US2888906A - Livestock oiler - Google Patents

Livestock oiler Download PDF

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US2888906A
US2888906A US703924A US70392457A US2888906A US 2888906 A US2888906 A US 2888906A US 703924 A US703924 A US 703924A US 70392457 A US70392457 A US 70392457A US 2888906 A US2888906 A US 2888906A
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cylinder
oil
column
oiler
piston
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US703924A
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Kyle I Delp
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01KANIMAL HUSBANDRY; CARE OF BIRDS, FISHES, INSECTS; FISHING; REARING OR BREEDING ANIMALS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NEW BREEDS OF ANIMALS
    • A01K13/00Devices for grooming or caring of animals, e.g. curry-combs; Fetlock rings; Tail-holders; Devices for preventing crib-biting; Washing devices; Protection against weather conditions or insects
    • A01K13/004Rubbing-posts

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a livestock oiler and more particularly to an oiler for hogs.
  • An object of the invention is to provide a practical hog oiler which is simple in design, easy to service and install, and which operates automatically upon the rubbing of hogs by discharging a proper quantity of oil onto the oil conducting and scratching outer surface of a post-like oiler.
  • My invention is exceedingly simple in mechanical detail having no pumps, valves, etc. or parts generally considered as such to become clogged and unsatisfactorily operative.
  • My hog oiler has the oil distributed to the outer covering by relying on the flow due to gravity. There are orifices in the chamber that stores the oil and these are opened automatically when the hogs rub up against the scratching surface of the covering so that oil is discharged as it is used and needed.
  • Figure 1 is a perspective view of a hog oiler which exemplifies how the invention may be embodied in one practical oiler.
  • Figure 2 is a sectional view on enlarged scale and taken on the line 2-2 of Figure 1.
  • Figure 3 is an enlarged transverse sectional view taken on the line 33 of Figure 2.
  • Figure 4 is a transverse sectional view taken on the line 44 of Figure 2.
  • Figure 5 is an enlarged fragmentary sectional view showing the oiler as it appears when moved to a position at which oil is discharged to the outer covering of the oiler.
  • Figure 6 is an exploded perspective view of a part of the oiler.
  • a hog oiler 10 which is constructed in accordance with the invention.
  • the oiler has a platform 12 which is optional.
  • An area 14 of the platform is enclosed by fence 16 in the center of which there is a base 18 bolted or otherwise held in place.
  • a column 20 is welded or otherwise rigidly secured to base 18 and has a piston 22 at the upper extremity thereof.
  • the piston head 24 is made of a leather or like material with washers 26 and 28 on opposite sides thereof and having a skirt 30. Nuts or other fasteners are used to hold the piston assembled on column 20.
  • a cylinder 32 is mounted for reciprocation on column 20 with the skirt of the piston sliding against the inner surface of the cylinder.
  • the lower wall 34 of the cy1inder has a guide aperture 36 in its center through which the column 20 is passed.
  • Stop 38 is attached to the column and abuts the inner surface of wall 34 to limit the upward movement of the cylinder.
  • Guide 40 is attached to the cylinder 32 near its upper extremity and it has a downwardly sloped upper surface 42 which tends to guide oil which accumulates beneath the piston, toward the walls of the cylinder 32.
  • a plurality of oil discharge apertures 44 are in the side wall of the cylinder 32 and are located above and at the edge of the sloped upper surface 42 of guide 40.
  • the main discharge openings or orifices 46 are formed in a group above apertures 44 and these are registered with the oil 48 in oil chamber 50 when the cylinder is lifted.
  • the discharge orifices 46 move past the piston 24 as the cylinder moves upward and become registered with the oil 48 enabling it to flow to the outer surface of the cylinder 32.
  • Chamber 50 is filled by lifting the loosely fitting closure 52 and pouring oil into the open upper extremity of the cylinder which constitutes chamber 50.
  • Closure 52 fits sufliciently loose so that no appreciable vacuum will be formed above the oil level. Accordingly, there will be no serious retarding of the flow of oil through orifices 46 when cylinder 32 is lifted.
  • the cylinder 32 is lifted by the rubbing action of the hogs on the scratching surface 56 of a cylinder covering.
  • the scratching surface is formed by a wire mesh screen 57 whose confronting edges have flanges 58 and 60 ( Figures 3 and 6) that engage and lock, holding the screen 57 in cylindrical form on the pliers or layers of burlap 62 that are on the outside surface of cylinder 32.
  • the burlap functions as a wick by which to conduct the oil and the wire mesh screen not only protects the burlap but also provides a scratching surface for the hogs.
  • a number of ties 64 be placed on the outside surface of the wire mesh to help hold it fastened firmly in place and prevent the hogs from pulling it loose.
  • bafiie at the top part of screen 57.
  • the upper part of screen 57 can be rolled over the annular baffle 75 to hold it in place.
  • the proper position for the bafile is in alignment with orifices 46 ( Figure 2) to prevent the oil in chamber 50 from squirting completely through the covering on cylinder 32.
  • a hog oiler comprising a base, an upstanding column attached to said base at one end and having a fixedly mounted piston at its opposite end, a cylinder mounted on said column and slidable over said piston, said cylinder having at least one discharge orifice located below said piston when said cylinder is in its lowered position, the volume enclosed by said cylinder above said piston constituting an oil storage chamber, a covering on said cylinder and against which the hogs are adapted to brush and thereby elevate said cylinder to bring said orifice in registry with said chamber and thereby discharge oil from the chamber onto the covering which has a portion in oil receiving communication with said orifice.
  • said covering includes at least one ply of oil saturable material, and a screen mesh over said ply.
  • a hog oiler comprising a base, an upstanding column attached to said base at one end and having a fixedly mounted piston at its opposite end, a cylinder mounted on said column and slidable over said piston, said cylinder having at least one discharge orifice located below said piston when said cylinder is in its lowered 3 position, the volume enclosed by said cylinder above said piston constituting an oil storage chamber, a covering on said cylinder and against Which the hogs are adapted to brush and thereby elevate saidcylinder to-bring said orifice in registry with'said chamber and thereby discharge oil from the chamber onto the covering which has a portion in .oil receivingcom-munication with said orifice, a guide secured to said cylinder and having an opening through which said column is passed, the upper surface of said guide sloping downwardly and outwardly toward the walls of said cylinder, and said cylinder having at least one aperture at the edge of said guide through which oil which accumulates on the sloping surface of said guide may .pass and be received by said covering.
  • said covering includes at least one ply of cloth selected from a group of oil saturable cloth materials, and an abrasive mesh covering said cloth.
  • a hogoiler the combination of a base, a generally uprightcolumn attached to said base, a post-like cylinder on said generally upright column, a piston fixedly mounted on said column and holding said column and said cylinder spaced from each other and in sliding relationship whereby .said cylinder is movable with respect to said column and in response to rubbing and brushing of hogs against the cylinder, and rneans openable in response to lifting of said cylinder with respect to said column for conducting oil from within said column to the outer surface of said cylinder.
  • a base a generally upright column attached to said base, a post-like cylinder on said generally upright column, a piston fixedly mounted on said column and holding said column and said cylinder spaced from each other and in sliding relationship whereby said cylinder is movable with respect to said column and in response to rubbing and brushing of hogs against the cylinder, means openable in response to lifting of said cylinder with respect to said column for conducting oil from within said column to the outer surface of said cylinder, said cylinder having an oil storage chamber located above said piston, and said means for conducting oil including an orifice in said cylinder which is registered with said chamber when said cylinder is elevated so that the oil is cavity fed to the outer surface of the cylinder.
  • a base a generally upright column attached to said base, a movably mounted cylinder on said generally upright column, a piston fixedly mounted on said column and holding said column and said cylinder laterally spaced from each other and in sliding relationship whereby said cylinder is movable with respect to said column and in response to rubbing and brushing of hogs against the cylinder, means openable in response to lifting of said cylinder with respect to said column for conducting oil from within said column to the outer surface of said cylinder, said cylinder having an oil storage chamber located above said piston, said means for conducting oil including an orifice in said cylinder which is registered with said chamber when said cylinder is elevated so that the oil is gravity fed throughsaid orifice to'the outer surface of the cylinder, a covering on the outer surface of said cylinder and having an oil conductive layer in registry with said orifice to distribute the oil throughout the outer surface of the cylinder, and an oil baffle on the outer side of said layer and in alignment with said orifice to'prevent

Description

K. I. DELP LIVESTOCK OILER June 2, 159
2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed Dec. 19, 1957 Fig,
Ky/Q I; 840
INVENTOR.
June 2, 1959 K. I. DELP 2,888,906
LIVESTOCK OILER Filed Dec. 19, 1957 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 3 Flgz @111: I! \W Mia. w; 544 w,
30 W Wt ,I 26 24 30 a I 55 ,w ,3 A 4 Kyle I; De/p INVENTOR.
United States Patent LIVESTOCK OILER Kyle I. Delp, Norfolk, Nebr.
Application December 19, 1957, Serial No. 703,924
10 Claims. 01. 119-157 This invention relates to a livestock oiler and more particularly to an oiler for hogs.
An object of the invention is to provide a practical hog oiler which is simple in design, easy to service and install, and which operates automatically upon the rubbing of hogs by discharging a proper quantity of oil onto the oil conducting and scratching outer surface of a post-like oiler.
My invention is exceedingly simple in mechanical detail having no pumps, valves, etc. or parts generally considered as such to become clogged and unsatisfactorily operative. My hog oiler has the oil distributed to the outer covering by relying on the flow due to gravity. There are orifices in the chamber that stores the oil and these are opened automatically when the hogs rub up against the scratching surface of the covering so that oil is discharged as it is used and needed.
Other objects and features of importance will become apparent in following the description of the illustrated form of the invention.
Figure 1 is a perspective view of a hog oiler which exemplifies how the invention may be embodied in one practical oiler.
Figure 2 is a sectional view on enlarged scale and taken on the line 2-2 of Figure 1.
Figure 3 is an enlarged transverse sectional view taken on the line 33 of Figure 2.
Figure 4 is a transverse sectional view taken on the line 44 of Figure 2.
Figure 5 is an enlarged fragmentary sectional view showing the oiler as it appears when moved to a position at which oil is discharged to the outer covering of the oiler.
Figure 6 is an exploded perspective view of a part of the oiler.
In the accompanying drawings there is a hog oiler 10 which is constructed in accordance with the invention. The oiler has a platform 12 which is optional. An area 14 of the platform is enclosed by fence 16 in the center of which there is a base 18 bolted or otherwise held in place. A column 20 is welded or otherwise rigidly secured to base 18 and has a piston 22 at the upper extremity thereof. The piston head 24 is made of a leather or like material with washers 26 and 28 on opposite sides thereof and having a skirt 30. Nuts or other fasteners are used to hold the piston assembled on column 20.
A cylinder 32 is mounted for reciprocation on column 20 with the skirt of the piston sliding against the inner surface of the cylinder. The lower wall 34 of the cy1inder has a guide aperture 36 in its center through which the column 20 is passed. Stop 38 is attached to the column and abuts the inner surface of wall 34 to limit the upward movement of the cylinder. Guide 40 is attached to the cylinder 32 near its upper extremity and it has a downwardly sloped upper surface 42 which tends to guide oil which accumulates beneath the piston, toward the walls of the cylinder 32. A plurality of oil discharge apertures 44 are in the side wall of the cylinder 32 and are located above and at the edge of the sloped upper surface 42 of guide 40. The main discharge openings or orifices 46 are formed in a group above apertures 44 and these are registered with the oil 48 in oil chamber 50 when the cylinder is lifted. The discharge orifices 46 move past the piston 24 as the cylinder moves upward and become registered with the oil 48 enabling it to flow to the outer surface of the cylinder 32.
Chamber 50 is filled by lifting the loosely fitting closure 52 and pouring oil into the open upper extremity of the cylinder which constitutes chamber 50. Closure 52 fits sufliciently loose so that no appreciable vacuum will be formed above the oil level. Accordingly, there will be no serious retarding of the flow of oil through orifices 46 when cylinder 32 is lifted.
The cylinder 32 is lifted by the rubbing action of the hogs on the scratching surface 56 of a cylinder covering. The scratching surface is formed by a wire mesh screen 57 whose confronting edges have flanges 58 and 60 (Figures 3 and 6) that engage and lock, holding the screen 57 in cylindrical form on the pliers or layers of burlap 62 that are on the outside surface of cylinder 32. The burlap functions as a wick by which to conduct the oil and the wire mesh screen not only protects the burlap but also provides a scratching surface for the hogs. When applying the burlap and the wire mesh to the cylinder it is recommended that a number of ties 64 be placed on the outside surface of the wire mesh to help hold it fastened firmly in place and prevent the hogs from pulling it loose.
The operation has been partially described previously. The hogs rub onto the outer surface of the post-like hog oiler not only scratching but also receiving oil from the cover on cylinder 32. At the same time their movements will cause the cylinder to ride up and expose the contents of the chamber 50 to the layers of burlap 62 or like material, such as cloth of other types, through orifices 46. When the hogs move from contact with the scratch surface, the cylinder 32 is gravity lowered. This closes registry between the oil 48 and the covering on cylinder 32.
An important feature of the invention is bafiie at the top part of screen 57. The upper part of screen 57 can be rolled over the annular baffle 75 to hold it in place. The proper position for the bafile is in alignment with orifices 46 (Figure 2) to prevent the oil in chamber 50 from squirting completely through the covering on cylinder 32.
It is understood that various changes may be made without departing from the claimed invention.
What is claimed as new is as follows:
1. A hog oiler comprising a base, an upstanding column attached to said base at one end and having a fixedly mounted piston at its opposite end, a cylinder mounted on said column and slidable over said piston, said cylinder having at least one discharge orifice located below said piston when said cylinder is in its lowered position, the volume enclosed by said cylinder above said piston constituting an oil storage chamber, a covering on said cylinder and against which the hogs are adapted to brush and thereby elevate said cylinder to bring said orifice in registry with said chamber and thereby discharge oil from the chamber onto the covering which has a portion in oil receiving communication with said orifice.
2. The oiler of claim 1 wherein said covering includes at least one ply of oil saturable material, and a screen mesh over said ply.
3. A hog oiler comprising a base, an upstanding column attached to said base at one end and having a fixedly mounted piston at its opposite end, a cylinder mounted on said column and slidable over said piston, said cylinder having at least one discharge orifice located below said piston when said cylinder is in its lowered 3 position, the volume enclosed by said cylinder above said piston constituting an oil storage chamber, a covering on said cylinder and against Which the hogs are adapted to brush and thereby elevate saidcylinder to-bring said orifice in registry with'said chamber and thereby discharge oil from the chamber onto the covering which has a portion in .oil receivingcom-munication with said orifice, a guide secured to said cylinder and having an opening through which said column is passed, the upper surface of said guide sloping downwardly and outwardly toward the walls of said cylinder, and said cylinder having at least one aperture at the edge of said guide through which oil which accumulates on the sloping surface of said guide may .pass and be received by said covering.
4. The oiler of claim 3 wherein said covering includes at least one ply of cloth selected from a group of oil saturable cloth materials, and an abrasive mesh covering said cloth.
5. In a hogoiler the combination of a base, a generally uprightcolumn attached to said base, a post-like cylinder on said generally upright column, a piston fixedly mounted on said column and holding said column and said cylinder spaced from each other and in sliding relationship whereby .said cylinder is movable with respect to said column and in response to rubbing and brushing of hogs against the cylinder, and rneans openable in response to lifting of said cylinder with respect to said column for conducting oil from within said column to the outer surface of said cylinder.
6. In a hog oiler the combination of a base, a generally upright column attached to said base, a post-like cylinder on said generally upright column, a piston fixedly mounted on said column and holding said column and said cylinder spaced from each other and in sliding relationship whereby said cylinder is movable with respect to said column and in response to rubbing and brushing of hogs against the cylinder, means openable in response to lifting of said cylinder with respect to said column for conducting oil from within said column to the outer surface of said cylinder, said cylinder having an oil storage chamber located above said piston, and said means for conducting oil including an orifice in said cylinder which is registered with said chamber when said cylinder is elevated so that the oil is cavity fed to the outer surface of the cylinder.
7. In a hog oiler the combination of a base, a generally upright column attached to said base, a movably mounted cylinder on said generally upright column, a piston fixedly mounted on said column and holding said column and said cylinder laterally spaced from each other and in sliding relationship whereby said cylinder is movable with respect to said column and in response to rubbing and brushing of hogs against the cylinder, means openable in response to lifting of said cylinder with respect to said column for conducting oil from within said column to the outer surface of said cylinder, said cylinder having an oil storage chamber located above said piston, said means for conducting oil including an orifice in said cylinder which is registered with said chamber when said cylinder is elevated so that the oil is gravity fed throughsaid orifice to'the outer surface of the cylinder, a covering on the outer surface of said cylinder and having an oil conductive layer in registry with said orifice to distribute the oil throughout the outer surface of the cylinder, and an oil baffle on the outer side of said layer and in alignment with said orifice to'prevent oil from squirting completely through said covering.
8. The hog oiler of claim 7 wherein there is a scratch surface constructed of a screen over said oil distributing layer.
9. The ho oiler of claim 8 and means operatively connected between said cylinder and said column for constraining the motion of-said cylinder on said column.
10. The hog oiler of claim 8 and means operatively connected between said cylinder and said column for constraining the motion of said cylinder on said column, and a stop connected between said cylinder and said column for limiting the extent of motion of saidcylinder in one direction.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,198,570 Parton Sept. 19, 1916 1,390,611 Haisley Sept. 13, 1921 1,492,142 Schoemaker Apr. 29, 1924 2,438,731 Wedeking Mar. v30, 1948
US703924A 1957-12-19 1957-12-19 Livestock oiler Expired - Lifetime US2888906A (en)

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Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3033166A (en) * 1960-07-21 1962-05-08 Charles H Murray Cartridge fed animal insecticide applicator
US3062187A (en) * 1960-10-24 1962-11-06 Alfred J Piel Liquid applicator for animal usage
US3156216A (en) * 1963-04-03 1964-11-10 Jesse L Poage Livestock oiler
US3960114A (en) * 1975-05-27 1976-06-01 Hovorak William P Hog oiler
US20030000483A1 (en) * 2001-06-27 2003-01-02 Haber Jason Bernard Mountable clamp-on cat scratching device
US6619237B2 (en) * 2001-06-22 2003-09-16 Nita J. Robertson Recoverable cat-scratching post
US20140196670A1 (en) * 2013-01-14 2014-07-17 Cynthia Lamers Animal Self-Grooming Device
US20210392854A1 (en) * 2020-06-18 2021-12-23 Hebe Studio Limited Scratching apparatus
WO2023017104A1 (en) * 2021-08-11 2023-02-16 Hebe Studio Limited Scratching apparatus

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1198570A (en) * 1914-10-01 1916-09-19 Louis J Gregerson Rubbing-post.
US1390611A (en) * 1921-02-15 1921-09-13 Charles A Haisley Hog-oiler
US1492142A (en) * 1923-05-11 1924-04-29 Shoemaker Murry Machine for treating live stock
US2438731A (en) * 1946-01-02 1948-03-30 Lake Mfg Company Inc Stock oiler

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1198570A (en) * 1914-10-01 1916-09-19 Louis J Gregerson Rubbing-post.
US1390611A (en) * 1921-02-15 1921-09-13 Charles A Haisley Hog-oiler
US1492142A (en) * 1923-05-11 1924-04-29 Shoemaker Murry Machine for treating live stock
US2438731A (en) * 1946-01-02 1948-03-30 Lake Mfg Company Inc Stock oiler

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3033166A (en) * 1960-07-21 1962-05-08 Charles H Murray Cartridge fed animal insecticide applicator
US3062187A (en) * 1960-10-24 1962-11-06 Alfred J Piel Liquid applicator for animal usage
US3156216A (en) * 1963-04-03 1964-11-10 Jesse L Poage Livestock oiler
US3960114A (en) * 1975-05-27 1976-06-01 Hovorak William P Hog oiler
US6619237B2 (en) * 2001-06-22 2003-09-16 Nita J. Robertson Recoverable cat-scratching post
US20030000483A1 (en) * 2001-06-27 2003-01-02 Haber Jason Bernard Mountable clamp-on cat scratching device
US6715447B2 (en) * 2001-06-27 2004-04-06 Jason Bernard Haber Mountable clamp-on cat scratching device
US20140196670A1 (en) * 2013-01-14 2014-07-17 Cynthia Lamers Animal Self-Grooming Device
US20210392854A1 (en) * 2020-06-18 2021-12-23 Hebe Studio Limited Scratching apparatus
US11696569B2 (en) * 2020-06-18 2023-07-11 Hebe Studio Limited Scratching apparatus
WO2023017104A1 (en) * 2021-08-11 2023-02-16 Hebe Studio Limited Scratching apparatus

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