Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 162,253 pages of information and 244,496 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Difference between revisions of "William Bundy"

From Graces Guide
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[[Image:JD 2020 Bundy 2.jpg|thumb|Bundy's comb cutting machine - detail]]
[[Image:JD 2020 Bundy 2.jpg|thumb|Bundy's comb cutting machine - detail]]
1796 Patented a comb-cutting machine. Described and illustrated in Rees's Cyclopedia. See illustrations.
1796 Patented a comb-cutting machine. Described and illustrated in Rees's Cyclopedia. See illustrations.
The comb cutting machine resembled a treadle lathe, but instead of the workpiece revolving against a stationary tool, a stack of cutters (steel circular saws) rotated while the ivory comb blank was fed into the cutters. The cutters were assembled on a driven shaft, separated by a series of spacers.
The ivory blank was clamped in a dovetailed cross slide, its overhanging portion being supported at each tooth location by a series of thin metal fingers. The cross slide was moved by a leadscrew, turned by worm and wheel gears, the wormshaft being driven from the lathe spindle by a belt.
The operator engaged the leadscrew by pressing down a lever. The lever had a profiled edge which located in the leadscrew threads, and would remain engaged until unlatched by the operator. Thus the feed was ''self-acting''.
A second tailstock was provided to locate another belt-driven spindle, and this was equipped with a further stack of revolving cutting discs, whose chamfered edges formed the pointed ends of the teeth. This was done by the operator holding the comb against the discs, while the teeth of another comb were being cut.


1817 'Patents Lately Enrolled ..... WILLIAM BUNDY, Pratt Place, Camden Town, mathematical instrument-maker, for machinery for breaking and preparing flax and hemp, February 1.'<ref>The Scots Magazine, 1 August 1817</ref>
1817 'Patents Lately Enrolled ..... WILLIAM BUNDY, Pratt Place, Camden Town, mathematical instrument-maker, for machinery for breaking and preparing flax and hemp, February 1.'<ref>The Scots Magazine, 1 August 1817</ref>

Revision as of 07:02, 21 September 2020

Bundy's comb cutting machine
Bundy's comb cutting machine - detail

1796 Patented a comb-cutting machine. Described and illustrated in Rees's Cyclopedia. See illustrations.

The comb cutting machine resembled a treadle lathe, but instead of the workpiece revolving against a stationary tool, a stack of cutters (steel circular saws) rotated while the ivory comb blank was fed into the cutters. The cutters were assembled on a driven shaft, separated by a series of spacers.

The ivory blank was clamped in a dovetailed cross slide, its overhanging portion being supported at each tooth location by a series of thin metal fingers. The cross slide was moved by a leadscrew, turned by worm and wheel gears, the wormshaft being driven from the lathe spindle by a belt.

The operator engaged the leadscrew by pressing down a lever. The lever had a profiled edge which located in the leadscrew threads, and would remain engaged until unlatched by the operator. Thus the feed was self-acting.

A second tailstock was provided to locate another belt-driven spindle, and this was equipped with a further stack of revolving cutting discs, whose chamfered edges formed the pointed ends of the teeth. This was done by the operator holding the comb against the discs, while the teeth of another comb were being cut.

1817 'Patents Lately Enrolled ..... WILLIAM BUNDY, Pratt Place, Camden Town, mathematical instrument-maker, for machinery for breaking and preparing flax and hemp, February 1.'[1]


See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. The Scots Magazine, 1 August 1817