US773525A - Process of making coated nails. - Google Patents

Process of making coated nails. Download PDF

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Publication number
US773525A
US773525A US212581A US1904212581A US773525A US 773525 A US773525 A US 773525A US 212581 A US212581 A US 212581A US 1904212581 A US1904212581 A US 1904212581A US 773525 A US773525 A US 773525A
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US
United States
Prior art keywords
nails
coating
nail
oil
coated
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Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
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US212581A
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William S Rogers
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J C PEARSON Co
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J C PEARSON Co
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Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US15035603A external-priority patent/US773524A/en
Application filed by J C PEARSON Co filed Critical J C PEARSON Co
Priority to US212581A priority Critical patent/US773525A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US773525A publication Critical patent/US773525A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C09DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • C09DCOATING COMPOSITIONS, e.g. PAINTS, VARNISHES OR LACQUERS; FILLING PASTES; CHEMICAL PAINT OR INK REMOVERS; INKS; CORRECTING FLUIDS; WOODSTAINS; PASTES OR SOLIDS FOR COLOURING OR PRINTING; USE OF MATERIALS THEREFOR
    • C09D5/00Coating compositions, e.g. paints, varnishes or lacquers, characterised by their physical nature or the effects produced; Filling pastes
    • C09D5/08Anti-corrosive paints
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C10PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
    • C10MLUBRICATING COMPOSITIONS; USE OF CHEMICAL SUBSTANCES EITHER ALONE OR AS LUBRICATING INGREDIENTS IN A LUBRICATING COMPOSITION
    • C10M2219/00Organic non-macromolecular compounds containing sulfur, selenium or tellurium as ingredients in lubricant compositions
    • C10M2219/04Organic non-macromolecular compounds containing sulfur, selenium or tellurium as ingredients in lubricant compositions containing sulfur-to-oxygen bonds, i.e. sulfones, sulfoxides
    • C10M2219/044Sulfonic acids, Derivatives thereof, e.g. neutral salts

Definitions

  • Rosin is dissolved in gasolene or some readily-volatile solvent in about the proportion of thirty-two parts, by weight, of rosin to ninetysix parts, by weight, of gasolene, and a small quantity of a non-drying oil such as fish-oil, castor-oilgrosin-oil, or similar oil is added to this solution in about the proportion of one part, by weight, of such oil to the above-given proportions of solution.
  • a non-drying oil such as fish-oil, castor-oilgrosin-oil, or similar oil
  • the coating is tough and not brittle, and the nails so coated will not stick to each other.- As the nails will not stick to each other, it is not necessary to break them apart when they have 5 dried or on removing them from the kegs in which they are packed, and there is no roughness or break in the coated surface such as would be found if the surfaces were brittle and had stuck together and been separated, as
  • the amount of the non-drying oil contained in the resinous solution is so small in proportion that it Will, not be unpleasantly perceptible to any extent in the handling or use of the article, While it is sufficient to add toughness to the coating and prevent the coating from becoming brittle and flaky and to prevent the coated articles from sticking together 5 after dipping and while they are drying and to increase the holding power of the nail when driven. A less amount even than indicated will be sufficient for practical purposes, and if a very dry coating is wanted it is an 7 advantage to add about one part, by weight, of metallic resinatesuch as lead resinate or manganese resinate, or bothto each one hundred parts of the non-drying oil. This is most conveniently done by adding the resinates to warm oil before the non-drying oil is mixed with the rosin and gasolene.
  • cement-coated nails which have been for a long time sold in large quantities have a coating which softens by heat and friction caused by driving the nail into the wood, and the coating is stripped from the nail and remains about the'head of the nail near the surface of the first piece of wood penetrated.
  • the greater part of the nail is not protected from moisture striking its sides, but only from moisture which might enter near the head of the nail, and the lower part of the 9 nail often has no substantial coating either to protect the nail from moisture or to adhere to the second piece of wood into which the nail is driven, whereby a large part of the value of v the coating is lost.
  • coated nails made in accordance with this specification have a tough coating, which will not strip off when the nail is driven into the Wood, although it will soften sufliciently by the heat developed in driving to make the nail very tenacious to the material into which it is driven after the nail has been allowed to cool.
  • the nail will be protected from moisture throughout its length and the benefit of the tenacity of the coating for the entire length of the nail is obtained.
  • Another important feature is that the nail may be drawn from the wood and used again with its coating substantially intact, whereas the coated nails now used when withdrawn from the wood are substantially uncoated nails.
  • That I claim as my invention is The process of manufacturing coated nails which consists in dissolving rosin and a small quantity of a non-drying oil in a readily-volatile solvent, dipping the nails in this composition Without heating, draining off the surplus composition and drying the nails by evaporation of the volatile solvent, substantially as hereinbefore set forth.

Description

Patented October 25, 1904..
UNTTED STATES PATENT OEEicE.
WILLIAM S. ROGERS, OF CLEVELAND, OHIO, ASSIGNOR TO J. C. PEARSON COMPANY, OF BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS, A CORPORATION OF MAINE.
PROCESS OF MAKING COATED NAILS.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 773,525, dated October 25, 1904.
Original application filed March 31, 1903, Serial No. 150,356. Divided and this application filed June 14, 1904. Serial No. 212,581.
g (No specimens.)
To all whom, it nuty concern.-
Be it known that I, l/VILLIAH S. RoeERs, a citizen of the United States, and a resident of Cleveland, county of Cuyahoga, and State of Ohio, have invented a certain new and useful Improvement in Processes of Making Coated Nails, of which thefollowingis aspecification.
This invention is a division, of my application, Serial No. 150,356, filed March 31, 1903,
IO for a certain new and useful improvement in coated nails and process for coating the same and is directed to the process of making such nails described in said application.
My process for the manufacture of coated 5 nails is as follows:
Rosin is dissolved in gasolene or some readily-volatile solvent in about the proportion of thirty-two parts, by weight, of rosin to ninetysix parts, by weight, of gasolene, and a small quantity of a non-drying oilsuch as fish-oil, castor-oilgrosin-oil, or similar oil is added to this solution in about the proportion of one part, by weight, of such oil to the above-given proportions of solution. It will be found 5 that the above amounts of rosin and fish-oil will be almost entirely dissolved in the abovenamed proportion of gasolene, especially if the mixture is allowed to stand for some time, although without the fish-oil the solutionof 3 the rosin would be far from complete. Other non-drying oils assist in the solution in the same way in varying degrees, castor-oil being more effective in this respect than fish-oil,
of the small amount of non-drying oil the coating is tough and not brittle, and the nails so coated will not stick to each other.- As the nails will not stick to each other, it is not necessary to break them apart when they have 5 dried or on removing them from the kegs in which they are packed, and there is no roughness or break in the coated surface such as would be found if the surfaces were brittle and had stuck together and been separated, as
'would often be necessary if the coating did not contain the non-drying oil.
The amount of the non-drying oil contained in the resinous solution is so small in proportion that it Will, not be unpleasantly perceptible to any extent in the handling or use of the article, While it is sufficient to add toughness to the coating and prevent the coating from becoming brittle and flaky and to prevent the coated articles from sticking together 5 after dipping and while they are drying and to increase the holding power of the nail when driven. A less amount even than indicated will be sufficient for practical purposes, and if a very dry coating is wanted it is an 7 advantage to add about one part, by weight, of metallic resinatesuch as lead resinate or manganese resinate, or bothto each one hundred parts of the non-drying oil. This is most conveniently done by adding the resinates to warm oil before the non-drying oil is mixed with the rosin and gasolene.
The so-called cement-coated nails which have been for a long time sold in large quantities have a coating which softens by heat and friction caused by driving the nail into the wood, and the coating is stripped from the nail and remains about the'head of the nail near the surface of the first piece of wood penetrated. In consequence of this stripping of the coating from the cement-coated nails now sold the greater part of the nail is not protected from moisture striking its sides, but only from moisture which might enter near the head of the nail, and the lower part of the 9 nail often has no substantial coating either to protect the nail from moisture or to adhere to the second piece of wood into which the nail is driven, whereby a large part of the value of v the coating is lost.
The coated nails made in accordance with this specification have a tough coating, which will not strip off when the nail is driven into the Wood, although it will soften sufliciently by the heat developed in driving to make the nail very tenacious to the material into which it is driven after the nail has been allowed to cool. The nail will be protected from moisture throughout its length and the benefit of the tenacity of the coating for the entire length of the nail is obtained. Another important feature is that the nail may be drawn from the wood and used again with its coating substantially intact, whereas the coated nails now used when withdrawn from the wood are substantially uncoated nails.
The process of making the composition Without heat and applying it to the nails by merely dipping the nails in the cold solution or pouring the cold solution over the nails and drying the coating by the mere evaporation of the gasolene at ordinary temperatures without artificial heat is a marked improvement over prior processes for coating nails. Great care should be used, of course, to neglect none of the usual precautions to avoid an explosion of the gasolene.
Other substances may be added to the rosin, non-drying oil, and the volatile solvent without departingfrom my invention, and any readily-volatile solvent similar to gasolene may be used, and I desire to be understood as including any such modification within my claim.
That I claim as my invention is The process of manufacturing coated nails which consists in dissolving rosin and a small quantity of a non-drying oil in a readily-volatile solvent, dipping the nails in this composition Without heating, draining off the surplus composition and drying the nails by evaporation of the volatile solvent, substantially as hereinbefore set forth.
In testimony whereof I afiix my signature in presence of two witnesses.
WILLIAM S. ROGERS. Witnesses:
R. B. HOFFMAN,
GEO. H. MA'roHE'rT.
US212581A 1903-03-31 1904-06-14 Process of making coated nails. Expired - Lifetime US773525A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US212581A US773525A (en) 1903-03-31 1904-06-14 Process of making coated nails.

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US15035603A US773524A (en) 1903-03-31 1903-03-31 Coated nail.
US212581A US773525A (en) 1903-03-31 1904-06-14 Process of making coated nails.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US773525A true US773525A (en) 1904-10-25

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US212581A Expired - Lifetime US773525A (en) 1903-03-31 1904-06-14 Process of making coated nails.

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