US1095757A - Drainage means for drying-drums. - Google Patents

Drainage means for drying-drums. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1095757A
US1095757A US79510813A US1913795108A US1095757A US 1095757 A US1095757 A US 1095757A US 79510813 A US79510813 A US 79510813A US 1913795108 A US1913795108 A US 1913795108A US 1095757 A US1095757 A US 1095757A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
drum
shaft
stem
pipe
steam
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US79510813A
Inventor
George F Wentz
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
SPOTLESS STEAM SPONGER CO
Original Assignee
SPOTLESS STEAM SPONGER CO
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by SPOTLESS STEAM SPONGER CO filed Critical SPOTLESS STEAM SPONGER CO
Priority to US79510813A priority Critical patent/US1095757A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1095757A publication Critical patent/US1095757A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D21PAPER-MAKING; PRODUCTION OF CELLULOSE
    • D21FPAPER-MAKING MACHINES; METHODS OF PRODUCING PAPER THEREON
    • D21F5/00Dryer section of machines for making continuous webs of paper
    • D21F5/02Drying on cylinders

Definitions

  • This invention has reference to improvements in drainage means for drying drums
  • the drying drum is provided with means for the introduction of steam thereinto in order to produce the desired heat which is quite rapidly dissipated by the surface of the. drum, and, therefore, there is considerable condensation of steam within the drum, and unless some means be provided for the escape of the water of condensation its accumulation would soon become a burden, as well as materially cutting down the efiiciency of the device.
  • the steam pressure within the drum is uti lized to force the water of condensation from the lowermost part of the drum to the axis of rotation, and from this the waterfinds escape through a suitable channel or duct, but since in operation the water of ofi any outflow of steam and thereby pre-,
  • the pres- ,ent invention provides a duct within the .drum rotating with the drum, and this duct is so constructed and so related to the exterior waste pipe that it is in communication with the latter only while traveling through an arc of comparatively few degrees, which are extends'subst-antially equally on opposite sides of a radius extending from-the axis of rotation downwardly in avertical direction.
  • Figure 1 is an axial diametric section of a drying drum equipped with the present invention.
  • Fig. '2 is a similar view drawn to a larger scale than Fig. 1, through the drainage end of the supporting shaft and the drainage structure connected therewith.
  • Fig. 3 is a section on the line 33 of Fig, 2 with distant parts omitted.
  • drum 1 which. is usually made'of sheet metal of a character which readily transmits though it may he stated that the drumis customarily cylindrical without surface projections and is of a length and diameter suitable for the purpose.
  • I Y is usually made'of sheet metal of a character which readily transmits though it may he stated that the drumis customarily cylindrical without surface projections and is of a length and diameter suitable for the purpose.
  • the drum is mounted upona hollow shaft 2iwhich for a portion of its length within "Patented y- 5, 1914.
  • the drum is perforated. as indicated at 3, a
  • this plug or division wall may be steam tight within the shaft so that while steam finds ready entrance into the interior of the drum it will not pass the division wall or plug That end of the shaft 2 divided from the steam receivin end by, the plug 7v is indisated at San projects through the COII'Q-A spending head of the drum 1 and through t e corresponding bearing 4 treme end is screw threaded, as
  • the end 8 of the shaft 2 receives one end of a pipe 10, which end opens into the interior of the shaft section 8,'while this pipe 10 is of a length andis. readily disposed with relation to the longi tudinal axis of the shaft to extend to within a short distance of the inner peripheral wall of the drum, such distance being in practice approximatel one-fourth of an, inch, although the distance may be less, or greater.
  • the pipe 10 is freely open from end to' end and at that end remote from the shaft, andwhich may therefore be called the outer end of I the pipe, there is applied a shield or and ,at the exindicated guard 11 preferably expanding from the pipe, and this guard may be made of.
  • the shield 11 is shown as provided with a series of perforations 12, but this does not necessarily-confine the invention to the use of perforated v 7 metal, for any kind of a shield which will of the shaft guard the inlet end of the pipe 10 from the entrance of lar e particles will answer.
  • the guard 11 may e brought even closer to the inner peripheral wall of the drum than the pipe 10.
  • a nut 13 exteriorly shaped for the application of a suitabletool, the nut being customarily hexagonal on its exterior and is interiorly threaded to receive the shaft section 8.
  • the exterior diameter of the nut is reduced at the end remote from that receiving the shaft extension 8 into an axially extended neck 14 having an internal axial bore 15'opening freely into the interior extension 8, while that end of the neck 14 remote from the nut 13 is closed, as indicated at 15 and exteriorly threaded as indicated-at 16.
  • a sleeve 17 in which the stem may rotate, and applied to the threaded end 15 of the stem 1s a nut 18.
  • the nut 13 immediately about the stem 14 is undercut, as indicated at 19, to form a channel for the reception of a packing ring 20, and the correspond ng end of f Extending where joining roam?
  • the sleeve 17 is formed with an axially projecting flange 21 entering the undercut chanml 19 and engaging the packing ring 20.
  • the other end of the sleeve 171s formed with a similar axial flange 22 engaging a packing ring 23 lodged in an undercut channel 24 formed in the corresponding face of the nut 18.
  • a neck 25 having a longitudinal bore 26 opening intothe interior of the sleeve, and this neck where joining the'sleeve is contracted,
  • a'port 28 which may be, elongated in the direction, ,ofthe- I length of the stem. and comparatively nar-, row circumferentially, so 'as to match the, shape of. the passage through the fneck- 25.
  • the sleeve 17.i., .,.-,'1heouter end oftheneck 25 is threaded as'findicatedat- 29 forthe reception of a pipe 3Q designed to serve as a discharge pipe for carryingwater of colndensation to any. suitable placeof dis osa v
  • the port 28 is" so lrelated to the pipe, 10
  • a rotatable steam drum having a sustaining shaft rotatable with the drum, said shaft having at one end a hollow chamber extending from the interior of the drum to the exterior thereof, a pipe extending radially from the hollow chamber within the drum to a point closely adjacent to the inner peripheral wall of the drum and there open, said pipe being also in freecommunicacation with the chamber within the shaft, an axially extended stem carried by the end of the shaft exterior to the drum,said stem having a bore closed at one end and at the other end open to the chamber within the shaft and also provided with a port between its ends, a sleeve surrounding the stem and provided with a neck having a bore communicating with the interior of the sleeve and in position to communicate with the interior of the stem through the port therein during the rotative movement of the stem, and means for securing the sleeve on the stem in fluid tight relation thereto and permitting rotative movements of the stem with the sleeve stationary.
  • a rotatable drum having a hollow shaft provided at one end with means for the introduction of steam, said shaft having passages therethrough for the flow of steam to the interior of the drum and also having one end formed into a chamber separate from the steam receiving portion of the shaft and extending to the exterior of the drum, an open ended pipe carried by the shaft and communicating at one end with the end chamber in the shaft and at the other end approaching closely to the inner peripheral wall of the drum, a nut applied to the chambered end of the shaft exterior to the drum, said nut being provided with an axially extended hollow stem closed at the end remote from the nut and said nut having an undercut channel formed therein about the stem, and the latter being threaded at its closed end, an undercut nut adapted to the threaded end of the stem, and a sleeve applied to the stem between the two nuts and having terminal flanges adapted to enter the undercut grooves of the nuts to confine packing therein, the sleeve having a laterally extended neck for the attachment of a drainage pipe
  • a rotatable drum having means for the introduction of steam therein, a drainage pipe within the drum and rotatable therewith and extending from the axial portion of the drum into close relation with the inner peripheral wall of the drum, a fluid duct to which the pipe is connected and extending to the exterior of the drum, and drainage connections with said duct comprising spaced nuts, one of which is adapted to be applied to the drainage duct and provided with a hollow stem 'to which the other nut is applied, and a relatively fixed sleeve confined to the stem by the nuts, said sleeve having a duct leading therefrom and the stem being providedwith a port movable by the rotative movements of the drum into and out of communication with the duct carried by the sleeve.

Description

Patented May 5, 1914.
G. F. WENI'Z.
DRAINAGE MEANS FOB. DRYING mums. APPLICATION FILED OOT.14,.1913. 1,095,757.
I ATTORNEY W ITNE SSES To all whom it may concern I .Be it known that I, GEoRcEF. VENTZ, a
UNITED. s'rAT s PATENT OFFICE- GEORGE E. WENTZ, or LAKEWOOD, onro, assrenon 'rosro'rLEss' STEAM sroNoE'a 00., or CLEVELAND, 01110. w
pnamAe MEANS FOR DRYING-DRI-IMS.
Specification or Letters Patent.
Application filed October 14, 1913. Serial No.-795,108.
citizen of the United States, residing at Lakewood, in the county of Cuyahoga and State of Ohio, have invented a new and useful Drainage Means for Drying-Drums, of which the following is a specification,
This invention has reference to improvements in drainage means for drying drums,
and its object is to provide an automatic means which will vkeep a drying drum intowhich steam is introduced for heating purposes reasonably free from water of condensation, and this Without any material waste of live steam.
In accordance with the present invention the drying drum is provided with means for the introduction of steam thereinto in order to produce the desired heat which is quite rapidly dissipated by the surface of the. drum, and, therefore, there is considerable condensation of steam within the drum, and unless some means be provided for the escape of the water of condensation its accumulation would soon become a burden, as well as materially cutting down the efiiciency of the device.
Various devices have been proposed for ridding the drum of the water'of condensation, but these devices have either been inefiicient or require suflicient mechanism to make them expensive to construct and more or less unreliable in operation.
In accordance with the present invention the steam pressure within the drum is uti lized to force the water of condensation from the lowermost part of the drum to the axis of rotation, and from this the waterfinds escape through a suitable channel or duct, but since in operation the water of ofi any outflow of steam and thereby pre-,
venting waste. To accomplish this the pres- ,ent invention .provides a duct within the .drum rotating with the drum, and this duct is so constructed and so related to the exterior waste pipe that it is in communication with the latter only while traveling through an arc of comparatively few degrees, which are extends'subst-antially equally on opposite sides of a radius extending from-the axis of rotation downwardly in avertical direction.
The invention. will be best understood from a consideration of the following dc tailed description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings forming part of this specification, with the further understanding that while the drawings; show a practical embodiment of the invention, the latter is not confined to any exact conformity with the showing of the drawings but may be changed and modified-s0 long'as such changes and modifications mark no material departure from the salient features of the invent-ion. I
In the drawings :Figure 1 is an axial diametric section of a drying drum equipped with the present invention. Fig. '2 is a similar view drawn to a larger scale than Fig. 1, through the drainage end of the supporting shaft and the drainage structure connected therewith. Fig. 3 is a section on the line 33 of Fig, 2 with distant parts omitted. a
Referring to the drawings there is shown a drum 1 which. is usually made'of sheet metal of a character which readily transmits though it may he stated that the drumis customarily cylindrical without surface projections and is of a length and diameter suitable for the purpose. I Y
The drum is mounted upona hollow shaft 2iwhich for a portion of its length within "Patented y- 5, 1914.
the drum is perforated. as indicated at 3, a
and this shaft is mountedinl bearings 4 at opposite ends exterior to the drum. At one end the shaftis coupled to a steam supply pipe 5 by means of a coupling 6 permitting the shaft to turn without it being necessary that the pipe 5 should turn with it. SWiv-- eled joints suitable for the purpose of known and common construction and-consequently need no description, since the manner of,
connecting upthe shaft to the steam supply pipe forms no part of the present invention.
part ofthe shaft, and this plug or division wall may be steam tight within the shaft so that while steam finds ready entrance into the interior of the drum it will not pass the division wall or plug That end of the shaft 2 divided from the steam receivin end by, the plug 7v is indisated at San projects through the COII'Q-A spending head of the drum 1 and through t e corresponding bearing 4 treme end is screw threaded, as
at 9. a v
Within the drum the end 8 of the shaft 2 receives one end of a pipe 10, which end opens into the interior of the shaft section 8,'while this pipe 10 is of a length andis. readily disposed with relation to the longi tudinal axis of the shaft to extend to within a short distance of the inner peripheral wall of the drum, such distance being in practice approximatel one-fourth of an, inch, although the distance may be less, or greater.- The pipe 10 is freely open from end to' end and at that end remote from the shaft, andwhich may therefore be called the outer end of I the pipe, there is applied a shield or and ,at the exindicated guard 11 preferably expanding from the pipe, and this guard may be made of. any
pervious material, such as perforated metal or gauze. In the drawingthe shield 11 is shown as provided with a series of perforations 12, but this does not necessarily-confine the invention to the use of perforated v 7 metal, for any kind of a shield which will of the shaft guard the inlet end of the pipe 10 from the entrance of lar e particles will answer. The guard 11 may e brought even closer to the inner peripheral wall of the drum than the pipe 10.
Adapted to the threaded end 9 of the extension 8 of the shaft 2 is a nut 13 exteriorly shaped for the application of a suitabletool, the nut being customarily hexagonal on its exterior and is interiorly threaded to receive the shaft section 8. The exterior diameter of the nut is reduced at the end remote from that receiving the shaft extension 8 into an axially extended neck 14 having an internal axial bore 15'opening freely into the interior extension 8, while that end of the neck 14 remote from the nut 13 is closed, as indicated at 15 and exteriorly threaded as indicated-at 16.
Applied to the stem 14. between the nut 13 and the threaded end 15 of the stem is a sleeve 17 in which the stem may rotate, and applied to the threaded end 15 of the stem 1s a nut 18. The nut 13 immediately about the stem 14 is undercut, as indicated at 19, to form a channel for the reception of a packing ring 20, and the correspond ng end of f Extending where joining roam? the sleeve 17 is formed with an axially projecting flange 21 entering the undercut chanml 19 and engaging the packing ring 20. The other end of the sleeve 171s formed with a similar axial flange 22 engaging a packing ring 23 lodged in an undercut channel 24 formed in the corresponding face of the nut 18. By this arrangement the sleeve 17 may be held against rotation, while the stem 14: rotates with the nut13 and shaft 2, and the packing rings 20 and 23'effectually prevent leakage between the sleeve 17fand the stem 14.
radially from the sleeve 17 isa neck 25 having a longitudinal bore 26 opening intothe interior of the sleeve, and this neck where joining the'sleeve is contracted,
asindicated-at 27 1n Fig.3,"but may1 be .elongated in the directionof'thelengt of the sleeve.
iFormed in the stem 14 is a'port 28which may be, elongated in the direction, ,ofthe- I length of the stem. and comparatively nar-, row circumferentially, so 'as to match the, shape of. the passage through the fneck- 25.
the sleeve 17.i., .,.-,'1heouter end oftheneck 25 is threaded as'findicatedat- 29 forthe reception of a pipe 3Q designed to serve as a discharge pipe for carryingwater of colndensation to any. suitable placeof dis osa v The port 28 is" so lrelated to the pipe, 10
. that when the-latter has its open .end lowermost the port 28 isjcoinjcidentwith the bore of the-neck 25 and consequently there is a free passage from the interior iof the drum at the lower portion thereof-through the pipe 10 into the continuation v8 of. the shaft 2,.thenceby the bore-15 in the stem 1 1 to the port 28, and byway of the latter into the bore 26 of the neck 25, and to the pipe 30,
and under these circumstances the pressure of steam within the drum will cause water of condensation collected inthe lower portion of the drum to flow out therefrom by the route described. the drum rotates the port 28 is quickly broughtoutof coincidence with the bore ofthe neck 25 and communicationbetween the interiorof the drum and v the exhaust pipe v30 is shut off, so that there 11!) is no esca eof live steam'from the drum. This condition,continuesduring the major portion of they rotative movemeht of the drum,wat-er of condensation accumulatin in the meantime,-and ultimately the pipe is again brought with its free end downward and will dip into any water which may "have A accumulated inthe drum, so that whentha port 28 again opens to the bore 26 more water will be forced out of the drum. This operation is repeated each-time the drum rotates, so that the drum iskept nearly free from water of condensation with little or no loss -of live steam, whiletljiej-tnne flame which the exhaust pm 30 1s ihcmnmhhicaf 1:30
tion with the interior of the drum marks but a small fraction of the rotative movement of the drum, but practice has demonstrated that this movement though covering but a few degrees of the rotative movement of the drum is ample to maintain the drum quite free from water of condensation.
lVhat is claimed is 1 A rotatable steam drum having a sustaining shaft rotatable with the drum, said shaft having at one end a hollow chamber extending from the interior of the drum to the exterior thereof, a pipe extending radially from the hollow chamber within the drum to a point closely adjacent to the inner peripheral wall of the drum and there open, said pipe being also in freecommunicacation with the chamber within the shaft, an axially extended stem carried by the end of the shaft exterior to the drum,said stem having a bore closed at one end and at the other end open to the chamber within the shaft and also provided with a port between its ends, a sleeve surrounding the stem and provided with a neck having a bore communicating with the interior of the sleeve and in position to communicate with the interior of the stem through the port therein during the rotative movement of the stem, and means for securing the sleeve on the stem in fluid tight relation thereto and permitting rotative movements of the stem with the sleeve stationary.
2. A rotatable drum having a hollow shaft provided at one end with means for the introduction of steam, said shaft having passages therethrough for the flow of steam to the interior of the drum and also having one end formed into a chamber separate from the steam receiving portion of the shaft and extending to the exterior of the drum, an open ended pipe carried by the shaft and communicating at one end with the end chamber in the shaft and at the other end approaching closely to the inner peripheral wall of the drum, a nut applied to the chambered end of the shaft exterior to the drum, said nut being provided with an axially extended hollow stem closed at the end remote from the nut and said nut having an undercut channel formed therein about the stem, and the latter being threaded at its closed end, an undercut nut adapted to the threaded end of the stem, and a sleeve applied to the stem between the two nuts and having terminal flanges adapted to enter the undercut grooves of the nuts to confine packing therein, the sleeve having a laterally extended neck for the attachment of a drainage pipe, andthe stem having a port therethrough in position to be brought into matching relation with the troduction of steam,.said shaft having passages therethrough for the flow of steam to the interior of the drum and also having one end formed into a chamber separate from the steam receiving portion of the shaft and extending to the exteriorof the drum, an open ended pipe carried by the shaft and communicating at one end with the end chamber in the shaft and at the other end approaching closely to the inner peripheral wall of the drum, a nut applied to the chambered end of the shaft exterior to the drum, said nut being provided with an axially extended hollow stem closed at the end remote from the nut and said nut having an undercut channel formed therein aboutthe stem and the latter being threaded at its closed end, an undercut nut adapted to the threaded end of the stem, and a sleeve applied to the stem between the two nuts and having terminal flanges adapted to enter the undercut grooves of the nuts to confine packing therein, the sleeve having a laterally extended neck for the attachment of a drainage pipe, and the stem having a port therethrough in position to be brought into matching relation with the neck during the rotative movement of the drum and shaft, the pipe carried by the shaft within the drum having its free end provided with an exterior screen for preventing entrance of foreign bodies 'into the pipe.
4. A rotatable drum having means for the introduction of steam therein, a drainage pipe within the drum and rotatable therewith and extending from the axial portion of the drum into close relation with the inner peripheral wall of the drum, a fluid duct to which the pipe is connected and extending to the exterior of the drum, and drainage connections with said duct comprising spaced nuts, one of which is adapted to be applied to the drainage duct and provided with a hollow stem 'to which the other nut is applied, and a relatively fixed sleeve confined to the stem by the nuts, said sleeve having a duct leading therefrom and the stem being providedwith a port movable by the rotative movements of the drum into and out of communication with the duct carried by the sleeve.
In testimony, that I claim the foregoing as my own, I have. hereto aflixed my sigma-
US79510813A 1913-10-14 1913-10-14 Drainage means for drying-drums. Expired - Lifetime US1095757A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US79510813A US1095757A (en) 1913-10-14 1913-10-14 Drainage means for drying-drums.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US79510813A US1095757A (en) 1913-10-14 1913-10-14 Drainage means for drying-drums.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1095757A true US1095757A (en) 1914-05-05

Family

ID=3163964

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US79510813A Expired - Lifetime US1095757A (en) 1913-10-14 1913-10-14 Drainage means for drying-drums.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1095757A (en)

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2434795A (en) * 1944-07-01 1948-01-20 Westfield River Paper Company Method and machine for laminating
US2459643A (en) * 1945-04-21 1949-01-18 Parker Appliance Co Swivel coupling
US2492494A (en) * 1947-09-05 1949-12-27 Mueller Co Meter connection
US2628433A (en) * 1950-05-25 1953-02-17 Scott Paper Co Yankee drier
US2993282A (en) * 1957-09-19 1961-07-25 Beloit Iron Works Dryer drainage control
DE1200748B (en) * 1958-11-05 1965-09-09 Johnson Corp Support device for the components of a condensate suction device located in a steam-heated dryer drum
DE1753679B1 (en) * 1958-11-05 1971-09-09 Johnson Corp Inlet shoe of a condensate suction device
US4142741A (en) * 1976-03-15 1979-03-06 Ermeto-Armaturen Gmbh Pivotal screwed fitting
US4384412A (en) * 1981-04-20 1983-05-24 Beloit Corporation Dryer drum siphon
US20130200614A1 (en) * 2012-02-08 2013-08-08 Szu-Fang Tsai Device for pivotably connecting hydraulic line to hydraulic brake of bicycle

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2434795A (en) * 1944-07-01 1948-01-20 Westfield River Paper Company Method and machine for laminating
US2459643A (en) * 1945-04-21 1949-01-18 Parker Appliance Co Swivel coupling
US2492494A (en) * 1947-09-05 1949-12-27 Mueller Co Meter connection
US2628433A (en) * 1950-05-25 1953-02-17 Scott Paper Co Yankee drier
US2993282A (en) * 1957-09-19 1961-07-25 Beloit Iron Works Dryer drainage control
DE1200748B (en) * 1958-11-05 1965-09-09 Johnson Corp Support device for the components of a condensate suction device located in a steam-heated dryer drum
DE1753679B1 (en) * 1958-11-05 1971-09-09 Johnson Corp Inlet shoe of a condensate suction device
US4142741A (en) * 1976-03-15 1979-03-06 Ermeto-Armaturen Gmbh Pivotal screwed fitting
US4384412A (en) * 1981-04-20 1983-05-24 Beloit Corporation Dryer drum siphon
US20130200614A1 (en) * 2012-02-08 2013-08-08 Szu-Fang Tsai Device for pivotably connecting hydraulic line to hydraulic brake of bicycle

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1095757A (en) Drainage means for drying-drums.
US2136898A (en) Drain valve
CA2047907C (en) Device for removal of condensate from a steam-heated drying cylinder
US1465097A (en) Regulating centkieugal pumps
US2752197A (en) Rotary nozzle for soot blowers and the like
US2437004A (en) Steam head for drier drums
US1108077A (en) Drying-cylinder.
US550988A (en) Drying-cylinder
US1402504A (en) Cleaning device for oil wells
US1586220A (en) Drying cylinder
US2052827A (en) Valve
US1165794A (en) Turbine-blower.
US2313322A (en) Steam joint
US1662095A (en) Double-wall venturi steam fitting
US1237309A (en) Liquid-operated tipping-jack.
US1777608A (en) Valve
US784821A (en) Apparatus for removing water from paper-drying cylinders.
US636909A (en) Hydrant.
US929561A (en) Hose-coupling.
US955097A (en) Rotary stem-joint.
US2718234A (en) Hygroscopic air escape valve
US951771A (en) Rotary steam-joint.
US1201990A (en) Valve.
US1637327A (en) Drainage of steam chambers
US1181099A (en) Steam-pipe joint.