US965831A - Crude-oil burner. - Google Patents

Crude-oil burner. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US965831A
US965831A US51771609A US1909517716A US965831A US 965831 A US965831 A US 965831A US 51771609 A US51771609 A US 51771609A US 1909517716 A US1909517716 A US 1909517716A US 965831 A US965831 A US 965831A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
arm
oil
stove
crude
burner
Prior art date
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
Application number
US51771609A
Inventor
John A Mccoach
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US51771609A priority Critical patent/US965831A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US965831A publication Critical patent/US965831A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F24HEATING; RANGES; VENTILATING
    • F24CDOMESTIC STOVES OR RANGESĀ ; DETAILS OF DOMESTIC STOVES OR RANGES, OF GENERAL APPLICATION
    • F24C5/00Stoves or ranges for liquid fuels
    • F24C5/02Stoves or ranges for liquid fuels with evaporation burners, e.g. dish type

Definitions

  • This invention is an improved crude oil burner especially adapted for use in an ordinary cooking stove or heating stove but also adapted for other uses, the said invention consisting in the construction, combination and arrangement of devices hereindescribed and claimed.
  • Figure 1 is a vertical, longitudinal, sectional view of a crude oil burner, constructed in accordance with my invention, on the plane indicated by the line a-a of Fig. 2, showing the same in use for connection with a stove, a portion of the latter being indicated partly in section and partly in elevation.
  • Fig. 2 is a top plan view of the burner.
  • Fig. 3 is a detail perspective view of the separating cup and the drip ring under the same.
  • Fig. 4 is a similar view of the generator.
  • Fig. 5 is partly a plan of the burner and partly a section of the same, on the plane indicated by the line 6-?) of Fig. 1, and with a portion of the cover plate of the horizontal arm broken away so as to disclose the partition.
  • a body or casing 1 which comprises a vertical cylindrical arm 2 and a horizontal trough shaped arm 3, which extends from the lower end of said vertical arm and communicates with the lower end thereof, said trough shaped arm or pan 3 is partially covered at the end next the vertical arm 2 by means of a cover plate 4: and that portion of the pan or horizontal arm which is under the-cover plate is divided into two parallel passages 5 by means of a vertical partition 6.
  • the arm 2 is provided near its lower end on its outer side with an air inlet opening 7, which may be covered or opened to any desired extent by means of a cover 8, which is pivoted, as at 9, on the said vertical arm.
  • the vertical arm is made of two sections 10-11, which may be bolted or otherwise'secured together and the said sections are provided on their inner sides with annular grooves 12- 13,
  • a generator or converter 14 is placed in the arm 2 and is here shown as substantially cylindrical in form and is provided at its base with radially disposed studs 15, which serve to space the said generator from the wall of the vertical arm 2 and also engage the lower groove 12 so as to support said generator.
  • a separator or refiner 16 which, is cupshaped, is provided at its base with down- .wardly extending legs, which bear 011 a saucer or ring 17, the diameter of which exceeds that of the separator and is suihcient to enable the outer edge of said ring or saucer to engage the groove 13 and thereby support said saucer and hence also said separator in the arm 2 at a suitable height above the generator.
  • the said saucer or ring is provided with a central opening 18 of suitable size and its upper side is concave.
  • a cover 19 is placed on the upper end of the arm 2 and is provided with a central opening 20 and also with a series of air inlet openings 21.
  • pan or lower arm 3 In practice the major portion of the pan or lower arm 3 is extended through a fire door in a stove and is disposed in the fire box thereof, a stove being indicated in Fig. 1 at a, and it will be observed that the vertical arm of the burner is disposed without the stove and is readily accesslble and moreover is protected from the heat of the stove.
  • a discharge pipe 24 leads downwardly and outwardly from said separator and has a cock 25.
  • Air is drawn in by the draft of the stove through the opening 7 and becomes commingled with the gas from the oil so that the mixture of gas and air is caused to burn in the base of the arm 2 and in the pan 3, as will be readily understood, the cover 4 and partition 6 dividing the blaze of the burning mixture and facilitating the passage thereof to the extreme end of the pan and causing it to be distributed through the fire box of the stove, so that the stove becomes highly heated and may be used either for cooking or heating purposes according to the character of the stove. From time to time such water as accumulates in the separator may be drawn off therefrom through the pipe 24 by opening the cook 25.
  • a crude oil burner comprising a casing having a vertical cylindrical arm, a horizontal trough-shaped arm, the outer end of' which communicates with the lower end of said vertical arm, said trough-shaped arm being open at its inner end on its upper side, said vertical arm having a cover on its upper end provided with air inlet openings and with an oil feed opening, means to cause oil to drip through said oil feed opening, a generating device in the lower portion of said vertical arm and spaced from the wall thereof, a separating cup in the said vertical arm above the generating device, a deflecting element below the separating cup partially closing the said vertical arm at a point above the generating device and having an opening under the separating cup and above the generating device, and means to draw water from the lower portion of said separating cup.
  • a crude oil burner comprising a casing, a generatin device therein spaced from the wall thereo a separating cup in the casing above the generating device, a deflecting element below the separating cup partially closing the casing at a point above the generator and having an opening under the separating cup and i above the generator, means to draw water from the lower portion of said cup, and a cover on said casing having an opening for the admission of oil to the separating cup.

Description

J. A. MOGOACH. CRUDE OIL BURNER. APPLIOATIONIILED SEPT. 14, 1909.
965,831, Patented July 26,1910.
- Snow/tom qwm L/Z/ZIZ 6,006 9 I 51514 6 fittazneq 1n: NOR!!! FITIRS ca wnsmucmu, o. c.
JOHN A. MCCOACH, OF LA CYGNE, KANSAS.
sauna-01L BURNER.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, JOHN A. MoCoAoH,
a citizen of the United States, residing at La Cygne, in the county of Linn and State of Kansas, have invented new and useful,
Improvements in Crude-Oil Burners, of which the following is a specification.
This invention is an improved crude oil burner especially adapted for use in an ordinary cooking stove or heating stove but also adapted for other uses, the said invention consisting in the construction, combination and arrangement of devices hereindescribed and claimed.
In the accompanying drawings, Figure 1 is a vertical, longitudinal, sectional view of a crude oil burner, constructed in accordance with my invention, on the plane indicated by the line a-a of Fig. 2, showing the same in use for connection with a stove, a portion of the latter being indicated partly in section and partly in elevation. Fig. 2 is a top plan view of the burner. Fig. 3 is a detail perspective view of the separating cup and the drip ring under the same. Fig. 4 is a similar view of the generator. Fig. 5 is partly a plan of the burner and partly a section of the same, on the plane indicated by the line 6-?) of Fig. 1, and with a portion of the cover plate of the horizontal arm broken away so as to disclose the partition.
In accordance with my invention I provide a body or casing 1, which comprises a vertical cylindrical arm 2 and a horizontal trough shaped arm 3, which extends from the lower end of said vertical arm and communicates with the lower end thereof, said trough shaped arm or pan 3 is partially covered at the end next the vertical arm 2 by means of a cover plate 4: and that portion of the pan or horizontal arm which is under the-cover plate is divided into two parallel passages 5 by means of a vertical partition 6. The arm 2 is provided near its lower end on its outer side with an air inlet opening 7, which may be covered or opened to any desired extent by means of a cover 8, which is pivoted, as at 9, on the said vertical arm. In practice and as herein shown the vertical arm is made of two sections 10-11, which may be bolted or otherwise'secured together and the said sections are provided on their inner sides with annular grooves 12- 13,
which are disposed at suitable distances from the lower end of said vertical arm and are appropriately spaced apart.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Application filed September 14, 1909.
Patented July 26, 1910. Serial No. 517,716.
A generator or converter 14:, the upper side of which is concave, is placed in the arm 2 and is here shown as substantially cylindrical in form and is provided at its base with radially disposed studs 15, which serve to space the said generator from the wall of the vertical arm 2 and also engage the lower groove 12 so as to support said generator.
A separator or refiner 16, which, is cupshaped, is provided at its base with down- .wardly extending legs, which bear 011 a saucer or ring 17, the diameter of which exceeds that of the separator and is suihcient to enable the outer edge of said ring or saucer to engage the groove 13 and thereby support said saucer and hence also said separator in the arm 2 at a suitable height above the generator. The said saucer or ring is provided with a central opening 18 of suitable size and its upper side is concave.
A cover 19 is placed on the upper end of the arm 2 and is provided with a central opening 20 and also with a series of air inlet openings 21.
In practice the major portion of the pan or lower arm 3 is extended through a fire door in a stove and is disposed in the fire box thereof, a stove being indicated in Fig. 1 at a, and it will be observed that the vertical arm of the burner is disposed without the stove and is readily accesslble and moreover is protected from the heat of the stove. An oil tank or reservoir 22, which is located at a suitable elevation and supported by any suitable means, is provided with a valved discharge pipe 23, the discharge end of which is located above the opening 20 in the cover 19 and the valve 26 in said pipe being opened to a sufficient extent crude oil from the said reservoir is caused to drop through the opening 20 into the separator 16. A discharge pipe 24 leads downwardly and outwardly from said separator and has a cock 25. Initial heat having been applied to the burner, which may be done by igniting oil in the pan or horizontal arm 3, the crude oil, which is fed to the separator, by the heat of the separator, which does not equal the boiling point of water, is separated from the watery contents of the oil, the oil rising to the sur face flowing over the upper edge of the separator and dropping therefrom into the the generator, which being nearer the bottom of the arm 2 is sufiiciently hot to convert the oil into gas. Air is drawn in by the draft of the stove through the opening 7 and becomes commingled with the gas from the oil so that the mixture of gas and air is caused to burn in the base of the arm 2 and in the pan 3, as will be readily understood, the cover 4 and partition 6 dividing the blaze of the burning mixture and facilitating the passage thereof to the extreme end of the pan and causing it to be distributed through the fire box of the stove, so that the stove becomes highly heated and may be used either for cooking or heating purposes according to the character of the stove. From time to time such water as accumulates in the separator may be drawn off therefrom through the pipe 24 by opening the cook 25.
It will be understood from the foregoing that my improved crude oil burner is extremely cheap and simple and that it may be readily manufactured at slight cost.
Having thus described the invention what is claimed as new, is:
1. A crude oil burner comprising a casing having a vertical cylindrical arm, a horizontal trough-shaped arm, the outer end of' which communicates with the lower end of said vertical arm, said trough-shaped arm being open at its inner end on its upper side, said vertical arm having a cover on its upper end provided with air inlet openings and with an oil feed opening, means to cause oil to drip through said oil feed opening, a generating device in the lower portion of said vertical arm and spaced from the wall thereof, a separating cup in the said vertical arm above the generating device, a deflecting element below the separating cup partially closing the said vertical arm at a point above the generating device and having an opening under the separating cup and above the generating device, and means to draw water from the lower portion of said separating cup.
2. A crude oil burner comprising a casing, a generatin device therein spaced from the wall thereo a separating cup in the casing above the generating device, a deflecting element below the separating cup partially closing the casing at a point above the generator and having an opening under the separating cup and i above the generator, means to draw water from the lower portion of said cup, and a cover on said casing having an opening for the admission of oil to the separating cup.
In testimony whereof I afiix my signature in presence of two witnesses.
JOHN A. MoCOACH.
lVitnesses J. W. CoMsrooK, H. E. Tunes.
US51771609A 1909-09-14 1909-09-14 Crude-oil burner. Expired - Lifetime US965831A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US51771609A US965831A (en) 1909-09-14 1909-09-14 Crude-oil burner.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US51771609A US965831A (en) 1909-09-14 1909-09-14 Crude-oil burner.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US965831A true US965831A (en) 1910-07-26

Family

ID=3034228

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US51771609A Expired - Lifetime US965831A (en) 1909-09-14 1909-09-14 Crude-oil burner.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US965831A (en)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US965831A (en) Crude-oil burner.
US270690A (en) ostlund
US436240A (en) Hydrocarbon-stove
US670326A (en) Hydrocarbon-burner.
US256132A (en) Gas-furnace
US1167605A (en) Oil-burner.
US762183A (en) Hydrocarbon-gas generator and burner.
US219685A (en) Improvement in oil-stoves
US1016497A (en) Vapor-burner.
US396525A (en) Oil-burner
US1008843A (en) Oil-burner.
US964457A (en) Crude-oil burner.
US1005965A (en) Vapor-burner.
US1149404A (en) Crude-oil burner.
US957365A (en) Stove-burner.
US703282A (en) Crude-oil burner.
US612118A (en) Charles henry myers
US759500A (en) Oil-burner.
US906541A (en) Oil-burner.
US392510A (en) Water and oil vaporizer and burner
US762408A (en) Hydrocarbon-burner.
US1075875A (en) Oil-burner.
US769112A (en) Hydrocarbon-burner.
US1006853A (en) Oil-burner.
US944633A (en) Crude-oil burner.