Home| FAQ Search:Advanced|Person|Company| Type|Class Login
Quick search:
Patent number:
Patent Date:
first    back  next  last
US Patent: 730
Geared drill stock
Hand drill
Patentee:
George Page (exact or similar names) - Keene, NH

USPTO Classifications:
81/34

Tool Categories:
woodworking tools : hand drills : breast drills

Assignees:
None

Manufacturer:
Not known to have been produced

Witnesses:
C.H. Diltberger
Linton Thorn

Patent Dates:
Granted: May 08, 1838

Reissue Information:
Reissue of 8,828 (Mar. 23, 1852)

Patent Pictures: [ 1 | 2 ]
USPTO (New site tip)
Google Patents
Report data errors or omissions to steward George Langford
"Vintage Machinery" entry for Page & Co.
Description:
From Chuck Zitur's web page, this patent for a "Geared drill stock" is for a "breast drill with a single pinion gear and an additional friction roller which bears against the smooth inner top side of the main gear resulting in less wear to the gears." This patent is the earliest American patent for a geared drill, although the patent specification says that it consists of improvements to designs "that have heretofore been employed."

The inventor had earlier patents for a mortising machine and a combination bit-and-countersink - patent 7,484X and patent 82, respectively. The former patent was the starting point of what became the largest woodworking machinery maker in the world, J. A. Fay & Co., although George Page himself played little or no role in that company.

There was another woodworking machinery inventor named George Page, who lived in Baltimore. While it is possible that they are one and the same person, the most likely scenario is that they were two separate people. See patent 2,174, patent 10,394 and patent 84,937.

Copyright © 2002-2024 - DATAMP