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US1775580A - Eye-controlling mechanism for figure toys - Google Patents

Eye-controlling mechanism for figure toys Download PDF

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US1775580A
US1775580A US389224A US38922429A US1775580A US 1775580 A US1775580 A US 1775580A US 389224 A US389224 A US 389224A US 38922429 A US38922429 A US 38922429A US 1775580 A US1775580 A US 1775580A
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arm
eye
shaft
weighted
rock
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US389224A
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Woolgar Arthur Charles
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63HTOYS, e.g. TOPS, DOLLS, HOOPS OR BUILDING BLOCKS
    • A63H3/00Dolls
    • A63H3/36Details; Accessories
    • A63H3/38Dolls' eyes
    • A63H3/40Dolls' eyes movable

Definitions

  • toys such as dolls, in which the eyes are made to close and simulate sleep when the toy doll is changed from an upright or eye opened position to ⁇ a recumbent or eye closed,
  • the eyes are mounted within hollow headson rock'shafts from 'which weighted crank arms extend, the" changing of the position of'the doll from an upright to a recumbent one, and vice versa, causing the weighted, crank arm to rock its shaft and turn the eyes from an open to p a closed position and vice versa.
  • I have provided an abutment memleerpos tioned.
  • the retarding mechanism furthermorais so designed as to permit the eyesto close gradually when the toy doll is not fully recuinbent' or horizontal, as [when held ina 1 childs arms somewhat inclined tothe hori-f 'zontal when being .put to sleep.
  • 1 indicates the usual composition hollow head of a toy doll, the. eye openings being shown at 2.
  • a metal bar 3 extends transversely of the head and has its endsprovided with rearwardly turned earsrtwhich are fixedto 1 enlargements 5 as by'the fastenings shown.
  • a metal plate 6 is' applied to its outer face, the upper: and slower edges being bent over the bar edges to fasten thereto. Fromthe-outer face. of plate 6,. a pair of spaced ears?
  • the ends of the cylinders are closed by plugs 19 and their interiors are filled with fluid such as oil and sliding counter-balancing weights such as spherical balls and including one ball weight having a diameter approximating that of its cylinder to provide a restricted passage for the fluid therebeyond when the tube is tilted to cause the weight to slide downwardly therein by gravity, and preferably a number of smaller ball weights 21 further to impede the upfiow of fluid.
  • fluid such as oil and sliding counter-balancing weights such as spherical balls and including one ball weight having a diameter approximating that of its cylinder to provide a restricted passage for the fluid therebeyond when the tube is tilted to cause the weight to slide downwardly therein by gravity, and preferably a number of smaller ball weights 21 further to impede the upfiow of fluid.
  • the ball weights position the tubes 18 substantially in the vertical axis of the head as shown in Figure 1, with the cross bar of the abutment arm closely adjacent to the weighted arm 10 of the eye-mounting rock shaft 8. Tilting of the toy figure head from the upright toward a recumbent position will cause the ball weights in the check tubes 18 to slide downwardly slowly, retarded by the fluid check provided, and will slowly rock the shaft 13 and tilt its abutment arm up-' wardly in the direction ofey'e-closing movement of weight arm 10, permitting said arm, by gravity, slowly to rock its shaft 8 and turn the eyes 9 toward closed position, as permitted by the retarded movement of the abutment arm, the eyes thus simulating the slowly closing eyes of a child drowsing Ofl to sleep.
  • one of the check tubes 18 is, as shown, mounted on its rock shaft to incline rearwardly from the vertical in the upright position of the toy figure.
  • this rearwardly inclined tube will function to impart a retarded full tilting movement to the abutment arm and permit the eye-mounting rock shaft 8 to be swung by its gravity actuated weighted arm to full eye-closing position with the toy figure only partially lowered toward the fully horizontal recumbent position.
  • the abutment arm only retards the movement of the weighted arm 10 in eye-closing direction.
  • the eyes are swung to open position by the weighted arm 10 at its normal gravity actuated speed, the ball weights in the check tubes 10 returning the tubes, rock shaft and abutment arm to the initial positions shown in Figures 1 and 2 at a retarded rate of speed as previously described.
  • Eye controlling mechanism for the heads of figure toys comprising a rock shaft mounted within the head portion and having artificial eyes mounted thereon, a weighted arm extending from said rock shaft and nor mally, by gravity, tending to rock said shaft and oscillate said eyes to open and closed positions in the upright and recumbent positions, respectively, of the toy figure, a second rock shaft mounted in said head portion having an abutment arm extending therefrom to abut and extend in the path of eye closing movement of said weighted lever arm and progressively movable with the weighted arm 111 eye closlng direction, and a motion retarding element mounted in balanced position on and traversing the second rock shaft and mounting a sliding gravity actuated weightto cause rocking of said shaft and continuous swinging of its abutment arm in the eye closing direction of movement of said weighted arm, upon movement of the toy figure toward a recumbent position and in response to pressure of the weighted arm against said abutment arm,.and means providing a fluid check for retarding without stopping the normal sliding
  • a second rock shaft mounted within the head portion having an abutment arm extending outwardly therefrom into the path of eye closing movement of said weighted arm and movable by and with said arm in response to the gravity weight pressure thereof, a fluid cylinder mounted in balanced position on and traversing said second -roclrsliaft, and a sliding weight in said fiuid cylinder providing a restricted passage thereby for fluid and normally, byv gravity, rocking said second shaft to position its abutment arm adjacent the weighted arm of the first rock shaft in the open eye position ofsaid arm andin the direction of movement of said weighted arm to eye closing position.
  • a head for figure toys having an eye mounting rock shaft therein provided with a a weighted arm actuatedby gravity to rock said shaft and oscillate said eyes to open and closed positions, respectively, when the toy figure is held in upright and recumbent positions, a second rock shaft mounted within the head portion having an abutment arm ex- 7 tending outwardly therefrom into the pathof eye closing movement of said weighted arm and movable by and with said arm-in response to the gravity weight 'pressurethereof, a fluid cylinder mounted in balanced positionon and traversing said second rock shaft, and a sliding weight in said fluid cylin- V 5.
  • Eye controllingmechanism forhollow' head figure toys comprising a rock shaft journaled within the hollow head mounting artificial eyes thereon and having a weighted arm extending therefrom and normally by gravity tending to rock said shaft and oscillate said eyes to open and closed positions in the upright and recumbent posltlons, respectively, of the toy figure, a swinging abutment positioned in and continuously movable along the path of eye closingmovement of said weighted arm by and with said weighted arm, and means within said head cooperating with said swinging abutment and effective to decreasingly retard the speed of the continuous swinging movement imparted thereto by said weighted arm in the gravity operated movement of said arm to eye closing position.
  • Eye controlling mechanism for figure toys having hollow'head portions comprising a rock shaft mounted within the hollow head portion, artificial eyes mounted on the rock shaft, a weighted lever arm connected'to and extending from said rock shaft and normally by gravity tending to'rock' saidv shaft and I turn said eyes to open and closed posi tions in the upright andrecumbent positions, respectively, of the toy figure, and means

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Description

p 1930. A. c. WOOLGAR 1,775,580
EYE CONTROLLING MECHANISM FOR FIGURE TOYS Filed Aug. 29, 1929 lNVENTOR ATTORNEY Patented Sept. 9, 1930 UNITED A S ARTHUR CHARLES WOOLGAR, or LANSING, MICHIGAN I EYE-COIFTROLLING MEcHANIsm- FOR FIGURE rovs.
Application filed August 29, 1929. serial it 339,224. I
:My invention relates to that class of figure,
toys, such as dolls, in which the eyes are made to close and simulate sleep when the toy doll is changed from an upright or eye opened position to {a recumbent or eye closed,
sleeping position. K As at present practised, the eyes are mounted within hollow headson rock'shafts from 'which weighted crank arms extend, the" changing of the position of'the doll from an upright to a recumbent one, and vice versa, causing the weighted, crank arm to rock its shaft and turn the eyes from an open to p a closed position and vice versa. 7 In accordance with the present invention, I have provided an abutment memleerpos tioned. in the path of eye-closing movement of the weighted crank arm and progress vely movable with said abutment along its closing path ata retarded rate of speed so that the eye closing movement is slow and-gradualpsimulating the drowsing' to sleep of a young child and enabling. thelittle user of the doll to play at singing or talking the v baby to sleep duringgthis retarded eye 7 closing period.
The retarding mechanism, furthermorais so designed as to permit the eyesto close gradually when the toy doll is not fully recuinbent' or horizontal, as [when held ina 1 childs arms somewhat inclined tothe hori-f 'zontal when being .put to sleep.
The invention-consists in the structural features, arrangements and combinations of parts as hereinafter described and claimed, and will be more clearly apparent from the following. detailedspecification which is to be read in conjunction with the accompany- 407 ing drawings forming part thereof-and in N whichz-Q I i i Figure 1 is a longitudinal vertical section through a hollow doll head having the eye controlling mechanism of tion mounted thereim v V V v Figure 2 is a transverse vertical section taken onthe" line 2-7-2 of'Figure 1. j r 1 7 Figure 3 is a vertical section through lone' of the liquid check tubes, and I the present invensaid arm to rock thegeyes 9 to closed posi Figure 4 is a perspective detail of the pair tion.
of relatively inclined check tubes and their attached rockshaftand abutment arm. I
In Figures 1 and 2 of the drawings, 1 indicates the usual composition hollow head of a toy doll, the. eye openings being shown at 2. Within the l1ead 'rearward1y.of-the eye openings 2, .a metal bar 3 extends transversely of the head and has its endsprovided with rearwardly turned earsrtwhich are fixedto 1 enlargements 5 as by'the fastenings shown. Between thefends of bar 3, a metal plate 6 'is' applied to its outer face, the upper: and slower edges being bent over the bar edges to fasten thereto. Fromthe-outer face. of plate 6,. a pair of spaced ears? extend forwardly and are drilled in alinement to provide bears ,ings: fora rod or rock shaft 8 journaling therein and having fixed thereonat points in line with theeye openings 2, a pair of semispherical artificial eyes 9. Between the bear 'ing ears 7, the'upper .end of a crank-arm 10 is secured to the rock. shaft 8 from' which it depends.
On its lower end is mounted-a weight 11 faced by a cushioning buffer 12 to impact the inner face of the head, The described specific construction is one in come inon use and forms nopart of the present in? vention, but represents a standard form of. an eye-mounting rock shaft having a weighted eye-oscillating crank arm with which the retarding means now to bedescribed operates,
in. combination.
I? .Rearwardly of and below the bar 3, a'second rock shaft in the fOIlTlOf a wire orrod. 13 traverses the interior of the head lin parallel with the bar 3fand has its ends jamnaled in alined socket bearings 14 formed in plates 15' secured by suitable means to the inside face of the head at transversely alined points as shown in Figure 2. V p
Intermediate ofits endsand in line with the weighted arm 10 of theeye mounting rock shaft 8, this'second rock shaft 13 is bent out;
war'dly as, a crank to form an abutmentarm 95. 16 whosecrosslbar 17 is in line: with the 7 weighted lever" arm 10 0f the eyerinounting rock shaft 8 in the direction of ovementprl Mounted on the rock shaft rod 13 at opposite sides of its abutment arm are a pair of check tubes 18 in the form of closed cylinders traversing the rod 13 and afiixed therein in balanced relation as by soldering thereon at points midway of their length. The ends of the cylinders are closed by plugs 19 and their interiors are filled with fluid such as oil and sliding counter-balancing weights such as spherical balls and including one ball weight having a diameter approximating that of its cylinder to provide a restricted passage for the fluid therebeyond when the tube is tilted to cause the weight to slide downwardly therein by gravity, and preferably a number of smaller ball weights 21 further to impede the upfiow of fluid. The passage of these ball weights from one end to the other of the tubes functions to rock the shaft 13 and swing its abutment arm, the normal gravity operated rate of rocking and swinging movement being substantially retarded and checked by the resistance offered to the sliding of the ball weights by the displacement thereby of the cylinder fluid and the restricted displacement passage therefor between the ball weight and cylinder walls.
This tilting of the cylinders and the consequent rocking of shaft 13 and swinging of its abutment arm occurs when the toy doll. is
moved from and upright to a recumbent position and vice versa, the inclination of the cylinders from or toward the vertical causing the wall weights by gravity to slide toward opposite ends of the cylinders, overbalancing and tilting the cylinders and rocking shaft 13, the normal gravity actuated rate of sliding movement being greatly retarded by the fluid check provided'by the necessity of forcing oil or other fluid displaced by the ball weights upwardly through a restricted escape passage.
In the upright position of the toy figure, the ball weights position the tubes 18 substantially in the vertical axis of the head as shown in Figure 1, with the cross bar of the abutment arm closely adjacent to the weighted arm 10 of the eye-mounting rock shaft 8. Tilting of the toy figure head from the upright toward a recumbent position will cause the ball weights in the check tubes 18 to slide downwardly slowly, retarded by the fluid check provided, and will slowly rock the shaft 13 and tilt its abutment arm up-' wardly in the direction ofey'e-closing movement of weight arm 10, permitting said arm, by gravity, slowly to rock its shaft 8 and turn the eyes 9 toward closed position, as permitted by the retarded movement of the abutment arm, the eyes thus simulating the slowly closing eyes of a child drowsing Ofl to sleep.
In order that the eyes may close with the toy figure held at an intermediate point of inclination between the horizontally recumbent and upright positions, one of the check tubes 18 is, as shown, mounted on its rock shaft to incline rearwardly from the vertical in the upright position of the toy figure. Thus, if the toy figure is held in a childs arms inclined somewhat upwardly from the horizontal to be put to sleep, this rearwardly inclined tube will function to impart a retarded full tilting movement to the abutment arm and permit the eye-mounting rock shaft 8 to be swung by its gravity actuated weighted arm to full eye-closing position with the toy figure only partially lowered toward the fully horizontal recumbent position.
The abutment arm only retards the movement of the weighted arm 10 in eye-closing direction. When the toy figure is moved from recumbent to upright position, the eyes are swung to open position by the weighted arm 10 at its normal gravity actuated speed, the ball weights in the check tubes 10 returning the tubes, rock shaft and abutment arm to the initial positions shown in Figures 1 and 2 at a retarded rate of speed as previously described.
The retarding means herein described and shown, while representing a preferred embodiment of the invention, is intended as illustrative rather than restrictive thereof and is subject to structural variation and modification in consonance with the spirit of the invention and the scope of the appended claims.
' What I claim, therefore, and desire to secure by Letters Patent is:
1. Eye controlling mechanism for the heads of figure toys comprising a rock shaft mounted within the head portion and having artificial eyes mounted thereon, a weighted arm extending from said rock shaft and nor mally, by gravity, tending to rock said shaft and oscillate said eyes to open and closed positions in the upright and recumbent positions, respectively, of the toy figure, a second rock shaft mounted in said head portion having an abutment arm extending therefrom to abut and extend in the path of eye closing movement of said weighted lever arm and progressively movable with the weighted arm 111 eye closlng direction, and a motion retarding element mounted in balanced position on and traversing the second rock shaft and mounting a sliding gravity actuated weightto cause rocking of said shaft and continuous swinging of its abutment arm in the eye closing direction of movement of said weighted arm, upon movement of the toy figure toward a recumbent position and in response to pressure of the weighted arm against said abutment arm,.and means providing a fluid check for retarding without stopping the normal sliding movement of said weight and rocking of said second shaft in said eye closing direction.
2. In a head for figure toys having an eye mounting rock shaft therein provided with a weighted arm actuated by gravity to rock said shaft and oscillate said eyes to open and closed positions, respectively, when the toy figure is held in upright and recumbent positions, asecond rock shaft mounted within the head portion having an abutment arm extending outwardly therefrom into the path of eye closing movement of said weighted arm and movable by and with said arm in response to the gravity weight pressure thereof, a fluid cylinder mounted in balanced position on and traversing said second -roclrsliaft, and a sliding weight in said fiuid cylinder providing a restricted passage thereby for fluid and normally, byv gravity, rocking said second shaft to position its abutment arm adjacent the weighted arm of the first rock shaft in the open eye position ofsaid arm andin the direction of movement of said weighted arm to eye closing position.
3. in a head for figure toys having an eye mounting rock shaft therein provided with a a weighted arm actuatedby gravity to rock said shaft and oscillate said eyes to open and closed positions, respectively, when the toy figure is held in upright and recumbent positions, a second rock shaft mounted within the head portion having an abutment arm ex- 7 tending outwardly therefrom into the pathof eye closing movement of said weighted arm and movable by and with said arm-in response to the gravity weight 'pressurethereof, a fluid cylinder mounted in balanced positionon and traversing said second rock shaft, and a sliding weight in said fluid cylin- V 5. Eye controllingmechanism forhollow' head figure toys comprising a rock shaft journaled within the hollow head mounting artificial eyes thereon and having a weighted arm extending therefrom and normally by gravity tending to rock said shaft and oscillate said eyes to open and closed positions in the upright and recumbent posltlons, respectively, of the toy figure, a swinging abutment positioned in and continuously movable along the path of eye closingmovement of said weighted arm by and with said weighted arm, and means within said head cooperating with said swinging abutment and effective to decreasingly retard the speed of the continuous swinging movement imparted thereto by said weighted arm in the gravity operated movement of said arm to eye closing position.
ARTHUR CHARLES WOOLGAR.
der providing a restricted passage thereby for Q in the direction of movement of said weighted. arm to eye closlng position, sald cylinder I being mounted on said rock shaft to extend at an angle to the vertical axis of the head in the open eye position of the first rock shaft inclined 1n the directlon of swinging movement of its weighted arm to eye closing position, thereby to swing said abutment arm in a direction to perm t eye closlng movement of the weighted arm'with the head of the toy I v figure held at an angle to the horizontal'between the vertically upright andhorizontally recumbent positions of the toy figure.
4:. Eye controlling mechanism for figure toys having hollow'head portions comprising a rock shaft mounted within the hollow head portion, artificial eyes mounted on the rock shaft, a weighted lever arm connected'to and extending from said rock shaft and normally by gravity tending to'rock' saidv shaft and I turn said eyes to open and closed posi tions in the upright andrecumbent positions, respectively, of the toy figure, and means
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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2619773A (en) * 1947-01-02 1952-12-02 Lawrence H Strayer Sleeping-doll eye mechanism
US2813372A (en) * 1954-12-23 1957-11-19 Arranbee Doll Company Inc Slow-closing doll's eye assembly
US3310908A (en) * 1963-06-07 1967-03-28 Clodrey Polyflex Ets Sleeping dolls
US3404483A (en) * 1965-01-21 1968-10-08 Lettam Inc Doll eye control mechanism
US20110045735A1 (en) * 2009-08-21 2011-02-24 Mcgaha John Fluid Engine and Method of Use Thereof

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2619773A (en) * 1947-01-02 1952-12-02 Lawrence H Strayer Sleeping-doll eye mechanism
US2813372A (en) * 1954-12-23 1957-11-19 Arranbee Doll Company Inc Slow-closing doll's eye assembly
US3310908A (en) * 1963-06-07 1967-03-28 Clodrey Polyflex Ets Sleeping dolls
US3404483A (en) * 1965-01-21 1968-10-08 Lettam Inc Doll eye control mechanism
US20110045735A1 (en) * 2009-08-21 2011-02-24 Mcgaha John Fluid Engine and Method of Use Thereof

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