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US197988A - Improvement in piston water-meters - Google Patents

Improvement in piston water-meters Download PDF

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Publication number
US197988A
US197988A US197988DA US197988A US 197988 A US197988 A US 197988A US 197988D A US197988D A US 197988DA US 197988 A US197988 A US 197988A
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Prior art keywords
valve
piston
cylinders
meters
water
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01FMEASURING VOLUME, VOLUME FLOW, MASS FLOW OR LIQUID LEVEL; METERING BY VOLUME
    • G01F3/00Measuring the volume flow of fluids or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through the meter in successive and more or less isolated quantities, the meter being driven by the flow
    • G01F3/02Measuring the volume flow of fluids or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through the meter in successive and more or less isolated quantities, the meter being driven by the flow with measuring chambers which expand or contract during measurement
    • G01F3/04Measuring the volume flow of fluids or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through the meter in successive and more or less isolated quantities, the meter being driven by the flow with measuring chambers which expand or contract during measurement having rigid movable walls
    • G01F3/14Measuring the volume flow of fluids or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through the meter in successive and more or less isolated quantities, the meter being driven by the flow with measuring chambers which expand or contract during measurement having rigid movable walls comprising reciprocating pistons, e.g. reciprocating in a rotating body
    • G01F3/16Measuring the volume flow of fluids or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through the meter in successive and more or less isolated quantities, the meter being driven by the flow with measuring chambers which expand or contract during measurement having rigid movable walls comprising reciprocating pistons, e.g. reciprocating in a rotating body in stationary cylinders
    • G01F3/18Measuring the volume flow of fluids or fluent solid material wherein the fluid passes through the meter in successive and more or less isolated quantities, the meter being driven by the flow with measuring chambers which expand or contract during measurement having rigid movable walls comprising reciprocating pistons, e.g. reciprocating in a rotating body in stationary cylinders involving two or more cylinders

Definitions

  • ALVAH o. usirm or OAKLAND, Assienonro ANTHONY GHABOT, or
  • This invention consists in the combination of two cylinders, which are alternately filled and emptied by means of a peculiar valve arrangement, automatically worked by the movement of a piston passing back and forth within each cylinder as the water enters or escapes from one end or the otherf
  • the usual device is applied for registering the amount of water passing through the meter.
  • Figure 1 is a longitudinal section of my invention
  • AA are two cylinders, which are arranged to set one in advance of the other.
  • D D D D are four passages, which lead from the valve-chamber to each end of the two cylinders, the water flowing in or out of these passage-ways as the position of the valves (3 G closes or opens the passage-ways to the supply or exhaust, similarly to the common slide-valve arrangement of a steamengine.
  • E E are the pistons or hollow plun gers, which are forced from one end to the other of their respective cylinders by the inflowing and outflowing of the water.
  • F F are both the piston and valve rods, being rigidly secured to their respective valves at one end, and, passing loosely through the pistonheads e e, terminate within their pistons with fiatted heads ff.
  • Rubberwashers G maybe supplied upon the interior of the pistorrheads, against which the rods F F will strike at the end of each stroke.
  • H H are heads which separate the valve-chamber from the cylinders.
  • I I are heads closing the opposite ends of the cylinders.
  • the valves 0 and G differ in their form, the one marked 0 being a single valve with one central exhaust-cavity, the valve marked 0 being a double valve with two exhaust-caviies and a bridge in the middle. This is done around upon their axis, one or both may have a pin, P, projecting from its edge, which can be allowed to play back and forth in a slot cut in the side of the valvechamber, or the pin can project from the cylinder, and the slot be cut in the valve, as preferred.
  • K is a rod passing through a stuffing-box from the interior to the exterior of one of the cylinders.
  • an arm, L At the lower end of the rod inside the cylinder, an arm, L, will be secured; at the upper end a similar arm, L, which may have suitable connection with any ordinary registering device.
  • the rod K When the piston, at the termination of each double stroke, pushes backthe arm L, the rod K is turned partly around, and may, by a connection to the ratchet-wheel of a registeringdial, record the action which may indicate the quantity of water passed through both cylinders, according to their capacity.
  • a spring of any suitable form must be attached to the rod K to return it to its normal position.
  • the distance between the inside of the piston-heads, less the thickness of the rubber washers and the head of the piston-rod, should be equivalent to the entire stroke of the piston minus the travel of the valve to which it is attached.
  • the travel of the valves should be double the width of the ports, and no lap should be given the va ves.
  • N N are branches of the exhaust-passage N, each branch being controlled by its corresponding valve.
  • the action of the device is as follows As-.
  • the hollow pistons E E Working in the. cylinders A A, when, by means of the rods F F, they operate the valves 0 0 Within the chamber B, for the purpose of controlling the supply to and escape of the water from the cylinders through the passages D D D D, substantially as and for the purposes set forth.

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Fluid Mechanics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Orthopedics, Nursing, And Contraception (AREA)

Description

UNITED STATES PATIENT. OFFICE.
ALVAH o. usirm, or OAKLAND, Assienonro ANTHONY GHABOT, or
VALAMEDA COUNTY, CALIFORNIA.
V IMPROVEMENT IN PISTON WATER-METERS.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent Nof197,988, dated December 11, 1877 application filed September 26, 1877.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, ALVAH (l. AUSTIN, of Oakland, Alameda county, State of California, have invented an Improved Water-Meter, of which the following is a specification:
This invention consists in the combination of two cylinders, which are alternately filled and emptied by means of a peculiar valve arrangement, automatically worked by the movement of a piston passing back and forth within each cylinder as the water enters or escapes from one end or the otherf The usual device is applied for registering the amount of water passing through the meter.
' In the accompanying drawings, Figure 1 is a longitudinal section of my invention; Fig.
2, a transverse section taken through the line y y,- and Fig. 3, a transversesection taken through the line z 2.
In Fig.1, AA are two cylinders, which are arranged to set one in advance of the other.
Between them is placed the valve-chamber 13,
also cylindrical in form, within which the two semicircular valves 0 G are accommodated.
D D D D are four passages, which lead from the valve-chamber to each end of the two cylinders, the water flowing in or out of these passage-ways as the position of the valves (3 G closes or opens the passage-ways to the supply or exhaust, similarly to the common slide-valve arrangement of a steamengine. E E are the pistons or hollow plun gers, which are forced from one end to the other of their respective cylinders by the inflowing and outflowing of the water. F F are both the piston and valve rods, being rigidly secured to their respective valves at one end, and, passing loosely through the pistonheads e e, terminate within their pistons with fiatted heads ff. Rubberwashers G maybe supplied upon the interior of the pistorrheads, against which the rods F F will strike at the end of each stroke. H H are heads which separate the valve-chamber from the cylinders. I I are heads closing the opposite ends of the cylinders.
The valves 0 and G differ in their form, the one marked 0 being a single valve with one central exhaust-cavity, the valve marked 0 being a double valve with two exhaust-caviies and a bridge in the middle. This is done around upon their axis, one or both may have a pin, P, projecting from its edge, which can be allowed to play back and forth in a slot cut in the side of the valvechamber, or the pin can project from the cylinder, and the slot be cut in the valve, as preferred.
K is a rod passing through a stuffing-box from the interior to the exterior of one of the cylinders. At the lower end of the rod inside the cylinder, an arm, L, will be secured; at the upper end a similar arm, L, which may have suitable connection with any ordinary registering device.
When the piston, at the termination of each double stroke, pushes backthe arm L, the rod K is turned partly around, and may, by a connection to the ratchet-wheel of a registeringdial, record the action which may indicate the quantity of water passed through both cylinders, according to their capacity. A spring of any suitable form must be attached to the rod K to return it to its normal position.
I need not particularize the details of this registering device, for it does not form a novel portion of my invention.
The distance between the inside of the piston-heads, less the thickness of the rubber washers and the head of the piston-rod, should be equivalent to the entire stroke of the piston minus the travel of the valve to which it is attached. The travel of the valves should be double the width of the ports, and no lap should be given the va ves.
M is the supply-opening. N N are branches of the exhaust-passage N, each branch being controlled by its corresponding valve.
The action of the device is as follows As-.
suming the position of the valves as in Fig. 1,
the piston E in cylinder A has just been forced by the entering Water to the extremeouter end of its stroke, and has pulled the valve 0 with it, thus opening the exhaust for the inside end of the cylinder A, and the sup- What I claim as my invention, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
The hollow pistons E E, Working in the. cylinders A A, when, by means of the rods F F, they operate the valves 0 0 Within the chamber B, for the purpose of controlling the supply to and escape of the water from the cylinders through the passages D D D D, substantially as and for the purposes set forth.
ALVAH G. AUSTIN.
Witnesses:
JNo. PARDY, JAMEs H. GRAHAM.
US197988D Improvement in piston water-meters Expired - Lifetime US197988A (en)

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