Welcome! 

Register :: Login
Manufacturers Index - Victor Sewing Machine Co.
Patents
This page contains information on patents issued to this manufacturer.

Submitting Patent Information

If you find a patent number or patent date by this manufacturer that is not on this list, please contact the Site Historian.


Key to Links for Patent Information

USPTO = U.S. Patent Office . Images of the actual patent can be viewed on the U.S. Patent Office web site but a special TIFF viewer must be installed with your browser in order properly work. More information on how to configure your computer to view these patents can be found at TIFF image Viewers for Patent Images.
DATAMP = Directory of American Tool And Machinery Patents . A sister site to VintageMachinery.org with information on patents related to machinery and tools. A much easier user interface than the USPTO's for finding information on machinery patents.

Patent Number Date Title Name City Description
164,032 Jun. 01, 1875 Chucks for Metal Drills George M. Pratt Middletown, Middlesex County, CT
6,734 Nov. 09, 1876 Drill Chuck George M. Pratt Middletown, Middlesex County, CT This is the Canadian patent that corresponds to U. S. patent #164,032.
202,866 Apr. 23, 1878 Micrometer Gage George M. Pratt Middletown, Middlesex County, CT This invention relates to that class of micrometer gages having horseshoe shaped frames, in which the object to be measured is clamped between a suitable abutment and the tip of a micrometer-screw. In order that the measurement by such an instrument shall be absolutely correct, it is necessary that the surfaces of said abutment and screw shall be perfectly smooth, and they should, therefore, be made as hard as possible, to resist abrasion and wear. In hardening these surfaces, the ordinary methods of tempering have been employed, the screw being completely formed and adjusted while the metal of which it was composed was soft, and afterward tempered. In thus tempering the screw after its complete formation, it has been found that its adjustment is always more or less impaired, as the heat necessary in the process of tempering expands the metal, a portion of the expansion being permanent, and the contraction, on cooling, unequal so that, though a micrometer-screw should be perfectly accurate before being tempered, it would often, after tempering, be found so altered as to materially affect its accuracy in the minute measurements for which such instruments are employed, and is then worthless for its intended purpose. Besides, when the screw is first perfectly accurate, if its tip becomes much worn, a new adjustment or the substitution of a new screw is necessary in either event involving more or less expense. The bar forming the horseshoe or U shaped frame of such an instrument has heretofore been formed of uniform width and thickness throughout its length; and, in order to give it sufficient rigidity to prevent springing, this frame has been of inconvenient weight and bulk. To obviate the necessity for heating the screws for tempering, to provide for their easy repair, thus reducing the expense, while preserving the accuracy of micrometer-gages, and also to render the frame of such an instrument strong, light, and of elegant shape, is the object of my invention; and it consists, first, in a micrometer-gage screw, having a socket formed in its end, and provided with a separate tip of tempered steel or similar hard material, whereby the necessity for heating the screw, in order to temper the tip, is obviated, and said screw is rendered easy to repair by the simple replacement of a worn tip by a new one, properly hardened and adjusted; second, in forming a micrometer-gage frame of an approximately crescent shape, or semicircular and tapering from its middle portion to its ends, in which the screw-bearings are located.
RE8,793 Jul. 08, 1879 Chuck for Metal Drills George M. Pratt Middletown, Middlesex County, CT