US8978A - Cokrw-shelleb - Google Patents

Cokrw-shelleb Download PDF

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US8978A
US8978A US8978DA US8978A US 8978 A US8978 A US 8978A US 8978D A US8978D A US 8978DA US 8978 A US8978 A US 8978A
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corn
wedge
spring
shelleb
wheel
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01FPROCESSING OF HARVESTED PRODUCE; HAY OR STRAW PRESSES; DEVICES FOR STORING AGRICULTURAL OR HORTICULTURAL PRODUCE
    • A01F11/00Threshing apparatus specially adapted for maize; Threshing apparatus specially adapted for particular crops other than cereals
    • A01F11/06Threshing apparatus specially adapted for maize; Threshing apparatus specially adapted for particular crops other than cereals for maize, e.g. removing kernels from cobs

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  • DAVID ELDRIDGE OF PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA.
  • a A A A1111 represents the frame; B, the crank; C, the fly wheel; D D the spring; E, the concave wheel; F, the shaft and pinion; G, a guard; H, a conical concave wedge; I is a space out in the spring through which the corn may escape; J, a thumb screw to regulate the spring; K, a common block to stiffen the spring; L, the boxes in which the journals run.
  • the concave wheel E can be made of any required size, but I find that from seven to eight inches in diameter is quite large enough, it is made of cast iron in two pieces, and so fastened together on the shaft so as to form one wheel of about three and a half inches in thickness; the concave is about one and three quarters of an inch in width and about the same in depth.
  • This wheel takes ofi the corn on one side of the ear, and at the same time draws it through, so that the concave wedge takes it off on the other. -Its weight need not exceed eight or nine pounds.
  • the conical concave wedge H is made of cast iron about one and three quarters of an inch at the larger end, and about the same in length, the small end about a quarter of an inch in width and perfectly sharp, so as tocut off one or more rows just at the root of the grain, which grain escapes through the space out in the spring marked I. The rest is pressed off sidewise by the wedge.
  • the guard G is made of cast iron concaved so as to fit the ear, and is to guard it properly on the wedge.
  • the wedge should extend out past the guard about a half inch more 0r less according to the depth of the grains of corn in different sect-ions of the country.
  • the spring D D can be made of ash, or any other suitable wood, it can be placed in any required position, but I have set it perpendicular so as to make it more convenient to feed, as some ears may require a slight pressure when first put in.
  • the pin ion which turns the fly wheel should be made as small as can well be, so as to give as much speed as possible.
  • the cobs if required, can be separated from the corn by placing a coarse wire screen underneath, so that the corn may pass through it while the cob is carried oft by the screen.
  • My improvement in corn-shellers is for the purpose of cheapening their construction and facilitating the labor of shelling.
  • a part of the corn is shelled endwise or lengthwise of the ear, a part is cut off by the point of the Wedge, and the remainder pressed off sidewise by the wedge; the cob passing straight through without revolving; thereby requiring no gearing to increase its speed which adds so materially in the cost of construction, as well as in the power required to drive most all other shellers.
  • This machine may be made to run either with or without a flywheel, but with a small fly wheel weighing only ten pounds it runs so very easy that a small boy only eight or ten years of age can turn it with perfect ease; or it can be run by a treadle leaving both hands free so that one man can both turn and feed it at the same time.

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Description

No. 8,978. Patented June 1, 1852.
UNITED STAES PE FFC.
DAVID ELDRIDGE, OF PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA.
CORN-SHELLEB.
Specification of Letters Patent No. 8,978, dated June 1, 1852.
T 0 all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, DAVID ELDRIDGE, of Philadelphia, in the county ofPhiladelphla and State of Pennsylvania, have invented a new and useful Improvement in Corn- Shellers; and I do hereby declare that the following is a full, clear, and exact descrlption of the construction and operation of the same, reference being had to the annexed drawing, making a part of this specification, in which- Figure 1, is a perspective view, Fig. 2, a section showing the spring, &.c.
A A A A1111 represents the frame; B, the crank; C, the fly wheel; D D the spring; E, the concave wheel; F, the shaft and pinion; G, a guard; H, a conical concave wedge; I is a space out in the spring through which the corn may escape; J, a thumb screw to regulate the spring; K, a common block to stiffen the spring; L, the boxes in which the journals run.
To enable others skilled in the art to make and usemy improvement, I will proceed to describe its construction and operation.
The concave wheel E, can be made of any required size, but I find that from seven to eight inches in diameter is quite large enough, it is made of cast iron in two pieces, and so fastened together on the shaft so as to form one wheel of about three and a half inches in thickness; the concave is about one and three quarters of an inch in width and about the same in depth. This wheel takes ofi the corn on one side of the ear, and at the same time draws it through, so that the concave wedge takes it off on the other. -Its weight need not exceed eight or nine pounds.
The conical concave wedge H, is made of cast iron about one and three quarters of an inch at the larger end, and about the same in length, the small end about a quarter of an inch in width and perfectly sharp, so as tocut off one or more rows just at the root of the grain, which grain escapes through the space out in the spring marked I. The rest is pressed off sidewise by the wedge.
The guard G, is made of cast iron concaved so as to fit the ear, and is to guard it properly on the wedge. The wedge should extend out past the guard about a half inch more 0r less according to the depth of the grains of corn in different sect-ions of the country. The spring D D can be made of ash, or any other suitable wood, it can be placed in any required position, but I have set it perpendicular so as to make it more convenient to feed, as some ears may require a slight pressure when first put in. The pin ion which turns the fly wheel should be made as small as can well be, so as to give as much speed as possible. The more it has, the less weight it will require, its weight when so geared need not exceed eight or ten pounds; the former quite heavy enough for a crank, the latter sufliciently so for to run with a treadle. The cobs if required, can be separated from the corn by placing a coarse wire screen underneath, so that the corn may pass through it while the cob is carried oft by the screen.
My improvement in corn-shellers is for the purpose of cheapening their construction and facilitating the labor of shelling. By this improvement a part of the corn is shelled endwise or lengthwise of the ear, a part is cut off by the point of the Wedge, and the remainder pressed off sidewise by the wedge; the cob passing straight through without revolving; thereby requiring no gearing to increase its speed which adds so materially in the cost of construction, as well as in the power required to drive most all other shellers. This machine may be made to run either with or without a flywheel, but with a small fly wheel weighing only ten pounds it runs so very easy that a small boy only eight or ten years of age can turn it with perfect ease; or it can be run by a treadle leaving both hands free so that one man can both turn and feed it at the same time.
What I clalm as new, and my improvement, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, 1s
The combination of the conical concave wedge H, and the guard G, with the concave wheel E, for shelling corn as herein described.
DAVID ELDRIDGE.
Witnesses:
STEPHEN USTICK, WM. B. AITKEN.
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