US789A - Machine for sawing and jointing staves - Google Patents

Machine for sawing and jointing staves Download PDF

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Publication number
US789A
US789A US789DA US789A US 789 A US789 A US 789A US 789D A US789D A US 789DA US 789 A US789 A US 789A
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carriage
machine
pinion
sawing
staves
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B26HAND CUTTING TOOLS; CUTTING; SEVERING
    • B26DCUTTING; DETAILS COMMON TO MACHINES FOR PERFORATING, PUNCHING, CUTTING-OUT, STAMPING-OUT OR SEVERING
    • B26D3/00Cutting work characterised by the nature of the cut made; Apparatus therefor
    • B26D3/18Cutting work characterised by the nature of the cut made; Apparatus therefor to obtain cubes or the like
    • B26D3/185Grid like cutters
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/647With means to convey work relative to tool station
    • Y10T83/654With work-constraining means on work conveyor [i.e., "work-carrier"]
    • Y10T83/6545With means to guide work-carrier in nonrectilinear path
    • Y10T83/6547About axis fixed relative to tool station
    • Y10T83/6548Infeed
    • Y10T83/655About vertical axis
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T83/00Cutting
    • Y10T83/647With means to convey work relative to tool station
    • Y10T83/6584Cut made parallel to direction of and during work movement
    • Y10T83/6587Including plural, laterally spaced tools

Definitions

  • the kind of saw which I use isthat which is denominated the concavo convex saw, by the employment of which the staves are sawed curvilinearly both lengthwise and crosswise. ment of this saw, for the cutting of staves,
  • Figure 1 is a representation, in perspective, of that part of the machine by which the sawing is effected, the convex sides of the saw being presented to view, and marked A.
  • B, B, B, is the carriage upon which thestufi' is sustained, and which is' furnished ⁇ with a self feeding apparatus to be presently described.
  • C is the drum, or whirl, upon the shaft which sustains the saw, and which is represented as driven by a band, which is preferable to cog gearing.
  • Fig. 3 is a view ofthe back of the machine or of the side opposite tothat shown in Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 4f is a vertical section along the machine, in the direction ofthe line' I-I, H, Fig. 2.
  • the front wheels, I, I, of the carriage are To vthe invention, and employ.
  • I also provide a sliding piece N, or two such if preferred, which Vmay be brought down so as to press lightly upon the stuff, 'in aid of the roller ;v this sliding piece may be held in its place by a tightening screw N, seen in Fig. 4f.
  • the carriage is made to advance by the gearing of thepinion G, into a rack O, Fig. 4:, 011 the under side of the carriage.
  • the pinion G is thrown out of gear when the cut is completed, and the carriage is then drawn back by means of a weight passing over a pulley.
  • P, P Fig. 2 is apiece of timber 'called a tilting beam, in the side of which the pivot of the pinion G, has its bearing.
  • Q is a round shaft which runs through this piece of timber, and on which it can turn; the end P', of this piece of timber rests upon the frame of the machine, and it will be seen that if the end P, is depressed, the pinion G, will also becarried down, and thrown out of gear, with the rack.
  • R, R is also a piece of wood o'r metal alongside of, and on the same plane with the piece P, P, and like it having the shaft Q, passing through, not however through a round hole; but through a slot, or mortise, as it is necessary that it should have a ⁇ motion endwise. It is attached to P, P, by two screws passing through slots or mortises, which are shown at S, S, in Fig. 4. At R2, Fig. 2, there is a spring catch which holds on' to a corresponding catch, or jog seen on the piece R, R, and it is manifest that if R, R', be released from the catch, it and the piece P, P', will be free to turn together on the shaft Q.
  • X is-a rag wheel and pawls, X; the rag wheel being fixed on the shaft X2, which also carries the bevel pinion Y, gearing into Y', on the shaft Z.
  • the back View of the machine, Fig. 3, will at once show the remainder of the arrangement for setting.
  • the tail piece Z being brought into contact with the pin, Z2, at the proper moment, causes the pawls to advance the rag wheel, and to set the log, which will be carried forward under the pressing roller M, by the feeding wheels L, L.
  • the amount of feed may be regulated by raising or lowering stop piece Z3.
  • the jointing, or edging apparatus which I am now about to describe, I usually attach to the sawing apparatus and drive by a band from the wheel D', on the pinion shaft of Fig. 1. It may however be operated in any other manner which may be preferred.
  • Fig. 5 is a side
  • Fig. 6 a top view of the machine, a, a, a, being the frame of the stationary part, and b b, the'frame of the carriage upon which the staves to be jointed are laid and held.
  • the ends rest upon the cleats c, c, the middle of the bulge bearing upon the bed of the carriage d, being held in place by the screw e, passing through the upper part of the carriage frame Z)
  • the carriage is moved by arack and pini yion, resembling those of the sawing machine,
  • Vby the cleats c, c, and the bed piece d, being -such as torplacel it ina proper position for Vinto the rack, is upon the shaft f(and represented by dotted lines,) of the cog wheel g, whichris driven by a pinion and ⁇ whirl whichfis on the shaft
  • the inner end of the shaft f has its bearing in a lever, or
  • strip f f which is raised and lowered in a manner similar to that byrrwhich the pinion in thesa-wing machine is thrown out of gear; the Apiece i, raising lor lowering it as may be required. It is represented as in gear, being held. up by the catch j, which is thrown back by the pin 76, coming into contact with it, when the pinion falls, and the carriage is drawn back, by a weight passing over a pulley, as in the saw carriage. The staves'which have been jointed are thenl removed, and others substituted, when the pinion is again thrown into gear, by hand,
  • Yjointing is effected by revolving knives, or cutters, m, m, Flgs. 5, 6, and 7, set around a vertical drum a, n, which is made to revolve with great speed.
  • the knives or cutters must be ⁇ of such length as is required for the thickness of the number of staves which are to be jointed together.
  • the cutters I drive by a band o, onwhirls p, p.

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  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Forests & Forestry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Dovetailed Work, And Nailing Machines And Stapling Machines For Wood (AREA)

Description

UNTTED sTATEs PATENT oFFioE. N
NATIIANIEL MOORE, OF ELLSWOR'IH, MAINE.
MACHINE FOR SAWING `AND J OINTING STAVES.
Specification of .Letters Patent No. 789,` dated June .19, 1838.
To all whom 'it may concern:
Be it known that I, NATHANIEL Moonn, of
Ellsworth in the county ofI-Iancock, inthe State of Maine, have invented `several Improvements in Machinery for Sawing and Jointing Bilging-Staves; and I do hereby declare that the following is a full and exact description thereof.
The kind of saw which I use isthat which is denominated the concavo convex saw, by the employment of which the staves are sawed curvilinearly both lengthwise and crosswise. ment of this saw, for the cutting of staves,
`I `make no claim, it having been longknown `saw makes a component part.
Figure 1 is a representation, in perspective, of that part of the machine by which the sawing is effected, the convex sides of the saw being presented to view, and marked A. B, B, B, is the carriage upon which thestufi' is sustained, and which is' furnished `with a self feeding apparatus to be presently described. C is the drum, or whirl, upon the shaft which sustains the saw, and which is represented as driven by a band, which is preferable to cog gearing. From a whirl on this shaft a band is carried 4to the'whirl D, on the shaft of which there is a pinion E, gearing into the wheel F, the shaft of which wheel carries a pinion which gearsA into a rack on the underside of the carriage; this pinion is shown at G, vin Fig. 2, which is a top view of the ways upon which the carriage runs, and of some appendages thereto. n
Fig. 3 is a view ofthe back of the machine or of the side opposite tothat shown in Fig. 1.
Fig. 4f is a vertical section along the machine, in the direction ofthe line' I-I, H, Fig. 2.
Where the same parts are represented in the respective figures, they are designated by the same letters of reference.
The front wheels, I, I, of the carriage are To vthe invention, and employ.
-grooved,.andrun upon anedge rail, J, J, by-whichV Vthey are guided in the proper curve adapted to the saw. VThe stuff to be sewedis" placed upon the top of the carriage B B, B, and rests in part upon the teeth of the feeding wheels L, L, which are sharp, and rise a little above the top of the carriage, so as'to bite into the stuff, and move it forward. The stuff, which is of sawed plank, cut into suitable lengths, is held down upon the carriage, by the roller M, governed by a screw as shown in the drawing. I also provide a sliding piece N, or two such if preferred, which Vmay be brought down so as to press lightly upon the stuff, 'in aid of the roller ;v this sliding piece may be held in its place by a tightening screw N, seen in Fig. 4f.
The carriage is made to advance by the gearing of thepinion G, into a rack O, Fig. 4:, 011 the under side of the carriage. The pinion G, is thrown out of gear when the cut is completed, and the carriage is then drawn back by means of a weight passing over a pulley.
The method of throwing the pinion out of gear is as follows: P, P Fig. 2, is apiece of timber 'called a tilting beam, in the side of which the pivot of the pinion G, has its bearing. Q, is a round shaft which runs through this piece of timber, and on which it can turn; the end P', of this piece of timber rests upon the frame of the machine, and it will be seen that if the end P, is depressed, the pinion G, will also becarried down, and thrown out of gear, with the rack. R, R, is also a piece of wood o'r metal alongside of, and on the same plane with the piece P, P, and like it having the shaft Q, passing through, not however through a round hole; but through a slot, or mortise, as it is necessary that it should have a `motion endwise. It is attached to P, P, by two screws passing through slots or mortises, which are shown at S, S, in Fig. 4. At R2, Fig. 2, there is a spring catch which holds on' to a corresponding catch, or jog seen on the piece R, R, and it is manifest that if R, R', be released from the catch, it and the piece P, P', will be free to turn together on the shaft Q. Vhen the carriage 1s advanced upon the ways so farwhich rises above R, R', and this bar is con- I sequently drawn back, and relieved from the weight to draw the carriage back. `When'it" arrives back, the catch at R is struckV by it and recedes, and the friction wheel U,
now pressing upon the end P ofthe tilting,
that end is depressed, and the pinion'G, Fig. 2, thrown into gear. A spiral spring,l V,
serves to draw the piece R, R, into place` Y against the catch at R2.
It is sometimes desirable to allow the wheel work and bands of the machine to run, without allowing the rack and pinion of the carriage to -pass into gear, and to effect this, all that is necessary is to hold up t-he ends c, and p of the tilting pieces; tov
effect 'this a catch or hook WV, Figs. 2 and 3, is made to catch under a lever below these pieces, the end W, of this lever 'is shown as held up by the hook IV.
An important part of this machine is the sett-ingrapparatus by means of which the planks, as a stave is cut off, is made to advance toV the proper distance for another cut. X, Figs. 1, and 3, is-a rag wheel and pawls, X; the rag wheel being fixed on the shaft X2, which also carries the bevel pinion Y, gearing into Y', on the shaft Z. The back View of the machine, Fig. 3, will at once show the remainder of the arrangement for setting. The tail piece Z, being brought into contact with the pin, Z2, at the proper moment, causes the pawls to advance the rag wheel, and to set the log, which will be carried forward under the pressing roller M, by the feeding wheels L, L. The amount of feed may be regulated by raising or lowering stop piece Z3.
The jointing, or edging apparatus, which I am now about to describe, I usually attach to the sawing apparatus and drive by a band from the wheel D', on the pinion shaft of Fig. 1. It may however be operated in any other manner which may be preferred.
Fig. 5, is a side, and Fig. 6, a top view of the machine, a, a, a, being the frame of the stationary part, and b b, the'frame of the carriage upon which the staves to be jointed are laid and held. The ends rest upon the cleats c, c, the middle of the bulge bearing upon the bed of the carriage d, being held in place by the screw e, passing through the upper part of the carriage frame Z) The carriage is moved by arack and pini yion, resembling those of the sawing machine,
but the rack and ways are straight. The
bilge Yof the stave, and the cant given to it,
Vby the cleats c, c, and the bed piece d, being -such as torplacel it ina proper position for Vinto the rack, is upon the shaft f(and represented by dotted lines,) of the cog wheel g, whichris driven by a pinion and` whirl whichfis on the shaft The inner end of the shaft f, has its bearing in a lever, or
strip f f" which is raised and lowered in a manner similar to that byrrwhich the pinion in thesa-wing machine is thrown out of gear; the Apiece i, raising lor lowering it as may be required. It is represented as in gear, being held. up by the catch j, which is thrown back by the pin 76, coming into contact with it, when the pinion falls, and the carriage is drawn back, by a weight passing over a pulley, as in the saw carriage. The staves'which have been jointed are thenl removed, and others substituted, when the pinion is again thrown into gear, by hand,
the spring Z, drawing the catch j, into place, when e', is raised up, several staves, placed on each other, are jointed together. The
Yjointing is effected by revolving knives, or cutters, m, m, Flgs. 5, 6, and 7, set around a vertical drum a, n, which is made to revolve with great speed. The knives or cutters must be` of such length as is required for the thickness of the number of staves which are to be jointed together. The cutters I drive by a band o, onwhirls p, p.
Vhat I claim as'constituting my invention, and which I desire to secure by Let-- ters Patent isl. The particular manner in which I have arranged and combined the several parts of the machine above described, that is to say.
I claim the general varrangement of the apparatus by which the rack and pinion of the saw carriage is thrown 4into and out of gear, as above specifically set forth.'
2. I claim also, in their combination with each other, the arrangement of the apparatus for setting the stuff to be sawed, although I do not claim either of the individual parts of this apparatus, taken separately, and alone.
3. In the jointing apparatus I claim the manner of jointing with the knives or cutters constructed as above described, and combined with the other parts described, for the purpose of jointing staves cut by a concavo-convex or dishing saw.
NATHANIEL yMOORE.
Vitnesses l MIGHILL NUTTING, LINTON THoRN.
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