US810852A - Gas-burning tank-heater. - Google Patents

Gas-burning tank-heater. Download PDF

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Publication number
US810852A
US810852A US26635405A US1905266354A US810852A US 810852 A US810852 A US 810852A US 26635405 A US26635405 A US 26635405A US 1905266354 A US1905266354 A US 1905266354A US 810852 A US810852 A US 810852A
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chamber
air
tank
heater
wall
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US26635405A
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Chester C Fifield
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47JKITCHEN EQUIPMENT; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; APPARATUS FOR MAKING BEVERAGES
    • A47J36/00Parts, details or accessories of cooking-vessels
    • A47J36/24Warming devices
    • A47J36/26Devices for warming vessels containing drinks or food, especially by means of burners Warming devices with a burner, e.g. using gasoline; Travelling cookers, e.g. using petroleum or gasoline with one burner

Definitions

  • My object is, first, to provide a tank-heater adapted for operating hydrocarbon-burners therein; second, to provide means for regulating the heat therein as required to regulate the temperature of water in a tank; third, to adapt the heater to maintain a uniform heat of any desired degree twenty-four hours or more without attention from anyperson for adding fuel, adjusting a damper or registers, or removing ashes; fourth, to reduce the cost of operating a tank-heater, as required to prevent water from freezing and keeping water in a tank at any desired temperature.
  • My invention consists in the construction, arrangement, and combination of a doublewalled air-conductor, air-heater, and heatradiator, a combustion-chamber, a serpentine hot-air conductor and radiator and flue, and an adjustable hydrocarbon-burner and oil-tank, as hereinafter set forth, pointed out in my claims, and illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which Figure 1 is a side elevation of my tankheater in position in the end portion of a water-tank as re uired for practical use.
  • Fig. 2 is a vertica sectional view of the tankheater and shows the relative positions of all the interior parts.
  • Fig. 3 is a transverse sectional view on the dotted line 3 3 of Fig. 2.
  • the numeral 10 designates the end portion of a water-tank in which my tank-heater is detachably fixed, as shown in Fig. 1.
  • the air-conductor is composed of two concentric sheet-metal walls 13 and 14, as shown in Fig. 2.
  • the outer wall is closed at its bottom and has a removable cover 15 at its top and a plurality of openings 16 near its top to admit air.
  • the inner wall 14 is open at its top and bottom, enlarged in diameter, and fitted in the top portion and inside of the out side wall, as required to close the top of the annular air-chamber thus produced between the two walls 13 and 14.
  • the combustion-chamber 17 is fixed-in an opening in the lower ends of the two concen tric walls to communicate with the lower end of the air-chamber produced by the inner wall 14 and the annular air-chamber between the two walls 13 and 14, as required to feed air to a burner in the combustion-chamber 17.
  • a flue 18 is connected with the top of the com-' bustion-chamber 17 by means of a plurality of open-ended tubes 19, fixed in the bottom of the flue and in the top of the combustionchamber, as shown, or in any suitable Way, as required to allow heated air to pass up from the combustion-chamber into the flue and to produce a draft for a burner in the conibus tion-chamber that will draw air from the double-walled air-conductor to promote combustion in the combustion-chamber.
  • a hydrocarbon-burner 20 is swiveled to a pipe 21, fixed to the outside of the doublewalled chamber in such a manner that the burner can be turned into the double-walled chamber, as indicated by dotted lines in Fig. 2, for the purpose of lighting the burner and adjusting it as required to regulate it.
  • a tank 22 for a supply of gasolene is fixed to the top of the pipe 21, and the pipe is provided with a valve 23 forTegulating the flow of oil to the burner 20.
  • a plurality of deflectors 24 are fixed in the lower end portion of the flue 18, as re uired, to produce a serpentine passage-way or the products of combustion that rise through the tubes 19 from the combustion-chamber 17, as required, to restrict the upward passage of heat and to allow the heat to radiate from the flue into the water surrounding the lower end portion of the flue.
  • Perforated angle-irons 25 are fixed to the outside and top portion of the wall 13, and rods 26, terminating in screws at their lower ends, are passed down through the angle-irons into the bottom of the tank, as required, to detachably fasten the tank-heater in the tank.
  • a tank-heater the combination of a chamber comprising two concentricallyarranged walls, spaced from each other, forming an air-chamber, the inner wall being suspended from the outer walland open at its ottom, the outer wall being provided with air-inlet openings near its top, a combustionchamber secured to and extending from said walls and in communication with said airchamber, a fuel-supply pipe and a burner swiveled thereto, said burner adapted to swing either into said combustion-chamber or into said first-named chamber.
  • a tank-heater the combination of a chamber comprising two concentricallyar ranged walls, spaced from each other, forming an air-chamber, the inner wall being suspended from the outer Wall, and open at its bottom and the two walls being provided with alining openings near their bottoms and the outer wall provided with an inlet near its top, a combustion chamber extended through said alining openings and secured therein to communicate with the double- Walled chamber.
  • a tank heater comprising a doublewalled air-chamber, closed at its top and open at its bottom, the outer wall closed at its bottom and provided with openings near its top, the inner wall open at its bottom covered at its top and fitted to the inside and top portion of the outer wall, a combustion-chamber fixed in coinciding openings in the lower ends of the top walls, a pipe for conveying oil fixed to the outer Wall, a hydrocarbon-burner swiveled to the lower end of said pipe, a flue connected with the top of the combustion-chamber, an oil-tank fixed to the top of the pipe for conveying oil and a valve in the pipe, arranged and combined to operate in the manner set forth for the purposes stated.

Description

' No. 810,852. PATENTED JAN. 23, 1906.
N 0.0. PIPIELD.
GAS BURNING TANK HEATER.
APPLICATION FILED JUNE 19, 1905.
' UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented Jan. 23, 1906.
Application filed June 19,1905. Serial No. 266,354..
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, CHESTER O. FIFIELD,
a citizen of the United States, residing at I Grand Junction, in the county of Greene and State of Iowa, have invented a new and useful Gas-Burning Tank-Heater, of which the following is a specification.
My object is, first, to provide a tank-heater adapted for operating hydrocarbon-burners therein; second, to provide means for regulating the heat therein as required to regulate the temperature of water in a tank; third, to adapt the heater to maintain a uniform heat of any desired degree twenty-four hours or more without attention from anyperson for adding fuel, adjusting a damper or registers, or removing ashes; fourth, to reduce the cost of operating a tank-heater, as required to prevent water from freezing and keeping water in a tank at any desired temperature.
My invention consists in the construction, arrangement, and combination of a doublewalled air-conductor, air-heater, and heatradiator, a combustion-chamber, a serpentine hot-air conductor and radiator and flue, and an adjustable hydrocarbon-burner and oil-tank, as hereinafter set forth, pointed out in my claims, and illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which Figure 1 is a side elevation of my tankheater in position in the end portion of a water-tank as re uired for practical use. Fig. 2 is a vertica sectional view of the tankheater and shows the relative positions of all the interior parts. Fig. 3 is a transverse sectional view on the dotted line 3 3 of Fig. 2.
The numeral 10 designates the end portion of a water-tank in which my tank-heater is detachably fixed, as shown in Fig. 1.
The air-conductor is composed of two concentric sheet- metal walls 13 and 14, as shown in Fig. 2. The outer wall is closed at its bottom and has a removable cover 15 at its top and a plurality of openings 16 near its top to admit air. The inner wall 14 is open at its top and bottom, enlarged in diameter, and fitted in the top portion and inside of the out side wall, as required to close the top of the annular air-chamber thus produced between the two walls 13 and 14. By thus closing the top of the annular chamber by means of the enlarged top of the inner wall the air that is admitted through the opening 16 will be drawn downward and heated so that the heat will radiate from the outer wall.
- The combustion-chamber 17 is fixed-in an opening in the lower ends of the two concen tric walls to communicate with the lower end of the air-chamber produced by the inner wall 14 and the annular air-chamber between the two walls 13 and 14, as required to feed air to a burner in the combustion-chamber 17. A flue 18 is connected with the top of the com-' bustion-chamber 17 by means of a plurality of open-ended tubes 19, fixed in the bottom of the flue and in the top of the combustionchamber, as shown, or in any suitable Way, as required to allow heated air to pass up from the combustion-chamber into the flue and to produce a draft for a burner in the conibus tion-chamber that will draw air from the double-walled air-conductor to promote combustion in the combustion-chamber.
A hydrocarbon-burner 20 is swiveled to a pipe 21, fixed to the outside of the doublewalled chamber in such a manner that the burner can be turned into the double-walled chamber, as indicated by dotted lines in Fig. 2, for the purpose of lighting the burner and adjusting it as required to regulate it. A tank 22 for a supply of gasolene is fixed to the top of the pipe 21, and the pipe is provided with a valve 23 forTegulating the flow of oil to the burner 20.
A plurality of deflectors 24 are fixed in the lower end portion of the flue 18, as re uired, to produce a serpentine passage-way or the products of combustion that rise through the tubes 19 from the combustion-chamber 17, as required, to restrict the upward passage of heat and to allow the heat to radiate from the flue into the water surrounding the lower end portion of the flue.
Perforated angle-irons 25 are fixed to the outside and top portion of the wall 13, and rods 26, terminating in screws at their lower ends, are passed down through the angle-irons into the bottom of the tank, as required, to detachably fasten the tank-heater in the tank.
In the practical use of my invention air admitted into the top of the annular air-chamber between the two walls 13 and 14 is drawn down to feed the burner in the combustionchamber and to fill the large air-chamber pro duced by the inner wall, and the air thus fed into the combustion-chamber, the annular chamber, and the large air-chamber communicating therewith becomes heated, as required, to promote combustion and also to radiate heat to aid in heating the Water in the {Sank surrounding the double-walled air-cham- Having thus set forth the purpose of my invention and its construction and manner of use, its practical operation and utility will be readily understood by farmers and others familiar with the art to which it pertains.
What I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
1. In a tank-heater the combination of a chamber comprising two concentricallyarranged walls, spaced from each other, forming an air-chamber, the inner wall being suspended from the outer walland open at its ottom, the outer wall being provided with air-inlet openings near its top, a combustionchamber secured to and extending from said walls and in communication with said airchamber, a fuel-supply pipe and a burner swiveled thereto, said burner adapted to swing either into said combustion-chamber or into said first-named chamber.
2. In a tank-heater the combination of a chamber comprising two concentricallyar ranged walls, spaced from each other, forming an air-chamber, the inner wall being suspended from the outer Wall, and open at its bottom and the two walls being provided with alining openings near their bottoms and the outer wall provided with an inlet near its top, a combustion chamber extended through said alining openings and secured therein to communicate with the double- Walled chamber.
3. A tank heater comprising a doublewalled air-chamber, closed at its top and open at its bottom, the outer wall closed at its bottom and provided with openings near its top, the inner wall open at its bottom covered at its top and fitted to the inside and top portion of the outer wall, a combustion-chamber fixed in coinciding openings in the lower ends of the top walls, a pipe for conveying oil fixed to the outer Wall, a hydrocarbon-burner swiveled to the lower end of said pipe, a flue connected with the top of the combustion-chamber, an oil-tank fixed to the top of the pipe for conveying oil and a valve in the pipe, arranged and combined to operate in the manner set forth for the purposes stated.
CHESTER C. FIFIELD.
Witnesses:
J. H. ORoUsE, W. B. GULIcK.
US26635405A 1905-06-19 1905-06-19 Gas-burning tank-heater. Expired - Lifetime US810852A (en)

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2511353A (en) * 1944-12-26 1950-06-13 Otto W Leaf Heated minnow bucket
US2737175A (en) * 1953-04-09 1956-03-06 James M Dunston Starter unit for tank heaters

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2511353A (en) * 1944-12-26 1950-06-13 Otto W Leaf Heated minnow bucket
US2737175A (en) * 1953-04-09 1956-03-06 James M Dunston Starter unit for tank heaters

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