.
4. The combination with track-rails and a vehicle running thereon, said vehicle having centrally-swiveled front axle, of guide-rolls having vertical axes rigidly carried b v said axle in close juxtaposition tothe lateral faces of the track-rails and in front of said axle, substantially as described.
5. The combination with track-rails and a vehicle running thereon, of forwardly-projecting arms rigid with the axle of the front wheels of the vehicle, each said arm having` a vertical socket at its front end, a rod slidable in each said socket, a roll carried at the lower end of each said rod, and means for locking said rods in said sockets, substantially as described.
In testimony that l. claim the foregoing invention l have hereunto set my hand this 14th day of December, 1903.
HERBERT L. SlllLLh/IA'N.
Witnesses:
A. B. UrnAM, L L. Goomcloli.
US18572503A 1903-12-18 1903-12-18 Wheel-guide. Expired - Lifetime US768157A (en)

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