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US Patent: 535X
Wry Fly Applied to Mills
Patentee:
Benjamin Tyler (exact or similar names) - Claremont, Sullivan County, NH

USPTO Classifications:

Tool Categories:
propulsion and energy : water power : water wheels

Assignees:
None

Manufacturer:
Not known to have been produced

Witnesses:
Unknown

Patent Dates:
Granted: Mar. 19, 1804

Patent Pictures:
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Wry Fly Turbine Wheel
Description:
Most of the patents prior to 1836 were lost in the Dec. 1836 fire. Only about 2,000 of the almost 10,000 documents were recovered. Little is known about this patent. There are no patent drawings available. This patent is in the database for reference only.

The Wry Fly is a wheel which, built upon the lower end of a perpendicular shaft in a circular form, resembling that of a tub. It is made fast by the insertion of two or more short cones, which, passing through the shaft, extends to the outer side of the wheel. The outside of the wheel is made of plank, jointed and fitted to each other, doweled at top and bottom, and hooped by three bands of iron, so as to make it water-tight; the top must be about one-fifth pars larger than the bottom in order to drive the hoops, but this proportion may be varied, or even reversed, according to the situation of place, proportion of the wheel, and quantity of water. The buckets are made of winding timber, and placed inside of the wheel, made fast by strong wooden pins drove in an oblique direction; they are fitted to the inside of the tub, or wheel, in such a manner as to form an acute angle from the wheel, the inner edge of the bucket inclining towards the water, which is poured upon the top, or upper end of it, about twelve and a half degrees; instead of their standing perpendicular with the shaft of the wheel they are placed in the form of a screw, the lower ends inclining towards the water, and against the course of the stream, after the rate of forty-five degrees; this however may be likewise varied, according to the circumstances of the place, quantity of water, and size of the wheel; over this wheel, and exactly fitted to the top of it, is a cup, or short cylinder, made fast and immovable by timbers connected with other parts of the building. Said Wry Fly may be used with or without said cylinder.

BENJAMIN TYLER.

Treatise Relative to the Testing of Water-wheels and Machinery, 1892, pg. 205

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