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US804673A - Self-closing faucet. - Google Patents

Self-closing faucet. Download PDF

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Publication number
US804673A
US804673A US21043504A US1904210435A US804673A US 804673 A US804673 A US 804673A US 21043504 A US21043504 A US 21043504A US 1904210435 A US1904210435 A US 1904210435A US 804673 A US804673 A US 804673A
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United States
Prior art keywords
valve
chamber
seat
outlet
disk
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Expired - Lifetime
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US21043504A
Inventor
Lewis J Rice
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FREANEY BROTHERS
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FREANEY BROTHERS
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Priority to US21043504A priority Critical patent/US804673A/en
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B67OPENING, CLOSING OR CLEANING BOTTLES, JARS OR SIMILAR CONTAINERS; LIQUID HANDLING
    • B67DDISPENSING, DELIVERING OR TRANSFERRING LIQUIDS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B67D1/00Apparatus or devices for dispensing beverages on draught
    • B67D1/08Details
    • B67D1/12Flow or pressure control devices or systems, e.g. valves, gas pressure control, level control in storage containers
    • B67D1/14Reducing valves or control taps
    • B67D1/1405Control taps
    • B67D1/145Control taps comprising a valve shutter movable in a direction perpendicular to the valve seat
    • B67D1/1455Control taps comprising a valve shutter movable in a direction perpendicular to the valve seat the valve shutter being opened in the same direction as the liquid flow
    • B67D1/1461Control taps comprising a valve shutter movable in a direction perpendicular to the valve seat the valve shutter being opened in the same direction as the liquid flow the valve shutter being integral with a compensator
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16KVALVES; TAPS; COCKS; ACTUATING-FLOATS; DEVICES FOR VENTING OR AERATING
    • F16K11/00Multiple-way valves, e.g. mixing valves; Pipe fittings incorporating such valves
    • F16K11/02Multiple-way valves, e.g. mixing valves; Pipe fittings incorporating such valves with all movable sealing faces moving as one unit
    • F16K11/06Multiple-way valves, e.g. mixing valves; Pipe fittings incorporating such valves with all movable sealing faces moving as one unit comprising only sliding valves, i.e. sliding closure elements
    • F16K11/065Multiple-way valves, e.g. mixing valves; Pipe fittings incorporating such valves with all movable sealing faces moving as one unit comprising only sliding valves, i.e. sliding closure elements with linearly sliding closure members
    • F16K11/07Multiple-way valves, e.g. mixing valves; Pipe fittings incorporating such valves with all movable sealing faces moving as one unit comprising only sliding valves, i.e. sliding closure elements with linearly sliding closure members with cylindrical slides

Definitions

  • the object of this invention is to improve the construction of faucets.
  • One feature of this invention consists in the means for cushioning the valve by water passing through, so that it will close without the thud or the pounding ⁇ common to faucets used in connection with fluid under pressure.
  • this result is accomplished by detlecting a portion of the incoming water against the valve-seat d uring the closing of the valve, so that said deflected water will cushion the valve.
  • Another feature consists of the use of an ejector above the valve-seat instead of packing, said ejector withdrawing all the water that may pass into the upper part of the chamber in which the various parts of the device are mounted. The suction created by this ejector prevents the water escaping' upward outof said chamber.
  • Figure 1 is a vertical longitudinal central section through the faucet while the valve is open, and Fig'. 2 while the valve is closed.
  • Fig. 3 is a vertical transverse section on the line 3 3 of Fig. l, showing the ejector, valve-seat, and valve in elevation.
  • Fig. 4 is a vertical section of the ejector on the line et of Fig'. 3.
  • Fig. 5 is a central vertical section of the lower part of the valve mechanism, on an enlarged scale.
  • the faucet has an inlet 10, which leads to a vertical chamber 1l, and an outlet 12 leads from said vertical chamber.
  • an annular' rib 13 is located immediately above the inlet and below the outlet, and the portion of the chamber below said annular rib is reduced in diameter and turned true to form a cylinder for the piston-valve l-l, that tits snugly lout loosely therein, so the water will exert an equal pressure on the valve at all points, thus maintaining it balanced.
  • the depth of the cylinder is greater than the thickness of the valve, so that it has considerable vertical movement.
  • valveseat l5 rests upon said rib 13 loosely and consists of a downwardly-extending central portion that forms the valve-seat propel' and engages the packing' 16 in an annular depression in the top of the valve.
  • the valve-seat has a central opening larger than the valve-stem 17, that passes centrally therethrough.
  • a cone 18 is located about the lower end of the valvestem and at its junction with the valve. The diameter of the lower and largest part of this cone does not exceed the diameter of the hole through the seat 15, but is substantially the same.
  • This cone is suoli as to cause the incoming water as the valve is closing to be partially deflected against the seat, and such ydeflected water constitutes a water cushion between the seat and the valve that causes the valve to close gradually, and therefore the thumping' common to faucets when used with water under pressure is prevented.
  • An ejector 2O is placed upon the valve-seat 15 and held down by a threaded sleeve Q6 from the cap 25. It is a disk hollow on the under side and centrally, and it has ltwo outlet-openings 21 leading from below and one outletopening 29. from above and midway between the former two outlet-openings.
  • the stem 1T is tapered at its upper end and fits loosely in a central recess in the under side of a head Q3, connected with the handle .Z-I, as seen by the dotted lines in Fig. 1.
  • Said head has on it cams that, as shown in Figs. 1 and 2, are engaged by cams on the cap Q5, that closes the vertical chamber 12.
  • the handle 24E is turned so that the cams force the valve-stem and valve downward, moving the latter away from its seat, as seen in Fig. -1, so that water passes from the inlet-opening' 10 into the lower part of the vertical chamber and between the valve and valveseat and out through the central opening of the valve and through the outlet-openings 21 in the ejector 2() and thence through the faucet-outlet 12. All waterthat leaks or is forced into the upper part 11 of the vertical chamber above the ejector by following up the valvestem through the slight space between the valve-stem and the surrounding disk or ejector 2O is drawn out through the outlet-opening Q2 by the suction created by the l'low of water through the two outlet-openings 21.
  • a vertical chamber with a suita'ole inlet and outlet, one being slightly above the other, an annular rib in said chamber between said openings, a disk mounted on said rib and with a central opening through it and a downwardly-extending annular ange to form the valve-seat, a cylinder in the lower portion of said chamber, a piston-like valve operating in said cylinder with a stem extending up through the opening in said valve-seat and of smaller diameter than said opening, a cone formed about the valve-stem adjacent the valve so that the diameter of no part of said cone shall exceed the diameter of the opening through the Valve-seat, and means for depressing the valve.
  • a vertical chamber with a suitable inlet andoutlet, one vbeing slightly above the other, an annular rib in said chamber between said openings, a disk mounted on said rib and with a central opening through it and a downwardly-extending annular flange to form the valve-seat, a cylinder in the lower part of said chamber, a piston-like valve operating in said cylinder with a stem extending up through the opening in said valve-seat and of smaller diameter than said opening, said valve-stem having a cone formed about it adjacent the valve with an inclined surface adapted to deflect a portion of the incoming water against the valve-seat.
  • a faucet having a chamber with a suitable inlet and outlet, a disk in said chamber above said inlet and outlet with an outlet-opening in it for the passage of fluid from below, a valve below said disk for controlling the passage ofthe fluid with the stem extending above said disk, means above said disk for controlling said valve, and a passage-way in said disk leading from above the disk and issuing near said outlet-opening in the disk, whereby the movement of vthe Huid through said outletopening will withdraw the uid from above said disk.
  • Afaucet having a chamber with asuitable inlet and outlet, a valve for controlling the passage of Huid therethrough, means mounted in connection with said chamber for opening the valve, an ejector th rough which the fluid passes through the faucet for drawing the fluid from said chamber, said ejector having two outletopenings side by side for the passage of the fluid, and a passage-way issuing between said two outletopenings and leading from said chamber in the faucet into which the iiuid is liable to be diverted.
  • a chamber with an inlet and outlet, and an ejector in the form of a disk mounted in said chamber to one side of the inlet and registering with the outlet, said disk having two outlet-openings leading from the inlet end of the chamber to the outlet and an.
  • a faucet having a vertical chamber with an inlet and outlet port, one on a higher level than the other, an annular rib in said chamber between the inlet and outlet, a disk resting upon said rib with a downwardly-extending flange to form a valve-seat, said seat-disk having a central opening, a valve in the lower part of said chamber with a stem extending upward through a hole in said seat-disk and of smaller diameter than said opening, an
  • ejector in the form of a disk resting upon said seat-disk hollow centrally on its under side and with two outlets therefrom and also a passage-way leading from above said disk out between said two outlet-openings, means for holding said ejector in place, and means for depressing the valve-stem.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Lift Valve (AREA)

Description

No. 804,673. PATENTED NOV. 14, 1905. L. J. RICE.
SELL` CLOSING PAUCET. APPLIUATION FILED MAY 31,1904.
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFIOE.
LEIVIS J. RICE, OF INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA, ASSIGNOR OF ONE-HALF TO FREANEY BROTHERS, OF INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA, A OOPARTNERSHIP.
SELF-CLOSING FAUCET.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented Nov. 14, 1905.
Application filed May 31, 1904. Serial No. 210.435.
10 (all whom it may concern.-
Be it known that I, LEWIS J. RICE, of Indianapolis, county of Marion, and State of Indiana, have invented a certain new and useful Self-Closing Faucet; and I do hereby declare that the following is a full, clear, and exact description thereof. reference being' had to the accompanying' drawings, in which like numerals refer to like parts.
The object of this invention is to improve the construction of faucets.
One feature of this invention consists in the means for cushioning the valve by water passing through, so that it will close without the thud or the pounding` common to faucets used in connection with fluid under pressure. Here this result is accomplished by detlecting a portion of the incoming water against the valve-seat d uring the closing of the valve, so that said deflected water will cushion the valve.
Another feature consists of the use of an ejector above the valve-seat instead of packing, said ejector withdrawing all the water that may pass into the upper part of the chamber in which the various parts of the device are mounted. The suction created by this ejector prevents the water escaping' upward outof said chamber.
The foregoing and the other features of the invention will be more clearly apparent from the accompanying drawings and the following description and claims.
ln the drawings, Figure 1 is a vertical longitudinal central section through the faucet while the valve is open, and Fig'. 2 while the valve is closed. Fig. 3 is a vertical transverse section on the line 3 3 of Fig. l, showing the ejector, valve-seat, and valve in elevation. Fig. 4: is a vertical section of the ejector on the line et of Fig'. 3. Fig. 5 is a central vertical section of the lower part of the valve mechanism, on an enlarged scale.
The faucet has an inlet 10, which leads to a vertical chamber 1l, and an outlet 12 leads from said vertical chamber. In said vertical chamber an annular' rib 13 is located immediately above the inlet and below the outlet, and the portion of the chamber below said annular rib is reduced in diameter and turned true to form a cylinder for the piston-valve l-l, that tits snugly lout loosely therein, so the water will exert an equal pressure on the valve at all points, thus maintaining it balanced. The depth of the cylinder is greater than the thickness of the valve, so that it has considerable vertical movement. The valveseat l5 rests upon said rib 13 loosely and consists of a downwardly-extending central portion that forms the valve-seat propel' and engages the packing' 16 in an annular depression in the top of the valve. The valve-seat has a central opening larger than the valve-stem 17, that passes centrally therethrough. A cone 18 is located about the lower end of the valvestem and at its junction with the valve. The diameter of the lower and largest part of this cone does not exceed the diameter of the hole through the seat 15, but is substantially the same. The inclination of this cone is suoli as to cause the incoming water as the valve is closing to be partially deflected against the seat, and such ydeflected water constitutes a water cushion between the seat and the valve that causes the valve to close gradually, and therefore the thumping' common to faucets when used with water under pressure is prevented.
An ejector 2O is placed upon the valve-seat 15 and held down by a threaded sleeve Q6 from the cap 25. It is a disk hollow on the under side and centrally, and it has ltwo outlet-openings 21 leading from below and one outletopening 29. from above and midway between the former two outlet-openings.
The stem 1T is tapered at its upper end and fits loosely in a central recess in the under side of a head Q3, connected with the handle .Z-I, as seen by the dotted lines in Fig. 1. Said head has on it cams that, as shown in Figs. 1 and 2, are engaged by cams on the cap Q5, that closes the vertical chamber 12.
In operation the handle 24E is turned so that the cams force the valve-stem and valve downward, moving the latter away from its seat, as seen in Fig. -1, so that water passes from the inlet-opening' 10 into the lower part of the vertical chamber and between the valve and valveseat and out through the central opening of the valve and through the outlet-openings 21 in the ejector 2() and thence through the faucet-outlet 12. All waterthat leaks or is forced into the upper part 11 of the vertical chamber above the ejector by following up the valvestem through the slight space between the valve-stem and the surrounding disk or ejector 2O is drawn out through the outlet-opening Q2 by the suction created by the l'low of water through the two outlet-openings 21. Hence packingabove is needless. When the valve is released, it immediately rises and closes, and this movement is thought to be due to the suction arising from the flow of water through the valve, for the valve is balanced in its cylinder or chamber, and it moves up to its seat with the same readiness as if actuated by a spring, and the force of its upward movement is such as to causea considerable thumping when the water is under pressure, as is common in most faucets, excepting for the means provided herein to prevent that result. As stated above, during the closing movement of the valve the water is partially deiiected by the cone against the'valve-seat above, and thus a water-cushion is provided which prevents the final closing act of the valve being so sudden as to make a noise. The same suction effect also draws any water that might rise into the upper part of the chamber out from the opening 22, and a faucet is provided without any spring and with a few simple parts herein specified which acts with positiveness and yet is free from noise at closing when under considerable water-pressure. Furthermore, the parts are readily removable, and the faucet will open automatically and let air into the pipes when the water-pressu re is removed and the stop and waste of the pipes is closed, whereby the pipes are allowed to drain.
One important consequence of the construction herein for preventing the th ud in the operation of the faucet with fluid under pressure is that when thevalve is released suddenly there is no vibratory movement of the pipes connected with the faucet or any back action whatever thereon.
What I claim as my invention, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is-
1. In a faucet, a vertical chamber with a suita'ole inlet and outlet, one being slightly above the other, an annular rib in said chamber between said openings, a disk mounted on said rib and with a central opening through it and a downwardly-extending annular ange to form the valve-seat, a cylinder in the lower portion of said chamber, a piston-like valve operating in said cylinder with a stem extending up through the opening in said valve-seat and of smaller diameter than said opening, a cone formed about the valve-stem adjacent the valve so that the diameter of no part of said cone shall exceed the diameter of the opening through the Valve-seat, and means for depressing the valve.
2. In a faucet, a vertical chamber with a suitable inlet andoutlet, one vbeing slightly above the other, an annular rib in said chamber between said openings, a disk mounted on said rib and with a central opening through it and a downwardly-extending annular flange to form the valve-seat, a cylinder in the lower part of said chamber, a piston-like valve operating in said cylinder with a stem extending up through the opening in said valve-seat and of smaller diameter than said opening, said valve-stem having a cone formed about it adjacent the valve with an inclined surface adapted to deflect a portion of the incoming water against the valve-seat.
3. A faucet having a chamber with a suitable inlet and outlet, a disk in said chamber above said inlet and outlet with an outlet-opening in it for the passage of fluid from below, a valve below said disk for controlling the passage ofthe fluid with the stem extending above said disk, means above said disk for controlling said valve, and a passage-way in said disk leading from above the disk and issuing near said outlet-opening in the disk, whereby the movement of vthe Huid through said outletopening will withdraw the uid from above said disk. l
4. Afaucet havinga chamber with asuitable inlet and outlet, a valve for controlling the passage of Huid therethrough, means mounted in connection with said chamber for opening the valve, an ejector th rough which the fluid passes through the faucet for drawing the fluid from said chamber, said ejector having two outletopenings side by side for the passage of the fluid, and a passage-way issuing between said two outletopenings and leading from said chamber in the faucet into which the iiuid is liable to be diverted.
5. In a faucet, a chamber with an inlet and outlet, and an ejector in the form of a disk mounted in said chamber to one side of the inlet and registering with the outlet, said disk having two outlet-openings leading from the inlet end of the chamber to the outlet and an.
ejector-opening leading from the other end of the chamber through said disk and issuing between said outlet-openings.
6. A faucet having a vertical chamber with an inlet and outlet port, one on a higher level than the other, an annular rib in said chamber between the inlet and outlet, a disk resting upon said rib with a downwardly-extending flange to form a valve-seat, said seat-disk having a central opening, a valve in the lower part of said chamber with a stem extending upward through a hole in said seat-disk and of smaller diameter than said opening, an
ejector in the form of a disk resting upon said seat-disk hollow centrally on its under side and with two outlets therefrom and also a passage-way leading from above said disk out between said two outlet-openings, means for holding said ejector in place, and means for depressing the valve-stem.
In witness whereof I have hereunto affixed my signature in the presence of the witnesses herein named.
LEWIS J. RICE.
Witnesses:
V. H. Locxwoon, N. ALLEMONG.
IOO
IIO
IZO
US21043504A 1904-05-31 1904-05-31 Self-closing faucet. Expired - Lifetime US804673A (en)

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