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US1000234A - Self-dumping hoist. - Google Patents

Self-dumping hoist. Download PDF

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Publication number
US1000234A
US1000234A US61305211A US1911613052A US1000234A US 1000234 A US1000234 A US 1000234A US 61305211 A US61305211 A US 61305211A US 1911613052 A US1911613052 A US 1911613052A US 1000234 A US1000234 A US 1000234A
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Prior art keywords
skep
frame
guides
rail
self
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US61305211A
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Lee Callahan
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Priority to US642721A priority patent/US1033670A/en
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B66HOISTING; LIFTING; HAULING
    • B66BELEVATORS; ESCALATORS OR MOVING WALKWAYS
    • B66B17/00Hoistway equipment
    • B66B17/14Applications of loading and unloading equipment
    • B66B17/26Applications of loading and unloading equipment for loading or unloading mining-hoist skips

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  • My present invention has to do with self dumping hoists; and it consists in the simple, reliable and durable construction hereinafter described and particularly pointed out in the claims appended.
  • Figure 1 is a side elevation illustrating the arrangement of my improvement in a tower and also illustrating by dotted lines the manner in which the skep or bucket dumps itself when it reaches the upper end of its traverse.
  • Fig. 2 is a vertical section of the same taken in a plane in rear of the skep.
  • Fig. 3 is a horizontal section taken in a plane above the skep and showing the same as it appears when in upright position.
  • Fig. 4 is an enlarged detail side elevation showing the arrangement of the skep and the frame by which the same iscarried, relative to the channel guides and the upright sustaining rail.
  • Fig. 5 is an enlarged detail view, partly in elevation and partly in section, showing the manner in which the anti-friction balls are arranged in the runners on the side bars of the skep frame.
  • A is a tower of the type that is erected adjacent a building to be formed of poured concrete.
  • B B are upright channel guides which are preferably, though not necessarily, fixed in suitable manner in the tower
  • C is an upright skep-sustaining rail which is also preferably, though not necessarily, fixed in the tower, and is arranged in front of the channel guides after the manner best shown in Figs. 3 and 4.
  • the said sustaining rail is preferably of T-form in cross-section, Fig. 3, and has its upper end arranged a sufficient distance below the upper ends of the channel guides G, as shown in Figs. 1 and 2.
  • D is the skep or bucket of the hoist.
  • G is a hoisting cable passed over the said sheaves and designed to be connected at one end to hoisting means (not shown), and G is the skep-carrying frame connected to the opposite end of the said cable, as shown in Fig. 2.
  • the skep or bucket D comprises a concaveconvex bottom a, vertical and parallel side walls I), a vertical back wall 0 disposed at right angles to the side walls, a vertical front wall (Z also disposed at right angles to the side walls, and continuous angle-iron straps c, one at each side of the bucket, straddling and riveted to the edge portions of the side walls 7) and the adjacent edge portions of the bottom, back and frontwalls. From this it follows that the skep is possessed of great stiffness and strength and therefore is not liable to be bulged by a load of concrete therein or be injured in the event of a fall.
  • the skep On its front side and in the vertical center thereof the skep is provided with a downwardly tapered shoe H, and adjacent the upper and larger end of the shoe bearings I are provided between which a circumferentially-grooved roller J is mounted,
  • this roller being arranged immediately above the shoe H and being designed to bear agalnst and travel on the sustaining rail incidental to the downward and upward traverses of the skep.
  • the skep At its sides the skep is provided with fixed plates K that carry trunnions L, and at the rear side of its upper end the skep is preferably, though not necessarily, equipped with a guard-flange M, designed to prevent upward splashing of the concrete when the skep is dumped.
  • the trunnions L are located considerably below the horizontal center of the skep and,
  • the frame G by which the skep D is carried has at its upper end a bail m to the middle of which one end of the cable G is connected, and from the ends of the said. bail, side bars a depend, which side bars are arranged in the channel guides 13, best shown in Figs. 2 and 3.
  • the lower portions of the side bars a of frame G are shaped to form runners 1, and these runners extend below the bottom of the skep D as shown for an important purpose hereinafter set forth.
  • the said runners p are preferably, though not necessarily, provided with vertical series of antifriction balls 9 which are housed in the runners and project slightly therefrom, and are designed, by bearing against the side walls of the channel guides B, to ease the movements of the runners and the frame G as a whole.
  • the frame G comprises a combined back brace and stop B.
  • This latter is bail-shaped and connected at its ends in fixed manner to the side bars a, and it serves to brace the said side bars and thereby lend increased strength to the frame G and at the same time serves to limit the forward movement of the skep D when the latter is dumped, and back ard movement of said skep when the same is righted.
  • the stiffness and strength of the skep hereinbefore referred to is further materially advantageous inasmuch as it precludes the possibility of a load of concrete or the like bulging the side walls of the skep and thereby binding the frame sides against the channel guides and causing undue friction.
  • a self-clumping hoist the combination of upright channel guides; an upright sustaining-rail arranged in front of the space between said guides and having its upper end disposed below the upper ends of the guides; a frame comprising a bail for the connection of a hoisting cable, side bars and runners thereon disposed in the channel guides, and a bail-shaped back brace and stop connected at its ends to the side bars; vertical.
  • a selfdumping hoist the combination of upright guides, an upright sustaining-rail arranged in front of the space between the guides and terminating below the upper ends thereof, a vertically movable frame arranged between the guides and having side bars and a bail-shaped back brace and stop, and a skep arranged entirely above the lower portion of the frame and pivoted, at a point below its horizontal center and in rear of its vertical center, in the side bars of the frame and having a roller on its front to engage the sustaining rail and also having a downwardly and rearwardly tapered shoe on its front immediately below said roller.
  • a self-dumping hoist the combination of upright guides, an upright sustaining-rail arranged in front of the space between the guides and terminating below the upper ends of the same, a vertically movable skep adapted to be sustained in upright position by said rail, and a vertically-movable frame carrying the skep and in which the skep is pivoted at a point below its horizontal center and in rear of its vertical center said vertically-movable frame being arranged between the said guides and having a portion extending downward beyond the bottom of the skep.
  • a self-dumping hoist the combination of upright guides, an upright sustaining rail arranged in front of the space between the guides and terminating below the upper ends of the same, a vertically movable skep having on its front a roller and immediately below said roller a downwardly and rearwardly tapered shoe, both to engage the sustaining rail, and a frame in which the skep is pivoted and adapted to dump itself, said frame being movable vertically between the said guides.

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  • On-Site Construction Work That Accompanies The Preparation And Application Of Concrete (AREA)

Description

L. OALLAHAN.
SELF DUMPING HOIST.
APPLICATION FILED MAR. 8, 1911.
Patented Aug. 8, 1911.
2 SHEETS-SHEET 1.
WITNESSES INVENTOR J 6 llama COLUMBIA PLANOGRAPH CO., WASHINGTON. D. C.
L. GALLAH AN'.
SELF DUMPING HOIST. I 'APPLIOATION FILED MAR. 11, 1911.
Patented Aug. 8, 19 11.
2 SHEETS-SHEET 2.
j Alla leg/4 COLUMBIA PLANOGRAPH C(L. WASHINGTON, D. C
LEE CALLAHAN, 035 LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA.
SELF-DUMPING I-IOIST.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented Aug. 8, 1911.
Application filed March 8, 1911. Serial No. 613,052.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that 1, LEE CALLAHAN, citizen of the United States, residing at Los Angeles, in the county of Los Angeles and State of California, have invented new and useful Improvements in Self-Dumping Hoists, of which the following is a specification.
My present invention has to do with self dumping hoists; and it consists in the simple, reliable and durable construction hereinafter described and particularly pointed out in the claims appended.
In the drawings accompanying and forming part of this specification: Figure 1 is a side elevation illustrating the arrangement of my improvement in a tower and also illustrating by dotted lines the manner in which the skep or bucket dumps itself when it reaches the upper end of its traverse. Fig. 2 is a vertical section of the same taken in a plane in rear of the skep. Fig. 3 is a horizontal section taken in a plane above the skep and showing the same as it appears when in upright position. Fig. 4 is an enlarged detail side elevation showing the arrangement of the skep and the frame by which the same iscarried, relative to the channel guides and the upright sustaining rail. Fig. 5 is an enlarged detail view, partly in elevation and partly in section, showing the manner in which the anti-friction balls are arranged in the runners on the side bars of the skep frame.
Similar letters designate corresponding parts in all of the views of the drawings, referring to which:
A is a tower of the type that is erected adjacent a building to be formed of poured concrete.
B B are upright channel guides which are preferably, though not necessarily, fixed in suitable manner in the tower, and C is an upright skep-sustaining rail which is also preferably, though not necessarily, fixed in the tower, and is arranged in front of the channel guides after the manner best shown in Figs. 3 and 4. The said sustaining rail is preferably of T-form in cross-section, Fig. 3, and has its upper end arranged a sufficient distance below the upper ends of the channel guides G, as shown in Figs. 1 and 2.
D is the skep or bucket of the hoist.
E is a beam mounted on the tower and bearing sheaves F. G is a hoisting cable passed over the said sheaves and designed to be connected at one end to hoisting means (not shown), and G is the skep-carrying frame connected to the opposite end of the said cable, as shown in Fig. 2.
The skep or bucket D comprises a concaveconvex bottom a, vertical and parallel side walls I), a vertical back wall 0 disposed at right angles to the side walls, a vertical front wall (Z also disposed at right angles to the side walls, and continuous angle-iron straps c, one at each side of the bucket, straddling and riveted to the edge portions of the side walls 7) and the adjacent edge portions of the bottom, back and frontwalls. From this it follows that the skep is possessed of great stiffness and strength and therefore is not liable to be bulged by a load of concrete therein or be injured in the event of a fall. On its front side and in the vertical center thereof the skep is provided with a downwardly tapered shoe H, and adjacent the upper and larger end of the shoe bearings I are provided between which a circumferentially-grooved roller J is mounted,
this roller being arranged immediately above the shoe H and being designed to bear agalnst and travel on the sustaining rail incidental to the downward and upward traverses of the skep. At its sides the skep is provided with fixed plates K that carry trunnions L, and at the rear side of its upper end the skep is preferably, though not necessarily, equipped with a guard-flange M, designed to prevent upward splashing of the concrete when the skep is dumped. The trunnions L are located considerably below the horizontal center of the skep and,
slightly in rear of the vertical center thereof, Figs. 1 and 4E, and hence it will be manifest that when on the upward movement of the skep the roller J overruns or passes beyond the upper end of the sustaining rail G, the skep will of itself and by reason of gravity commence to swing to the dumping position shown by dotted lines in Fig. 1. Attention is also directed here to the fact that immedi ately after the roller J passes out of engagement with the upper end of the rail C, the tapered shoe H will. bear and slide on the said end. and by so doing will render the tilting of the skep gradual and smooth and at the same time will preclude injury to the front wall cl of the skep. Again it will be observed that when the skep is moved downward from the dumped position shown by dotted lines in Fig. 1, the shoe H will bear on the upper end of the rail C and gradually right the same until the roller J comes into engagement with the thread of rail C and the skep in upright position. I
The frame G by which the skep D is carried has at its upper end a bail m to the middle of which one end of the cable G is connected, and from the ends of the said. bail, side bars a depend, which side bars are arranged in the channel guides 13, best shown in Figs. 2 and 3. The lower portions of the side bars a of frame G are shaped to form runners 1, and these runners extend below the bottom of the skep D as shown for an important purpose hereinafter set forth. In their opposite sides the said runners p are preferably, though not necessarily, provided with vertical series of antifriction balls 9 which are housed in the runners and project slightly therefrom, and are designed, by bearing against the side walls of the channel guides B, to ease the movements of the runners and the frame G as a whole.
In addition to the elements named, the frame G comprises a combined back brace and stop B. This latter is bail-shaped and connected at its ends in fixed manner to the side bars a, and it serves to brace the said side bars and thereby lend increased strength to the frame G and at the same time serves to limit the forward movement of the skep D when the latter is dumped, and back ard movement of said skep when the same is righted.
By reason of the runners p of frame Gr extending below the skep D, as before described, it will be readily understood that in the event of the cable Gr breaking when the full skep is at a considerable height, little or no damage to the skep will result from the fall, inasmuch as the ends of the strong steel f ame G will bring up against the bottom of the tower and thereby protect the skep, while the combined brace and stop R will hold the skep between it and the rail C and prevent lateral displacement of the skep from the frame and guide means. Also because of this a fall of the frame G and skep or the sudden bringing up of the frame at the bottom of the tower will not be attended by injury to any part of the apparatus or danger to workmen standing in or near the tower. The stiffness and strength of the skep hereinbefore referred to is further materially advantageous inasmuch as it precludes the possibility of a load of concrete or the like bulging the side walls of the skep and thereby binding the frame sides against the channel guides and causing undue friction.
Having described my invention, what I claim and desire to secure by Letters-Patent, is:
1. In a self-clumping hoist, the combination of upright channel guides; an upright sustaining-rail arranged in front of the space between said guides and having its upper end disposed below the upper ends of the guides; a frame comprising a bail for the connection of a hoisting cable, side bars and runners thereon disposed in the channel guides, and a bail-shaped back brace and stop connected at its ends to the side bars; vertical. series of anti-friction balls housed in opposite sides of the runners and project ing beyond said sides to engage the sides of the channel guides; and a skep arranged entirely above the lower portion of the frame and having lateral trunnions journaled in the runners of the frame and arranged below its horizontal center and in rear of its vertical center and also having a roller on its front side to engage the sustaining rail, and a downwardly and rearwardly tapered shoe arranged immediately below said roller.
2. In a selfdumping hoist, the combination of upright guides, an upright sustaining-rail arranged in front of the space between the guides and terminating below the upper ends thereof, a vertically movable frame arranged between the guides and having side bars and a bail-shaped back brace and stop, and a skep arranged entirely above the lower portion of the frame and pivoted, at a point below its horizontal center and in rear of its vertical center, in the side bars of the frame and having a roller on its front to engage the sustaining rail and also having a downwardly and rearwardly tapered shoe on its front immediately below said roller.
3. In a self-clumping hoist, the combination of upright guides, an upright sustailr ing-rail arranged in front of the space be tween the guides and terminating below the upper ends of the same, a vertically movable skep adapted to be sustained in upright position by said rail, and a verticallymovable frame carrying the skep and in which the skep is pivoted at a point below its horizontal center and in rear of its vertical center; said vertically-movable frame being arranged between the said guides and having a portion extending downward beyond the bottom of the skep and also having a bail-shaped back brace and stop arranged in rear of the upper portion of the skep.
4. In a self-dumping hoist, the combination of upright guides, an upright sustaining-rail arranged in front of the space between the guides and terminating below the upper ends of the same, a vertically movable skep adapted to be sustained in upright position by said rail, and a vertically-movable frame carrying the skep and in which the skep is pivoted at a point below its horizontal center and in rear of its vertical center said vertically-movable frame being arranged between the said guides and having a portion extending downward beyond the bottom of the skep.
5. In a self-dumping hoist, the combination of upright guides, an upright sustaining rail arranged in front of the space between the guides and terminating below the upper ends of the same, a vertically movable skep having on its front a roller and immediately below said roller a downwardly and rearwardly tapered shoe, both to engage the sustaining rail, and a frame in which the skep is pivoted and adapted to dump itself, said frame being movable vertically between the said guides.
In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand in presence of two subscribing witnesses.
LEE OALLAHAN.
Witnesses:
P. S. LUDWICK, R. T. GOURTRIGHT.
Copies of this patent may be obtained for five cents each, by addressing the Commissioner of Patents, Washington, I). G.
US61305211A 1911-03-08 1911-03-08 Self-dumping hoist. Expired - Lifetime US1000234A (en)

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US61305211A US1000234A (en) 1911-03-08 1911-03-08 Self-dumping hoist.
US642721A US1033670A (en) 1911-03-08 1911-08-07 Skip.

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