Slater Lewis insulator patent (not screw-top style)

[Trade Journal]

Publication: The Telegraphic Journal and Electrical Review

London, England
p. 466-467, col. 2-1


SLATER LEWIS'S PATENT INSULATOR.


THIS insulator (according to the inventor) may now be regarded as a practical success, having withstood the most severe tests over a period of about four years. It will be seen from the illustration that the usual iron stud is screwed into the insulator instead of being secured by cement.

 

Illustration

 

This idea, however, is not exactly new, inasmuch as Mr. Cordeaux patented a similar article some seven or eight years ago, but with the addition of an India-rubber washer, placed on the shoulder or upper gallery on the iron bolt which supports the cup. This washer or cushion is for the purpose of protecting the porcelain threads from a dead pressure, to allow for expansion and contraction of the sundry parts, and to protect the threads from moisture and consequent rust. This rubber cushion or washer Mr. Lewis dispenses with altogether, employing nothing whatever except the porcelain cup and the bare iron bolt. This is accomplished through a slight modification in the construction of the parts, and by reason of automatica machinery of the best class, which cuts the threads with unerring accuracy — a condition absolutely indispensable to ensure a perfectly satisfactory insulator, because the slightest outward or upward pressure will force off the top of the cup. The new insulator when fixed is brought down to a solid bearing, and the cup sits perfectly upright in its seat, whereas (according to Mr. Lewis) with the rubber washer a solid bearing is impossible, therefore there is, especially round shart curves in the line wires, a strong tendency to pull the insulator aside and out of truth with its support, thus throwing great pressure on the porcelain threads, and causing in many instances complete fracture. It will be clearly understood that this condition of things grows worse as teh rubber deteriorates, until, as is always the case in the course of time and according to circumstances, no rubber whatever remains, and the insulator is left to rock about on the stud, to the danger of chafing the wire and ripping the earthenware threads. The importance, therefore, of dispensing with the rubber altogether is, of course, fully apparent. About 200,000 of these insulators have already been sold to various railway, telegraph, and telephone companies at home and abroad, and repeated orders on a large scale are being constantly received. A large number of these insulators have been under trial on the Postal Telegraph lines for some years, and a further quantity are now being supplied under contract with the owners, viz., the Telegraph Manufacturing Company, Limited, of which the patentee is managing director. The insulator is also supplied with the patent self-binding screw tops, already described in our pages, by means of which a perfectly rigid attachment is instantly made. The cups can afterwards be renewed or taken down for washing without disturbing either binder or bolt. This is effected by an arrangement of a right hand screw on the bolt and a left hand screw on the insulator.

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Keywords:Foreign : Slater Lewis
Researcher notes:This could be Slater Lewis patent gb1883-0002115.
Supplemental information: 
Researcher:Bob Stahr
Date completed:August 28, 2009 by: Elton Gish;