[go: up one dir, main page]

US1807541A - Automobile spring - Google Patents

Automobile spring Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1807541A
US1807541A US416886A US41688629A US1807541A US 1807541 A US1807541 A US 1807541A US 416886 A US416886 A US 416886A US 41688629 A US41688629 A US 41688629A US 1807541 A US1807541 A US 1807541A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
spring
leaf
springs
auxiliary
leaves
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US416886A
Inventor
Mccauley George Thurman
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US416886A priority Critical patent/US1807541A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1807541A publication Critical patent/US1807541A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B60VEHICLES IN GENERAL
    • B60GVEHICLE SUSPENSION ARRANGEMENTS
    • B60G11/00Resilient suspensions characterised by arrangement, location or kind of springs
    • B60G11/32Resilient suspensions characterised by arrangement, location or kind of springs having springs of different kinds
    • B60G11/34Resilient suspensions characterised by arrangement, location or kind of springs having springs of different kinds including leaf springs
    • B60G11/36Resilient suspensions characterised by arrangement, location or kind of springs having springs of different kinds including leaf springs and also helical, spiral or coil springs

Definitions

  • An additional object of the invention embodies the arrangement of coil springs between the spring proper and auxiliary leaves whereby the same efiect as a shock absorber in checking the rebound action is derived.
  • auxiliary leaves are provided with pockets to accommodate the coil springs whereby the construction of the conventional springs do not have to be modified in any respect to facilitate application of the present invention.
  • the invention further consists of the follow ingnovel features and details of construction, tobe hereinafter more fully described,
  • Figure 1 is a side elevation of a leaf spring with the invention applied.
  • Figure 2 is a fragmentary end elevation of the shackle connections for the main and auxiliary leaves.
  • Figure 3 is a fragmentary side elevation of a leaf spring with the hanger construction partly broken away to illustrate the arrange ment of the modified form of the invention thereon.
  • thereference character 10 indicates generally a bar or beam of an automobile chassis, not shown, forming a shackle sleeve within one end to accommodate a shackle bolt 11 for securing the adjacent end of a spring 12 therewith of the conventional leaf form.
  • the opposite bearing sleeve for the spring 12, such as indicated at 13 is suspended between the lowermost ends of pivoted links 14 having connection at their uppermost ends with a fixed hanger 15 upon the under side of the vehicle chassis bar' 10.
  • the preferred form of my invention primarily resides in the provision and arrange ment of an auxiliary leaf 16 and which as shown is preferably disposed upon the 1113-" per side of the lowermost of the leaves for the conventional leaf spring 12. This will increase the number of leaves for the spring to the extent of one-leaf.
  • the action taking place by the addition of the auxiliaryleaf 16, however, is decidedly different than that which would be ordinarily expected in view of the fact that such leaf extends well beyond the extremities of the lowermost of the leaves of the spring 12 and forms pockets 17 thereon within which coil compression sprlngs 18 are received and sprung at their ends against the bottom of the pockets 17 and the adjacent surface of the immediate leaf in the spring 12. 7
  • thoseleaves of the spring 12 engageable with the uppermost end convolutions of the compression springs 18 may be provided with bosses or enlargements 24: to project within the convolutions thereof whereby distortion of said springs or displacement thereof will be prevented.
  • the bottom walls of the pockets 17 are provided with studs, enlargements or bosses 25 which project well within the lowermost ends of the springs.
  • the forms of my invention will give the same eifect as a shock absorber, making it impossible to break a spring, as the resistance of these springs do not allow the car to jerk upwardly on themain spring.
  • a leaf spring attachment comprising an auxiliary leaf having connection with the main leaf adjacent the ends, pivoted links carried by and extended beyond the shackle connections for the main leaf, a bearing sleeve formed in the extended ends of the auxiliary leaf being journaled between the remaining extremities of said links, the auxiliary leaf having pockets, and compression springs carried within said pockets and sprung between the auxiliary leaf and the spring proper to shift the weight of the load and the spring action therefor toward the center.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Vehicle Body Suspensions (AREA)

Description

a Q i M AUTOMOBILE SPRING a. lim O'aidqy aa wmb G; T. MCCLAULEY 1,807,541
Patented May 26, 1931 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE GEORGE THURMAN MoOAULEY, 0F BUTTE,,.MONTANA AUTOMOBILE SPRING Application filed December 27, 1929. Serial No. 416,886.
the provision and arrangement of an auxiliary leaf for the conventional form of leaf spring designed to throw or otherwise shift the weight of the load from the ends toward the center of the spring proper.
An additional object of the invention embodies the arrangement of coil springs between the spring proper and auxiliary leaves whereby the same efiect as a shock absorber in checking the rebound action is derived.
More specifically stated the auxiliary leaves are provided with pockets to accommodate the coil springs whereby the construction of the conventional springs do not have to be modified in any respect to facilitate application of the present invention.
With the above and other objects in view, the invention further consists of the follow ingnovel features and details of construction, tobe hereinafter more fully described,
illustrated in the accompanying drawings and pointed out in the appended claim.
In the drawings Figure 1 is a side elevation of a leaf spring with the invention applied.
Figure 2 is a fragmentary end elevation of the shackle connections for the main and auxiliary leaves.
Figure 3 is a fragmentary side elevation of a leaf spring with the hanger construction partly broken away to illustrate the arrange ment of the modified form of the invention thereon.
Referring to the drawings in detail wherein like characters of reference denote corresponding parts, thereference character 10 indicates generally a bar or beam of an automobile chassis, not shown, forming a shackle sleeve within one end to accommodate a shackle bolt 11 for securing the adjacent end of a spring 12 therewith of the conventional leaf form. The opposite bearing sleeve for the spring 12, such as indicated at 13, is suspended between the lowermost ends of pivoted links 14 having connection at their uppermost ends with a fixed hanger 15 upon the under side of the vehicle chassis bar' 10. The foregoing description is common to that of the conventional spring construction and means of application therefor.
The preferred form of my invention primarily resides in the provision and arrange ment of an auxiliary leaf 16 and which as shown is preferably disposed upon the 1113-" per side of the lowermost of the leaves for the conventional leaf spring 12. This will increase the number of leaves for the spring to the extent of one-leaf. The action taking place by the addition of the auxiliaryleaf 16, however, is decidedly different than that which would be ordinarily expected in view of the fact that such leaf extends well beyond the extremities of the lowermost of the leaves of the spring 12 and forms pockets 17 thereon within which coil compression sprlngs 18 are received and sprung at their ends against the bottom of the pockets 17 and the adjacent surface of the immediate leaf in the spring 12. 7
Extensions 19 projecting outwardly and beyond the pockets 17 terminate to provide bearing sleeves 20 for the accommodation of shackle bolts 21. The sleeves 20, after the manner of the sleeves 13 for the extremities of the main leaf 12, are also supported between the extremities of spaced depending pivoted links or spring hanger bars 22 carried upon the same shackle bolts for the spring leaves 13.
In the modification of my invention disclosed in FigureB of the drawings, the invention appears more in the nature of an attachment which may be conveniently applied upon already made-up leaf springs as extras. The modification takes the form of those portions of the auxiliary leaf 16 extending beyond the extremities of the lowermost of the leaves in the leaf spring 12. The innermost ends of such extensions are carried by spring clamping yokes 23 whereas the opposite ends are secured in the manner previously set forth in Figure 2 of the drawings.
In the preferred form, thoseleaves of the spring 12 engageable with the uppermost end convolutions of the compression springs 18 may be provided with bosses or enlargements 24: to project within the convolutions thereof whereby distortion of said springs or displacement thereof will be prevented. In both the preferred and modified forms of the invention, however, the bottom walls of the pockets 17 are provided with studs, enlargements or bosses 25 which project well within the lowermost ends of the springs.
The forms of my invention will give the same eifect as a shock absorber, making it impossible to break a spring, as the resistance of these springs do not allow the car to jerk upwardly on themain spring. There is also the advantage of having the whole absorber applied to the spring alone thereby obviating the customary spring tensioned drums carried upon the chassis and straps carried thereby and joined to the main springs.
It will be further noted that by the restricting of downward movement of the main springs adjacent the ends thereof that the weight of the load or spring action to take place will be shifted or otherwise delivered toward the centers thereof whereby the breaking of springs will be obviated.
The invention is susceptible of various changes in its form, proportions and minor details of construction, and the right is herein reserved to make such changes as properly fall within the scope of the appended claim,
Having described the invention, what is claimed is A leaf spring attachment comprising an auxiliary leaf having connection with the main leaf adjacent the ends, pivoted links carried by and extended beyond the shackle connections for the main leaf, a bearing sleeve formed in the extended ends of the auxiliary leaf being journaled between the remaining extremities of said links, the auxiliary leaf having pockets, and compression springs carried within said pockets and sprung between the auxiliary leaf and the spring proper to shift the weight of the load and the spring action therefor toward the center.
In testimony whereof I affix my signature.
GEORGE THURMAN MCCAULEY.
US416886A 1929-12-27 1929-12-27 Automobile spring Expired - Lifetime US1807541A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US416886A US1807541A (en) 1929-12-27 1929-12-27 Automobile spring

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US416886A US1807541A (en) 1929-12-27 1929-12-27 Automobile spring

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1807541A true US1807541A (en) 1931-05-26

Family

ID=23651715

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US416886A Expired - Lifetime US1807541A (en) 1929-12-27 1929-12-27 Automobile spring

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1807541A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20030080527A1 (en) * 2001-10-26 2003-05-01 Bryant Peter E. Opposing spring rebound tension suspension system

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20030080527A1 (en) * 2001-10-26 2003-05-01 Bryant Peter E. Opposing spring rebound tension suspension system

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1807541A (en) Automobile spring
US1534533A (en) Spring suspension for vehicles
US1739917A (en) Combination vehicle spring and snubber
US1890853A (en) Vehicle suspension spring
US2387732A (en) Vehicle spring suspension
US1125199A (en) Variable-tension shock-absorbing and rebound spring for automobiles and other vehicles.
US1587116A (en) Shock absorber for vehicles
US2047802A (en) Spring
US1635880A (en) Shock-absorber shackle
US1368563A (en) Air-spring suspension
US1785118A (en) Balancing spring
US1531899A (en) Vehicle spring
US1381623A (en) Spring suspension for vehicles
US1113941A (en) Spring and shock-absorber.
US1544169A (en) Clip bar
US1535086A (en) Shock absorber
US1583049A (en) Shock absorber for ford cars
US1524908A (en) Vehicle spring construction
US1954945A (en) Spring structure
US1688749A (en) Spring
US1141194A (en) Vehicle-spring.
US1450370A (en) Spring suspension for vehicle bodies
US331430A (en) Vehicle-spring
US1559101A (en) Cushion-spring shackle
US1411640A (en) Vehicle spring