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US899492A - Roller feed mechanism. - Google Patents

Roller feed mechanism. Download PDF

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Publication number
US899492A
US899492A US34348906A US1906343489A US899492A US 899492 A US899492 A US 899492A US 34348906 A US34348906 A US 34348906A US 1906343489 A US1906343489 A US 1906343489A US 899492 A US899492 A US 899492A
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rollers
stock
feed
roller
head
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US34348906A
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Wilbur A Leonard
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GEOMETRIC TOOL Co
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GEOMETRIC TOOL Co
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G11INFORMATION STORAGE
    • G11BINFORMATION STORAGE BASED ON RELATIVE MOVEMENT BETWEEN RECORD CARRIER AND TRANSDUCER
    • G11B15/00Driving, starting or stopping record carriers of filamentary or web form; Driving both such record carriers and heads; Guiding such record carriers or containers therefor; Control thereof; Control of operating function
    • G11B15/18Driving; Starting; Stopping; Arrangements for control or regulation thereof
    • G11B15/26Driving record carriers by members acting directly or indirectly thereon
    • G11B15/28Driving record carriers by members acting directly or indirectly thereon through rollers driving by frictional contact with the record carrier, e.g. capstan; Multiple arrangements of capstans or drums coupled to means for controlling the speed of the drive; Multiple capstan systems alternately engageable with record carrier to provide reversal
    • G11B15/29Driving record carriers by members acting directly or indirectly thereon through rollers driving by frictional contact with the record carrier, e.g. capstan; Multiple arrangements of capstans or drums coupled to means for controlling the speed of the drive; Multiple capstan systems alternately engageable with record carrier to provide reversal through pinch-rollers or tape rolls

Definitions

  • This invention relates to roller feed'mechanisms, and particularly such as. are-em-v ployed in lathes and: similartools and has for an object toprovide an efficient .durable ping or stock engaging facesr-thereofalso carry the'faces whereby these rollers may be suant to this invention the feed rollers may be constructed in the form of worm wheels and their actuators will then be worms meshing directly therewith.
  • the feed rollers may be constructed in the form of worm wheels and their actuators will then be worms meshing directly therewith.
  • This-elastic means may constitute a pair of springs eachconnected at its. respective ends withsaid rollers sorthatvi- 'bration of the stock will not cause oramping of the rollers.
  • Bothpf-the rollers will'move in unison and the spring: tension, andconsequently the pressureupon the stock, will not be varied by the variation oftheosition of rollers may be wormsso that the movement in 1 and out of the rollers will not change. their driving relation with the worms.
  • the feed rollers being required not only'to advance the stock but also to engage the actuators the journals of each are g1ven substantial bearings at each side of the roller, and these journals may be carried by the head insuch manner that the torsional or rotating strain is-not communicated to the rod feed actuatingtrain.
  • the gear directly connected tothe worm shaft may be provided with journals at both sides. The thrust of the working engagement between :the various parts is efliciently taken care of throughout'the entire structure.
  • the casing of -the device may be substantially closed by an end plate which will be normally constituted for ready removal, and u on which the feed rollers may be mounted. This will give ease in opening up the device as'occasionmay demand, and especially facilitate'the interchangeability of the feed rollers.
  • the direct working thrust of the the torsional or rod rotating thrust will also bereceivedby such end plate, as well as the thrust of'the driving engagement of.
  • the Worms against .the worm wheels or feed If the feed rollers are given a shape which willenable these to engage the faces of a rod, as for instance, a hexagon rod, the rollswill not beable' to slip upon such rod when the power is suddenlyapplied and the head rotated consequently thereis provided herein a'shock absorber between the mechanism for rotating the feed rollers andthe driver for the same.
  • FIG. 1 is a ;central longitudinalsection of a feed mechanism embodying a form of the present invention.
  • Fig. 2 is an end view of the same with the closingor end plateremoved.
  • Fig. 3 is a view of the inside of the closing or end plate, showing the feed rollers and their carriages.
  • Fig. 4 is an edge view of the portion of the devicexshown in Fig. 3; this is not a projection of Fig. 3 since it shows the plate in a position turned ab out ninety degrees.
  • Fig. 5 is a detail of a roller which may be emrollers willbe received by this end plate, and c ployed on flat sided stock; and
  • Fig. 6 shows an enlarged worm-wheel tooth in crosssection.
  • the feeding mechanism herein is shown mounted upon a spindle 10, which will be i driven in some convenient manner from a source of ower, not shown, and which may be the 1101 ow spindle found in machine tools upon which this invention is adapted to be employed.
  • the frame of the device which may for convenience be called a head, is shown herein in the formof a casing 11 having an end portion 12 which carries a hub 13 mounted upon a reduced portion 14 of the spindle and se cured thereto by screw keys 15, and the easing is closed, with the exception of the stock opening 16, at the other end, by a plate 17 occupying a rabbet 18 in the end of the casing, and held in place by screws traversing openings 19 in the plate and tapped bosses 20 conveniently located on the casing.
  • the feed rollers are illustrated as provided with combined, stock feeding and actuating teeth 26, in the present illustration these rollers are given the form of worm wheels.
  • Each of these wheels is shown as mounted upon a shaft or journal 27, projecting from eachside, and mounted in bearings in a device which may be characterized as a feedroller carriage 28, which has guides 29 engaging ways 30, in the present illustration shown integral with the plate 1.7.
  • This construction is an illustration of a manner'for carrying out that feature of my invention which permits each of the rollers to be independently movable toward and from the stock position. In the present instance the movement is radial.
  • the two feed-roller carriages are shown as connected by a pair of extension springs 31 engaging pins 32 upon the sides of the carriages and upon the respective sides or ends of the feed rollers.
  • the rollers are connected together by springs. This will insure that both of the rollers shall at all times engage the stock irrespective of its vibration.
  • the shaft is also shown as having a still further I reduced portion 41 entering a bearing in the casing 11..
  • the bevel wheel 39 is shown in mesh with a bevel wheel 42 which has a hub 43 rotatably mounted upon the hub 13 of the casing.
  • a ring 44 is mounted upon the hub 43 and is provided with gear teeth 45 for meshing with some suitable actuator, not shown.
  • suitable shock absorbing devices may be employed, as for instance some packing 46, which may he leather, placed between the ring and the body 47 of the gear wheel 42 and a ring 48, which may be secured to the hub 43, as for instance by means of screws 49.
  • the bevel wheel 42 will be held in mesh with the bevel wheel 39 and the thrust of meshing will be supported in the present instance by means of a suitable thrust collar 390 secured to the spindle, as for instance by means of suitable screws.
  • a rod, round in Figs. 1 and 3, and designated in a general way by 50, is shown between the rollers 25, and by which. means the roller carriages 28 have been forced outward and the springs 31 tensioned. This will cause the rollers to engage the bar, and upon the rotation of the worms the feed rollers will be rotated and feed the bar. This, of course, being incident to the rotation of the spindle which will also cause the rollers to rev tate the bar.
  • the torsional strain, on the rcvolving rollers, of rotating the bar will be i borne by the journals 27, which, it will be I seen, are upon each side thereof, and are carried by the roller-carriages which constitute bearing blocks and are mounted upon the end i plate of the casing. This will bring the thrust of the rod feeding and rotating engagel ment upon the plate, as well as the thrust of The shaft has a reduced portion than double.
  • the worms is that of the meshing working engagement, and that the rollers are free to move in a direction parallel with the axis of said worm.
  • the stock assage will, in a rotary head, be centrally ocated, and the feed rollers will be mounted insuch position that the stock engaging arc of the workinglOngitudi-nal zone u on their stock engaging perimeters will e alongside of the path of stock movement.
  • the bearings for the journals for each of the rollers are close up to the sides of the working or stock ongaging zone of the roller, and another are of contact for the engagement of the actuator, the worm 35, is located at about one-quarter angular distance around the said perimeter from said stock engaging arc, but in the same stock engaging zone.
  • the spindle carries a head in which a pair of rolls is mounted each having a shaft projecting from its ends, the bearings for said shafts being located adjacent to the respective ends of the rollers, and each of said rollers having worm teeth about its perimeter in the stock engaging zone, and with which zone the worms Wlll engage, the Worms being mounted on the head with their inner ends adjacent to the path of stock movement and their axes alined and radially disposed relative to the stock when this is in osition.
  • Fig. 3 the perimeters 55 of the feed rolls are shown as concave, after the well known manner of constructing worm wheels; but the perimeters of these worm-wheels may also be made flat as illustrated at 550 in Fig. 5 for the purpose of engaging the flat sides 501 of a hexagonal bar 500:
  • the face 51 of the worm-tooth, see Fig. 6, at the addendum line 52' will constitute the perimeter of the rolls, when this term is strictly applied, but for the present memegpose the working zone-or active periphery othe rollers embodies the faces 51 forengaging the stock and the flanks 53 for the engagement of the worm 35. Portions of the faces 51 and flanks 53, more articularly at and adjacent to their line of uncture 54, will engage the stock when this line is ap roaching the arc of contact of the pitch circ es.
  • a roller feed mechanism the combination with a head, of feed roller actuating means carried thereby, a removable end plate for the head, means carried by said end plate for su porting feed rollers for movement towar and from each other, and feed rollers mounted on said supporting means and constructed and adapted for removal with the said end plate while so mounted.
  • a roller feed the combination with a head, of feed rollers, feed roller rotating means carried by the head, an end plate having means for carrying said rolls and removably carried by the head and being located beyond the feed rollers in respect to the roller rotating means for receiving the thrust of the engagement between the rollers and roller rotating means.
  • a roller feed mechanism the combination with a rotary head, of worm Wheels carried thereby and disposed in axial alinement radially of the axis of rotation of the head, an end plate removably carried by the head and provided with a stock passageway and with guideways disposed radially of said passageway and of said axis and parallel with said Worm wheels, carriages mounted in said guideways and removable with said end plate While so mounted, feed rollers mounted on said carriages and provided on their stock gripping faces with worm teeth meshing with said worms when the plate is in position, and means for drawing said carriages one toward the other.
  • a roller feed mechanism the combination with a spindle, of a head carried by said worm teeth, said worms being mounte( in the head with their inner ends adjacent to the path of stock movement and their axes alined and radially disposed relative to the stock when this is in position, a bevel gear mounted on each of said shafts outside of the feed roller and of larger diameter than said feed roller, the back wall of the head having openings for the extrusion of the said bevel gears, and a bevel gear carried by said spindle meshing with the bevel gears on said shafts.

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Description

W. A. LEONARD. ROLLER FEED MECHANISM. APPLIGATION FILED NOV 15, 1906.
Inventor.- Zlizlburflleonam.
By his Attorne Witnesses= r115 NORRIS PETERS ca, WASHINGTON, D. c.
W'. A. LEONARD. ROLLER FEED MEGHANISM.
' ,uruoumn FILED NOV. 15, 1906.-
Patented Sept. 22, 1908.
2 SHEETS-SHEET 2..
s PEI-ms an, 'WASFL'NDTON n c WILBUR A. LEONARD, OFNEW- HAVEN, CONNECTICUT, ASSIGNOR TO THE GEOMETRIC TOOL COM- engaged by an actuator-and rotated. Pur- UNITED STATES Peres PANY, OF NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT, A CORPORATION OF CONNECTICUT.
ROLLER FEED' MECHANISM.
No. 899,492. Specification of Letters Patent; Patented Sept. 22, 1908.
Application filed November 15, 1906. Serial No. 343,489.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I,W1LBUR A. LEONARD,
a citizen of the United States, residing in" New Haven, in the county of :NewhHaven and State of Connecticut,-have invented certain new and useful I Improvements in Roller Feed Mechanism, of which: the fol1owingis a specification.
This invention relates to roller feed'mechanisms, and particularly such as. are-em-v ployed in lathes and: similartools and has for an object toprovide an efficient .durable ping or stock engaging facesr-thereofalso carry the'faces whereby these rollers may be suant to this invention the feed rollers may be constructed in the form of worm wheels and their actuators will then be worms meshing directly therewith. Of course,- strictly speaking the faces of the worm-teeth atthe 1 when these are coming into engagement with rollers.
the actuator engaging-faces or surfaces, and
the stock, engage the stock" cooperatively with the engagement of the same byrth'e faces 7 of the teeth, especially when the rollers are pressed stronglyagainst the-stockfi If a pair of such rollers ;are employed they will be so mounted that they may move toward Y eachother for varying the amount of vintermediate space forthe accommo'dationfofthe;
stock being fed, and elastic means. will be 1 provided for so drawing -therollers toward each other.
This-elastic means may constitute a pair of springs eachconnected at its. respective ends withsaid rollers sorthatvi- 'bration of the stock will not cause oramping of the rollers. Bothpf-the rollers will'move in unison and the spring: tension, andconsequently the pressureupon the stock, will not be varied by the variation oftheosition of rollers may be wormsso that the movement in 1 and out of the rollers will not change. their driving relation with the worms. By having feed rollers constructed in this manner and driven immediately from the worms the number of the parts in the'operativ'e train is minimized. The feed rollers being required not only'to advance the stock but also to engage the actuators the journals of each are g1ven substantial bearings at each side of the roller, and these journals may be carried by the head insuch manner that the torsional or rotating strain is-not communicated to the rod feed actuatingtrain. The gear directly connected tothe worm shaft may be provided with journals at both sides. The thrust of the working engagement between :the various parts is efliciently taken care of throughout'the entire structure. a
The casing of -the device may be substantially closed by an end plate which will be normally constituted for ready removal, and u on which the feed rollers may be mounted. This will give ease in opening up the device as'occasionmay demand, and especially facilitate'the interchangeability of the feed rollers. The direct working thrust of the the torsional or rod rotating thrust will also bereceivedby such end plate, as well as the thrust of'the driving engagement of. the Worms against .the worm wheels or feed If the feed rollers are given a shape which willenable these to engage the faces of a rod, as for instance, a hexagon rod, the rollswill not beable' to slip upon such rod when the power is suddenlyapplied and the head rotated consequently thereis provided herein a'shock absorber between the mechanism for rotating the feed rollers andthe driver for the same.
In the drawings accompanying and forming a part of this specification Figure 1 is a ;central longitudinalsection of a feed mechanism embodying a form of the present invention. Fig. 2 is an end view of the same with the closingor end plateremoved. Fig. 3 is a view of the inside of the closing or end plate, showing the feed rollers and their carriages. Fig. 4 is an edge view of the portion of the devicexshown in Fig. 3; this is not a projection of Fig. 3 since it shows the plate in a position turned ab out ninety degrees. Fig. 5 is a detail of a roller which may be emrollers willbe received by this end plate, and c ployed on flat sided stock; and Fig. 6 shows an enlarged worm-wheel tooth in crosssection.
The feeding mechanism herein is shown mounted upon a spindle 10, which will be i driven in some convenient manner from a source of ower, not shown, and which may be the 1101 ow spindle found in machine tools upon which this invention is adapted to be employed.
The frame of the device, which may for convenience be called a head, is shown herein in the formof a casing 11 having an end portion 12 which carries a hub 13 mounted upon a reduced portion 14 of the spindle and se cured thereto by screw keys 15, and the easing is closed, with the exception of the stock opening 16, at the other end, by a plate 17 occupying a rabbet 18 in the end of the casing, and held in place by screws traversing openings 19 in the plate and tapped bosses 20 conveniently located on the casing.
The feed rollers, designated without discrimination by 25, are illustrated as provided with combined, stock feeding and actuating teeth 26, in the present illustration these rollers are given the form of worm wheels. Each of these wheels is shown as mounted upon a shaft or journal 27, projecting from eachside, and mounted in bearings in a device which may be characterized as a feedroller carriage 28, which has guides 29 engaging ways 30, in the present illustration shown integral with the plate 1.7. This construction is an illustration of a manner'for carrying out that feature of my invention which permits each of the rollers to be independently movable toward and from the stock position. In the present instance the movement is radial. The two feed-roller carriages are shown as connected by a pair of extension springs 31 engaging pins 32 upon the sides of the carriages and upon the respective sides or ends of the feed rollers. By this means the rollers are connected together by springs. This will insure that both of the rollers shall at all times engage the stock irrespective of its vibration. Since when it is moved so that its aXis is out of coincidence 1 with the aXis of revolution of the rollers one roller will be forced away from its axis of rotation and the other roller will, by means of the spring connection, instantly follow it up, not only by a tendency to yield to the normal tension of the spring, but since the other roller moves away, the tension of the spring will be augmented, and produce a quicker action of the roller than if this only responded to the normal spring tension. The casing adjacent to the position of the carriage 28 is provided with an opening through which a screw 33 will pass and have a working fit, the screw then entering a tapped hole in the carriage. By this means the forward in inward movement of the carriage may be adjustably limited. 11011 it is desired to remove the I rollers, for the purpose of substituting new f or changing the size, the screws 83 will be removed, as will also the screws holding the plate to the casing. The plate and the rolll ers and their carriages maybe removed withi out disturbing any of the other parts of the device.
The rollers 25, which as before stated may be in the form of worm wheels, will mesh with worms 35, each of which is shown as fast upon a shaft, which shaft is shown as comprising a portion 36 mounted in a bearing 37 which is securely fastened to the end 12 of the casing. 38 upon which a bevel wheel 39 is mounted, such bevel wheel is illustrated as keyed to the shaft to prevent its rotation thereon and also as fastened by means of a screw key 40 to i prevent its longitudinal movement. The shaft is also shown as having a still further I reduced portion 41 entering a bearing in the casing 11.. By this means both sides of the bevel wheel are supported by journals in suitable bearings and rotation of the axis of the shaft is prevented. The bevel wheel 39 is shown in mesh with a bevel wheel 42 which has a hub 43 rotatably mounted upon the hub 13 of the casing. A ring 44 is mounted upon the hub 43 and is provided with gear teeth 45 for meshing with some suitable actuator, not shown. F or the purpose of preventing breaking of the teeth or other parts by a too rapid meshing of the driver for the device with the teeth 45, suitable shock absorbing devices may be employed, as for instance some packing 46, which may he leather, placed between the ring and the body 47 of the gear wheel 42 and a ring 48, which may be secured to the hub 43, as for instance by means of screws 49. The bevel wheel 42 will be held in mesh with the bevel wheel 39 and the thrust of meshing will be supported in the present instance by means of a suitable thrust collar 390 secured to the spindle, as for instance by means of suitable screws. i A rod, round in Figs. 1 and 3, and designated in a general way by 50, is shown between the rollers 25, and by which. means the roller carriages 28 have been forced outward and the springs 31 tensioned. This will cause the rollers to engage the bar, and upon the rotation of the worms the feed rollers will be rotated and feed the bar. This, of course, being incident to the rotation of the spindle which will also cause the rollers to rev tate the bar. The torsional strain, on the rcvolving rollers, of rotating the bar will be i borne by the journals 27, which, it will be I seen, are upon each side thereof, and are carried by the roller-carriages which constitute bearing blocks and are mounted upon the end i plate of the casing. This will bring the thrust of the rod feeding and rotating engagel ment upon the plate, as well as the thrust of The shaft has a reduced portion than double.
the worms is that of the meshing working engagement, and that the rollers are free to move in a direction parallel with the axis of said worm.
One feature of importance in the present improvement is the centralization of the mechanical elements. The stock assage will, in a rotary head, be centrally ocated, and the feed rollers will be mounted insuch position that the stock engaging arc of the workinglOngitudi-nal zone u on their stock engaging perimeters will e alongside of the path of stock movement. The bearings for the journals for each of the rollers are close up to the sides of the working or stock ongaging zone of the roller, and another are of contact for the engagement of the actuator, the worm 35, is located at about one-quarter angular distance around the said perimeter from said stock engaging arc, but in the same stock engaging zone. These worms are perpendicular to the path of stock movement, their axes are radially disposed to the axis of the stock, in the illustration their axes are alined, and the inner ends of the worms approach nearly to such path. In other words the spindle carries a head in which a pair of rolls is mounted each having a shaft projecting from its ends, the bearings for said shafts being located adjacent to the respective ends of the rollers, and each of said rollers having worm teeth about its perimeter in the stock engaging zone, and with which zone the worms Wlll engage, the Worms being mounted on the head with their inner ends adjacent to the path of stock movement and their axes alined and radially disposed relative to the stock when this is in osition. 'A bevel gear-mounted on each 0 said shafts outside of the feed roller and of larger diameter than said feed roller, will engage a bevel gear carried. by the spindle. The back wall of the head is shown rovided with openings for the extrusion. of tlie bevel gears. There are two of these worms and their shaft portions respectively extend back of the stock feed rollers 25, and the gear wheels 39 fast with the worms are located in part outwardly of the feed rollers and this ives room for the relatively large gear whee s without adding materially to the size of the head or casing, gear wheels larger in diameter than the rollers, in the present illustration more The present organization makes a short train from the actuator to the feed rollers. The structure is by reason of the disposition of its parts of a very strong and durable nature.
In Fig. 3 the perimeters 55 of the feed rolls are shown as concave, after the well known manner of constructing worm wheels; but the perimeters of these worm-wheels may also be made flat as illustrated at 550 in Fig. 5 for the purpose of engaging the flat sides 501 of a hexagonal bar 500:
The face 51 of the worm-tooth, see Fig. 6, at the addendum line 52' will constitute the perimeter of the rolls, when this term is strictly applied, but for the present puigpose the working zone-or active periphery othe rollers embodies the faces 51 forengaging the stock and the flanks 53 for the engagement of the worm 35. Portions of the faces 51 and flanks 53, more articularly at and adjacent to their line of uncture 54, will engage the stock when this line is ap roaching the arc of contact of the pitch circ es.
Having described my invention what I claim is:
1. In a roller feed, the combination with a pair of feed rollers provided with combined stock feeding and actuator engaging teeth, of a driver for each of said rollers, and said drivers having teeth for engaging the teeth on the respective rollers.
2. In a roller feed, the combination with a pair of feed rollers having teeth upon their stock engaging faces, of rotary drivers therefor having teeth in driving engagement with the teeth on said feed rollers, and means for drawing the stock engaging faces of said rollers toward each other, While in driving engagement with the teeth of said drivers, for engaging the stock.
8. In a roller feed, the combination with a pair of feed rollers in the form of wormwheels having worm-teeth upon their stock engaging faces, of worms in driving engagement with said teeth.
4. In a roller feed mechanism, the combination with a head, of feed roller actuating means carried thereby, a removable end plate for the head, means carried by said end plate for su porting feed rollers for movement towar and from each other, and feed rollers mounted on said supporting means and constructed and adapted for removal with the said end plate while so mounted.
5. The combination with a rotary head, of feed roller actuating worms carried thereby and disposed with their working faces at substantially right angles to the axis of rotation ofthe head, a removable end plate for the head having means for supporting feed rollers for movement toward and from each other at substantially right angles to the said axis, feed rollers mounted in said supporting means and constructed and ada ted for removal with the said end plate Whi e so mounted and provided with wormteeth for engaging said worms, and means for elastically drawing said rollers toward the said axis.
6. In a roller feed, the combination with a head, of feed rollers, feed roller rotating means carried by the head, an end plate having means for carrying said rolls and removably carried by the head and being located beyond the feed rollers in respect to the roller rotating means for receiving the thrust of the engagement between the rollers and roller rotating means.
7. In a roller feed mechanism, the combination with a rotary head, of worm Wheels carried thereby and disposed in axial alinement radially of the axis of rotation of the head, an end plate removably carried by the head and provided with a stock passageway and with guideways disposed radially of said passageway and of said axis and parallel with said Worm wheels, carriages mounted in said guideways and removable with said end plate While so mounted, feed rollers mounted on said carriages and provided on their stock gripping faces with worm teeth meshing with said worms when the plate is in position, and means for drawing said carriages one toward the other.
8. In a roller feed mechanism, the combination with a spindle, of a head carried by said worm teeth, said worms being mounte( in the head with their inner ends adjacent to the path of stock movement and their axes alined and radially disposed relative to the stock when this is in position, a bevel gear mounted on each of said shafts outside of the feed roller and of larger diameter than said feed roller, the back wall of the head having openings for the extrusion of the said bevel gears, and a bevel gear carried by said spindle meshing with the bevel gears on said shafts.
WILBUR A. LEONARD.
Witnesses:
G. T. SAMPsoN, A. F. BREITENSTEIN.
US34348906A 1906-11-15 1906-11-15 Roller feed mechanism. Expired - Lifetime US899492A (en)

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2856640A (en) * 1954-02-01 1958-10-21 Deering Milliken Res Corp Apparatus for crimping textile strands
US2957574A (en) * 1956-06-14 1960-10-25 Roy C Compton Apparatus for continuously feeding articles of finite length
US3337064A (en) * 1965-10-23 1967-08-22 Fleetwood Syst Inc Aerodynamic can end stacker
US3461703A (en) * 1964-10-30 1969-08-19 Production Machinery Corp Apparatus for uncoiling and processing metal strip

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2856640A (en) * 1954-02-01 1958-10-21 Deering Milliken Res Corp Apparatus for crimping textile strands
US2957574A (en) * 1956-06-14 1960-10-25 Roy C Compton Apparatus for continuously feeding articles of finite length
US3461703A (en) * 1964-10-30 1969-08-19 Production Machinery Corp Apparatus for uncoiling and processing metal strip
US3337064A (en) * 1965-10-23 1967-08-22 Fleetwood Syst Inc Aerodynamic can end stacker

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