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Manufacturers Index - Hewes & Phillips Iron Works

Hewes & Phillips Iron Works
New York, NY; Newark, NJ, U.S.A.
Manufacturer Class: Wood Working Machinery, Metal Working Machinery & Steam and Gas Engines

Patents
This page contains information on patents issued to this manufacturer.

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Patent Number Date Title Name City Description
54,153 Apr. 24, 1866 Improvement in cut-off valves Joseph L. Hewes Newark, NJ
112,626 Mar. 14, 1871 Improvement in machines for tapping boilers Joseph L. Hewes Newark, NJ This patent was perhaps used by Hewes & Phillips of Newark, a maker of machine tools and drill presses, plus water valves, steam engines, and rock drills.
    Improvement in machines for tapping boilers Parley I. Perrin Taunton, MA  
127,768 Jun. 11, 1872 Improvement in stop-valves for water-pipes Joseph L. Hewes Newark, NJ
148,884 Mar. 24, 1874 Improvement in machines for making gear-wheel patterns Joseph L. Hewes Newark, NJ Here is a quote from the patent specification:
"At the present time the pattern-cogs of the patterns used for molding cog-wheels are fitted into the runs by hand, by sawing and chiseling out dovetail grooves across the face of the pattern, making corresponding tenons on the blocks of which the teeth are to be formed, fitting in said blocks, and then dressing the blocks down to the finished shape.
"Throughout the range of pattern-making, which is an art requiring the greatest skill in all its branches, there is perhaps no part of it more difficult and requiring more skill than this part of the making of a pattern-wheel, for the wheels made from the pattern will be unsatisfactory unless the teeth are exactly uniform in size, shape, etc., as is well known to all makers and users of machinery.
"Now, I propose to do all the fitting of the rim and the teeth, and the finishing of the teeth, by mechanical devices, and thus not only secure the exact uniformity of shape and dimensions peculiar to the use of special tool for special work, but largely economize in time and labor as well."
This patent was perhaps used by Hewes & Phillips of Newark, a maker of machine tools and drill presses, plus water valves, steam engines, and rock drills.
153,254 Jul. 21, 1874 Metal Planing Machines Joseph L. Hewes Newark, Essex County, NJ Munn & Co. - patent attorneys
164,736 Jun. 22, 1875 Improvement in valve-gears for steam-engines Joseph L. Hewes Newark, NJ Inventor Hewes was deceased.
201,197 Mar. 12, 1878 Improvement in journal-boxes Charles T. Porter Montclair, NJ
350,554 Oct. 12, 1886 Planing-Machine Cushioning Device Franklin Phillips Newark, Essex County, NJ Crane & Miller - patent attorneys
This invention relates to that class of machines in which a casting of any desired form is secured upon a movable bed and traversed longitudinally beneath a cutting-tool, the rate of movement toward the tool being limited, as from twelve to twenty feet per minute, according to the hardness of the iron and the endurance of the tool which, operates upon it. There is, however, no necessary limit to the speed of the table and its attached casting in the reverse direction, except the difficulty of arresting the motion of the table at the end of its stroke without injury to the reversing mechanism; and the object of the present invention is to connect a spring or air cushion adjustably to the table, so as to gradually check the motion of the latter before the reversing mechanism is fully actuated. As the reversing mechanism in such machines is usually actuated by a direct connection with the moving table, it is obvious that a diminution in the speed of the table before the reversing mechanism is operated will entirely obviate the difficulty which arises in actuating the table with a quick return motion and operating the reversing mechanism by direct connection thereto.

350,555 Oct. 12, 1886 Planer Table Cushioning Device Franklin Phillips Newark, Essex County, NJ
378,106 Feb. 21, 1888 Friction Feed Mechanism for Iron-Planers Franklin Phillips Newark, NJ Crane & Miller - patent attorneys
The object of this improvement is to operate the tool-feeding mechanism of a reciprocating planer by a frictional connection with the reversible pinion-shaft used to actuate the planer table and the invention consists in the combination, with a friction-drum driven by the pinion-shaft, of a feed-shifting device operated by a strap pressed upon such drum and released when the feed movement is effected. The intermittent tension of the strap is effected by a lever which has its end operated in contact with a segment concentric with the friction-drum, the end sections of the segment being movable and being shifted by the reversing mechanism of the planer. The frictional connection of the feeding mechanism with the reversible pinion-shaft is maintained only during the period required to actuate the feed, and is then wholly released, so as to arrest the parts in frictional contact and to remove the frictional resistance to the motive power. The tool-feeding mechanism upon a planer consists commonly in a screw mounted in a cross-head and fitted to a nut upon a sliding carriage which sustains the tool. The rotation of the screw thus propels the carriage and tool at the desired rate along the cross-head, the tool meanwhile operating upon the material which is attached to the reciprocating planer-table. The rotation of the screw is effected during the reverse movement of the table, and is commonly produced by a ratchet wheel and pawl, the pawl being carried by an oscillating arm hinged upon the screw or upon a stud adjacent thereto and vibrated by some sort of connection with the belt-shifting mechanism of the planer. The reversible table is not shown herein nor the feeding devices, as they are already well known; and my invention is applicable to any machine having a shaft rotated alternately in opposite directions, as the pinion shaft of a planer-table, and having a mechanism shifted at each end of the cutting-stroke, as the belt shifting device in such a planer.

378,105 Feb. 21, 1888 Dash-pot for steam-engines Franklin Phillips Newark, NJ
420,887 Feb. 04, 1890 Escape-valve for dash-pots Franklin Phillips Newark, NJ
494,746 Apr. 04, 1893 Governor for steam-engines Franklin Phillips Newark, NJ
500,271 Jun. 27, 1893 Valve for engines Franklin Phillips Newark, NJ
929,008 Jul. 27, 1909 Dash-pot Franklin Phillips Newark, NJ Improvements to patent 378,105.