US2144857A - Sandglass - Google Patents

Sandglass Download PDF

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Publication number
US2144857A
US2144857A US71892A US7189236A US2144857A US 2144857 A US2144857 A US 2144857A US 71892 A US71892 A US 71892A US 7189236 A US7189236 A US 7189236A US 2144857 A US2144857 A US 2144857A
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Prior art keywords
valve
sand
glass
vent
apex
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Expired - Lifetime
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US71892A
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Schultz Hermann
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Individual
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G04HOROLOGY
    • G04FTIME-INTERVAL MEASURING
    • G04F1/00Apparatus which can be set and started to measure-off predetermined or adjustably-fixed time intervals without driving mechanisms, e.g. egg timers
    • G04F1/04Apparatus which can be set and started to measure-off predetermined or adjustably-fixed time intervals without driving mechanisms, e.g. egg timers by movement or acceleration due to gravity
    • G04F1/06Apparatus which can be set and started to measure-off predetermined or adjustably-fixed time intervals without driving mechanisms, e.g. egg timers by movement or acceleration due to gravity by flowing-away of a prefixed quantity of fine-granular or liquid materials, e.g. sand-glass, water-clock
    • GPHYSICS
    • G04HOROLOGY
    • G04FTIME-INTERVAL MEASURING
    • G04F7/00Apparatus for measuring unknown time intervals by non-electric means

Definitions

  • My invention relates to sand-glasses of the type comprising means for a rapid return of the sand from the measuring chamber to the storage chamber, and more particularly to a sand-glass in which a valve having a vent therein is provided between the storage chamber and the measuring chamber.
  • the objects of my invention are: first, to provide a sand-glass of this type, in which the opening and closing of the valve can be effected rapidly by reversing the glass; second, to produce a sand-glass, in which the movability of the valve will not be impaired by sand particles; third, to provide a valve construction which is not sensitive to the grinding action of the sand, and fourth, to afford accurate closing of the valve and of the vent, respectively, in either position of the valve.
  • a cylindrical container comprising an annular valve seat between the storage chamber and the measuring chamber, a conical cup-shaped valve having a vent in its apex and being adapted to drop freely from said seat in axial direction with respect to the container, and a fixed stop arranged to be contacted by the apex of said cup-shaped valve to limit the drop of the latter and simultaneously close the vent in its apex.
  • Fig. 1 shows a side view, partly in section, of a sand-glass, according to my invention in measuring position
  • Fig. 2 is a view similar to that of Fig. 1, of the glass in reversed position;
  • Fig. 3 is a cross-section of a valve body having a substantially cylindrical upper portion and a substantially conical base portion.
  • i denotes a glass cylinder provided with a scale I to measure the sand accumulating in the glass cylinder during a predetermined time.
  • the lovnr end of the cylinder 1 is secured in a base 3, while its upper open end is inserted in the lower 45 edge of a second cylindrical container 5.
  • An inwardly projecting annulus is provided on the inner wall of the container I adjacent the lower edge thereof.
  • the upper surface of the annulus I comprises an outer conical portion and an in- I0 ner portion 8 disposed substantially at right angles to the cylinder while the lower conical shape.
  • valve 8 drops from the seat 8 and its inner apex strikes the tip of the rod III.
  • annular opening is formed between the valve 8 and the annulus l, which is several times larger in diameter than the vent 'I and through which the sand returns rapidly to the storage chamber.
  • the sand is guided by the above-mentioned conical surface of the annulus I. No connection at all exists between the valve and the valve seat, and any collection of sand on'the valve seat is effectively avoided.
  • valve 8 drops immediately on its seat 8, owing to the short distance of the tip of rod l0 from the inner apex of the valve in closed position of the latter.
  • Fig. 3 shows a second embodiment of a valve having an annular flange ll, a cylindrical portion H, a conical portion ii, a recess l1, and a vent It.
  • the particular shape of the valve illustrated in Fig. 3 facilitates the flowing of the sand through the vent without leaving any residue.
  • An invertible sand-glass comprising a cylindrical container medially provided with an inwardly projecting annular valve seat, a substantially conical cup-shaped valve partitioning said container into two chambers and having an annular rim to contact said seat and a vent at its apex for slow flow of sand therethrough from one chamber to the other in one position of said sand-glass said valve being adapted to drop freely from said seat in axial direction with respect to said container, thereby permitting a rapid return flow of sand around the periphery of the valve, when the glass isinverted, and a fixed stop arranged to be contacted by the apex of said cup-shaped valve in said inverted position of the said glass to limit the drop of the valve and simultaneously close the vent in the latter.

Description

Jan. 24, 1939. H, SCHULTZ 2,144,857
SANDGLASS Filed March 51, 1936 War a n SC 4 U INVENTO R BY m;
-ATTORNEY Patented Jan. 24, 1939 PATENT OFFICE SANDGLASS Hermann Schultz,
Frankiort-on-the-Main, German Application March 31, 1936, Serial No. 71,892
1 Claim.
My invention relates to sand-glasses of the type comprising means for a rapid return of the sand from the measuring chamber to the storage chamber, and more particularly to a sand-glass in which a valve having a vent therein is provided between the storage chamber and the measuring chamber.
The objects of my invention are: first, to provide a sand-glass of this type, in which the opening and closing of the valve can be effected rapidly by reversing the glass; second, to produce a sand-glass, in which the movability of the valve will not be impaired by sand particles; third, to provide a valve construction which is not sensitive to the grinding action of the sand, and fourth, to afford accurate closing of the valve and of the vent, respectively, in either position of the valve.
I accomplish these objects by means of a cylindrical container comprising an annular valve seat between the storage chamber and the measuring chamber, a conical cup-shaped valve having a vent in its apex and being adapted to drop freely from said seat in axial direction with respect to the container, and a fixed stop arranged to be contacted by the apex of said cup-shaped valve to limit the drop of the latter and simultaneously close the vent in its apex.
My invention is illustratively exemplified in no the accompanying drawing, in which,
Fig. 1 shows a side view, partly in section, of a sand-glass, according to my invention in measuring position;
Fig. 2 is a view similar to that of Fig. 1, of the glass in reversed position;
Fig. 3 is a cross-section of a valve body having a substantially cylindrical upper portion and a substantially conical base portion.
Referring to the figures and particularly to Fig. l, i denotes a glass cylinder provided with a scale I to measure the sand accumulating in the glass cylinder during a predetermined time. The lovnr end of the cylinder 1 is secured in a base 3, while its upper open end is inserted in the lower 45 edge of a second cylindrical container 5. An inwardly projecting annulus is provided on the inner wall of the container I adjacent the lower edge thereof. The upper surface of the annulus I comprises an outer conical portion and an in- I0 ner portion 8 disposed substantially at right angles to the cylinder while the lower conical shape. with an annular axis to form a valve seat, surface of the annulus I is of A conical cup-shaped valve 0 flange disposed adiaeent its open end is seated on the valve seat 8, and provided with a vent I and a recess ll upper end of the container 5 is closed by means of -a screw cover 9 which carries axially of the cylinder a rod l0 projecting into the cup-shaped valve 8 and terminating at a point short of the apex of the latter. In the position of the sandglass shown in Fig. 1 the sand flows from the storage chamber 5 into the measuring chamber I at a rate predetermined by the diameter of the vent 1. when the sand-glass is reversed, as shown in Fig. 2, the valve 8 drops from the seat 8 and its inner apex strikes the tip of the rod III. In this position an annular opening is formed between the valve 8 and the annulus l, which is several times larger in diameter than the vent 'I and through which the sand returns rapidly to the storage chamber. During its flow in this direction the sand is guided by the above-mentioned conical surface of the annulus I. No connection at all exists between the valve and the valve seat, and any collection of sand on'the valve seat is effectively avoided.
When the glass is reversed once more, the valve 8 drops immediately on its seat 8, owing to the short distance of the tip of rod l0 from the inner apex of the valve in closed position of the latter.
Fig. 3 shows a second embodiment of a valve having an annular flange ll, a cylindrical portion H, a conical portion ii, a recess l1, and a vent It. The particular shape of the valve illustrated in Fig. 3 facilitates the flowing of the sand through the vent without leaving any residue.
I claim:
An invertible sand-glass comprising a cylindrical container medially provided with an inwardly projecting annular valve seat, a substantially conical cup-shaped valve partitioning said container into two chambers and having an annular rim to contact said seat and a vent at its apex for slow flow of sand therethrough from one chamber to the other in one position of said sand-glass said valve being adapted to drop freely from said seat in axial direction with respect to said container, thereby permitting a rapid return flow of sand around the periphery of the valve, when the glass isinverted, and a fixed stop arranged to be contacted by the apex of said cup-shaped valve in said inverted position of the said glass to limit the drop of the valve and simultaneously close the vent in the latter.
HERMAN SCHULTZ.
in its apex. The
US71892A 1936-03-31 1936-03-31 Sandglass Expired - Lifetime US2144857A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US71892A US2144857A (en) 1936-03-31 1936-03-31 Sandglass

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US71892A US2144857A (en) 1936-03-31 1936-03-31 Sandglass

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Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2529240A (en) * 1949-05-11 1950-11-07 William H Barrows Doll eye mechanism
US2589757A (en) * 1950-10-21 1952-03-18 Paul A Williams Toy of the fluent material operative type
US3103099A (en) * 1960-05-13 1963-09-10 Raymond J Hanks Timing apparatus
US3757460A (en) * 1971-12-30 1973-09-11 Marvin Glass & Associates Doll having collapsible torso portion with fluent material therein
US3874161A (en) * 1972-11-28 1975-04-01 Brodrene Asia A S Device for indicating used parking time
US3938315A (en) * 1974-06-20 1976-02-17 Paul Guilden Adjustable interval timer
US4049277A (en) * 1975-09-04 1977-09-20 Ideal Toy Corporation Bubble free die agitator
US4117666A (en) * 1977-10-03 1978-10-03 Henry Aguilar Quick reset timer
US4813030A (en) * 1987-07-23 1989-03-14 Kurt Jensen Resettable multiple timer
US5093815A (en) * 1990-04-23 1992-03-03 Rudolph James R Hourglass novelty apparatus having unequal chamber volumes
US6341518B1 (en) 1999-12-10 2002-01-29 U.E Systems, Inc. Ultrasonic standard

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2529240A (en) * 1949-05-11 1950-11-07 William H Barrows Doll eye mechanism
US2589757A (en) * 1950-10-21 1952-03-18 Paul A Williams Toy of the fluent material operative type
US3103099A (en) * 1960-05-13 1963-09-10 Raymond J Hanks Timing apparatus
US3757460A (en) * 1971-12-30 1973-09-11 Marvin Glass & Associates Doll having collapsible torso portion with fluent material therein
US3874161A (en) * 1972-11-28 1975-04-01 Brodrene Asia A S Device for indicating used parking time
US3938315A (en) * 1974-06-20 1976-02-17 Paul Guilden Adjustable interval timer
US4049277A (en) * 1975-09-04 1977-09-20 Ideal Toy Corporation Bubble free die agitator
US4117666A (en) * 1977-10-03 1978-10-03 Henry Aguilar Quick reset timer
US4813030A (en) * 1987-07-23 1989-03-14 Kurt Jensen Resettable multiple timer
US5093815A (en) * 1990-04-23 1992-03-03 Rudolph James R Hourglass novelty apparatus having unequal chamber volumes
US6341518B1 (en) 1999-12-10 2002-01-29 U.E Systems, Inc. Ultrasonic standard

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