UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE
MERRITT L. WOOD, OF ITHACA, NEW YORK, ASSIGNOR TO HIMSELF, SAMUEL PORTER, AND L. M. MONROE.
Letters Patent No. 71,564, dated November 26, 1867.
IMPROVEMENT IN TELEGRAPH-INSULATORS.
The Schedule referred to in these Letters Patent and making part of the same.
TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: Be
it known that I, MERRITT L. WOOD,
of Ithaca, Tompkins county, State of New York, have invented certain new
and useful Improvements in Telegraphic Insulators; and I do hereby
declare the following description and accompanying drawings are
sufficient to enable any person skilled in the art or science to which
it most nearly appertains to make and use my said invention or
improvements without further invention or experiment. The
nature of my invention consists in a conical-shaped iron case, made
largest at the upper end, to be applied to a wooden standard, provided
with a wedge, which is forced in by the case when it is forced on to the
standard to spread the end of the standard into the upper end of the
case, and hold it firmly on the standard, and in making a groove around
the standard that supports the case or insulator, which may be filled
with paraffine or other suitable material; and in preparing the standard
with paraffine or other insulating substance before the insulator is
applied; and in rib or collar on the wooden standard under the base of
the insulator in the accompanying drawings--- Figure
1 is an elevation of my improved insulator on a standard. Figure
2 is a section of the insulator with a standard in it. In
these drawings, A is the top of the insulator, to which the standard or
support is fitted, and B the enlarged base, both of which may be made of
cast iron or other metal, in the form shown, or in such other form as
will answer the purpose. The
top, A, is about one and one-half inch in diameter at the top, and
one-forth of an inch smaller where it joins the base B, which swells out
somewhat in a hemispherical form to two and one-half inches in diameter.
The heights of the top and base are about two inches each, making
the insulator about four inches long. The metal may be about one-eighth
of an inch, or a little less, in thickness.
I make two hooks or horns, C C, on the base, just below where it
joins the top, and curve the horns in towards the top, as shown in the
drawing, and arrange them in such a position that they will press the
wire D against the insulator, at or near where the top joins the base,
so that the wire cannot be raised above the points of the horns without
being bent considerably, so that when the wire is put in, and drawn as
straight as the horns will permit, it will be held firmly by the
insulator. This insulator
is coated or lined with porcelain, flint, felspar, glass, or other
insulating substance, on the inside, in the mode well known and
practiced by furnace-men, to insulate it from the standard F, which is
made of wood, in the form shown in the drawing, with the upper end
fitted to the top A, and an enlargement, G, under the base B, covered
and protected by it. The top of this enlargement is hollowed out to form
a circular trough around the standard F, which I fill with paraffine,
rosin, or some other suitable material imperious to water, and which
will prevent the rain which gets on the standard from ascending the wood
and soaking up into the standard F so freely as it might do, without the
paraffine. The whole of the
upper end of the standard may be soaked in paraffine before the
insulator is applied, down a little below the trough, if preferred that
way. Before the insulator
is put on the standard, it is sawed or split, and the wedge I
claim, in combination with the conical-shaped iron insulator A, the
wedge H, inserted in the top of the standard or support, in the manner
and for the purpose as set forth. I
also claim the groove N around the standard F, for holding paraffine or
other suitable material, for the purpose set forth. MERRITT
L. WOOD. Witnesses:
FRANCIS M. FINCH, WALTER C. CURRAN. |