US2247382A - Sewing machine feed mechanism - Google Patents

Sewing machine feed mechanism Download PDF

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Publication number
US2247382A
US2247382A US348928A US34892840A US2247382A US 2247382 A US2247382 A US 2247382A US 348928 A US348928 A US 348928A US 34892840 A US34892840 A US 34892840A US 2247382 A US2247382 A US 2247382A
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shaft
movements
sewing machine
arm
work
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US348928A
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Richard K Hohmann
Osann Frederick
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Sears Roebuck and Co
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Sears Roebuck and Co
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Priority claimed from US311486A external-priority patent/US2247379A/en
Application filed by Sears Roebuck and Co filed Critical Sears Roebuck and Co
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D05SEWING; EMBROIDERING; TUFTING
    • D05BSEWING
    • D05B27/00Work-feeding means
    • D05B27/02Work-feeding means with feed dogs having horizontal and vertical movements

Definitions

  • That machine is readily convertible from one to the other of two conditions, in one of which it is adapted for plain sewing and includes a flat work bed, which may be generally similar in form and disposition to the conventional work bed of a plain sewing machine, and in the other of which it is adapted for darning and is adapted to support stockings, or other work to be darned, on a cylinder arm generally like, though preferably somewhat smaller in cross section than, the work supporting cylinder arms of ordinary darning machines.
  • the machine is adapted, however, .for either plain sewing or darning operations, on flat bed and cylinder arm supported work.
  • the object of the invention claimed herein is to provide a novel work feed mechanism, especially adapted for use in a sewing machine in which all of the underbed sewing instrumentalities including a hook shaft making at least two revolutions for each of the recurring stitch forming movements of the needle, are located in a hollow cylinder arm of relatively small cross section.
  • Fig. 1- is an elevation, partly in section, of a sewing machine constituting a preferred embodiment of the present invention
  • Fig. 2 is a perspective view of a removable flat work bed member shown in part in Fig. 5;
  • Fig. 3 is a section on the line 3-3 of Fig. 1 with parts broken away and removed;
  • Fig. 4 is a perspective view showing parts of the cylinder arm and flat work bed of Fig. 1
  • Fig. 6 is a section on th line 6-6 of Fig. 1;
  • Fig; 7 is a partial section on the broken line ll-l of Fig. 6;
  • Fig. 8 is a partial section on the line 8-t Fig. 6;
  • Fig. 9 is a plan partly in section on the line t-9 of Fig. l;
  • Fig. 10 is a composite perspective view showing different work feeding mechanism parts.
  • the housing structure, or framework of the sewing machine illustrated in the drawings comprises a rectangular supporting bottom plate A, and a sewing machine framework proper which is screw connected to the bottom plate and includes a rectangular base or bed portion A, a standard A and a horizontal cylinder arm com prising portions A and A.
  • the machine comprises a driving motor B, mounted in the base portion A and having a pulley B on its shaft which is operatively connected by a belt C to a driving pulley D mounted on the adjacent end of the needle bar shaft E, which may b journalled in the arm A in any usual or suitable manner.
  • the rear end E of the needle bar shaft E is threaded, and supports a nut member F, which may be rotated about the shaft end E to thereby clamp the hub portion of the pulley D between the head of the nut member F and the radially extending flange of a part E carried by and secured to the shaft E and comprising a tubular hub portion forming an elongated bearing for the pulley D.
  • the pulley E When the nut F is backed off, the pulley E may be displaced axially of th shaft E, from its normal position, to thereby move the inner, belt groove portion of the pulley out of its normal position within the arm A so as to permit the belt C to be removed from and replaced on said pulley.
  • the machine comprises means including a crank disc E carried by the shaft E for actuating a needle bar G, mounted in the head A in any usual or suitable manner for vertical reciprocatory movement.
  • the machine is also provided with a presser bar h, and in our said prior application we disclose and claim novel actuating means for lifting said presser bar during each upstroke of the needle bar G, when the machine is in condition for darning use, but said actuating means need not be illustrated or described herein.
  • Our sewing machine also includes tension and thread takeup provisions which may be of conventional type and hence do not require description herein.
  • the sewing machine mechanism shown is of the rotary hook type, and comprises a hook shaft I, which is suitably journalled in the frame part A and its cylinder arm extension A", and which carries a loop taker or hook element i adjacent the front of the machine.
  • the hook shaft I is rotated by the needle bar shaft E through a vertical shaft'I' journalled in thestandard A and having its upper end connected to the shaft E by bevel gears I" and having its lower end connected to the hook shaft I through bevel gears 1
  • the gears are so proportioned that the shaft I will rotate with double the angular velocity of the shaft E.
  • the sewing machine includes work feeding means comprising a feed dog K adapted to extend up into and to move horizontally in the slot of a throat or needle plate part KA, of conventional fiat form and supported by the cylinder arm part A.
  • the work feeding means also comprises mechanism within the hollow cylindrical arm of the sewing machine for giving the feed dog its feeding movements.
  • Said mechanism comprises a cross head member L mounted in a guideway M in a second cross head M for vertical movement relative to the latter.
  • the feed dog K is normally secured to the upper end of the member L by screws.
  • the feed dog support L is given up and down movements by the angular oscillation of a shaft L which carries, an arm including a portion L parallel to, but laterally displaced from the shaft L and entering a horizontal slot formed in the upper portion of the member L.
  • the shaft L is tubular and surrounds an oscillating shaft M which carries at its front end a crank arm M supporting a pin M parallel to and laterally displaced from the shaft M
  • the pin M enters a suitably formed opening M in the member M, which is mounted in the framework of the machine for horizontal to and fro movement in a direction transverse to the needle bar shaft and to the shafts M and L
  • the mounting provisions illustrated comprise stationary guide pin parts M and M respectively received in slots M and M formed in the opposite sides of the member M.
  • the oscillatory movements of the tubular shaft L give vertical movements to the member L in the guideway M of the member M.
  • the pin L extends through a slot M in the upper portion of the member M, so shaped and disposed as to accommodate the oscillatory movements of the pin L
  • Each of the members L and M is formed with an opening for the passage of the hook shaft E large enough to accommodate the movements of the parts L and M relative to that shaft.
  • the shaft M is oscillated to give the feed dog K its horizontal feeding movements, through a crank arm M secured to therear end of the shaft M and an actuating lever M pivotally connected to the arm M
  • Thelever M has an upper end straddling a cam carried by the shaft E.
  • a roller M pivotally connected to the lever M is received in the guideway in a member M which is pivotally connected to the standard A and is provided with a stitch adjusting arm M extending through a slot in the side of the standard A, so that the member M may be adjusted angularly in one direction away from a position in which the guideway extends horizontally, into positions in which it is inclined upwardly away from the horizontal position, and in the other direction into other positions in which it is inclined downwardly away from-the horizontal.
  • the shaft L is given oscillatory movements and the feed dog K thereby given up and down movements through an arm L secured to the rear end of the tubular shaft L and pivotally connected to the lower end of a link L which, on its upper end, carries an eccentric strap L surrounding an eccentric on the shaft E.
  • the means including the angul-arly adjustable guide member through which the movements imparted by the shaft E to the upper end of the lever M give the feed dog K feeding movements in the normal direction, or in the reverse direction, or hold the feed dog against horizontal movement, are of a known type.
  • the feed mechanism illustrated and described is believed to be novel in its general organization, however, and is especially adapted for use asshown with the bulk of the feeding mechanism located within a cylinder arm of small cross section.
  • the shaft of the motor B is parallel to the needle bar shaft E and hook shaft I, but is laterally displaced from the latter.
  • an idler pulley N normally engaged .by the rear run of the belt, is so located as to deflect the lower portion of that belt run into or near parallelism with the belt front run which extends in a direction inclined to the vertical from the pulley B to the pulley D.
  • the upper portion of the belt groove in the pulley D is within and closely encircled by a cylindrical portion A of the framework.
  • An opening formed in the standard A and base member A, at the right hand end of the machine, as seen in Fig. 1, is normally closed by a cover plate or member A which may be removed to give access to the portion of the belt and other mechanism within the hollow standard.
  • the sewing machine includes a removable work bed member P, in the form of a metal box minu its bottom wall and open at its end which, when the part i in use as shown in Fig. 1, is adjacent, and bears against, the sewing machine frame part A.
  • the member P is formed with an opening P in its top wall to receive the throat plate member KA, and is formed with an adjacent opening partly in the.
  • the base plate A is formed with an uprising marginal flange AA in telescopic engagement with the lower portion of the bed plate part P, whereby the latter is anchored in position.
  • the machine With the part P in place, the machine as a whole, has the general appearance'and operative capacity of an ordinary fiat bed sewing machine.
  • the work upport is of the cylinder arm'- form heretofore used in darning stockings and other work.
  • the tubular cylinder arm may advantageously be generally elliptical in cross section but with its top portion flattened to provide a flat seat for the engaging top wall portion of the member P.
  • a bobbin winder wheel Q carried by an arm Q pivotally connected to the standard A, is adaptedto be turned from its idle position, shown in Fig. 3 into the position in which the wheel Q extends through a slot formed for the purpose in the standard A, and frictionally engages the pulley D, which, during the bobbin winding operation is normally free to turn on the needle'shaft E.
  • the member M may be adjusted through its arm. NP into position to effect the work feeding movements of the feed dog K. desired in the operation of the machine as an ordinary plain sewing machine, or into position to render the feed mechanism inoperative to facilitate the operation of the machine as a darning machine.
  • a sewing machine adapted for interchangeable use in plain sewing and darning operations and comprising in combination, a hollow cylinder arm work support, stitch forming mechanism including means external to saidarm for giving recurring stitch forming movements to a needle and a. hook shaft within and parallel to said cylinder arm and connected to said means to make a plurality of revolutions for each of the recurring stitch forming movementsof the needle, a rotating hook within said arm and mounted on said hook shaft and work feeding mechanism mounted in said arm and comprising a tubular feed haft parallel to said hook shaft and laterally displaced from the axis of said hook shaft by a distance less than the radius of said hook, a second feed shaft extending through said tubular shaft, and a-feed dog given up and down movements by the angular movements of one, and' given horizontal movements by the angular movement of the other of the two feed shafts,
  • said angular movements being in synchronism with the stitch forming movements of the needle.
  • a sewing machine adapted for interchangeable use'in plain sewing and darning operations and comprising in combination, a hollow cylinder arm work support, stitch forming mechanism ineluding means external to said arm for giving recurring stitch forming movements to a needle and a hook shaft within and parallel to said cylinder arm and connected to said means to make a plurality of revolutions for each of the recurring stitch forming movements of the needle, and work feeding mechanism mounted in said arm and comprising a member having vertical movements and a member having horizontal movements, one of said members being mounted in said support for its said movements and being formed with a guideway in which the other member is mounted for its saidmovements, each of said members being cut away to permit the passage of, and extending about said hook shaft,

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Sewing Machines And Sewing (AREA)

Description

y 1941- R. K. HOHMANN ET AL 2 3 SEWING MACHINE FEED MECHANISM Original Filed Dec. 29, 1939 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 July L 1941. R. K. HOHMANN ET AL SEWING MACHINE FEED MECHANISM Original Filed Dec. 29, 1939 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Patented July 1, 1941 SEWING MACHINE FEED MECHANISM Richard K. Hohmann, Jamaica, and Frederick Osann, White Plains, N. Y., assignors to Sears, Roebuck and Co., Chicago, 11]., a corporation of New York Original application December 29, 1939, Serial No. 311,486. Divided and this application July 31, 1940, Serial No. 348,928
2 Claims.
In our prior application Serial No. 311,486, filed December 29, 1939, of which this application is a division, we have disclosed a simple and effective sewing machine devised by us especially for interchangeable use as a darning machine and for ordinary sewing operations.
That machine is readily convertible from one to the other of two conditions, in one of which it is adapted for plain sewing and includes a flat work bed, which may be generally similar in form and disposition to the conventional work bed of a plain sewing machine, and in the other of which it is adapted for darning and is adapted to support stockings, or other work to be darned, on a cylinder arm generally like, though preferably somewhat smaller in cross section than, the work supporting cylinder arms of ordinary darning machines. In its preferred form, the machine is adapted, however, .for either plain sewing or darning operations, on flat bed and cylinder arm supported work.
The object of the invention claimed herein, is to provide a novel work feed mechanism, especially adapted for use in a sewing machine in which all of the underbed sewing instrumentalities including a hook shaft making at least two revolutions for each of the recurring stitch forming movements of the needle, are located in a hollow cylinder arm of relatively small cross section.
The various features of novelty which characterize our novel work feed mechanism are pointed out with particularity in the claims annexed to and forming a part of this specification. For a better understanding of the invention, however, its advantages and specific objects attained with its use, reference should be had to the accompanying drawings and descriptive matter in which we have illustrated and described a preferred form of embodiment of the present invention.
Of the drawings:
Fig. 1- is an elevation, partly in section, of a sewing machine constituting a preferred embodiment of the present invention;
Fig. 2 is a perspective view of a removable flat work bed member shown in part in Fig. 5;
Fig. 3 is a section on the line 3-3 of Fig. 1 with parts broken away and removed;
Fig. 4 is a perspective view showing parts of the cylinder arm and flat work bed of Fig. 1
Fig. 6 is a section on th line 6-6 of Fig. 1;
Fig; 7 is a partial section on the broken line ll-l of Fig. 6;
Fig. 8 is a partial section on the line 8-t Fig. 6;
Fig. 9 is a plan partly in section on the line t-9 of Fig. l; and
Fig. 10 is a composite perspective view showing different work feeding mechanism parts.
The housing structure, or framework of the sewing machine illustrated in the drawings, comprises a rectangular supporting bottom plate A, and a sewing machine framework proper which is screw connected to the bottom plate and includes a rectangular base or bed portion A, a standard A and a horizontal cylinder arm com prising portions A and A. The portion A is an integral tubular extension of the base por= tlon A, and A is a tubular part detachably secured to the front end of the part A and forming an extension of the latter.
The machine comprises a driving motor B, mounted in the base portion A and having a pulley B on its shaft which is operatively connected by a belt C to a driving pulley D mounted on the adjacent end of the needle bar shaft E, which may b journalled in the arm A in any usual or suitable manner. In the preferred construction shown, the rear end E of the needle bar shaft E is threaded, and supports a nut member F, which may be rotated about the shaft end E to thereby clamp the hub portion of the pulley D between the head of the nut member F and the radially extending flange of a part E carried by and secured to the shaft E and comprising a tubular hub portion forming an elongated bearing for the pulley D. When the nut F is backed off, the pulley E may be displaced axially of th shaft E, from its normal position, to thereby move the inner, belt groove portion of the pulley out of its normal position within the arm A so as to permit the belt C to be removed from and replaced on said pulley. A washer member F specially shaped and disposed as described in said prior application, is interposed between the nut F and the hub of the pulley D.
At its head end, the machine comprises means including a crank disc E carried by the shaft E for actuating a needle bar G, mounted in the head A in any usual or suitable manner for vertical reciprocatory movement. At its head end, the machine is also provided with a presser bar h, and in our said prior application we disclose and claim novel actuating means for lifting said presser bar during each upstroke of the needle bar G, when the machine is in condition for darning use, but said actuating means need not be illustrated or described herein. Our sewing machine also includes tension and thread takeup provisions which may be of conventional type and hence do not require description herein.
The sewing machine mechanism shown, is of the rotary hook type, and comprises a hook shaft I, which is suitably journalled in the frame part A and its cylinder arm extension A", and which carries a loop taker or hook element i adjacent the front of the machine. The hook shaft I is rotated by the needle bar shaft E through a vertical shaft'I' journalled in thestandard A and having its upper end connected to the shaft E by bevel gears I" and having its lower end connected to the hook shaft I through bevel gears 1 Desirably, and as shown, the gears are so proportioned that the shaft I will rotate with double the angular velocity of the shaft E.
The sewing machine includes work feeding means comprising a feed dog K adapted to extend up into and to move horizontally in the slot of a throat or needle plate part KA, of conventional fiat form and supported by the cylinder arm part A. The work feeding means also comprises mechanism within the hollow cylindrical arm of the sewing machine for giving the feed dog its feeding movements. Said mechanism comprises a cross head member L mounted in a guideway M in a second cross head M for vertical movement relative to the latter. The feed dog K is normally secured to the upper end of the member L by screws. The feed dog support L is given up and down movements by the angular oscillation of a shaft L which carries, an arm including a portion L parallel to, but laterally displaced from the shaft L and entering a horizontal slot formed in the upper portion of the member L.
As shown, the shaft L is tubular and surrounds an oscillating shaft M which carries at its front end a crank arm M supporting a pin M parallel to and laterally displaced from the shaft M The pin M enters a suitably formed opening M in the member M, which is mounted in the framework of the machine for horizontal to and fro movement in a direction transverse to the needle bar shaft and to the shafts M and L The mounting provisions illustrated comprise stationary guide pin parts M and M respectively received in slots M and M formed in the opposite sides of the member M. Through the arm M and pin M the oscillatory movements of the shaft M thus give horizontal movements to the member M, and thereby to the member L and to the feed dog K carried by the latter. Through the pin L the oscillatory movements of the tubular shaft L give vertical movements to the member L in the guideway M of the member M. As shown, the pin L extends through a slot M in the upper portion of the member M, so shaped and disposed as to accommodate the oscillatory movements of the pin L Each of the members L and M is formed with an opening for the passage of the hook shaft E large enough to accommodate the movements of the parts L and M relative to that shaft.
The shaft M is oscillated to give the feed dog K its horizontal feeding movements, through a crank arm M secured to therear end of the shaft M and an actuating lever M pivotally connected to the arm M Thelever M has an upper end straddling a cam carried by the shaft E. A roller M pivotally connected to the lever M is received in the guideway in a member M which is pivotally connected to the standard A and is provided with a stitch adjusting arm M extending through a slot in the side of the standard A, so that the member M may be adjusted angularly in one direction away from a position in which the guideway extends horizontally, into positions in which it is inclined upwardly away from the horizontal position, and in the other direction into other positions in which it is inclined downwardly away from-the horizontal.
With the guideway in the member M horizontally disposed, the oscillatory movements given by the shaft E to the upper end of the lever M will impart no oscillatory movement to the lower end of the lever M or to the shaft M When the free end ofv the arm M is moved downward to incline the guideway downwardly from the horizontal, the feed dog K will be given feeding movements in the normal direction, i. e., away from the user of an extent varying with the inclination of the guideway to the horizontal. When the free end of the lever is raised, and the guideway is inclined upwardly away from the horizontal, the oscillatory movements given to the upper end of the lever M will impart back feed movements to the feed dog K, of a magnitude depending on the inclination of the guideway to the horizontal.
The shaft L is given oscillatory movements and the feed dog K thereby given up and down movements through an arm L secured to the rear end of the tubular shaft L and pivotally connected to the lower end of a link L which, on its upper end, carries an eccentric strap L surrounding an eccentric on the shaft E.
The means including the angul-arly adjustable guide member through which the movements imparted by the shaft E to the upper end of the lever M give the feed dog K feeding movements in the normal direction, or in the reverse direction, or hold the feed dog against horizontal movement, are of a known type. The feed mechanism illustrated and described, is believed to be novel in its general organization, however, and is especially adapted for use asshown with the bulk of the feeding mechanism located within a cylinder arm of small cross section.
As shown in Fig. 3, the shaft of the motor B is parallel to the needle bar shaft E and hook shaft I, but is laterally displaced from the latter. To accommodate this displacement without requiring the standard A to have an unconventional and undesirable form, an idler pulley N, normally engaged .by the rear run of the belt, is so located as to deflect the lower portion of that belt run into or near parallelism with the belt front run which extends in a direction inclined to the vertical from the pulley B to the pulley D. In the normal operating position, the upper portion of the belt groove in the pulley D is within and closely encircled by a cylindrical portion A of the framework. An opening formed in the standard A and base member A, at the right hand end of the machine, as seen in Fig. 1, is normally closed by a cover plate or member A which may be removed to give access to the portion of the belt and other mechanism within the hollow standard.
As shown in Fig. 1, the sewing machine includes a removable work bed member P, in the form of a metal box minu its bottom wall and open at its end which, when the part i in use as shown in Fig. 1, is adjacent, and bears against, the sewing machine frame part A. The member P is formed with an opening P in its top wall to receive the throat plate member KA, and is formed with an adjacent opening partly in the.
top wall and partly in the closed end of the member and normally closed by a hinged cover member P The latter, when moved into open position, permits access to the bobbin case extending into the loop taker, for insertion and removal of bobbins. As shown, the base plate A is formed with an uprising marginal flange AA in telescopic engagement with the lower portion of the bed plate part P, whereby the latter is anchored in position. With the part P in place, the machine as a whole, has the general appearance'and operative capacity of an ordinary fiat bed sewing machine. With the bed member P removed, the work upport is of the cylinder arm'- form heretofore used in darning stockings and other work. As shown in Figs. 1 and 4, the tubular cylinder arm may advantageously be generally elliptical in cross section but with its top portion flattened to provide a flat seat for the engaging top wall portion of the member P.
In lieu of the flat work bed part P shown in Figs. '1 and 4, I may make use of the work bed part PA shown in Figs. 2 and 5, and differing from the part P, in that it is formed with a longitudinal slot P in its top wall adapted to receive the flattened top wall portion of the cyl-- inder arm A, which to this end may differ in shape from the cylinder arm first described, in that its top wall portion is in the form of a flat rib shaped to fit into the slot 17 As shown, a bobbin winder wheel Q, carried by an arm Q pivotally connected to the standard A, is adaptedto be turned from its idle position, shown in Fig. 3 into the position in which the wheel Q extends through a slot formed for the purpose in the standard A, and frictionally engages the pulley D, which, during the bobbin winding operation is normally free to turn on the needle'shaft E.
The general operation of the sewing machine illustrated and described, will be readily apparcut to those skilled in the art. With either of the bed plate parts P and PA in place, the member M may be adjusted through its arm. NP into position to effect the work feeding movements of the feed dog K. desired in the operation of the machine as an ordinary plain sewing machine, or into position to render the feed mechanism inoperative to facilitate the operation of the machine as a darning machine.
While in accordance with the provisions of the statutes, we have illustrated and described the best form of embodiment of the invention now known to us, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that changes may be made in the form of the apparatus disclosed without departing from the spirit of the invention as set forth in the appended claims and that in some cases certain features of our invention may be used to advantage without a corresponding use of other features.
'Having now described our invention, what we claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is:
, 1. A sewing machine adapted for interchangeable use in plain sewing and darning operations and comprising in combination, a hollow cylinder arm work support, stitch forming mechanism including means external to saidarm for giving recurring stitch forming movements to a needle and a. hook shaft within and parallel to said cylinder arm and connected to said means to make a plurality of revolutions for each of the recurring stitch forming movementsof the needle, a rotating hook within said arm and mounted on said hook shaft and work feeding mechanism mounted in said arm and comprising a tubular feed haft parallel to said hook shaft and laterally displaced from the axis of said hook shaft by a distance less than the radius of said hook, a second feed shaft extending through said tubular shaft, and a-feed dog given up and down movements by the angular movements of one, and' given horizontal movements by the angular movement of the other of the two feed shafts,
said angular movements being in synchronism with the stitch forming movements of the needle.
2. A sewing machine adapted for interchangeable use'in plain sewing and darning operations and comprising in combination, a hollow cylinder arm work support, stitch forming mechanism ineluding means external to said arm for giving recurring stitch forming movements to a needle and a hook shaft within and parallel to said cylinder arm and connected to said means to make a plurality of revolutions for each of the recurring stitch forming movements of the needle, and work feeding mechanism mounted in said arm and comprising a member having vertical movements and a member having horizontal movements, one of said members being mounted in said support for its said movements and being formed with a guideway in which the other member is mounted for its saidmovements, each of said members being cut away to permit the passage of, and extending about said hook shaft,
US348928A 1939-12-29 1940-07-31 Sewing machine feed mechanism Expired - Lifetime US2247382A (en)

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US311486A US2247379A (en) 1939-12-29 1939-12-29 Convertible sewing and darning machine
US348928A US2247382A (en) 1939-12-29 1940-07-31 Sewing machine feed mechanism

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2435937A (en) * 1946-07-23 1948-02-10 Singer Mfg Co Sewing machine
US2550553A (en) * 1948-03-24 1951-04-24 Singer Mfg Co Feeding mechanism for sewing machines
US2619058A (en) * 1945-06-13 1952-11-25 Jr Josef Keller Tissue feed-dog driving mechanism of sewing machines
FR2692603A1 (en) * 1992-06-19 1993-12-24 Union Special Gmbh Sewing machine with device for advancing the sewing piece.

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2619058A (en) * 1945-06-13 1952-11-25 Jr Josef Keller Tissue feed-dog driving mechanism of sewing machines
US2435937A (en) * 1946-07-23 1948-02-10 Singer Mfg Co Sewing machine
US2550553A (en) * 1948-03-24 1951-04-24 Singer Mfg Co Feeding mechanism for sewing machines
FR2692603A1 (en) * 1992-06-19 1993-12-24 Union Special Gmbh Sewing machine with device for advancing the sewing piece.

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