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US604703A
US604703A US604703DA US604703A US 604703 A US604703 A US 604703A US 604703D A US604703D A US 604703DA US 604703 A US604703 A US 604703A
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tube
air
disk
combustion
wick
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23DBURNERS
    • F23D3/00Burners using capillary action

Definitions

  • This invention relates to what are known as blue-flame oil-stoves, in which vaporized hydrocarbons are burned with annular iiames of intense heat produced by the aid of combustion-tubes, and it relates, primarily, to those in which the oil is fed to the burningpoint by means of wick-tubes and Wicks.
  • the invention consists in certain novel features of construction and combinations of parts hereinafter set forth and claimed; and its objects are, first, to mingle the right proportion of air with the vapor to support perfect combustion, and thus to render the flames free from odor; secondly, to prevent overheating the wick-tube by avoiding the radiation or deilection of heat downward into its air-space, as well as the transmission of heat thereto from the combustion-tube through metallic connections, and by its eX- posure both internally andeXternally to the air, and, thirdly, to render the improved stove. simple and easily cleaned vand repaired.
  • Figure l of the drawings is a sectional elevation of the burner of a vaporizing oil-stove and its appurtenances constructed according to this invention.
  • Fig. 2 is a face view of an air-distributing disk forming part thereof.
  • Fig. 3 is a like view of its lifter-abutment.
  • Fig. 4. is a fragmentary elevation projected from Fig. l, and
  • Fig. 5 is a plan view of one of the pair of guide-spiders shown within the wick-tube in Fig. l.
  • An annular wick-tube A is constructed for the purposes of this invention with inner and outer surfaces exposed to cooling air-contact and with a practically unobstructed central air-space a open at bottom and top for the admission and flow of the cooling and iiamefeeding air. Its outer wall projects below the v(Zand outwardly-projecting beads e, in addition to the customary flanged shoulders f andV g at its upper end, and other necessary details.
  • the combustion-tube B rests loosely upon said shoulders f and g of the wick-tube Within an outer drum or metallic chimney C, and the latter is supported by a gallery D, surrounding the wick-tube A below its upper end, separated therefrom by the customary annular air-inlet a2 and fixedly attached to the wick-tube by brackets h, supported beneath by said beads c.
  • the only attachments within the wick-tube are a pair of guide-spiders i', Figs. l .and 5, located by said beads cl and preferably riveted fast. These form axial guides 4 for a vertical lifter-rod E within the wick-tube.
  • a horizontal arm j at the lower end of said rod projects outward through the slot of said wick-tube extension c and terminates in a lifter-knob k.
  • the respective parts of said slot which is preferably 'lshapechare marked 1, 2, and 3 in Figs. l and 4.
  • the army' normallyrests in the bottom of the vertical portion I and when lifted to elevate the combustion-tube B may be turned either to the right or left, Where it is securely held in oneof the downwardly-curved detents 2 or 3.
  • the lifter-rod E carries at its upper end a perforated lifter disk Z, Fig. l, preferably dish-shaped, with its rim 5 upturned and attached between a pair of screw-nuts on, so as to be detachable, and a lifter-abutment u, Figs. l and 3, is secured within the lower end of the combustion-tube B, preferably in the form of a ring having downwardly and inwardly inclined fingers 6 to coact with the rim 5 of the lifter-disk Zwhen the latter is elevated to raise the combustion tube for lighting the stove, said lifter-disk and lifterabutment being normally out of contact with each other, as in Fig.
  • said lifter-disk serves by its perforations to regulate the admission of air to the air-chamber of the combustion-tube, and thus to regulate its supply to the interior of the flame and IOO also to prevent the radiation or deiiection of heat downward from the highly-heated combustion-tube into the wick-tube.
  • the combustion-tube B comprises the customary concentric outer and inner walls o and p, connected with each other, but not with the outer drum C, by crossed wires q, in one or more pairs, said walls inclosing an annular llame-space r and a central air-chamber or mixing-chamber s, the latter closed at top by an imperforate cap t and provided at about mid-height with an imperforate air-directing disk u, Figs. l and 2, having notches 7 in its perimeter, which allow the air topass freely to the space above said disk, directing j it at the same time outward and through the perforated inner wall for immediate admixture with the free vapors with reference to their combustion.
  • the notches 7 serve to equalize the supply of air to the Haine on all sides of the combustion-tube, and thus to assist in maintaining a blue flame of uniform height and intensity at all points, and the projections between the notches bring the disk into contact with the inner wall of the tube on all sides for mutual support.v
  • the lifterabutment n and air directing disk u are preferably and conveniently held between pairs of beads 8 and 9, formed in the inner Wall of the combustion tube.
  • the closed cap t isl preferably secured to the uppervedge of the inner ywall p, as shown at 10, Fig. l, and the lifter-disk Z and outer and in, ner walls o and p may be cut and formedy from one and the same sheet of perforated iron ⁇ or brass.
  • the combustion-tube B is freely removable "v from the wick-tube A, and its open lower end affords vaccess to its interior when thus re- ⁇ moved for cleaning out its air chamber s,- which is important owing to the scaling of they inner walls p when made of iron and the furring or frosting of the same if of brass.
  • - Access can onlybe had tothe air-space above, the disk u by making the cap t removable ,1 but without resorting to this scale may be detached by tapping the sides of the tube and it" will escape through the notches 7, while-that; portion of the tube below said disk may be thoroughly cleaned out at will. Access mayf also be had to the interior of the air-space CL of the wick-tube, should it require cleaning, by removing the lifter-disk Z.
  • Said imperforate capt prevents any escape of vapor or air from the inner chamber s of the combustion-'j tube BeXcept through the perforations at its sides. It is my experience that when thereg is an escape of air at the top of the inner Wall p it draws off a very considerable quantityl of unconsumed gases which create an offensive odor. By forcing the air and vapor to' escape through the perforations of the highlyk heated metal into the iiame-space r the com-y bustion is rendered more perfect, and by myy arrangement as a whole I avoid any percep- ⁇ tible odor or offensive smell.
  • the notched air-directing disk u is held in place inside the inner wall p of the combustion-tube Without any other means of support than that afforded by said inner wall itself, and it has the advantage over other diaphragms of not only regulating the admission of air into the chamber above the diaphragm, but at the same time of strengthening the inner wall at its weakest part and of keeping the same cool by directing against said inner wall the draft of air through the notches of the disk just where the flame has a tendency to and very frequently does burn out said inner Wall.
  • the wick-raiser (not shown) may be of any known or improved construction appropriate thereto, and the same is true of other parts of the improved stove omitted from the drawings. i
  • the outer drum or chimney C may be provided with a door to obviate lifting it for lighting the stove, and other like modifications will suggest themselves to those skilled in the art.
  • a vaporizing oil-stove vcomprising an annular wick-tube having a practically unobstructed central air-chamber open at bottom and top, a superposed combustion-tube having concentric perforated walls and loosely seated at the top of said wick-tube, a iiXedlyattached gallery surrounding said wick-tube, an outer drum supported on said gallery, and means for elevating said combustion-tube including a Vertical lifter-rod within the wicktube, a perforated lifter-disk carried by the upper end of said rod and serving by its perforations to regulate the supply of air to the interior of the flame, and a lifter-abutment within said combustion -tube to coact with said lifter-disk, substantially as hereinbefore specified.
  • combustion-tube vcomprising a vertical lifter rod within said wick-tube, a disk-shaped perforated disk carried by the upper end of said rod, and alifter- ⁇ abutment within said combustion-tube in the form of a fixed ring having downwardly and inwardly inclined fingers to coact with the upturned rim of said disk.
  • a combustiontube constructed with concentric outer and inner walls inclosing an annular name-space and a central air-chamber and provided within the latter with an imperforate air-directin g disk having notches in its perimeter forming lthe air-passages, the projections between said notches bringing the disk into contact with ⁇ the inner wall of the tube on all sides, for mutual support.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Wick-Type Burners And Burners With Porous Materials (AREA)

Description

(No Model.)
W. H. SILVER. VAPORIZING OIL sToVB.
No. 604,703. Patented May 24, 1898.
OLQL Inlet lul dramas arrivar ,Oi-irren@ WILLIAM II. SILVER, OF BROOKLYN, NEV YORK, ASSIGNOR TO THE SILVER it COMPANY, OF SAME PLACE.
VAPORlZING OBLQSTOVE.
SPECIFICATION forming partrof LettersPatent No. 604,703, dated May 24, 1898. Application filed May 24, 1897. Serial No. 637,870. (No model.)
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, WILLIAM H. SILVER, a citizen of the United States of America, and a resident of the city of Brooklyn, in the State of N ew York, have invented a new and useful Improvement in Vaporizing Oil-Stoves, of which the following is a specication.
This invention relates to what are known as blue-flame oil-stoves, in which vaporized hydrocarbons are burned with annular iiames of intense heat produced by the aid of combustion-tubes, and it relates, primarily, to those in which the oil is fed to the burningpoint by means of wick-tubes and Wicks.
The invention consists in certain novel features of construction and combinations of parts hereinafter set forth and claimed; and its objects are, first, to mingle the right proportion of air with the vapor to support perfect combustion, and thus to render the flames free from odor; secondly, to prevent overheating the wick-tube by avoiding the radiation or deilection of heat downward into its air-space, as well as the transmission of heat thereto from the combustion-tube through metallic connections, and by its eX- posure both internally andeXternally to the air, and, thirdly, to render the improved stove. simple and easily cleaned vand repaired.
Asheet of drawings accompanies this specification as part thereof.
Figure l of the drawings is a sectional elevation of the burner of a vaporizing oil-stove and its appurtenances constructed according to this invention. Fig. 2 is a face view of an air-distributing disk forming part thereof. Fig. 3 is a like view of its lifter-abutment. Fig. 4. is a fragmentary elevation projected from Fig. l, and Fig. 5 is a plan view of one of the pair of guide-spiders shown within the wick-tube in Fig. l.
Like letters and numbers refer to like parts in all the gures.
An annular wick-tube A is constructed for the purposes of this invention with inner and outer surfaces exposed to cooling air-contact and with a practically unobstructed central air-space a open at bottom and top for the admission and flow of the cooling and iiamefeeding air. Its outer wall projects below the v(Zand outwardly-projecting beads e, in addition to the customary flanged shoulders f andV g at its upper end, and other necessary details. The combustion-tube B rests loosely upon said shoulders f and g of the wick-tube Within an outer drum or metallic chimney C, and the latter is supported by a gallery D, surrounding the wick-tube A below its upper end, separated therefrom by the customary annular air-inlet a2 and fixedly attached to the wick-tube by brackets h, supported beneath by said beads c.
The only attachments within the wick-tube are a pair of guide-spiders i', Figs. l .and 5, located by said beads cl and preferably riveted fast. These form axial guides 4 for a vertical lifter-rod E within the wick-tube. A horizontal arm j at the lower end of said rod projects outward through the slot of said wick-tube extension c and terminates in a lifter-knob k. The respective parts of said slot, which is preferably 'lshapechare marked 1, 2, and 3 in Figs. l and 4. The army' normallyrests in the bottom of the vertical portion I and when lifted to elevate the combustion-tube B may be turned either to the right or left, Where it is securely held in oneof the downwardly- curved detents 2 or 3.
The lifter-rod E carries at its upper end a perforated lifter disk Z, Fig. l, preferably dish-shaped, with its rim 5 upturned and attached between a pair of screw-nuts on, so as to be detachable, and a lifter-abutment u, Figs. l and 3, is secured within the lower end of the combustion-tube B, preferably in the form of a ring having downwardly and inwardly inclined fingers 6 to coact with the rim 5 of the lifter-disk Zwhen the latter is elevated to raise the combustion tube for lighting the stove, said lifter-disk and lifterabutment being normally out of contact with each other, as in Fig. l, so that the air may pass freely around the former, while said lifter-disk serves by its perforations to regulate the admission of air to the air-chamber of the combustion-tube, and thus to regulate its supply to the interior of the flame and IOO also to prevent the radiation or deiiection of heat downward from the highly-heated combustion-tube into the wick-tube.
The combustion-tube B comprises the customary concentric outer and inner walls o and p, connected with each other, but not with the outer drum C, by crossed wires q, in one or more pairs, said walls inclosing an annular llame-space r and a central air-chamber or mixing-chamber s, the latter closed at top by an imperforate cap t and provided at about mid-height with an imperforate air-directing disk u, Figs. l and 2, having notches 7 in its perimeter, which allow the air topass freely to the space above said disk, directing j it at the same time outward and through the perforated inner wall for immediate admixture with the free vapors with reference to their combustion.
The notches 7 serve to equalize the supply of air to the Haine on all sides of the combustion-tube, and thus to assist in maintaining a blue flame of uniform height and intensity at all points, and the projections between the notches bring the disk into contact with the inner wall of the tube on all sides for mutual support.v
The lifterabutment n and air directing disk u are preferably and conveniently held between pairs of beads 8 and 9, formed in the inner Wall of the combustion tube. The closed cap t isl preferably secured to the uppervedge of the inner ywall p, as shown at 10, Fig. l, and the lifter-disk Z and outer and in, ner walls o and p may be cut and formedy from one and the same sheet of perforated iron `or brass.
The combustion-tube B is freely removable "v from the wick-tube A, and its open lower end affords vaccess to its interior when thus re-` moved for cleaning out its air chamber s,- which is important owing to the scaling of they inner walls p when made of iron and the furring or frosting of the same if of brass.- Access can onlybe had tothe air-space above, the disk u by making the cap t removable ,1 but without resorting to this scale may be detached by tapping the sides of the tube and it" will escape through the notches 7, while-that; portion of the tube below said disk may be thoroughly cleaned out at will. Access mayf also be had to the interior of the air-space CL of the wick-tube, should it require cleaning, by removing the lifter-disk Z. Said imperforate capt prevents any escape of vapor or air from the inner chamber s of the combustion-'j tube BeXcept through the perforations at its sides. It is my experience that when thereg is an escape of air at the top of the inner Wall p it draws off a very considerable quantityl of unconsumed gases which create an offensive odor. By forcing the air and vapor to' escape through the perforations of the highlyk heated metal into the iiame-space r the com-y bustion is rendered more perfect, and by myy arrangement as a whole I avoid any percep-` tible odor or offensive smell.
The notched air-directing disk u is held in place inside the inner wall p of the combustion-tube Without any other means of support than that afforded by said inner wall itself, and it has the advantage over other diaphragms of not only regulating the admission of air into the chamber above the diaphragm, but at the same time of strengthening the inner wall at its weakest part and of keeping the same cool by directing against said inner wall the draft of air through the notches of the disk just where the flame has a tendency to and very frequently does burn out said inner Wall.
The wick-raiser (not shown) may be of any known or improved construction appropriate thereto, and the same is true of other parts of the improved stove omitted from the drawings. i
The outer drum or chimney C may be provided with a door to obviate lifting it for lighting the stove, and other like modifications will suggest themselves to those skilled in the art.
I-Iaving thus described the said improvement, I claim as my invention and desire to patent under this specificationl. A vaporizing oil-stove vcomprising an annular wick-tube having a practically unobstructed central air-chamber open at bottom and top, a superposed combustion-tube having concentric perforated walls and loosely seated at the top of said wick-tube, a iiXedlyattached gallery surrounding said wick-tube, an outer drum supported on said gallery, and means for elevating said combustion-tube including a Vertical lifter-rod within the wicktube, a perforated lifter-disk carried by the upper end of said rod and serving by its perforations to regulate the supply of air to the interior of the flame, and a lifter-abutment within said combustion -tube to coact with said lifter-disk, substantially as hereinbefore specified.
2. In a vaporizing oil-stove, the combination of an annular wick-tube having a practically unobstructed air-chamber open at bottom and top, a superposed combustion-tube loosely seated at the top of said wick-tube,
,and means for elevating said combustion-tube vcomprising a vertical lifter rod within said wick-tube, a disk-shaped perforated disk carried by the upper end of said rod, and alifter- `abutment within said combustion-tube in the form of a fixed ring having downwardly and inwardly inclined fingers to coact with the upturned rim of said disk.
3. In a vaporizing oil-stove, a combustiontube constructed with concentric outer and inner walls inclosing an annular name-space and a central air-chamber and provided within the latter with an imperforate air-directin g disk having notches in its perimeter forming lthe air-passages, the projections between said notches bringing the disk into contact with `the inner wall of the tube on all sides, for mutual support.
IOO
IIO
notches bringing the disk into contact with Io the inner Weil of the tube on all sides, for mutual support, substantially as hereinbefore specified.
WM. H. SILVER.
Witnesses:
JAS. L. EWIN, HERBERT S. BRYANT.
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