The Stark Machine
The [reproduction of the patent drawings] of the Stark machine illustrated on the opposite page show a series of numeral wheels, each provided with three sets of figures running from 1 to 9 and 0.
Description of Stark machine
Pivotally mounted upon the axis of the numeral wheels at each end are sector gears E¹ and arms E⁴, in which are pivoted a square shaft E, extended from one arm to the other across the face of the numeral wheels. The shaft E, is claimed to be held in its normal position by a spring so that a pawl, E², shiftably mounted on the shaft, designed to ratchet or actuate the numeral wheels forward, may engage with any one of the numeral wheel ratchets.
A bail marked D, is pivoted to standards A¹, of the frame of the machine, and is provided with the two radial racks D³ which mesh with the sector gears E¹. It may be conceived that the act of depressing the bail D, will cause the actuating pawl E², to operate whichever numeral wheel it engages the ratchet of.
The bail D, is held in its normal position by a spring D², and is provided with nine keys or finger-pieces d, eight of which co-act with the stepped plate G, to regulate the additive degree of rotation given to the numeral wheels, while the ninth has a fixed relation with the bail and the bail itself is stopped.
The keys d, marked from 1 to 8, are pivoted to the bail in such a manner that their normal relation to the bail will allow them to pass by the steps on the stepped plate G, when the bail is depressed by the fixed No. 9 key. When, however, any one of the keys numbered from 1 to 8 is depressed, the lower end of the shank of the key will tilt rearward, and, as the bail is depressed, offers a stop against the respective step of the plate G, arranged in its path, thus stopping further action of the actuating pawl E², but offering nothing to prevent the continuation of the force of momentum set up in the numeral wheels by the key action.
There was small use in stopping the action of the pawl E², if the ratchet and numeral wheel, impelled by the pawl, could continue onward under its momentum.
The carry of the tens transfer device is of the same order as that described in the Pascal and Hill machines; that is, a one-step ratchet-motion actuated by a cam lug or pin from the lower wheel. The carry transfer device consists of the lever F, and pawl f⁴, acting on the ratchet of the upper wheel which is operated by the cam lugs b⁵ of the lower wheel acting on the arms f¹ and f³ of the lever F.
From the Robjohn Patent Drawings
Inoperativeness of Stark machine
The machine shown in the Stark patent was provided with but one set of keys, but the arrangement for shifting the driving ratchet pawl E², from one order to another, so that the action of the keys may rotate any one of the numeral wheels, gave the machine greater capacity than the single digit adders; but as with the Chapin machine, of what use was the increase in capacity if the machine would not add correctly. That is about all that may be said of the Stark machine, for since there was no means provided by which the rotation of numeral wheels could be controlled, it was merely a device for rotating numeral wheels and was therefore lacking in the features that would give it a right to the title of an adding machine.
Nine keys common to a plurality of orders
The nine-key scheme of the Stark invention, connectable to the different orders, was old, and was first disclosed in the U. S. Patent to O. L. Castle in 1857 (a machine operated by a clock-spring wound by hand), but its use in either of these machines should not be construed as holding anything in common with that found in some of the modern recording adders. The Castle machine has not been illustrated because it does not enter into the evolution of the modern machine.
The ancient Art, or the Art prior to the invention of Parmelee, consisted of mechanism which could be controlled by friction devices, or Geneva gear-lock devices, that were suitable to the slow-acting type of manipulative means.
The first attempt at a positive control for a key-driven adding device is found in a patent issued to W. Robjohn in 1872 ([see illustration]). As will be noted, this machine was referred to in the foregoing discussion as merely a single-digit adding machine, having the capacity for adding but one column of digits at a time.