US821458A - Combined end-gate and lifting-jack. - Google Patents

Combined end-gate and lifting-jack. Download PDF

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US821458A
US821458A US29597406A US1906295974A US821458A US 821458 A US821458 A US 821458A US 29597406 A US29597406 A US 29597406A US 1906295974 A US1906295974 A US 1906295974A US 821458 A US821458 A US 821458A
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bar
lifting
gate
foot
jack
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US29597406A
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Orson Bucklin
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B66HOISTING; LIFTING; HAULING
    • B66FHOISTING, LIFTING, HAULING OR PUSHING, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR, e.g. DEVICES WHICH APPLY A LIFTING OR PUSHING FORCE DIRECTLY TO THE SURFACE OF A LOAD
    • B66F15/00Crowbars or levers

Definitions

  • This invention is a combined end-gate and lifting-jack, and has for its object to enable the convenient transfer of the device from one use to the other without requiring any disconnection or complicated adjustment of arts.
  • Figure 1 is a fragmentary perspective view of the rear end of a wagonbody having the combined end-gate and liftingjack of the present invention applied thereto.
  • Fig. 2 is a horizontal sectlonal view taken longitudinally through the device.
  • Fig. 3 is a side elevation of the device set for use as a lifting-jack.
  • Fig. 4 is a detail persp ective view of the adjustable lifting-foot.
  • the present device includes end-gate sec tions or members 1 and 2 of corresponding widths and unequal lengths, which are hinged, as at 3, so as to have the joint break outwardly when an end-gate is fitted in a wagon-body, such as shown at 4 in Fig. 1 of the drawings.
  • the end-gate sections are preferably provided with transverse cleats 5 upon their inner faces to prevent warplng thereof, while the lower edges of the members are provided with metal wear-strips 6.
  • a bar 7 Rigidly secured to the outer face of the short end-gate section is a bar 7, having a width slightly less than that of the end-gate and of a length to overlap the joint between the end-gate sections.
  • This bar is provided with a longitudinal bifurcation 8 intersecting its free end for the reception of a swinging bolt 9, having its head loosely retained in a socket 10, formed in the end-gate, and its outer end carrying a handled nut 11 and bearing against the outer face of the bar 7, thereby rigidly interlocking the elements of the end-gate when the latter is in use, as illustrated in Fig. 1 of the drawings.
  • Suitable metal lates 12 are provided upon the outer face 0 the bar 7 at opposite sides of thebi- 'furcation 8 to take the wear of the nut 1 1.
  • a metallic lifting-bar 13 is mounted in the bifurcation 8, with its inner end pivoted, as at 14,'t0 a flange 15 upon a metallic arm 16, secured to the outer face of the member 2 at its inner end.
  • the free end of the lifting-bar works between guide-straps 17 and 18, secured to the opposite faces of the bar 7, the guide 17 having an intermediate offset 19 to permit of the necessary tilting movement of the lifting-bar.
  • the front or outer edge of the lifting-bar is smooth, and its rear edge is toothed, as at 20.
  • a lifting-foot 21 has its inner end bifurcated, as at 21, (best shown in Fig. 4 of the drawings,) whereby the foot straddles-the lifting-bar.
  • This foot has longitudinal upstanding flanges 22 at its opposite sides, and a transverse pin 23 pierces the rear portions of the flanges in rear of the lifting-bar, so as to engage the teeth.
  • the upper edges of the flanges 22 are toothed or serrated, as at 24, to prevent slipping thereof upon an axle, and there is a transverse upstanding flange 25 at the outer end of tie foot, the outer edge of the flange being sharp or beveled and terminating short of the tops of the flanges 22.
  • the end-gate When using the end-gate as a lifting-jack, it is removed. from the wagon and stood in an upright position upon the section 1 as' a standard.
  • the foot 21 is adjusted upon the lifting-bar 13 to engage the under side of the member to be lifted, whereupon the section 2 is swung downwardly as a lever, thereby lifting the bar 13, the foot 21, and the member with which the foot is en aged.
  • the lever and lifing-bar are locked and the member to be jacked up will be supported in an elevated osition.
  • the anges of the foot produce a trough or receptacle to receive such lubricant as may run off of the axle-spindle, particularly when the foot is disposed longitudinally of the spindle at its outer end.
  • the wheel When disposed in this relation, the wheel may be drawn from the spindle onto the foot 21, where it will be supported while the spindle is being lubricated, and the wheel may afterward be slipped back upon the spindle in a prompt and positive manner.
  • the liftingbar folds into the bifurcation 8 and the foot 21 is capable of being folded upon the liftingbar so as to embrace the same, said bar being provided with a transverse notch 26 in its front edge to receive the flange or lip 25 of the foot, whereby the latter is permitted to fold in flat against the lifting-bar.
  • the hub-attaching nut is first removed and then the foot is adjusted so that the lip 25 engages the under side of the small nut on the endof the skein, the lip biting into the nut, so as to prevent slipping thereof, while the flanges 22 embrace the nut and prevent turning thereof.
  • the jack will be applied to the end of a spindle with the foot 21 in longitudinal alinement therewith, as hereinbefore described, and will be employed with the foot under the axle at substantially right angles thereto only when it becomes necessary to remove the wheel entirely from the spindle for the purpose of cleaning the same.
  • a device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate sections, a bar rigidly carried by one of the sections and overlap ping the other section, a lifting-bar working upon the end-gate bar and pivotally connected to the other end-gate section, the first-mentioned end-gate section constituting a lifting-jack standard, and the other endgate section constituting a lever for actuating the lifting-b ar.
  • a device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate sections, a bar rigidly carried by one of the sections and overlapping the other section, said bar having a longitudinal slot, and a liftingbar working in the slot and pivotally connected to the other end-gate member, the firstmentioned endgate member constituting a liftingjack standard, and the other end-gate member gonstituting a lever for actuating the lifting- 3.
  • a device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate members, a bar rigidly carried by one of the members and overlapping the other member, said bar having a bifurcation which intersects its free end, a
  • lifting-bar mounted in the bifurcation and working through the outer end thereof and pivotally connected to the other end-gate member.
  • a device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate members, a longitudi nally-slotted bar rigidly carried by one of the end-gate members and overlapping the other member, a lifting-bar working in the slot, a connection between the lifting-bar and the other end-gate member, said other member constituting a lever for controlling the liftingbar, and a foot carried by the lifting-bar capable of being folded into the slotwhen the device is in use as an end-gate.
  • a device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate members, a longitudinally-slotted bar rigidly carried by one of the end-gate members and overlapping the other member, a lifting-bar working in the slot, a connection between the lifting-bar and the other end-gate member, said other member constituting a lever for controlling the liftingbar, and a foot adjustable longitudinally upon the lifting-bar and foldable into the slot when the device is in use as an end-gate.
  • a device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate members, a longitudinally-slotted bar rigidly carried by one of the end-gate members and overlapping the other member, a lifting-bar working 1n the slot and connected to the other end-gate member which constitutes a lever for moving the liftingbar, one edge of the lifting-bar being toothed, and a foot slidably straddling the lifting bar and provided with transverse shoulders for respective engagements with the toothed side of the lifting-bar and the opposite side thereof, said foot capable of being folded into the slot when the device is in use as an end-gate.
  • a device of the class described comprising a base, a slotted standard rigidly rising from one side of the base, a lever hinged to the other side of the base, a lifting-bar working in the slot of the standard, and a connection between the lever and the lifting-bar for elevating the latter by moving the lever.
  • a device of the class described comprising a base, a slotted standard fixed upon one side of the base with its slot overlapping the IIO base, a lever hinged to the other side of the base, a lifting-bar Working in the slot of the standard, and an arm carried by the inner end of the lever and pivoted to the liftingbar, the inner end of the lifting-bar and the projecting portion of the link lying in the inner end of the slot across the base when the lever is folded against the standard.
  • a lifting-jack having a lifting-bar and a foot carried by the bar and foldable against the same.
  • a lifting-jack having a lifting-bar, and a foot slidably adjustable upon the bar and capable of being folded thereagainst.
  • a lifting-j ack having a toothed liftingbar, means for elevating the bar and a slotted foot slidably embracing the bar independent of the elevating means and provided with shoulders for respective engagements with the toothed side of the bar and the opposite side thereof.
  • a lifting-jack having a toothed liftingbar, and a foot having a longitudinal slot receiving the bar, flanges rising at opposite sides of the slot, and a pin extending between the flanges above the bottom of the foot for engagement with the teeth of the bar, the front wall of the slot being adapted to engage the front side of the lifting-bar, said foot capable of being swung upon the pin as a in the presence of two witnesses.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
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  • Structural Engineering (AREA)
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Description

COMBINED END GATE AND LIFTING JACK.
APPLICATION FILED JAN.13. 1906.
I% By I ATTORNEYS UNITED STATES PATENT orrron.
COMBINED END-GATE AND LlFTING-dACK- Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented May 22, 1906.
Application filed January 13, 1906. Serial No. 295,974.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, ORSON BUCKLIN, a citizen of the United States, residing at Marietta, in the county of Lao qui Parle and State of Minnesota, have invented a new and useful Combined End-Gate and Lifting-Jack, of which the following is a specification.
This invention is a combined end-gate and lifting-jack, and has for its object to enable the convenient transfer of the device from one use to the other without requiring any disconnection or complicated adjustment of arts.
With this object in view the invention consists in the combination and arrangement of parts, as will be hereinafter more fully described, shown in the accompanying drawings, and particularly pointed out in the appended claims, it being understood that changes in the form, proportion, size, and minor details maybe made within the scope of the claims without departing from the spirit or sacrificing any of the advantages of the inventi'on.
In the drawings, Figure 1 is a fragmentary perspective view of the rear end of a wagonbody having the combined end-gate and liftingjack of the present invention applied thereto. Fig. 2 is a horizontal sectlonal view taken longitudinally through the device. Fig. 3 is a side elevation of the device set for use as a lifting-jack. Fig. 4 is a detail persp ective view of the adjustable lifting-foot.
Similar numerals of reference designate corresponding parts in all of the figures of the drawings.
The present device includes end-gate sec tions or members 1 and 2 of corresponding widths and unequal lengths, which are hinged, as at 3, so as to have the joint break outwardly when an end-gate is fitted in a wagon-body, such as shown at 4 in Fig. 1 of the drawings. The end-gate sections are preferably provided with transverse cleats 5 upon their inner faces to prevent warplng thereof, while the lower edges of the members are provided with metal wear-strips 6.
Rigidly secured to the outer face of the short end-gate section is a bar 7, having a width slightly less than that of the end-gate and of a length to overlap the joint between the end-gate sections. This bar is provided with a longitudinal bifurcation 8 intersecting its free end for the reception of a swinging bolt 9, having its head loosely retained in a socket 10, formed in the end-gate, and its outer end carrying a handled nut 11 and bearing against the outer face of the bar 7, thereby rigidly interlocking the elements of the end-gate when the latter is in use, as illustrated in Fig. 1 of the drawings. Suitable metal lates 12 are provided upon the outer face 0 the bar 7 at opposite sides of thebi- 'furcation 8 to take the wear of the nut 1 1.
To enable the use of the device as a liftingjack, a metallic lifting-bar 13 is mounted in the bifurcation 8, with its inner end pivoted, as at 14,'t0 a flange 15 upon a metallic arm 16, secured to the outer face of the member 2 at its inner end. The free end of the lifting-bar works between guide- straps 17 and 18, secured to the opposite faces of the bar 7, the guide 17 having an intermediate offset 19 to permit of the necessary tilting movement of the lifting-bar. The front or outer edge of the lifting-bar is smooth, and its rear edge is toothed, as at 20. A lifting-foot 21 has its inner end bifurcated, as at 21, (best shown in Fig. 4 of the drawings,) whereby the foot straddles-the lifting-bar. This foot has longitudinal upstanding flanges 22 at its opposite sides, and a transverse pin 23 pierces the rear portions of the flanges in rear of the lifting-bar, so as to engage the teeth. When the pin 23 engages the back of the lifting-bar and the inner closed end of the bifurcation engages the front of the lifting-bar, the foot 21 will be held upon the lifting-bar at substantially right angles thereto and projecting forwardly through the bifurcation 8. The upper edges of the flanges 22 are toothed or serrated, as at 24, to prevent slipping thereof upon an axle, and there is a transverse upstanding flange 25 at the outer end of tie foot, the outer edge of the flange being sharp or beveled and terminating short of the tops of the flanges 22.
When using the end-gate as a lifting-jack, it is removed. from the wagon and stood in an upright position upon the section 1 as' a standard. The foot 21 is adjusted upon the lifting-bar 13 to engage the under side of the member to be lifted, whereupon the section 2 is swung downwardly as a lever, thereby lifting the bar 13, the foot 21, and the member with which the foot is en aged. When the member 2 has been swung down past the horizontal and into engagement with the ground or floor, the lever and lifing-bar are locked and the member to be jacked up will be supported in an elevated osition. It will here be explained that the anges of the foot produce a trough or receptacle to receive such lubricant as may run off of the axle-spindle, particularly when the foot is disposed longitudinally of the spindle at its outer end. When disposed in this relation, the wheel may be drawn from the spindle onto the foot 21, where it will be supported while the spindle is being lubricated, and the wheel may afterward be slipped back upon the spindle in a prompt and positive manner.
In connection with the use of the device as an end-gate it will be noted that the liftingbar folds into the bifurcation 8, and the foot 21 is capable of being folded upon the liftingbar so as to embrace the same, said bar being provided with a transverse notch 26 in its front edge to receive the flange or lip 25 of the foot, whereby the latter is permitted to fold in flat against the lifting-bar.
When the device is used as a lifting-jack, with the foot 21 disposed longitudinally of an axle, the hub-attaching nut is first removed and then the foot is adjusted so that the lip 25 engages the under side of the small nut on the endof the skein, the lip biting into the nut, so as to prevent slipping thereof, while the flanges 22 embrace the nut and prevent turning thereof. Ordinarily the jack will be applied to the end of a spindle with the foot 21 in longitudinal alinement therewith, as hereinbefore described, and will be employed with the foot under the axle at substantially right angles thereto only when it becomes necessary to remove the wheel entirely from the spindle for the purpose of cleaning the same.
Having thus described the invention, what is claimed is 1. A device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate sections, a bar rigidly carried by one of the sections and overlap ping the other section, a lifting-bar working upon the end-gate bar and pivotally connected to the other end-gate section, the first-mentioned end-gate section constituting a lifting-jack standard, and the other endgate section constituting a lever for actuating the lifting-b ar.
2. A device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate sections, a bar rigidly carried by one of the sections and overlapping the other section, said bar having a longitudinal slot, and a liftingbar working in the slot and pivotally connected to the other end-gate member, the firstmentioned endgate member constituting a liftingjack standard, and the other end-gate member gonstituting a lever for actuating the lifting- 3. A device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate members, a bar rigidly carried by one of the members and overlapping the other member, said bar having a bifurcation which intersects its free end, a
lifting-bar mounted in the bifurcation and working through the outer end thereof and pivotally connected to the other end-gate member.
4. A device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate members, a bar rigidly carried by one of the members'and overlapping the other member, said bar having a longitudinal bifurcation intersecting its free end and extending across the first mentioned end-gate member, a lifting-bar working in the bifurcation, and an army carried by the other end-gate member and pivotally connected to the inner end of the lifting-bar, said link projecting beyond the inner end of said other end-gate member and overlapping the first-mentioned end-gate member within the inner end of the bifurcation when the device is in use as an end-gate.
5. A device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate members, a longitudi nally-slotted bar rigidly carried by one of the end-gate members and overlapping the other member, a lifting-bar working in the slot, a connection between the lifting-bar and the other end-gate member, said other member constituting a lever for controlling the liftingbar, and a foot carried by the lifting-bar capable of being folded into the slotwhen the device is in use as an end-gate.
6. A device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate members, a longitudinally-slotted bar rigidly carried by one of the end-gate members and overlapping the other member, a lifting-bar working in the slot, a connection between the lifting-bar and the other end-gate member, said other member constituting a lever for controlling the liftingbar, and a foot adjustable longitudinally upon the lifting-bar and foldable into the slot when the device is in use as an end-gate.
7. A device of the class described comprising hinged end-gate members, a longitudinally-slotted bar rigidly carried by one of the end-gate members and overlapping the other member, a lifting-bar working 1n the slot and connected to the other end-gate member which constitutes a lever for moving the liftingbar, one edge of the lifting-bar being toothed, and a foot slidably straddling the lifting bar and provided with transverse shoulders for respective engagements with the toothed side of the lifting-bar and the opposite side thereof, said foot capable of being folded into the slot when the device is in use as an end-gate.
8. A device of the class described comprising a base, a slotted standard rigidly rising from one side of the base, a lever hinged to the other side of the base, a lifting-bar working in the slot of the standard, and a connection between the lever and the lifting-bar for elevating the latter by moving the lever.
9. A device of the class described comprising a base, a slotted standard fixed upon one side of the base with its slot overlapping the IIO base, a lever hinged to the other side of the base, a lifting-bar Working in the slot of the standard, and an arm carried by the inner end of the lever and pivoted to the liftingbar, the inner end of the lifting-bar and the projecting portion of the link lying in the inner end of the slot across the base when the lever is folded against the standard.
10. A lifting-jack having a lifting-bar and a foot carried by the bar and foldable against the same.
11. A lifting-jack having a lifting-bar, and a foot slidably adjustable upon the bar and capable of being folded thereagainst.
12. A lifting-j ack having a toothed liftingbar, means for elevating the bar and a slotted foot slidably embracing the bar independent of the elevating means and provided with shoulders for respective engagements with the toothed side of the bar and the opposite side thereof.
13. A lifting-jack having a toothed liftingbar, and a foot having a longitudinal slot receiving the bar, flanges rising at opposite sides of the slot, and a pin extending between the flanges above the bottom of the foot for engagement with the teeth of the bar, the front wall of the slot being adapted to engage the front side of the lifting-bar, said foot capable of being swung upon the pin as a in the presence of two witnesses.
ORSON BUCKLIN.
Witnesses:
F. L. STONE, H. O. MILLER.
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