US27285A - Improvement in mole-plows - Google Patents

Improvement in mole-plows Download PDF

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US27285A
US27285A US27285DA US27285A US 27285 A US27285 A US 27285A US 27285D A US27285D A US 27285DA US 27285 A US27285 A US 27285A
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mole
sword
improvement
point
roller
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E02HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING; FOUNDATIONS; SOIL SHIFTING
    • E02FDREDGING; SOIL-SHIFTING
    • E02F5/00Dredgers or soil-shifting machines for special purposes
    • E02F5/02Dredgers or soil-shifting machines for special purposes for digging trenches or ditches
    • E02F5/10Dredgers or soil-shifting machines for special purposes for digging trenches or ditches with arrangements for reinforcing trenches or ditches; with arrangements for making or assembling conduits or for laying conduits or cables
    • E02F5/102Dredgers or soil-shifting machines for special purposes for digging trenches or ditches with arrangements for reinforcing trenches or ditches; with arrangements for making or assembling conduits or for laying conduits or cables operatively associated with mole-ploughs, coulters

Description

UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
GEORGE L. GRIFFIN AND J. H. OARPER, OF DALLAS CITY, ILLINOIS.
IMPROVEMENT IN MOLEPLOWS.
Specication formingpart of Letters Patent No. 27,285, dated February 28, 1860.
To all whom it may concern Be it known that we, GEORGE L. GRIFFIN and J. H. GARPER, of Dallas City, in the county of Hancock and State of Illinois, have invented certain new and useful Improvements inMole-Plows for Forming UnderDrains, of which the following is a full, clear, and exact description, reference being had to thc accompanying drawings, making part ot' this specilication, in which- Figure l represents a side elevation of an under-drain or mole plow embracing our improvements Fig. 2 represents a similar elevation, showing the supports of the beam in the position they occupy when adjusted to form the drain with a descent. Fig. 3 represents an elevation of the rear end of the beam and its supporting-frame, and Fig. I represents an elevation of the front end of the beam and its adjustable support.
y Among the most serious diiculties in the operation of forming uuderfdrains is the great amount of power that is required to draw the mole through the earth, the loss of' time thereby, and consequently greatly increasing the expense and rendering the operation too laborious.
To diminish the draft of the mole-plow, so that it can be worked with less power and with greater facility, is the object ot' one branch of our improvement; and it consists in constructing the sword (which connects the beam with the mole-plow) ot' an angular or pointed form, having its cutting-edge terminating iu a point by the convergence ot' an advancing and receding angle in advance of and above the point of the mole, whereby the sword will be caused to penetrate and pass through the earth more easily than if it were straight. Moreover7 this pointed sword braces and stcadies A the mole during the operation, because the two branches or angles receding from the point make a double oblique brace in the ground, and thus the single sword performs the duty c and possesses the advantages of the colter and standard as heretofore combined.
In the accompanyiugdrawin gs, A represents the beam7 to the rear portion of which the sword that carries the mole is firmly secured. An adj listing-frame consisting of two uprights, B B and D D, is secured at each end of the beam, so as to be capable of vertical adjustment, by means of screws b d, swiveled to the frame beneath the beam and passing through anut in the latter.
The rear adjusting-frame, B, carries a roller, O, which is made concave, and it also passes over the opening made by the sword, and thus renders it certain to be properly closed. The front adjusting-frame carries an axle with a roller, E, on each end, which serves to support the frame and this end of the beam. By these adjusting-frames the depth of the drain may be varied and made more or less inclined.
The sword consists of a single piece of wrought-iron made pointed, with its upper part, F, advancing from the beam and its lower part, G, receding from the point to the back of the mole, and the angles of the two meet in a point, a, in advance ofthe mole, and at such a distance above it that the point a of the sword shall always be below the surface ofthe ground. This construction of the sword, it will be seen, forms a double oblique brace to the mole in the soil and keeps the mole steady without obvious that the draft ofthe machine win be greatlyreduced, because the sword leads with its point easily piercing the soil, and the cutting-edges, rapidly retreating from the point, sever the soil with comparatively little or no resistance. Moreover, by this angular sword no colter or independentleadingcutter is necessary.
The mole I is of the usual form, being fiat on its under side, convex on its top and sides, and pointed, with its back or top rising from the point with a gradual curve to the rear end. Its iat portion determines the bottom of the ditch or drain and its sides and top the walls or arch thereof. A follower having a transverse depression in the middle of its length may be connected iexibly to the. rear ot' the mole.
The second part of our .improvement is for the purpose ot' closing the opening made by the sword in the surface of the soil more effectually than has hitherto been done, to prevent the water running into the drain from the outside; and as under-drains are frequently choked and closed up from this cause, it is found necessary to employ a man to follow the machine and close the opening, so imperfect are the devices of the machines hitherto employed to accomplish it.
The inclined rear edge of the upper branch, F, of the sword, it will be seen, forms an obtuse angle with lthe surface of the ground, and in the apex of this angle we have arranged the closing-roller J, mounted so as to turn on its axis in the front end of a spring arm or reach, K, whose rear end may be hinged or otherwise secured to the adjusting-frame B or under side of the beam A.
The spring-reach consists of a` curved plate of tem peredsteel, and should be of such length that when the mole has reached the depth of the intended drain the rear-h or arm will be compressed in the direction of its length, and the tendency therefore of the roller J is constantly to press forward; but as it is arrested against the inclined back ofthe sword the compressed force of the spring is directed downward and holds the roller firmly upon the ground.
In addition to the pressure of the spring, it will be observed thatihe back of the sword holds the roller down and only allows it to rise againsttheincreased compression ofthe sprin greach, as shown by red lines in Fig. 1, so that while the roller may rise to pass over stones, hillocks, and other obstructions, it will be always pressed by Athe conjoint action of thel spring and inclined back of the sword upon the soil with sufficient force to close the openingeffectually. Crossinghollowsordepressions does not interfere with the action of the roller or the joint action of the sword, as the couipressed force of the spring always crowds it into the apex of the angle formed by the sword and surface of the ground, as shown by red lines in Fig. 2.
The roller is made concave, or of two concs with their apices united together directly over the openings in the ground; or it may be of any other proper shape suitable for the purpose.
. The spring-arm should be made sufficiently strong and elastic to insure its proper action, and also of such length that it may have the requisite degree of compressed force as it extends forward beneath the inclined back of the sword.
Our machine is operated by horse-power provided with a windlass and rope or chain, by which it is connected to the front end of the beam.
The mole may be adjusted to cut a drain from a depth of fourteen inches to five feet below the surface ofthe ground, and it is obvious that the supporting-rollers may be adjusted so as to cause the lnole to form the drain parallel or thereabout to the surface of the ground, or to accord with an inclination lhaving a decent of about three feet and a length'of about ten rods over rough and uneven ground.
What we claim as our improvement is- Constructing the sword with an advancing and receding angle, which converge in a point in advance of the point of the mole and directly aboveit, in combination with said mole, inthe manner and for the purposes herein fully described.
In testimony whereof' we have hereunto signed our names.
GEORGE L. GRIFFIN. J. H. CARPER. Witnesses:
L. H. DoTY, HENRY F. BLACK.
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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2649747A (en) * 1947-12-01 1953-08-25 Francis B Ryan Cutting blade for ditching and cable laying machines
US3659426A (en) * 1970-03-26 1972-05-02 Robert H Caldwell Cable laying plow
US3792439A (en) * 1969-08-19 1974-02-12 Siemens Ag Storage arrangement for program controlled telecommunication exchange installations
US3843953A (en) * 1972-06-29 1974-10-22 Ibm Apparatus for controlling functionally severable parts of a computer system
US4127073A (en) * 1977-06-13 1978-11-28 Blair Calvin B Subsoil tillage tooth

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2649747A (en) * 1947-12-01 1953-08-25 Francis B Ryan Cutting blade for ditching and cable laying machines
US3792439A (en) * 1969-08-19 1974-02-12 Siemens Ag Storage arrangement for program controlled telecommunication exchange installations
US3659426A (en) * 1970-03-26 1972-05-02 Robert H Caldwell Cable laying plow
US3843953A (en) * 1972-06-29 1974-10-22 Ibm Apparatus for controlling functionally severable parts of a computer system
US4127073A (en) * 1977-06-13 1978-11-28 Blair Calvin B Subsoil tillage tooth

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