US1292289A - Gasolene-regulator. - Google Patents

Gasolene-regulator. Download PDF

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Publication number
US1292289A
US1292289A US22605918A US1292289A US 1292289 A US1292289 A US 1292289A US 22605918 A US22605918 A US 22605918A US 1292289 A US1292289 A US 1292289A
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Prior art keywords
casting
tank
carbureter
gasolene
globe
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William A Fleek
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16KVALVES; TAPS; COCKS; ACTUATING-FLOATS; DEVICES FOR VENTING OR AERATING
    • F16K15/00Check valves
    • F16K15/02Check valves with guided rigid valve members
    • F16K15/03Check valves with guided rigid valve members with a hinged closure member or with a pivoted closure member
    • 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
    • Y10T137/00Fluid handling
    • Y10T137/7722Line condition change responsive valves
    • Y10T137/7837Direct response valves [i.e., check valve type]
    • Y10T137/7898Pivoted valves
    • Y10T137/7903Weight biased

Definitions

  • This invention relates to liquid fuel supply, and more especially it is a regulator to be inserted between the tank and the carbureter of the engine on a motor boat or the like, whereby tossing of the boat in rough water will not interrupt or reduce the supply of fuel to the engine.
  • One feature of the invention is the provision of means whereby the valve and strainer can be withdrawn from the connection without uncoupling the parts; and-another feature is the provision of a sediment tank adjacent the strainer. and from which accumulation can be drawn from time to 7 time.
  • the inlet pipe is connected at 3 with a casting whose first element is a pendant bulb 4 having a draw-off cock 5 at its lower end, the obvious purpose being to permit sediment to accumulate within the bulb, from which it is withdrawn from time to time through the cock 5.
  • the upper side of the casting is formed with a boss 6 closed by a screw cap 7 and when the latter is removed the interior of the casting discloses side grooves or channels into which from above is slipped a screen 9, the same standing in a plane near the farther sideiof the throat or inlet 10 to the bulb 4.
  • the next element to the right, forming by preference an integral part of the casting, is an upstanding globe 15, preferably of about the shape and size shown and defining an auxiliary tank or chamber capable of holding perhaps a quart.
  • An air vent pipe 16 rises from the apex of this globe to a point above the highest level of the liquid within the tank (not shown) where it has a vent opening at 17, and the purpose of this detail is to prevent the liquid within the globe from becoming air bound.
  • the throat 20 of the globe or chamber is of some considerable size, divided by a transverse ridge 21 into an inlet 22 adjacent the valve already described, and an outlet 23 leading into a branch 24 which has a coupling 25 for attachment of the outlet pipe 2.
  • the ridge' 21 may well be formed at the time the attachment is cast, and the whole may be supported at this time on a standard 26 which, with the couplings 3 and 25, and perha 5 some support for the vent pipe 16, will hold all parts in their proper position, whether mounted on a motor boat or on a motor vehicle.
  • gasolene When the tank is first filled, gasolene will flow along theinlet pipe 1, will fill the bulb 4:, pass through the valve and rise within the globe 15 to a level equal ,with that within the tank, and will then flow through the outlet 23 and along the pipe 2 to the carbureter; and thus the level of the fluid fuel will stand so long as the boat or vehicle is fixed, or so long as it proceeds along an even course.
  • the engine When the engine is set in motion,
  • the entire device will be low whenthe carbureter is low; and therefore it will serve as a check for the return of the gasolene to the tank at any time when the carbureter rises.
  • the bulb 4 and co;k 5 are used for the purpose of removing sediment from time to time. The functions and uses of the strainer and valve have been explained. Other details are not considered necessary.
  • the combination with an inlet pipe adapted to be'connected with the tank, and an outlet pipe adapted to be con- nected with the carbureter; of a casting connecting said pipes and having a boss at its top and upright grooves in its sides beneath said boss, a cap removably closing the latter, a valve opening toward the carbureter and removably inserted through said boss into naeaaee tion with a pipe line adapted to connect the tank with the carbureter; of a casting interposed .within this line and having an upright ridge across its bottom, the cast- .ing being formed into a globe whose throat stands above said ridge, an upright air vent pipe leading from the top of saidtglobe, and a check valve within the casting between the globe and its inlet end and opening to- .Ward the globe.
  • the herein described gasolene regulator comprising a casting adapted to be inserted in the pipe line between a tank and carbu-- reter, the same having an inlet leg and an outlet leg, an upright transverse ridge across the bottom of the casting between said legs, said casting including a globe upstanding therefrom and having a throat disposed above the ridge with an inlet to the throat at one side of the ridge and an outlet from the globe at the other side of the'ridge, and a .check valve within the casting between the inlet end of the casting and the inlet to said throat, the check valve opening toward 'the throat, the whole for use substantially as described.
  • a gasolene regulator the combination with a casting adapted to be inserted inv the pipe line between a tank and carbureter, the inlet leg of said casting having a pendant bulb with a draw-off cock at its bottom, and the body of the casting having an upstanding globe between said bulb and the outlet leg; of a strainer within the cast- 10o ing just beyond the throat to said bulb, and a check valve adjacent the strainer opening toward the globe, for the purpose set forth.
  • a gasolene regulator the combination with a casting adapted to be inserted in 105 the pipe line between a tank and carbureter, the inlet leg of said casting having a pendant bulb with a draw-off; cock at its bottom, and the body of the casting having an upstanding globe between said bulb and the 1110 1 movably inserted in said grooves, and a flap valve hinged at its upper edge to said frame and openingtoward the globe, the whole for j use substantially as described.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Cooling, Air Intake And Gas Exhaust, And Fuel Tank Arrangements In Propulsion Units (AREA)

Description

W. A. FLEEK GASOLENE REGULATOR.
APPLICATION FILED APR. I S-l8. 1,292,289.
Patented Jan. 21, 1919.
INVENTOR WITNESSES ATTORN EY WILLIAM A. mask, or DOUGLAS, TERRITORY or ALASKA.
GASOLENE-BEGULATOR.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented Jan. 21, 1919.
Application filed April 1, 1918. Serial No. 226,059.
- To all whom it may concern Be it known that I, \VILLIAM A. FLEEK, a citizen of the United States, residing at Douglas, in the Territory of Alaska, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Gasolene-Regulators, of which the following is a specification.
This invention relates to liquid fuel supply, and more especially it is a regulator to be inserted between the tank and the carbureter of the engine on a motor boat or the like, whereby tossing of the boat in rough water will not interrupt or reduce the supply of fuel to the engine.
One feature of the invention is the provision of means whereby the valve and strainer can be withdrawn from the connection without uncoupling the parts; and-another feature is the provision of a sediment tank adjacent the strainer. and from which accumulation can be drawn from time to 7 time.
' lines 3-3 and 4-2. of Fig. 1.
' direction indicated by the arrow.
I have indicated the tank at T and the carbureter at C, the former at the left and the latter at the right of Fig. 1, and the gasolene or, other liquid fuel is flowing in the Assuming that the outfit is on a .motor boat or the like, subject to tossing as in rough water,
it has been found advisable to dispose the outlet from the tank at least six inches above the inlet to the carburetor when the flow is by gravity; but even then there will be occasions when the gasolene in the tank is low, that the fuel will run back from the carbureter so that the latter does not function properly. In order to avoid th1s contingency I dispose my improved regulator somewhere in the pipe line between the tank and the carbureter, and in the illustrated embodiment of my invention I give it the following construction:
Let 1 desi ate the inlet pipe, and 2 the outlet pipe r bm the regulator. The inlet pipe is connected at 3 with a casting whose first element is a pendant bulb 4 having a draw-off cock 5 at its lower end, the obvious purpose being to permit sediment to accumulate within the bulb, from which it is withdrawn from time to time through the cock 5. Next adjacent this element the upper side of the casting is formed with a boss 6 closed by a screw cap 7 and when the latter is removed the interior of the casting discloses side grooves or channels into which from above is slipped a screen 9, the same standing in a plane near the farther sideiof the throat or inlet 10 to the bulb 4. Obviously what particles are screened out-of the liquid will fall through said throat and be trapped within the bulb, to be removed later in a manner alread described. Hinged at 11 to the frame of t e screen 9 is a flap valve 12 opening toward the right which is in the direction of the outlet pipe 2 and closing toward the left and against said frame as will be described below. The
construction is such that when the cap 7 is removed, the screen and flap valve may be bodily withdrawn from the casting as for inspection orrepair, and yet when in place they form little .or no impediment to the flow of liquid through its normal course as described.
The next element to the right, forming by preference an integral part of the casting, is an upstanding globe 15, preferably of about the shape and size shown and defining an auxiliary tank or chamber capable of holding perhaps a quart. An air vent pipe 16 rises from the apex of this globe to a point above the highest level of the liquid within the tank (not shown) where it has a vent opening at 17, and the purpose of this detail is to prevent the liquid within the globe from becoming air bound. The throat 20 of the globe or chamber is of some considerable size, divided by a transverse ridge 21 into an inlet 22 adjacent the valve already described, and an outlet 23 leading into a branch 24 which has a coupling 25 for attachment of the outlet pipe 2. The ridge' 21 may well be formed at the time the attachment is cast, and the whole may be supported at this time on a standard 26 which, with the couplings 3 and 25, and perha 5 some support for the vent pipe 16, will hold all parts in their proper position, whether mounted on a motor boat or on a motor vehicle.
The parts being constructed as described and properly connected up, the action will be as follows:
When the tank is first filled, gasolene will flow along theinlet pipe 1, will fill the bulb 4:, pass through the valve and rise within the globe 15 to a level equal ,with that within the tank, and will then flow through the outlet 23 and along the pipe 2 to the carbureter; and thus the level of the fluid fuel will stand so long as the boat or vehicle is fixed, or so long as it proceeds along an even course. When the engine is set in motion,
. draft on the carbureter will cause suction on the outlet pipe 2,. and the gasolene will flow uninterruptedly. Now let us assume that a motor boat meets with rough [weather or a motor vehicle, or perhaps a tank equipped with this invention, passes over extremely rough ground. The immediate result is that the carbureter is not always six inches below the liquid level in the tank. When the tank is down and the carbureter is up, .the tendency of course is for the liquid to flow backward through the system described. This tendency is resisted, however, by the fact that the flap valve falls closed, and'the back- Ward flow of the gasolene causes it simply to rise within the globe 15, the outlet and vent permitting. As this globe should be situated rather near the carbureter, the entire device will be low whenthe carbureter is low; and therefore it will serve as a check for the return of the gasolene to the tank at any time when the carbureter rises. The bulb 4 and co;k 5 are used for the purpose of removing sediment from time to time. The functions and uses of the strainer and valve have been explained. Other details are not considered necessary.
What is claimed .as new is v 1. In a fluid fuel supply system of the type described, the combination with an inlet pipe adapted to be connected with the tank, and an outlet pipe adapted to be connected with the carbureter; of a casting connecting said pipes and having a boss at its top and upright grooves in its sides beneath said boss, a cap removably closing the latter, a frame inse-rtible in said grooves through the boss when the cap is removed, and a fiapvalve carried by said frame and opening toward the carburetor.
2. In a' fluid fuel supply system of the type described, the combination with an inlet pipe adapted to be'connected with the tank, and an outlet pipe adapted to be con-= nected with the carbureter; of a casting connecting said pipes and having a boss at its top and upright grooves in its sides beneath said boss, a cap removably closing the latter, a valve opening toward the carbureter and removably inserted through said boss into naeaaee tion with a pipe line adapted to connect the tank with the carbureter; of a casting interposed .within this line and having an upright ridge across its bottom, the cast- .ing being formed into a globe whose throat stands above said ridge, an upright air vent pipe leading from the top of saidtglobe, and a check valve within the casting between the globe and its inlet end and opening to- .Ward the globe.
4. The herein described gasolene regulator comprising a casting adapted to be inserted in the pipe line between a tank and carbu-- reter, the same having an inlet leg and an outlet leg, an upright transverse ridge across the bottom of the casting between said legs, said casting including a globe upstanding therefrom and having a throat disposed above the ridge with an inlet to the throat at one side of the ridge and an outlet from the globe at the other side of the'ridge, and a .check valve within the casting between the inlet end of the casting and the inlet to said throat, the check valve opening toward 'the throat, the whole for use substantially as described.
5. In a gasolene regulator, the combination with a casting adapted to be inserted inv the pipe line between a tank and carbureter, the inlet leg of said casting having a pendant bulb with a draw-off cock at its bottom, and the body of the casting having an upstanding globe between said bulb and the outlet leg; of a strainer within the cast- 10o ing just beyond the throat to said bulb, and a check valve adjacent the strainer opening toward the globe, for the purpose set forth.
6. In a gasolene regulator, the combination with a casting adapted to be inserted in 105 the pipe line between a tank and carbureter, the inlet leg of said casting having a pendant bulb with a draw-off; cock at its bottom, and the body of the casting having an upstanding globe between said bulb and the 1110 1 movably inserted in said grooves, and a flap valve hinged at its upper edge to said frame and openingtoward the globe, the whole for j use substantially as described.
In testimony whereof I aflix my signature tee in presence of two witnesses.
LLIAM A. FLE-EK.
itnesses: I
Jonn I Henson, None A. Muss/rs.
US22605918 1918-04-01 1918-04-01 Gasolene-regulator. Expired - Lifetime US1292289A (en)

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Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2834469A (en) * 1953-10-22 1958-05-13 Adolph V Mitterer Fuel condenser and strainer
US3106527A (en) * 1958-08-28 1963-10-08 Acf Ind Inc Fuel treatment device
US6106706A (en) * 1995-10-30 2000-08-22 Rsf Patent Pty Ltd. Storm water filter arrangement
US20040089350A1 (en) * 2002-11-08 2004-05-13 Marty Garry R. In-line screens for thermostatic valves
US20050092372A1 (en) * 2003-10-29 2005-05-05 Wade Rodney G. Flap valve
US10801605B2 (en) * 2018-08-28 2020-10-13 Nidec Tosok Corporation Pressure control device

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2834469A (en) * 1953-10-22 1958-05-13 Adolph V Mitterer Fuel condenser and strainer
US3106527A (en) * 1958-08-28 1963-10-08 Acf Ind Inc Fuel treatment device
US6106706A (en) * 1995-10-30 2000-08-22 Rsf Patent Pty Ltd. Storm water filter arrangement
US20040089350A1 (en) * 2002-11-08 2004-05-13 Marty Garry R. In-line screens for thermostatic valves
US6910501B2 (en) * 2002-11-08 2005-06-28 Masco Corporation Of Indiana In-line screens for thermostatic valves
US20050092372A1 (en) * 2003-10-29 2005-05-05 Wade Rodney G. Flap valve
US10801605B2 (en) * 2018-08-28 2020-10-13 Nidec Tosok Corporation Pressure control device

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