US1286214A - Method of making barrels and casks. - Google Patents

Method of making barrels and casks. Download PDF

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US1286214A
US1286214A US23889118A US23889118A US1286214A US 1286214 A US1286214 A US 1286214A US 23889118 A US23889118 A US 23889118A US 23889118 A US23889118 A US 23889118A US 1286214 A US1286214 A US 1286214A
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head
barrel
opening
board
stave
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US23889118A
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Erik August Bolinder
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65DCONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
    • B65D9/00Containers having bodies formed by interconnecting or uniting two or more rigid, or substantially rigid, components made wholly or mainly of wood or substitutes therefor
    • B65D9/02Containers of curved cross-section, e.g. cylindrical boxes
    • B65D9/04Containers of curved cross-section, e.g. cylindrical boxes made up of staves, e.g. barrels for liquids

Definitions

  • the staves For providing tightness between the barrel-wall, that is to say the staves, and the heads of the barrel, these latter are usually beveled at their peripheries so as to form an edge or a rim of narrow width, as compared to the thickness of the head which rim projects into a groove on the inside of the staves, the so-called croze. It is of course possible to push the staves together-in their longitudinal direction without interfering with this tightening device by first performing this assembling and then placing the wall thus produced around the head or the heads, but in a barrel made in this manner the last stave can not be pushed in longitudinally, if the said tightening rims of the heads are to protrude into the said crozes in the last stave. By the present invention, however, the longitudinal pushing-in of the last stave is rendered possible.
  • the invention is broadly characterized by this that one or several of the boards of the head or heads of the barrel is or are shortened in such manner that the board does not reach out to the periphery of the head and does thus not project into the croze of the staves, hence it does not obstruct the pushing in of the last stave or staves through the opening at the edge of the head produced by the said shortening of the board.
  • the shortening of the'board of the head may be made in such manner that the board is divided into two or several portions of such length that one of the portions may be moved so far inward toward the other portions that the outer end of the first- -named portion will be retracted within the periphery of the head and thus inside the croze of the staves. Both or all portions of the board may also be moved or slid inward in the said manner so that both ends of the board will come within the periphery of the head, thus making it possible to push in two staves located diametrically opposite one another.
  • the board may also be shortened by cutting-off a portion of the same at one end or at both ends.
  • the opening or openings in the head produced by the shortening of the board may be filled in or closed, but it is preferred to utilize the opening as a bung-hole, the board being cut directly in such manner that the edges of the cut will be shaped to form the borders of the bung-hole, or the opening may be reamed to round shape after the portion or the portions of the board having been moved 7 or slid outward into-the croze when the' last stave or staves have been pushed into place.
  • Figure 1 shows a portion of a barrel according to the first embodiment before being 7 shows a section on the line VIIVII.
  • Fig. 8 a section on the line VIIIVIII in Fig. 6.
  • Fig. 9 shows a plan view of a portion of the fourth embodiment, of which Fig. 10 shows a section on the line X-X, and Fig. 11 a section on the line XL-XI in Fig. 9.
  • 1 is thewall of the barrel which has been assembled by pushing the staves into each other in their longitudinal direction.
  • 2 denotes the last stave.
  • 3 and 4 are the portions of the shortened board in the barrel-head. Before the last stave 2 is pushed into place, the barrel-wall is flexible and expansible so that p3 inseam the head or the heads may easily be assembled with their rims into the croze. The portion 4 has previously been moved or slid into the opening 5 which, as stated above, 5 is intended to form the bung-hole.
  • the last stave 2 may now be pushed into the free space intended for the same without interfering with the head or the heads, and the stave 2 being in place the portion 4 is moved outward into the croze.
  • the perfectly round bunghole 5 thus produced may afterward be closed by means of an ordinary plug. 6 as shown in Figs. 3 5, or by means of a screw plug 7 as shown in Figs. 6%8, which screw plug may also be made deuble as shown at 8 in Figs.- 9 11.
  • the board maybe cut straight oh asshown in; dotted and dashed lineslin Fig.
  • a reetangular o ening 10 is pminced, This opening may afterward be filled or'elosed in suitable manner, or it may be bored to circular form in order to serve as a binghole.
  • all staves in the barrel are supposed t'o be of equal width, that is to say 0 also the last stave is supposed to be of the same width as the other staves. As shown in Figs. 8-5, however, the last stave may also be made considerably thinner than the wcthers.
  • the manufacture of the barrel may also bsperjfcnn ed in such manner that the barrehwall first'niade in two halves, one stave in each half being left out. These halves are then laid around the barrel heads, whereupon'the two last Steve's are introduced inthe' same manner as described above with relatio'n to one last stave. In such case it is of course necessary first to move or slide both portions of the shortened board inward, or else the board must be cut oil at both ends.
  • the barrel in such manner that the end of the board-may be brought within the periphery of the head so as to produce an opening at the saidperiphery, assembling the barrel-wall less one stave around the head so that the rim of the head fits into the croze of the barrelwall, and introducing the last stave into place through the opening at the periphery of the head.
  • a barrel-head provided with a board shorten'ed in such manner as to produce an opening at the peripheryoit the head
  • a barrel-wallprovi'ded with a croze for engaging the periphery of the head, a stave in said barrel-wall being arranged to be pushed into place through the said opening at the periphery of the head.
  • a barrel-head provided with a board shortsued in such manner as to produce an opening at the periphery of the head, a barrelwall provided with acroze for engaging the periphery of the head, a stave in said barrelwall being arranged to be pushed into place through the said opening. at the periphery of the i head, and means for closing said opening.
  • a barrel-head provided with a board cut into pieces movable in the head and of such length that placed together in the head they produce an openin at the periphery of the head, a barrel-wal provided with a bo for closing the opening produced between the said pieces when moved into engagement with the barrel-wall.
  • a barrel-head provided with a board cut into pieces in such manner that the cut edges of the pieces form together with adjacent boards of the head an opening of desired sha e,said pieces being movable in the head an of such length that placed together in the head they produce an opening at the periphery of the head
  • a barrel-wall provided with a crew for engagin the periphery of the head
  • a stave in sai barrel-Wall being arranged to be pushed into place through the said opening at the periphery of the head, and means for closing the opening of desired shape produced between the cut edges of said pieces and the adjacent boardswhen said pieces are moved into engagement with the barrel-Wall.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Perforating, Stamping-Out Or Severing By Means Other Than Cutting (AREA)

Description

E. A. BOLINDER.
METHOD OF MAKING BARRELS AND CASKS.
APPLICATION FILED JUNE 8,1918- 1,286,214. Patented Dec. 3, 1918.
2 SHEETS-SHEET I PWQUS C BOLLNdEY E. A. BOLINDER.
METHOD OF MAKING BARRELS AND CASKS.
APPLICATION FILED JUNE 8. I918.
' 1,286,214. Patented Dec, 3, 1918.
2 SHEETS-SHEET 2.
Inve nfan 5% ugv sc Bohudev 9 ERIK AUGUST BOLINDER, STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN.
METHOD OF MAKING BARRELS AND CASKS.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented Dec. 3, 1918.
Application filed June 8, 1918. Serial No. 238,891.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, ERIK AUGUST Bo- LINDER, a subject of the King of Sweden, residing at Stockholm, in the Kingdom of Sweden, have invented a new and useful Improvement in Methods of Making Barrels and Casks, of which the following is a specification.
When making barrels and casks, especially cylindrical ones, it is in many cases very advantageous to join the staves by pushing the same together in their longitudinal direction, that is to say in the axial direction of the barrel or the cask. This manner of assembling facilitates the manufacture and it is, in fact, necessary when the stave is grooved-and-tongued or rabbeted and the profile of the rabbet does not allow the staves to be assembled in their transverse direction. Heretofore, however, the said manner of assembling has not been employed to any considerable extent, in any case it has been connected with very great disadvantages on account of the difliculty of pushing the last stave into place in the barrel-wall. For providing tightness between the barrel-wall, that is to say the staves, and the heads of the barrel, these latter are usually beveled at their peripheries so as to form an edge or a rim of narrow width, as compared to the thickness of the head which rim projects into a groove on the inside of the staves, the so-called croze. It is of course possible to push the staves together-in their longitudinal direction without interfering with this tightening device by first performing this assembling and then placing the wall thus produced around the head or the heads, but in a barrel made in this manner the last stave can not be pushed in longitudinally, if the said tightening rims of the heads are to protrude into the said crozes in the last stave. By the present invention, however, the longitudinal pushing-in of the last stave is rendered possible.
The invention is broadly characterized by this that one or several of the boards of the head or heads of the barrel is or are shortened in such manner that the board does not reach out to the periphery of the head and does thus not project into the croze of the staves, hence it does not obstruct the pushing in of the last stave or staves through the opening at the edge of the head produced by the said shortening of the board.
The shortening of the'board of the head may be made in such manner that the board is divided into two or several portions of such length that one of the portions may be moved so far inward toward the other portions that the outer end of the first- -named portion will be retracted within the periphery of the head and thus inside the croze of the staves. Both or all portions of the board may also be moved or slid inward in the said manner so that both ends of the board will come within the periphery of the head, thus making it possible to push in two staves located diametrically opposite one another. The board may also be shortened by cutting-off a portion of the same at one end or at both ends. The opening or openings in the head produced by the shortening of the board may be filled in or closed, but it is preferred to utilize the opening as a bung-hole, the board being cut directly in such manner that the edges of the cut will be shaped to form the borders of the bung-hole, or the opening may be reamed to round shape after the portion or the portions of the board having been moved 7 or slid outward into-the croze when the' last stave or staves have been pushed into place.
In the accompanying drawings four different embodiments of the inventlon are illustrated in which the said opening in the bar rel-head is utilized as opening for the bung.
Figure 1 shows a portion of a barrel according to the first embodiment before being 7 shows a section on the line VIIVII. and
Fig. 8 a section on the line VIIIVIII in Fig. 6. Fig. 9 shows a plan view of a portion of the fourth embodiment, of which Fig. 10 shows a section on the line X-X, and Fig. 11 a section on the line XL-XI in Fig. 9.
Referring to Figs. 1 and 2, 1 is thewall of the barrel which has been assembled by pushing the staves into each other in their longitudinal direction. 2 denotes the last stave. 3 and 4 are the portions of the shortened board in the barrel-head. Before the last stave 2 is pushed into place, the barrel-wall is flexible and expansible so that p3 inseam the head or the heads may easily be assembled with their rims into the croze. The portion 4 has previously been moved or slid into the opening 5 which, as stated above, 5 is intended to form the bung-hole. The last stave 2 may now be pushed into the free space intended for the same without interfering with the head or the heads, and the stave 2 being in place the portion 4 is moved outward into the croze. The perfectly round bunghole 5 thus produced may afterward be closed by means of an ordinary plug. 6 as shown in Figs. 3 5, or by means of a screw plug 7 as shown in Figs. 6%8, which screw plug may also be made deuble as shown at 8 in Figs.- 9 11. Instead of cutting the head board so as to make the edges oi the cut ready' to form'the b'ung opening, the board maybe cut straight oh asshown in; dotted and dashed lineslin Fig. 61 When the portion 9 according to this embodiment is movedoutward a reetangular o ening 10 is pminced, This opening may afterward be filled or'elosed in suitable manner, or it may be bored to circular form in order to serve as a binghole. Inthe embodiments according to Figs. 1-2, 68" and 9-11 all staves in the barrel are supposed t'o be of equal width, that is to say 0 also the last stave is supposed to be of the same width as the other staves. As shown in Figs. 8-5, however, the last stave may also be made considerably thinner than the wcthers. v
v The manufacture of the barrel may also bsperjfcnn ed in such manner that the barrehwall first'niade in two halves, one stave in each half being left out. These halves are then laid around the barrel heads, whereupon'the two last Steve's are introduced inthe' same manner as described above with relatio'n to one last stave. In such case it is of course necessary first to move or slide both portions of the shortened board inward, or else the board must be cut oil at both ends. I claim: 1.- The method of making barrels and casks, consisting in shortening one of the beards of the head oi? the barrel in such manner that the end of the board-may be brought within the periphery of the head so as to produce an opening at the saidperiphery, assembling the barrel-wall less one stave around the head so that the rim of the head fits into the croze of the barrelwall, and introducing the last stave into place through the opening at the periphery of the head.
2. The method of making barrels and casks, consisting in shorteningone of the boards of the head of the barrel in such manner that the end of the board may be brought Within the periphery of the head so i as to produce an open-ing'at the saidperiphriphery of the head, moving said pieces together so as to produce openings at the said periphery, assembling the barrel-wall less a number of staves ai oiin'd the head so that the rim of the head fits into the croze oi the barrel-wall, introducing the last stav'es into place through the openings at theper'iphery of thehead, moving the said pieces outward teward the periphery into engagement with the c one of the said stave's, and closing the opening produced in the head by said moving of said pieces.
4; The-method of making barrels and cask-s consisting in cutting one of the boards or the head of the barrel into pieces in such manner that the cut edges'of the pieces form together with adjacent boards an opening in the head of desired shape, said pieces being of such length that they may be moved together with their outer ends within the periphe'ry of the head, moving said pieces to gather so asto roduce openings at thes'aid periphery, assembling the barrel-wall less a nainher'of staves around the head so that the rim of the head fits int'o the croze ofthe barrelwal-l, introducingthc last staves into place thro gh" the openings at the peri hery of the head, moving the said pieces outward toward the eriphery" into engagement with the'croz'eof the said staves, and closing the opening'thu's produced in the head between the cut edges of saidpieces and the adjacent a s t i 5. in a: barrel or cask, the combination of a barrel-head provided with a board shorten'ed in such manner as to produce an opening at the peripheryoit the head, and a barrel-wallprovi'ded with a croze for engaging the periphery of the head, a stave in said barrel-wall being arranged to be pushed into place through the said opening at the periphery of the head. v
6. In a barrel or cask, the combination of a barrel-head provided with a board shortsued in such manner as to produce an opening at the periphery of the head, a barrelwall provided with acroze for engaging the periphery of the head, a stave in said barrelwall being arranged to be pushed into place through the said opening. at the periphery of the i head, and means for closing said opening. t
7. In a barrel or cask, the combination. of
a barrel-head provided with a board cut into pieces movable in the head and of such length that placed together in the head they produce an openin at the periphery of the head, a barrel-wal provided with a crore for closing the opening produced between the said pieces when moved into engagement with the barrel-wall.
8. In a barrel or cask, the combination of a barrel-head provided with a board cut into pieces in such manner that the cut edges of the pieces form together with adjacent boards of the head an opening of desired sha e,said pieces being movable in the head an of such length that placed together in the head they produce an opening at the periphery of the head, a barrel-wall provided with a crew for engagin the periphery of the head, a stave in sai barrel-Wall being arranged to be pushed into place through the said opening at the periphery of the head, and means for closing the opening of desired shape produced between the cut edges of said pieces and the adjacent boardswhen said pieces are moved into engagement with the barrel-Wall.
ERIK AUGUST BOLINDEB.
Copies of this patent may be obtained for five cents each, by addressing the "Commissioner of Patents,
Washington, 9.0." p 1
US23889118A 1918-06-08 1918-06-08 Method of making barrels and casks. Expired - Lifetime US1286214A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4897140A (en) * 1986-05-19 1990-01-30 Peter Opsvik Method for making a pipe-shaped body of wood

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4897140A (en) * 1986-05-19 1990-01-30 Peter Opsvik Method for making a pipe-shaped body of wood

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