US980887A - Bottle-corking machine. - Google Patents
Bottle-corking machine. Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US980887A US980887A US58679110A US1910586791A US980887A US 980887 A US980887 A US 980887A US 58679110 A US58679110 A US 58679110A US 1910586791 A US1910586791 A US 1910586791A US 980887 A US980887 A US 980887A
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- US
- United States
- Prior art keywords
- bottle
- cork
- tube
- shaft
- corking
- 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
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Classifications
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B67—OPENING, CLOSING OR CLEANING BOTTLES, JARS OR SIMILAR CONTAINERS; LIQUID HANDLING
- B67B—APPLYING CLOSURE MEMBERS TO BOTTLES JARS, OR SIMILAR CONTAINERS; OPENING CLOSED CONTAINERS
- B67B1/00—Closing bottles, jars or similar containers by applying stoppers
- B67B1/04—Closing bottles, jars or similar containers by applying stoppers by inserting threadless stoppers, e.g. corks
- B67B1/045—Closing bottles, jars or similar containers by applying stoppers by inserting threadless stoppers, e.g. corks using hand operated devices
Definitions
- Patented J an. 3, 1911.
- This invention relates to certain improvements in the corking-machine for which.
- the object of the invention is to so improve the construction of the machine as to make it particularly adapted to be driven by power instead of by hand; and the invention also aims to improve several details of the construction, as will appear from the following description and claims.
- Figure 1 represents a perspective view of my improved bottle-corking machine
- Fig. 2 is a side-elevation of the same, drawn on a larger scale and partly in section through the upper portion of the machine so as to show the clutch and brake-mechanism for the driving-shaft
- Figs. 3 and 4 are respectively detail front-views of the mechanism for reciprocating the plunger
- Figs. 5 and 6 are respectively a vertical transverse section and a side elevation of the corkcompressing and transferring mechanism, showing the same respectively in the act of compressing the cork and introducing it into the mouth of the bottle and after the cork-compressing tube is withdrawn
- Fig. 1 represents a perspective view of my improved bottle-corking machine
- Fig. 2 is a side-elevation of the same, drawn on a larger scale and partly in section through the upper portion of the machine so as to show the clutch and brake-mechanism for the driving-shaft
- Figs. 3 and 4 are respectively
- Fig. 7 is a detail transverse section on line 7, 7 Fig. 2, showing the brake device for retarding the motion of the driving-shaft
- Fig. 8 is a vertical transverse section on line 8, 8, Fig. 2, showing the construction of the clutch for starting and stopping the driving-shaft.
- F represents the upright cast-metal frame of my improved corking-machine which frame is provided at its upper part with bearings for a driving-shaft S to which motion is imparted by a belt and pulley transmission from a suitable power-shaft.
- the pulley P runs loose on the shaft S until a clutch C, which is operated by a treadle T and intermediate connections, shown in Figs. 1 and 2, is called into action by the foot of the attendant.
- the cushioning-spring C on the clutch-rod C raises the cam C and lifts the movable clutch-member out of the recess g in the hub of the pulley P so as to prevent motion to be transmltted to the driving-shaft.
- the brake-device A On the carnal-bearings of the drivingshaft S is arranged a spring-actuated brakedevice A by which the motion of the drivingshaft is retarded as soon as the clutch is withdrawn, so that the operating crank B on the driving-shaft is held in normal raised position ready for the'next corking operation.
- the brake-device A consists of a brake-shoe a, a cushioning spring a and a stationary block a which is screwed into the upper part of the tubular housing of the brake as shown in Figs. 2 and 7.
- a stationary bracket B which carries a circular bottle-neck holding portion B that has a central opening through which the cork-compressing tube extends in the act of delivering the compressed cork into the neck of the bottle.
- the bottle-neck holding portion B is provided with a circumferential flange b at its under-side, the distance between the flange and the cork-feeding tube of the cork-compressing tube being of sufli cient width to provide for differentsizcs of bottles as used for olives, mustard and similar articles.
- a reciprocating plunger ii The plunger is guided in stationary keepers Z2 attached to the front of the frame A and connected at its upper end with the lower end of a stirrup B which is pivoted at its upper part to a wrist-pin on a crank 13 keyed to the frontend of the driving-shaft S, as shown in Figs. l, 2 and 3.
- the size of the crank B corre sponds with the stroke required by the plunger.
- a cork-compressing tube D which is provided at its upper part with a tapering mouth (Z, at its middle part with a circumferential rim (Z and at its lower part with a cork-compressing.and
- the cork compressing tube 1 is clearly shown in Fig. 5.
- the plunger B passes freely through the corkcompressing tube in downward and upward direction.
- the cork-compressing tube D rests by its circumferential rim (Z on av sup portingsringi E, which fits over the bottle holding portion and which forms a support for the cork-compressing tube.
- the supporting-ring E is connected by a sleeve 0' with the lower end of an actuating-rod c that is guided in suitable keepers e at the front-part of the frame F, and connected at its upper end With a stirrup e on the driving-shaft S adjacent to the crank operating the reciprocating plunger B The rod.
- said holder bear on the circumferential rim of the cork-con1pressing tube 1) and holding the same on the supporting-ring E so as to permit the withdrawing of the plunger after the cork has been compressed and prevent the cork-compressing tube D from following the upward motion of the plunger.
- the compressing-tube and its holder are raised above the bottle-mouth, while the plunger is still retained in its lowermost position.
- the cork is thereby delivered from the cork coin ncssing tube into the mouth of the bottlc, as shown in Fig. 6.
- the semicircular holder prevents the lifting of the corkcompressing tube from the csupporting-ring.
- the plunger then returned into its raised position as the crank arrives at its uppermost position and is held in that position by the simultaneous release of the clutch mechanism from the hub of the driving-pulley and the coactiou of the friction-brake.
- the bottle is then removed and the next bottle placed into the bottle-holding portion, after which the nextcork is inserted into the corkcompressing tube and the treadle again pressed. by the foot of the attendant.
- This produces the descending of the plunger for compressing the cork in the lower tubular part of the cork-compressing tube, then the raising of the cork-compressing tube by the lifting action of its supporting-ring and the delivery of the cork into the mouth of the bottle, and so on for every depression of the trcadle and full rotation of the driving-sha ft.
- the bottle is held by hand against the under-side of the bottle-holding bracket, the bottle being eentered in position therein by the circumferential. flange and the delivery-tube at the lower end of the cork-compressing tube ready for the descent of the plunger, as shown in Fig. 5.
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Devices For Opening Bottles Or Cans (AREA)
Description
G. NORTON, DEGD.
J E 1111121011 ADMINISTEATRIX.
BOTTLE OOBKING MACHINE. APPLICATION FILED AUG.16, 1907. RENEWED 001. 127 1910.
Patented Jan.3, 1911.
2 SHEETS-SHEET 1.
G. NORTON, DEGD. J. E. ALDRICH, ADMINISTRATRIXI BOTTLE GORKING MACHINE. APPLIOATION FILED AUG. 16, 1907. RENEWED 001. 12, 1910. 7 Patented Jan.3,1911.
2 SHEETS-SHEET 2.
UN ED STATES PA T GER-BIT NORTON, OF NEW YORK, N. Y.; JANE E. ALDRICH, OF UPPER MONTCLAIR,
rare
NEW JERSEY, ADMINISTBATRIX OF SAID GER-BIT NORTON, DECEASED.
BOTTLE-CORKING MACHINE.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented J an. 3, 1911.
Application filed August 16, 1907, Serial No. 388,768. Renewed October 12, 1910. Serial No. 586,791.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, GERRIT NORTON, a citizen of the United States, residing in the borough of Manhattan, county and State of New York, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Bottle-Corking Machines, of which the following is a specification.
This invention relates to certain improvements in the corking-machine for which.
Letters Patent were granted to me heretofore No. 527,021, dated October 2, 1894.
The object of the invention is to so improve the construction of the machine as to make it particularly adapted to be driven by power instead of by hand; and the invention also aims to improve several details of the construction, as will appear from the following description and claims.
In the accompanying drawings, Figure 1 represents a perspective view of my improved bottle-corking machine, Fig. 2 is a side-elevation of the same, drawn on a larger scale and partly in section through the upper portion of the machine so as to show the clutch and brake-mechanism for the driving-shaft, Figs. 3 and 4 are respectively detail front-views of the mechanism for reciprocating the plunger, and the corkcompressing tube, Figs. 5 and 6 are respectively a vertical transverse section and a side elevation of the corkcompressing and transferring mechanism, showing the same respectively in the act of compressing the cork and introducing it into the mouth of the bottle and after the cork-compressing tube is withdrawn, Fig. 7 is a detail transverse section on line 7, 7 Fig. 2, showing the brake device for retarding the motion of the driving-shaft, and Fig. 8 is a vertical transverse section on line 8, 8, Fig. 2, showing the construction of the clutch for starting and stopping the driving-shaft.
Similar letters of reference indicate corresponding parts throughout the several figures of the drawings.
Referring to the drawings, F represents the upright cast-metal frame of my improved corking-machine which frame is provided at its upper part with bearings for a driving-shaft S to which motion is imparted by a belt and pulley transmission from a suitable power-shaft. The pulley P runs loose on the shaft S until a clutch C, which is operated by a treadle T and intermediate connections, shown in Figs. 1 and 2, is called into action by the foot of the attendant. The lowering of the treadle and the intermediate spring-actuating mechanism withdraws a segmental cam C at the upper end of the clutch-operating rod C and permits the partial dropping of the movable clutch-member G which is applied to a flat spring and located in a longitudinal groove 9 at the interior of the shaft S, as shown in Fig. 2, said clutch-member dropping into a recess 9 in the hub of the pulley so as to lock the same to the shaft and impart thereby rotary motion to the latter for actuating thereby the operative parts of the machine for the corking operation. Every depression of the treadle produces the actuation of the clutch-mechanism and by a full rotation of the shaft S a complete corking operation. As soon as the treadle is released, the cushioning-spring C on the clutch-rod C raises the cam C and lifts the movable clutch-member out of the recess g in the hub of the pulley P so as to prevent motion to be transmltted to the driving-shaft.
On the carnal-bearings of the drivingshaft S is arranged a spring-actuated brakedevice A by which the motion of the drivingshaft is retarded as soon as the clutch is withdrawn, so that the operating crank B on the driving-shaft is held in normal raised position ready for the'next corking operation. The brake-device A consists of a brake-shoe a, a cushioning spring a and a stationary block a which is screwed into the upper part of the tubular housing of the brake as shown in Figs. 2 and 7.
To the middle-front part of the frame F is applied a stationary bracket B which carries a circular bottle-neck holding portion B that has a central opening through which the cork-compressing tube extends in the act of delivering the compressed cork into the neck of the bottle. The bottle-neck holding portion B is provided with a circumferential flange b at its under-side, the distance between the flange and the cork-feeding tube of the cork-compressing tube being of sufli cient width to provide for differentsizcs of bottles as used for olives, mustard and similar articles.
Vertically in line with the opening in the bottle-neck holding portion B is arranged a reciprocating plunger ii The plunger is guided in stationary keepers Z2 attached to the front of the frame A and connected at its upper end with the lower end of a stirrup B which is pivoted at its upper part to a wrist-pin on a crank 13 keyed to the frontend of the driving-shaft S, as shown in Figs. l, 2 and 3. The size of the crank B corre sponds with the stroke required by the plunger.
Above the stationary bottle-neck holding portion B is arranged a cork-compressing tube D, which is provided at its upper part with a tapering mouth (Z, at its middle part with a circumferential rim (Z and at its lower part with a cork-compressing.and
delivering tube (Z The cork compressing tube 1) is clearly shown in Fig. 5. The plunger B passes freely through the corkcompressing tube in downward and upward direction. The cork-compressing tube D rests by its circumferential rim (Z on av sup portingsringi E, which fits over the bottle holding portion and which forms a support for the cork-compressing tube. The supporting-ring E is connected by a sleeve 0' with the lower end of an actuating-rod c that is guided in suitable keepers e at the front-part of the frame F, and connected at its upper end With a stirrup e on the driving-shaft S adjacent to the crank operating the reciprocating plunger B The rod. 6 is actuated by the rotation of the shaft S which passes through a slot 6* in the rear-wall of the stirrup c, which moves up and down on the shaft Fl by the action of a cam f on the shaft, which cam engages an antifrictionroller f" on the stirrup as shown in Fig. at. This produces the intermittent lifting of the rod and the ring E. lnnnediately above the supporting-ring E is supported on the connecting-rod c a semi-circular holder H, which is also attached by means of a split clamp 76 and clamping screws h to the connecting-rod e shown in Figs. and 6, said holder bear on the circumferential rim of the cork-con1pressing tube 1) and holding the same on the supporting-ring E so as to permit the withdrawing of the plunger after the cork has been compressed and prevent the cork-compressing tube D from following the upward motion of the plunger.
The operation of my improved corking machine is nearly the same as that in the hand-operated corkiug-machine described in my prior patent referred to, only with the difference, that the operations are accomplished by power instead of. by manual operen ear ations. For corking the bottle, the mouth of the same is placed below the ring-shaped. portion of the stationary bracket, after which the tubular lower part of the corkcompressing tube is inserted. into the mouth of the bottle, a cork placed into the upper tapering part and driven by the descending plunger in downward direction into the lower tubular portion so as to be compressed in the same, as shown in Fig. 5. By the cam-mechanism on the driving-shaft, the compressing-tube and its holder are raised above the bottle-mouth, while the plunger is still retained in its lowermost position. The cork is thereby delivered from the cork coin ncssing tube into the mouth of the bottlc, as shown in Fig. 6. During the upward motion of the plunger, the semicircular holder prevents the lifting of the corkcompressing tube from the csupporting-ring. The plunger then returned into its raised position as the crank arrives at its uppermost position and is held in that position by the simultaneous release of the clutch mechanism from the hub of the driving-pulley and the coactiou of the friction-brake. The bottle is then removed and the next bottle placed into the bottle-holding portion, after which the nextcork is inserted into the corkcompressing tube and the treadle again pressed. by the foot of the attendant. This produces the descending of the plunger for compressing the cork in the lower tubular part of the cork-compressing tube, then the raising of the cork-compressing tube by the lifting action of its supporting-ring and the delivery of the cork into the mouth of the bottle, and so on for every depression of the trcadle and full rotation of the driving-sha ft. During the operation of corking, the bottle is held by hand against the under-side of the bottle-holding bracket, the bottle being eentered in position therein by the circumferential. flange and the delivery-tube at the lower end of the cork-compressing tube ready for the descent of the plunger, as shown in Fig. 5.
Having thus described. my invention, I claim new and desire to secure by Letters Pa tent 1. In a bottle-corking machine, the combination, with a cork-compressing tube, and means on which the same is supported at the base for vertical. movement, of a semicircular holder embracing said tube at the upper portion and between which and said first-named means said tube is positioned.
2. In a bottle-corking machine, the co1nbination of a reciprocating rod, a supporting ring carried thereby, a cork-compressing tube resting on said ring, and a holder applied to the. rod and preventing the move ment of the tube away from said supporting ring.
3. In a bottle-corking machine, the combination with a reciprocating plunger, of a reciprocating rod alongside the same, a supporting ring having a sleeve by which it is clamped to said rod a cork-compressing tube resting on said ring, and a holder applied to said rod and embracing the cork-coin pressing tube at the upper part of the latter.
In testimony, that I claim the foregoing as my invention, I have signed my name in presence of two subscribing Witnesses.
GERRIT NORTON.
Witnesses PAUL GOEPEL, HENRY J. SUHRBIER.
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US58679110A US980887A (en) | 1910-10-12 | 1910-10-12 | Bottle-corking machine. |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US58679110A US980887A (en) | 1910-10-12 | 1910-10-12 | Bottle-corking machine. |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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US980887A true US980887A (en) | 1911-01-03 |
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US58679110A Expired - Lifetime US980887A (en) | 1910-10-12 | 1910-10-12 | Bottle-corking machine. |
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Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2488820A (en) * | 1945-12-03 | 1949-11-22 | Twentieth Cent Fox Film Corp | Automatic stop motion device |
US2979875A (en) * | 1958-07-21 | 1961-04-18 | Upjohn Co | Bottle stoppering apparatus |
-
1910
- 1910-10-12 US US58679110A patent/US980887A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Cited By (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2488820A (en) * | 1945-12-03 | 1949-11-22 | Twentieth Cent Fox Film Corp | Automatic stop motion device |
US2979875A (en) * | 1958-07-21 | 1961-04-18 | Upjohn Co | Bottle stoppering apparatus |
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