US223656A - Clutching and braking device for power-driven sewing-machines - Google Patents

Clutching and braking device for power-driven sewing-machines Download PDF

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US223656A
US223656A US223656DA US223656A US 223656 A US223656 A US 223656A US 223656D A US223656D A US 223656DA US 223656 A US223656 A US 223656A
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shaft
brake
machines
power
arm
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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
    • F16DCOUPLINGS FOR TRANSMITTING ROTATION; CLUTCHES; BRAKES
    • F16D67/00Combinations of couplings and brakes; Combinations of clutches and brakes
    • F16D67/02Clutch-brake combinations

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  • FIG.2. F I G l ⁇ VITNESSES, INVENTOR.
  • My invention relates to mechanisn of the class in which a friction-clutch and a brake are coincidently operated so as to impart rotation to or arrest the rotation of a shaft at desired intervals, and is an improvement upon that for which Letters Patent of the United States No. 213,704 were granted and issued to me under date of March 25, 1879.
  • the object of my present invention is to sim plify and clieapen the construction of mechanism of this description and the application thereof to power-driven sewing-machines; to which end my improvements consist in the combination, with a sewingmachine shaft having a loose driving-pulley and a fast frictional disk mounted upon it, of a hanger depending from the table of the machine and supporting a triple-armed rockshaft, one of the arms of which carriesor is connected to a brake-shoe, another a device for shifting the loose pulley, and the third a connection to an operating-. treadle, these members being so constructed and relatively arranged as to avoid the necessity of intermediate or supplementary connections, to be within small compass, and to be conveniently applicable to the shaft of a sewing-machine of the ordinary construction.
  • My improvements further consist in combining a driving-shaft, a frictional disk having a swelled hub with an inwardly -projecting flange, and aloose pulley having an elongated hub flanged at its end and projecting into the hub of the fixed frictional disk, all as hereinafter more fully set forth.
  • Figure l is v a side view, partly in section, of a sewing-machine stand having my improvements applied Fig. 2, a transverse section of the same; and Figs. 3 and 4 are .views,in perspective and on an enlarged scale, of the rock-shaft and its supporting-hanger, the brake-arm being shown, respectively, as operating a segmental shoe and a friction-band.
  • My invention is shown as applied upon the frame of one of a series of sewing-machines arranged adjacent to and operated by acontinuously-rotating power-driven shaft, F.
  • the legs or end frames, A, of the machine support the table A, upon which the sewing mechanism is mounted, and also support the bearings of the main shaft B of the machine, which bearings, in this instance, are shown as consisting of conical pivots formed upon the ends of screws a.
  • the shaft B may be either a straight shaft or the ordinary cranked driving-shaft of -the machine, the latter being preferable, as in the event of stoppage of the motive power the machiiie may be operated by making the usual connection of the treadle with the crank-shaft for the application of foot-power; and the shaft B has an ordinary pulley, B secured upon it, from which pulley motion is imparted to the sewing mechanism.
  • a wheel or frictional disk, B is secured firmly upon the shaft B, and a driving-pulley, B around which passes abe1t,f, from a pulley, f, on the line or counter-shaft F, from which power is communicated, is mounted loosely upon the shaft Badjacent to the wheel B.
  • a dripcup If, to receive any oil that may drop from the shaft, is secured upon the collar b and a flange, b the inner diameter of which is slightly greater than that of the flange I), is formed upon the hub of the wheel B, the object of the flanges b and I) being to prevent the access of oil to the frictional ring b during the rotation of the shaft.
  • a horizontal rock-shaft, O is mounted transversely to the shaft B in a bearing in the lower end of a hanger, D, secured to and depending from the lower side of the table A.
  • the rockshaft 0 has three arms, 0 0 0 formed upon or secured to its ends, a construction which l;
  • the arms 0 and C extend in opposite directions from the two ends of the shaft, and the arm (fi, which is forked and provided with recesses c in its ends, is located substantially at right angles to the arms O and G
  • the brake-arm C is connected by a spring, 0 with an arm, (I, on the hanger I), the tension of the spring 0 acting to apply the brake against the periphery of the wheel B wheneverthe pressure of the operators foot upon the treadle is released, and the brake may consist either of a segmental shoe, 0 formed upon the end of the brake-arm G and faced with a strip, 0 of leather or similar material, as shown in Fig.
  • the lever 0 may be either-connected directly to the brake-arm by passing one of its ends through a slot therein, Figs. 1 and 2, or be coupled thereto by a link, 0 Fig. 4, and for the purpose of regulating the tension of the friction-band c from time to time, as may be required, one of its ends is connected to the lever c by a screw, 0 passing through an opening in the end of the lever and having nuts 0 above and below the latter.
  • a red or link, 0, connects the arm G with the treadle E ofthe machine, and the recesses 0 of the arm C engage pins b upon the loose collar 0 of the pulley B
  • the length of the arm 0 and its position relative to the wheel B are such as to enable the facingstrip of the brake-shoe or the friction-band, as the case may be, to be applied against the periphery of the wheel B for the purpose of arresting the movements of the sewing mechanism operated by the shaft B whenever required.
  • the triple-armed rock-shaft having a brake-shoenpon one of its arms, a forked shipping-lever upon another, and an eye or socket for a treadle-rod upon the third, the construction being such as to permit direct application of the clutching and braking members without the use of intermediate links or connections, substantially as set forth.

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Description

' L. STERNBERGER. Clutching and Braking Device for Power-Driven Sewing-Machines.
No. 223,656. Patentec! Jan. 20, I880.
FIG.2. F I G l \VITNESSES, INVENTOR.
ZZZ;
LEOPOLD STEENBERGER, OF PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA.
CLUTCHING AND BRAKING DEVICE FOR POWER-DRIVEN SEWING-MACHINES.
SPECIFICATION formingpart of Letters Patent No. 223,656, dated January 20, 1880. Application filed September 24, 1879.
To all whom t'tonay concern Be it known that I, LEOPOLD STERNBER- GER, of the city and county of Philadelphia, in the State of Pennsylvania, have invented cer tain new and useful Improvements in Clutch ing and Braking Devices for Power-Driven Sewing-Machines, of which improvements the following is a specification.
My invention relates to mechanisn of the class in which a friction-clutch and a brake are coincidently operated so as to impart rotation to or arrest the rotation of a shaft at desired intervals, and is an improvement upon that for which Letters Patent of the United States No. 213,704 were granted and issued to me under date of March 25, 1879. The object of my present invention is to sim plify and clieapen the construction of mechanism of this description and the application thereof to power-driven sewing-machines; to which end my improvements consist in the combination, with a sewingmachine shaft having a loose driving-pulley and a fast frictional disk mounted upon it, of a hanger depending from the table of the machine and supporting a triple-armed rockshaft, one of the arms of which carriesor is connected to a brake-shoe, another a device for shifting the loose pulley, and the third a connection to an operating-. treadle, these members being so constructed and relatively arranged as to avoid the necessity of intermediate or supplementary connections, to be within small compass, and to be conveniently applicable to the shaft of a sewing-machine of the ordinary construction.
My improvements further consist in combining a driving-shaft, a frictional disk having a swelled hub with an inwardly -projecting flange, and aloose pulley having an elongated hub flanged at its end and projecting into the hub of the fixed frictional disk, all as hereinafter more fully set forth.
In the accompanying drawings, Figure l is v a side view, partly in section, of a sewing-machine stand having my improvements applied Fig. 2, a transverse section of the same; and Figs. 3 and 4 are .views,in perspective and on an enlarged scale, of the rock-shaft and its supporting-hanger, the brake-arm being shown, respectively, as operating a segmental shoe and a friction-band.
My invention is shown as applied upon the frame of one of a series of sewing-machines arranged adjacent to and operated by acontinuously-rotating power-driven shaft, F. The legs or end frames, A, of the machine support the table A, upon which the sewing mechanism is mounted, and also support the bearings of the main shaft B of the machine, which bearings, in this instance, are shown as consisting of conical pivots formed upon the ends of screws a.
The shaft B may be either a straight shaft or the ordinary cranked driving-shaft of -the machine, the latter being preferable, as in the event of stoppage of the motive power the machiiie may be operated by making the usual connection of the treadle with the crank-shaft for the application of foot-power; and the shaft B has an ordinary pulley, B secured upon it, from which pulley motion is imparted to the sewing mechanism.
A wheel or frictional disk, B, is secured firmly upon the shaft B, and a driving-pulley, B around which passes abe1t,f, from a pulley, f, on the line or counter-shaft F, from which power is communicated, is mounted loosely upon the shaft Badjacent to the wheel B. A frictional ring, b, of leather or analo= gous material, is secured upon the side of the pulley B adjoining the wheel B, and the hub of the pulley B is prolonged at both ends, so
as at one side to enter the recess of the dished or swelled hub ofthe wheel B, within which it is provided with an end flange, b, and at the other side to afford space for a collar, b which is mounted loosely upon it and held in position longitudinally by a fast-collar, 12
A dripcup, If, to receive any oil that may drop from the shaft, is secured upon the collar b and a flange, b the inner diameter of which is slightly greater than that of the flange I), is formed upon the hub of the wheel B, the object of the flanges b and I) being to prevent the access of oil to the frictional ring b during the rotation of the shaft.
A horizontal rock-shaft, O,is mounted transversely to the shaft B in a bearing in the lower end of a hanger, D, secured to and depending from the lower side of the table A. The rockshaft 0 has three arms, 0 0 0 formed upon or secured to its ends, a construction which l;
have found desirable being to cast the arm 0 in one piece with and upon one end of the shaft, and to cast the arms 0 and O in a single piece, which is secured upon the opposite end of the shaft. The arms 0 and C extend in opposite directions from the two ends of the shaft, and the arm (fi, which is forked and provided with recesses c in its ends, is located substantially at right angles to the arms O and G The brake-arm C is connected by a spring, 0 with an arm, (I, on the hanger I), the tension of the spring 0 acting to apply the brake against the periphery of the wheel B wheneverthe pressure of the operators foot upon the treadle is released, and the brake may consist either of a segmental shoe, 0 formed upon the end of the brake-arm G and faced with a strip, 0 of leather or similar material, as shown in Fig. 3, or of afriction-band shoe, 0 which surrounds the wheel B and is connected at its ends to a lever, 0 pivoted to the hanger D, said lever being, in turn, connected to the brake-arm as in Figs. 1, 2, and 4.
The lever 0 may be either-connected directly to the brake-arm by passing one of its ends through a slot therein, Figs. 1 and 2, or be coupled thereto by a link, 0 Fig. 4, and for the purpose of regulating the tension of the friction-band c from time to time, as may be required, one of its ends is connected to the lever c by a screw, 0 passing through an opening in the end of the lever and having nuts 0 above and below the latter. A red or link, 0, connects the arm G with the treadle E ofthe machine, and the recesses 0 of the arm C engage pins b upon the loose collar 0 of the pulley B The length of the arm 0 and its position relative to the wheel B are such as to enable the facingstrip of the brake-shoe or the friction-band, as the case may be, to be applied against the periphery of the wheel B for the purpose of arresting the movements of the sewing mechanism operated by the shaft B whenever required.
In the operation of my improvements a downward pressure by the operator upon the toe of the treadle E will depress the outer end of the arm 0 of the rock-shaft, correspondingly elevate the brakearm U and swing the forked shipping-arm toward the right. The recesses in the arm (1 engaging the pins on the collar of the hub of the loose pulley B move the pulley into frictional contact with the fixed wheel B, and thereby rotation isimparted to the shaft B, while the facing-strip c of the brakeshoe c or the friction-band 0 is simultaneously withdrawn from contact with the periphery of the wheel B by the elevation of the brakearm 0 Upon the release of the pressureupon the treadle the spring 0 draws the brake-arm downward, thereby applying the brake-shoe or frictioirband, and the shipping-arm 0 draws the pulley B away from the Wheel B. The rotary movement of said wheel and its shaft is thereby arrested, and the sewing mechanism will be and remain at rest during the rotation of the shaft F, except when actuated from time to time, as may be required and as above described.
My improvements are readily adaptable to sewing-machines of the ordinary patterns, and in their application I have, while utilizing the same general principle of operation as is embodied in my Patent No. 213,704, aforesaid, effected such simplification of mechanism and consequent reduction of the first cost and the expense of maintenance of the apparatus relatively to that set forth in said patent as to entail a material economy in manufacturing operations where any considerable number of power-driven sewing-machines is made use of.
I claim as myinvention and desire to secure by Letters Patent 1. The combination, with a sewing-machine shaft having a loose driving-pulley and a fast frictional disk mounted upon it, of a triplearmed rock-shaft having two arms carrying, respectively, the shoe of a springbrake and a forked shipping-lever, and a third arm connected with the treadle of the machine, and a hanger depending from the machine-table, said hanger providing a bearing for the rockshaft and an abutment for the brake-spring, substantially as set forth.
2. The combination ofthe depending hanger, the triple-armed rock-shaft, and the brake spring, substantially as set forth.
3. The triple-armed rock-shaft having a brake-shoenpon one of its arms, a forked shipping-lever upon another, and an eye or socket for a treadle-rod upon the third, the construction being such as to permit direct application of the clutching and braking members without the use of intermediate links or connections, substantially as set forth.
4:. The combination, with the triple-armed rock-shaft, of the frictioirband brake-shoe, the pivoted lever, to which the ends of the friction-band are connected, and the brake-sprin g, substantially as set forth.
5. The combination of the triple-armed rockshaft, the friction-band brake-shoe, the pivoted lever, to which the ends of the friction-band are connected, and a device for varying the tension of the friction-band, substantially as set forth.
6. The combination of a sewingmachine driving-shaft, a wheel fixed thereon and having a swelled hub and ii1wardly-projecting flange, and a pulley mounted loosely upon the driving-shaft and having an elongated hub, with a flanged end projectinginto the recessed hub of the fixed wheel, substantially as set forth.
LEOPOLD STERNBERGER.
Witnesses:
'J. SNOWDEN BELL,
B. F. TELLER.
IIO
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