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US756133A - Bunker, bin, or the like. - Google Patents

Bunker, bin, or the like. Download PDF

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Publication number
US756133A
US756133A US16690703A US1903166907A US756133A US 756133 A US756133 A US 756133A US 16690703 A US16690703 A US 16690703A US 1903166907 A US1903166907 A US 1903166907A US 756133 A US756133 A US 756133A
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United States
Prior art keywords
bunker
opening
hood
discharge
bin
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US16690703A
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William Dixon Napier
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Individual
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B07SEPARATING SOLIDS FROM SOLIDS; SORTING
    • B07BSEPARATING SOLIDS FROM SOLIDS BY SIEVING, SCREENING, SIFTING OR BY USING GAS CURRENTS; SEPARATING BY OTHER DRY METHODS APPLICABLE TO BULK MATERIAL, e.g. LOOSE ARTICLES FIT TO BE HANDLED LIKE BULK MATERIAL
    • B07B1/00Sieving, screening, sifting, or sorting solid materials using networks, gratings, grids, or the like
    • B07B1/46Constructional details of screens in general; Cleaning or heating of screens

Definitions

  • My said invention has for its object to provide a discharge-fitting for bunkers, bins, and the like in which such materials, for example, as coal and grain in bulk are stored.
  • the contents of such bunkers are withdrawn througha discharge port or opening formed at the front or side and close to the bunker-floor, the said opening, being furnished with a sliding door.
  • Such discharge arrangement is, however, defective, as when the bulk of the material in the bunker extends above the top edge of the door or opening if the door is once open the weight of the mass tends to force the material out through the opening, and the door cannot be properly shut again,which prevents cleanliness, while being objectionable in other ways.
  • My improvements are designed to overcome such defects, and in order that they may be fully understood I hereunto append two sheets of explanatory drawings,to be hereinafter referred to in the course of the following description of the improved parts.
  • Figure 1 of the drawings is a front elevation, and Fig. 2 a horizontal section, of a bunker as made with my improvements.
  • Figs. 2 and 3 are respectively a front elevation and a side elevation of a discharge-fitting for the bunker.
  • the bunker A is provided with the usual admission doors or lids A A at the top and with the discharge-port B, ordinarily arranged for the withdrawal of the material placed in the bunker, ,such opening being formed in the front wall of the bunker and close to the floor or the bottom end.
  • this dischargeport B is fixedly fitted a funnel-shaped discharge-fitting or hood-piece C, formed with a curved and sloping top, the depth of the openingO at the back of the hood being less than that of the opening C at the front.
  • the hood 0 projects sufiiciently into the bunker A so that when the material is forced into it by the full weight of the mass above it the said material will be retained in the hood, and thus will not fall out past the outer end or'opening C of the hood.
  • hoodpiecp C By this arrangement of hoodpiecp C the natural outward flow of the material is thus made to expend itself within the bunker, the hood being made long enough to hold such outward flow, so that the material cannot fall out at the front discharge-opening C
  • Aflange C is formed on the outer end of the hood C for the purpose of attaching it to the front of the bunker A, this flange also servingas a frame for carrying a door D, which is preferably hinged thereto and can be readily closed, as the material presents no interference.
  • the door D is preferably provided with a ring D, of rubber or other suitable jointing material, to bear on the flange C when the door is shut, and thus form a tight joint.
  • the bunker floor instead of being made quite flat is preferably made with side parts A? A, which slope downward toward a central flat portion A extending from back to front immediately opposite the dischargeopening C the sloping parts being provided for the purpose of throwing or directing the material suitably toward the aforesaid opening.
  • a grating E is preferably fitted and arranged with suitable perforations, so as to intercept large lumps of coal or material which might block up the hood-piece openings.
  • discharge-fitting or hoodpiece 0 may be arranged to project outside the bunker instead of inside, as hereinbefore described.
  • a bunker or bin havingaport or opening in the bunker, arranged close to the floor thereof, and a four-sided stationary discharge- 7 tending into the bunker, and having its vertical sides extending from its top downwardly to its bottom, substantially as described.
  • a bunker or bin composed of sloping side parts and a central flat portion, a port or opening in the bunker arranged close to and opposite the flat portion, a four-sided stationary discharge-fitting or hood-piece fitted to the said opening and projecting through it into the bunker, a door fitted to the hood-piece, and jointing material in the door.
  • a bunkeror bin In combination, a bunkeror bin, a floor therein composed of sloping side parts, and a central flat portion, a grating fitted across thebunker above the sloping parts, a port or opening in the bunker, arranged close to and opposite the flat portion of the floor, a discharge-fitting or hood-piece fitted to the said opening and projecting through it into the bunker, a door fitted to the hood-piece, substantially as herein set forth.
  • a discharge-fitting for bunkers comprising a stationary four-sided funnel portion, an opening at each end of said fitting, the top of said fitting slanting downwardly toward the interior of the bunker, and the vertical sides being adapted to extend with the top into the bunker, said sides comprising, with the top and bottom, a funnel portion closed except at opposite ends, substantially as described.

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Description

PATENTED MAR. 29, 1904. w. n. NAPIER. BUNKER, BIN, OR THE LIKE.
APPLICATION rum) JULY, 1903.
2 sums-sum 1.-
N0 MODEL.
0 M R v Z M 4 pm m F w..
2 V A; Nww m us ca. "momma. vusnmnmu u r PATENTED MAR. 29,1904.
W. 1). NAPIER. BUNKER; BIN, OR THE LIKE,
APPLICATION FILED JULY 24, 1903.
2 sums-sum 2.
F/e's' ANT/{385 s;
ilo. 756,139.
Patented. March 229, i904.
PATENT OFFICE.
WILLIAM DIXON NAPIER, OF PAISLEY, SCOTLAND.
BUNKER, BIN, OR THE LIKE.
SIEECIFICA'IION forming part of Letters Patent No. 756,133, dated March 29, 1904.
Application filed July 24:, 1903. Serial No. 166,907. (No model.)
To allv whom itmay concern:
Be it known that I, WILLIAM DIXON NAPIER, a subject of the King of Great Britain and Ireland, and a resident of Paisley, in the county of Renfrew, Scotland, (whose postal address is 99 High street, Paisley, Scotland,) have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Bunkers, Bins, or the Like, (for which application for British Patent No. 1,7 28, dated January 24:, 1903. has been made,) of which the following is a specification.
My said invention has for its object to provide a discharge-fitting for bunkers, bins, and the like in which such materials, for example, as coal and grain in bulk are stored. As ordinarily arranged in some cases the contents of such bunkers are withdrawn througha discharge port or opening formed at the front or side and close to the bunker-floor, the said opening, being furnished with a sliding door. Such discharge arrangement is, however, defective, as when the bulk of the material in the bunker extends above the top edge of the door or opening if the door is once open the weight of the mass tends to force the material out through the opening, and the door cannot be properly shut again,which prevents cleanliness, while being objectionable in other ways. My improvements are designed to overcome such defects, and in order that they may be fully understood I hereunto append two sheets of explanatory drawings,to be hereinafter referred to in the course of the following description of the improved parts.
Figure 1 of the drawings is a front elevation, and Fig. 2 a horizontal section, of a bunker as made with my improvements. Figs. 2 and 3 are respectively a front elevation and a side elevation of a discharge-fitting for the bunker.
In the drawings the same reference-letters are used to mark the same or like parts.
As shown in Figs. 1 and 2 of the drawings, the bunker A is provided with the usual admission doors or lids A A at the top and with the discharge-port B, ordinarily arranged for the withdrawal of the material placed in the bunker, ,such opening being formed in the front wall of the bunker and close to the floor or the bottom end. In this dischargeport B is fixedly fitted a funnel-shaped discharge-fitting or hood-piece C, formed with a curved and sloping top, the depth of the openingO at the back of the hood being less than that of the opening C at the front. The hood 0 projects sufiiciently into the bunker A so that when the material is forced into it by the full weight of the mass above it the said material will be retained in the hood, and thus will not fall out past the outer end or'opening C of the hood. By this arrangement of hoodpiecp C the natural outward flow of the material is thus made to expend itself within the bunker, the hood being made long enough to hold such outward flow, so that the material cannot fall out at the front discharge-opening C Aflange C is formed on the outer end of the hood C for the purpose of attaching it to the front of the bunker A, this flange also servingas a frame for carrying a door D, which is preferably hinged thereto and can be readily closed, as the material presents no interference. The door D is preferably provided with a ring D, of rubber or other suitable jointing material, to bear on the flange C when the door is shut, and thus form a tight joint. The bunker floor instead of being made quite flat is preferably made with side parts A? A, which slope downward toward a central flat portion A extending from back to front immediately opposite the dischargeopening C the sloping parts being provided for the purpose of throwing or directing the material suitably toward the aforesaid opening. Immediately above the sloping parts A A a grating E is preferably fitted and arranged with suitable perforations, so as to intercept large lumps of coal or material which might block up the hood-piece openings.
In some cases the discharge-fitting or hoodpiece 0 may be arranged to project outside the bunker instead of inside, as hereinbefore described.
What. I claim as my invention is- '1. A bunker or bin, havingaport or opening in the bunker, arranged close to the floor thereof, and a four-sided stationary discharge- 7 tending into the bunker, and having its vertical sides extending from its top downwardly to its bottom, substantially as described.
2. In combination, a bunker or bin, a floor therein composed of sloping side parts and a central flat portion, a port or opening in the bunker arranged close to and opposite the flat portion, a four-sided stationary discharge-fitting or hood-piece fitted to the said opening and projecting through it into the bunker, a door fitted to the hood-piece, and jointing material in the door.
3. In combination, a bunkeror bin, a floor therein composed of sloping side parts, and a central flat portion, a grating fitted across thebunker above the sloping parts, a port or opening in the bunker, arranged close to and opposite the flat portion of the floor, a discharge-fitting or hood-piece fitted to the said opening and projecting through it into the bunker, a door fitted to the hood-piece, substantially as herein set forth.
4. A discharge-fitting for bunkers, comprising a stationary four-sided funnel portion, an opening at each end of said fitting, the top of said fitting slanting downwardly toward the interior of the bunker, and the vertical sides being adapted to extend with the top into the bunker, said sides comprising, with the top and bottom, a funnel portion closed except at opposite ends, substantially as described.
In testimony whereof I have signed my name to this specification in the presence of two subscribing witnesses.
WILLIAM DIXON NAPIER.
I/Vitnesses:
WILERED HUNT, GEORGE PATTERSON.
US16690703A 1903-07-24 1903-07-24 Bunker, bin, or the like. Expired - Lifetime US756133A (en)

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