US2968086A - Peening shot nozzle reciprocating apparatus - Google Patents

Peening shot nozzle reciprocating apparatus Download PDF

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US2968086A
US2968086A US746752A US74675258A US2968086A US 2968086 A US2968086 A US 2968086A US 746752 A US746752 A US 746752A US 74675258 A US74675258 A US 74675258A US 2968086 A US2968086 A US 2968086A
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peening
crank
link
shot
housing
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US746752A
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Henry O Fuchs
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METAL IMPROVEMENT EQUIPMENT CO
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METAL IMPROVEMENT EQUIPMENT CO
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B24GRINDING; POLISHING
    • B24CABRASIVE OR RELATED BLASTING WITH PARTICULATE MATERIAL
    • B24C9/00Appurtenances of abrasive blasting machines or devices, e.g. working chambers, arrangements for handling used abrasive material

Definitions

  • This invention relates generally to shot peening equipment and more particularly concerns improvements in shot peening apparatus wherein peening nozzles are reciprocated, by which one actuator can be used to provide selective active reciprocation of peening nozzles at different locations relative to a shot peening zone in order to obtain thorough peening treatment of work inserted in said zone.
  • the invention is broadly directed to the problem of simplifying the arrangement of apparatus for reciprocating peening nozzles at different locations, for example above a peening zone and at one side thereof, so that only one actuator is needed for reciprocating the nozzles at these different locations.
  • Such simplification of the equipment and reduction of the number of actuators needed to only one very clearly produces advantages in cost and simplification of fabrication and use of the peening equipment.
  • nozzle means for jetting shot at work inserted into a peening zone within a housing, the nozzle means being selectively actively reciprocable at spaced locations relative to the peening zone.
  • the nozzle means is preferably reciprocable transversely above the peening zone and up and down at one side thereof for subjecting the work to thorough peening treatment.
  • means for carrying and selectively actively reciprocating the nozzle means including an actuator, a pair of supports such as shafts carried by the housing, and linkage means reciprocable by the actuator on alternate of the supports or shafts for alternately transmitting reciprocation to the nozzle means at the spaced locations referred to.
  • the linkage means include a pair of cranks angularly rotatable on the respective shafts, and connector means actively connectible with either of the cranks to transmit angular reciprocation therethrough.
  • the single actuator is operatively connected with the cranks either of which may be blocked against rotation so that the other crank is angularly reciprocable by the actuator for transmitting reciprocation to the shaft carrying that crank and the nozzle means associated with that shaft.
  • the invention contemplates the provision of a third shaft angularly reciprocable by the actuator, a third crank on that third shaft, and a link connected with the third shaft and supporting the nozzle means for reciprocation, that link being selectively connectible with either of the pair of cranks associated with the two different nozzle locations. 7
  • Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a peening machine of the preferred type to be described
  • Fig. 2 is a section taken on line 2-2 of Fig. 1;
  • Fig. 3 shows the linkage means and actuator seen in States Patent 4 'ice ' V Patented Jan.'17, 196 1 Fig. 1 with one crank of the linkage means blocked against rotation;
  • Fig. 4 is a section taken on line 44 of Fig. 3;
  • Fig. 5 is a view similar to Fig. 3 showing the other crank blocked against rotation
  • Fig. 6 is a vertical section taken through the housing of a modified peening machine showing the arrangement of the nozzles and linkage means within the housing;
  • Fig. 7 is a section taken on line 7-7 of Fig. 6.
  • the peening machine 10 is shown to include an upright housing 11 having a door or closure 12 hinge supported by one wall of the housing to enable insertion of work into a peening zone within the housing.
  • the Work indicated by the broken lines 14 in Fig. 6 is adapted to be supported by the rotary carrier 15 which is rotated by the motor driven equipment generally shown at 16 in Fig. 1.
  • Shot particles falling off the work are tumbled downward within a tapering hopper 22 below the housing 11 and then are directed laterally by an enclosed conduit or chute 23 discharging into a reservoir 24 as shown in Fig. 2.
  • the reservoir comprises the lowest portion of a vertically elongated housing 25 containing a continuous bucket elevator 26 operable to lift the shot collecting at 27 in the reservoir upwardly within the housing and thereafter discharge the shot to a hopper, not shown, for supply to the shot conduits 19, as desired.
  • the chute 23 has a neck 127 fitting over and receiving the lowermost portion of y the hopper 22, and it also has a flange 28 removably attached by wing nut 29 to the side of the reservoir 24 so as to deliver the shot in the chute through the entrance 30 to the reservoir.
  • nozzles 17 are supported on rods 132 and 32 slidably adjustable in clamp mechanisms 133 and 33, the latter being angularly adjustable for angularly orienting the nozzles in space above and at one side of the peening zone, nozzle 17 being directed downwardly toward the peening zone and nozzle 13 being directed transversely toward the peening zone.
  • the upper and lower clamp mechanisms 133 and 33 are in turncarried by the upper and lower vertically staggered shafts 134 and 34 which are carried by and project through the housing wall 13 and have parallel horizontal axes.
  • cranks 35 and 36 Connected on the shafts 134 and 34 to rotate them are upper and lower vertically staggered cranks 35 and 36, these being outside the housing wall 13 whereas the nozzles are inside the housing.
  • the cranks are preferably but not necessarily of equal length, and they are both connected with a single actuator 37, the lower crank 36 being pivotally connected at 38 with the actuator pis ton rod 39 and the upper crank 35 being pivotally connected at 40 with a connector link 41 supporting the actuator'37 at 42.
  • the actuator will be understood as being reciprocable, as for example by hydraulic thereto through lines 43.
  • nozzles 17 and 18 are selectively actively reciprocable along arcs'by the one actuator 37. This is, accomplished by actively con- 1 necting one of the cranks 35 and 36 with the actuator,
  • crank 35 is blocked against angular reciprocation by a lock pin 45 having a handle 46 for inserting the pin into a hole 47 in the crank 35 and into a bore-48in a boss 49 carried by the housing wall 13. Accordingly under these conditions the crank 35 cannot rotate whereas the crank 36 is angularly reciprocable by the actuator so as to transmit angular reciprocation to the nozzle 13 which pivots up and down at one side of the peening zone.
  • a lock pin 45 having a handle 46 for inserting the pin into a hole 47 in the crank 35 and into a bore-48in a boss 49 carried by the housing wall 13.
  • crank 35 is reciprocated by the actuator and reciprocating the upper' nozzle 17 in a transverse angular course above the peening zone-and directed downwardly toward the part inserted therein.
  • linkage means including the cranks 35 and 36 and the link 41 is reciprocable by the actuator'37 on alternate of the shafts 34 for alternatelyreciprocating the nozzles 17 and 18 above and-at one side of the peening zone.
  • a housing wall 131 carries bearings rotatably supporting a pair of vertically staggered support shafts 50 and 51 having parallel horizontally extending axes, and also a third shaft 52 spaced directly above shaft 50 and horizontally from shaft 51.
  • shafts 5t Connected with shafts 5t) and 51 are a pair of floating auxiliary links or cranks 53 and 54 which are angularly rotatable with those shafts.
  • Actively pivotally connected with the crank 53 is a nozzle carrier including a long link 56 and an arm 57 swiveled at joint 58 from the link enabling rapid bolt-on connection of the arm 57 with the crank 53.
  • the arm 57 is alternately actively connectible with the crank 54- by removal of the bolts 55 from crank 53 and attachment of the arm 57 with crank 54 by means of those bolts.
  • the link 56 supports a bank of parallel shot nozzles 59, the latter being connected with the link 56 through elongated rods 60 and clamp assemblies 61, as previously described in connection with Figs. 3 and 5. Shot conduits 191 deliver shot to the nozzles 59.
  • the link 56 supporting the nozzles is pivotally connected to a third link or actuating crank 63 which is connected to the third shaft 52, the pivotal connection joint between the link 56 and this third shaft being shown at 64.
  • That crank is angularly reciprocable by an actuator shown at 65 outside the housing and connected to the Wall 13 thereof, an external crank 66 connecting the actuator piston rod 67 with the horizontal shaft 52 carried by the housing wall and extending therethrough.
  • crank 63 Operation of the actuator 65 to reciprocate the piston rod 67 thereof will effect angular reciprocation of the crank 63 vertically to reciprocate the link 56 and the nozzles 59 when that link is actively connected with the crank 53.
  • the link 56, crank 63 and interconnected crank 53 and arm 57 together with the wall 13 of the housing comprise or form in effect a four bar parallelogram linkage operable by the actuator 65 toreciprocate the nozzles 59 up and down while they remain angularly oriented in a fixed direction in space. The same is true with respect to the.
  • the nozzles 59 are selectively actively reciprocable transversely above the peening zone generally indicated at 70 and up and down at one side of that zone by the single actuator 65, a pair of shafts 50 and 51, and the linkage reciprocable by the actuator while connected with alternate of the shafts 50 and 51, the linkage including the cranks 53 and 54, and the link 56 actively connectible with either of the cranks 53 and 54.
  • a housing forming a work peening zone, nozzle apparatus in said housing directed toward said zone for jetting shot at work in said zone, an elongated member mounting said nozzle apparatus in said housing, and means for supportingand bodily oscillating said member in either of two locations of oscillation near said zone so that the nozzle apparatus is directed toward said zone during oscillation, said last named means including an actuating link and two auxiliary links mounted to turn within the housing about spaced apart parallel axes, first means for pivotally interconnecting one end portion of said elongated member to either of said auxiliary links, and other means pivotally interconnecting the opposite end portion of said elongated member with said actuating link so that the elongated member may be swung between said first and second locations and therein pivotally connected bysaid first means to either one of said auxiliary links, and thereafter said elongated member may be bodily oscillated in response to back and forth turning of said actuating link.
  • said last named means includes an actuating shaft extending into the housing from the exterior thereof and connected to said actuating link, and anactuator outside the housing for oscillating said actuating shaft about its axis.
  • said first means includes an arm detachably connectible with either of said auxiliary links, and a joint carried by said one end portion of the elongated memberandpivotally supporting saidarm.
  • auxiliary link axes are equally spaced in different directions from the actuating link axis
  • said other. means includes a joint the-axis of which is spaced a predetermined distance from the turning axis of said actuating link
  • said first means includes another jointtheaxis of which is spaced the same predetermined distance from the axis of either auxiliary link when said first means pivotally connects the elongated member thereto.
  • a housing forming a work peening zone, nozzle apparatus in said housing directed toward said zone for jetting shot at work in said zone, an elongated member mounting said nozzle apparatus in said housing, and means for supporting and bodily oscillating said member in either of two locations of oscillation near said zone so that the nozzle apparatus is directed toward said zone during said oscillation
  • said last named means including an actuating shaft and two auxiliary shafts mounted to turn within the housing about spaced apart parallel axes, first means for pivotally connecting one end portion of said elongated member to either of said auxiliary shafts, and other means including an actuating link for pivotally connecting the opposite end-portion of said elongated member with said actuating shaftso that the elongated member 5 may be swung between said first and second locations and therein pivotally connected by said first means to either one of said auxiliary shafts, and thereafter said elongated member may be bodily oscillated in response to back and forth turning of said actuating link.

Description

Jan. 17, 1961 H. o. FUCHS PEENING SHOT NOZZLE RECIPROCATING APPARATUS Filed July 7, 1958 2 Shets-Sheet 1 JNVENTOR. MAWM Arraeuzm Jan. 17, 1961 H. o. FUCHS 2,968,086
PEENING SHOT NOZZLE RECIPROCATING APPARATUS Filed July 7, 1958 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Haw/2y 0. 1266's,
IN VEN TOR.
Array/ways;
PEENING SHOT NOZZLE RECIPROCATING APPARATUS Henry 0. Fuchs, Altadena, Calif., assignor to Metal Improvement Equipment Company, Los Angeles, Calif., a corporation of California Filed July 7, 1958, Ser. No. 746,752
6 Claims. (Cl. 29-90) This invention relates generally to shot peening equipment and more particularly concerns improvements in shot peening apparatus wherein peening nozzles are reciprocated, by which one actuator can be used to provide selective active reciprocation of peening nozzles at different locations relative to a shot peening zone in order to obtain thorough peening treatment of work inserted in said zone.
The invention is broadly directed to the problem of simplifying the arrangement of apparatus for reciprocating peening nozzles at different locations, for example above a peening zone and at one side thereof, so that only one actuator is needed for reciprocating the nozzles at these different locations. Such simplification of the equipment and reduction of the number of actuators needed to only one very clearly produces advantages in cost and simplification of fabrication and use of the peening equipment.
In accordance with the invention, there is provided nozzle means for jetting shot at work inserted into a peening zone within a housing, the nozzle means being selectively actively reciprocable at spaced locations relative to the peening zone. For example, the nozzle means is preferably reciprocable transversely above the peening zone and up and down at one side thereof for subjecting the work to thorough peening treatment. In addition, there are provided means for carrying and selectively actively reciprocating the nozzle means including an actuator, a pair of supports such as shafts carried by the housing, and linkage means reciprocable by the actuator on alternate of the supports or shafts for alternately transmitting reciprocation to the nozzle means at the spaced locations referred to. Preferably the linkage means include a pair of cranks angularly rotatable on the respective shafts, and connector means actively connectible with either of the cranks to transmit angular reciprocation therethrough.
In one form of the invention the single actuator is operatively connected with the cranks either of which may be blocked against rotation so that the other crank is angularly reciprocable by the actuator for transmitting reciprocation to the shaft carrying that crank and the nozzle means associated with that shaft. In another of its forms, the invention contemplates the provision of a third shaft angularly reciprocable by the actuator, a third crank on that third shaft, and a link connected with the third shaft and supporting the nozzle means for reciprocation, that link being selectively connectible with either of the pair of cranks associated with the two different nozzle locations. 7
These and other features and objects of the invention, as well as the details of an illustrative embodiment, will be more fully understood from the following detailed description of the drawings, in which:
Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a peening machine of the preferred type to be described;
Fig. 2 is a section taken on line 2-2 of Fig. 1;
Fig. 3 shows the linkage means and actuator seen in States Patent 4 'ice ' V Patented Jan.'17, 196 1 Fig. 1 with one crank of the linkage means blocked against rotation;
Fig. 4 is a section taken on line 44 of Fig. 3;
Fig. 5 is a view similar to Fig. 3 showing the other crank blocked against rotation;
Fig. 6 is a vertical section taken through the housing of a modified peening machine showing the arrangement of the nozzles and linkage means within the housing; and
Fig. 7 is a section taken on line 7-7 of Fig. 6.
In Fig. l'the peening machine 10 is shown to include an upright housing 11 having a door or closure 12 hinge supported by one wall of the housing to enable insertion of work into a peening zone within the housing. When inserted into the peening zone the Work indicated by the broken lines 14 in Fig. 6 is adapted to be supported by the rotary carrier 15 which is rotated by the motor driven equipment generally shown at 16 in Fig. 1.
While the work is being rotated in the peening zone it is subjected to shot peening treatment by upper and lower nozzles seen at 17 and 18 in Figs. 3 and 4, the nozzles jetting shot supplied through shot conduits 119 and 19, the shot being entrained in streams of compressed air supplied to the nozzles through conduits 20.
Shot particles falling off the work are tumbled downward within a tapering hopper 22 below the housing 11 and then are directed laterally by an enclosed conduit or chute 23 discharging into a reservoir 24 as shown in Fig. 2. The reservoir comprises the lowest portion of a vertically elongated housing 25 containing a continuous bucket elevator 26 operable to lift the shot collecting at 27 in the reservoir upwardly within the housing and thereafter discharge the shot to a hopper, not shown, for supply to the shot conduits 19, as desired. The chute 23 has a neck 127 fitting over and receiving the lowermost portion of y the hopper 22, and it also has a flange 28 removably attached by wing nut 29 to the side of the reservoir 24 so as to deliver the shot in the chute through the entrance 30 to the reservoir. 29 from the screw 31 projecting laterally from the "reservoir side enables ready detachment of the chute 23 from reservoir 24 and the hopper 22, whereby the entrance 30 to the reservoir is exposed facilitating or giving convenient access to hopper 22 and to the reservoir for cleaning out shot particles therein. This operation is desirable when changing shot in the machine. 7
Reference to Figs. 3 and 5 shows that the nozzles 17 are supported on rods 132 and 32 slidably adjustable in clamp mechanisms 133 and 33, the latter being angularly adjustable for angularly orienting the nozzles in space above and at one side of the peening zone, nozzle 17 being directed downwardly toward the peening zone and nozzle 13 being directed transversely toward the peening zone. The upper and lower clamp mechanisms 133 and 33 are in turncarried by the upper and lower vertically staggered shafts 134 and 34 which are carried by and project through the housing wall 13 and have parallel horizontal axes. Connected on the shafts 134 and 34 to rotate them are upper and lower vertically staggered cranks 35 and 36, these being outside the housing wall 13 whereas the nozzles are inside the housing. The cranks are preferably but not necessarily of equal length, and they are both connected with a single actuator 37, the lower crank 36 being pivotally connected at 38 with the actuator pis ton rod 39 and the upper crank 35 being pivotally connected at 40 with a connector link 41 supporting the actuator'37 at 42. The actuator will be understood as being reciprocable, as for example by hydraulic thereto through lines 43.
In accordance with the invention, nozzles 17 and 18 are selectively actively reciprocable along arcs'by the one actuator 37. This is, accomplished by actively con- 1 necting one of the cranks 35 and 36 with the actuator,
Removal of the wing nut fastener passed I l as for example by blocking the other crank against angular reciprocation. Thus, as shown in Figs. 3 and 4 crank 35 is blocked against angular reciprocation by a lock pin 45 having a handle 46 for inserting the pin into a hole 47 in the crank 35 and into a bore-48in a boss 49 carried by the housing wall 13. Accordingly under these conditions the crank 35 cannot rotate whereas the crank 36 is angularly reciprocable by the actuator so as to transmit angular reciprocation to the nozzle 13 which pivots up and down at one side of the peening zone. Reference to Fig. will show the similar manner in which the other crank 36 is blocked against angular rotation by the lock pin 45 carried by the handle'46, allowing the crank 35 to be reciprocated by the actuator and reciprocating the upper' nozzle 17 in a transverse angular course above the peening zone-and directed downwardly toward the part inserted therein. Thus, the linkage means including the cranks 35 and 36 and the link 41 is reciprocable by the actuator'37 on alternate of the shafts 34 for alternatelyreciprocating the nozzles 17 and 18 above and-at one side of the peening zone.
In the modified form of the invention shown in Figs. 6 and 7 a housing wall 131 carries bearings rotatably supporting a pair of vertically staggered support shafts 50 and 51 having parallel horizontally extending axes, and also a third shaft 52 spaced directly above shaft 50 and horizontally from shaft 51. Connected with shafts 5t) and 51 are a pair of floating auxiliary links or cranks 53 and 54 which are angularly rotatable with those shafts. Actively pivotally connected with the crank 53 is a nozzle carrier including a long link 56 and an arm 57 swiveled at joint 58 from the link enabling rapid bolt-on connection of the arm 57 with the crank 53. The arm 57 is alternately actively connectible with the crank 54- by removal of the bolts 55 from crank 53 and attachment of the arm 57 with crank 54 by means of those bolts. As shown by the full lines of Fig. 6, the link 56 supports a bank of parallel shot nozzles 59, the latter being connected with the link 56 through elongated rods 60 and clamp assemblies 61, as previously described in connection with Figs. 3 and 5. Shot conduits 191 deliver shot to the nozzles 59. When the link 56 is actively connected with the crank 53 the nozzles are reciprocable along arcs up and down at one side of the work 14, as will be described, whereas when link 56 is actively connected with the crank 54 the nozzles 59 may be swung, by adjustment of the clamps 61, to the broken line position shown at 62, in which the nozzles are transversely reciprocable along arcs above the rotating work for jetting shot over the entire upper surface thereof.
The link 56 supporting the nozzles is pivotally connected to a third link or actuating crank 63 which is connected to the third shaft 52, the pivotal connection joint between the link 56 and this third shaft being shown at 64. Thus, when the link 56 is swung between its full line vertical position to its broken line horizontal position as seen in Fig. 6, it pivots with respect to the third crank 63. That crank is angularly reciprocable by an actuator shown at 65 outside the housing and connected to the Wall 13 thereof, an external crank 66 connecting the actuator piston rod 67 with the horizontal shaft 52 carried by the housing wall and extending therethrough.
Operation of the actuator 65 to reciprocate the piston rod 67 thereof will effect angular reciprocation of the crank 63 vertically to reciprocate the link 56 and the nozzles 59 when that link is actively connected with the crank 53. The link 56, crank 63 and interconnected crank 53 and arm 57 together with the wall 13 of the housing comprise or form in effect a four bar parallelogram linkage operable by the actuator 65 toreciprocate the nozzles 59 up and down while they remain angularly oriented in a fixed direction in space. The same is true with respect to the. four bar parallelogram linkage formed when the link 56 is swung upwardly and connected with crank 54, the nozzles in their broken line position 62 at such times being reciprocated transversely while remaining angularly oriented with fixed direction in space. Shafts 50 and 51 are equally spaced from the axis of shaft 52.
From the foregoing it is apparent that the nozzles 59 are selectively actively reciprocable transversely above the peening zone generally indicated at 70 and up and down at one side of that zone by the single actuator 65, a pair of shafts 50 and 51, and the linkage reciprocable by the actuator while connected with alternate of the shafts 50 and 51, the linkage including the cranks 53 and 54, and the link 56 actively connectible with either of the cranks 53 and 54.
I claim:
1. In shot peening equipment, a housing forming a work peening zone, nozzle apparatus in said housing directed toward said zone for jetting shot at work in said zone, an elongated member mounting said nozzle apparatus in said housing, and means for supportingand bodily oscillating said member in either of two locations of oscillation near said zone so that the nozzle apparatus is directed toward said zone during oscillation, said last named means including an actuating link and two auxiliary links mounted to turn within the housing about spaced apart parallel axes, first means for pivotally interconnecting one end portion of said elongated member to either of said auxiliary links, and other means pivotally interconnecting the opposite end portion of said elongated member with said actuating link so that the elongated member may be swung between said first and second locations and therein pivotally connected bysaid first means to either one of said auxiliary links, and thereafter said elongated member may be bodily oscillated in response to back and forth turning of said actuating link.
2. The invention as defined in claim 1 including auxiliary shafts mounting said auxiliary links to float freely in turning about the auxiliary shaft axes.
3. The invention as defined in claim 2 in which said last named means includes an actuating shaft extending into the housing from the exterior thereof and connected to said actuating link, and anactuator outside the housing for oscillating said actuating shaft about its axis.
4. The invention as defined in claim 2 in which said first means includes an arm detachably connectible with either of said auxiliary links, and a joint carried by said one end portion of the elongated memberandpivotally supporting saidarm.
5. The invention as defined-in claim 2 in which the auxiliary link axes are equally spaced in different directions from the actuating link axis, said other. means includes a joint the-axis of which is spaced a predetermined distance from the turning axis of said actuating link, and said first means includes another jointtheaxis of which is spaced the same predetermined distance from the axis of either auxiliary link when said first means pivotally connects the elongated member thereto.
6. In shot peening equipment, a housing forming a work peening zone, nozzle apparatus in said housing directed toward said zone for jetting shot at work in said zone, an elongated member mounting said nozzle apparatus in said housing, and means for supporting and bodily oscillating said member in either of two locations of oscillation near said zone so that the nozzle apparatus is directed toward said zone during said oscillation, said last named means including an actuating shaft and two auxiliary shafts mounted to turn within the housing about spaced apart parallel axes, first means for pivotally connecting one end portion of said elongated member to either of said auxiliary shafts, and other means including an actuating link for pivotally connecting the opposite end-portion of said elongated member with said actuating shaftso that the elongated member 5 may be swung between said first and second locations and therein pivotally connected by said first means to either one of said auxiliary shafts, and thereafter said elongated member may be bodily oscillated in response to back and forth turning of said actuating link.
Ebeling Feb. 21, 1911 Hoevel Nov. 2, 1926 6 Walters Mar. 15, 1932 Freda Oct. 3, 1933 Weir May 1, 1934 Wellshaw Aug. 17, 1937 Berger Feb. 8, 1955 Koenig May 27, 1958 Fuchs Apr. 14, 1959 FOREIGN PATENTS Great Britain 1 Dec. 18, 1935
US746752A 1958-07-07 1958-07-07 Peening shot nozzle reciprocating apparatus Expired - Lifetime US2968086A (en)

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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3423976A (en) * 1966-07-18 1969-01-28 Metal Improvement Co Blade peening apparatus with indexing control
US3426563A (en) * 1966-04-04 1969-02-11 Metal Improvement Co Peening apparatus
US4269003A (en) * 1978-06-29 1981-05-26 Georg Fischer Aktiengesellschaft Centrifugal blasting machine for large workpieces
US4441349A (en) * 1982-11-12 1984-04-10 General Motors Corporation Method of making a cast iron sealing ring
US5857497A (en) * 1985-08-05 1999-01-12 Wangner Systems Corporation Woven multilayer papermaking fabric having increased stability and permeability
US6692340B1 (en) * 2003-02-05 2004-02-17 Hershell E. Williams Blast wheel housing
CN110434768A (en) * 2019-07-17 2019-11-12 上海加敦电站成套设备有限公司 A kind of multi-rail type shot-blasting gun

Citations (10)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US984753A (en) * 1910-02-12 1911-02-21 Charles W Ebeling Sand-blast apparatus.
US1605730A (en) * 1921-12-24 1926-11-02 Herman F Hoevel Spraying device
US1849895A (en) * 1930-04-05 1932-03-15 August J Walters Sand blast apparatus
US1928621A (en) * 1928-09-17 1933-10-03 Gen Steel Castings Corp Apparatus for cleansing or blasting castings or other articles
US1957186A (en) * 1929-04-13 1934-05-01 Mott Sand Blast Mfg Co Sand blasting machine
GB439982A (en) * 1934-06-30 1935-12-18 James Bason Improvements in or relating to sand-blasting apparatus
US2090278A (en) * 1935-11-27 1937-08-17 Dunlop Rubber Co Sand blasting apparatus
US2701408A (en) * 1951-11-19 1955-02-08 Lockheed Aircraft Corp Method of cold forming sheets
US2836013A (en) * 1957-01-24 1958-05-27 Brant And Nielsen Company Sand blasting apparatus
US2881506A (en) * 1955-12-12 1959-04-14 Metal Improvement Company Shot peening apparatus

Patent Citations (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US984753A (en) * 1910-02-12 1911-02-21 Charles W Ebeling Sand-blast apparatus.
US1605730A (en) * 1921-12-24 1926-11-02 Herman F Hoevel Spraying device
US1928621A (en) * 1928-09-17 1933-10-03 Gen Steel Castings Corp Apparatus for cleansing or blasting castings or other articles
US1957186A (en) * 1929-04-13 1934-05-01 Mott Sand Blast Mfg Co Sand blasting machine
US1849895A (en) * 1930-04-05 1932-03-15 August J Walters Sand blast apparatus
GB439982A (en) * 1934-06-30 1935-12-18 James Bason Improvements in or relating to sand-blasting apparatus
US2090278A (en) * 1935-11-27 1937-08-17 Dunlop Rubber Co Sand blasting apparatus
US2701408A (en) * 1951-11-19 1955-02-08 Lockheed Aircraft Corp Method of cold forming sheets
US2881506A (en) * 1955-12-12 1959-04-14 Metal Improvement Company Shot peening apparatus
US2836013A (en) * 1957-01-24 1958-05-27 Brant And Nielsen Company Sand blasting apparatus

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3426563A (en) * 1966-04-04 1969-02-11 Metal Improvement Co Peening apparatus
US3423976A (en) * 1966-07-18 1969-01-28 Metal Improvement Co Blade peening apparatus with indexing control
US4269003A (en) * 1978-06-29 1981-05-26 Georg Fischer Aktiengesellschaft Centrifugal blasting machine for large workpieces
US4441349A (en) * 1982-11-12 1984-04-10 General Motors Corporation Method of making a cast iron sealing ring
US5857497A (en) * 1985-08-05 1999-01-12 Wangner Systems Corporation Woven multilayer papermaking fabric having increased stability and permeability
US6692340B1 (en) * 2003-02-05 2004-02-17 Hershell E. Williams Blast wheel housing
CN110434768A (en) * 2019-07-17 2019-11-12 上海加敦电站成套设备有限公司 A kind of multi-rail type shot-blasting gun

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