Abstract: A hinge mounting device for use with conventional doors or furniture doors may be easily mounted and adjustably positioned on the door frame or cabinet. The device includes a base plate which is attached to the furniture or door frame and a hinge fitting which is adjustably mounted to the base plate. The fitting carries the hinge mechanism. The base plate is elongate and has a pair of longitudinally extending grooves on its opposite sides. The hinge fitting is generally U-shaped in cross section to fit longitudinally over the top of the base plate, and has inwardly extending flanges which are received in the longitudinal grooves in the side of the base plate. A pair of screws are threaded through the top wall of the U-shaped fitting and are adjusted so that they may engage, selectively, the top surface of the base plate. One of the screws locks the fitting in a selected longitudinal position along the base plate and the other screw controls the angular position of the fitting with respect to the base plate.
Abstract: This invention relates to a device adapted to be attached to a conventional transfusion tube of a blood-transfusion apparatus, said device permitting the drop-by-drop regulation and control of the flow-rate and comprising a mechanical pump comprising a plurality of rollers rotatably mounted around the periphery of a disc rotatably mounted within a casing chamber, said chamber having the same diameter as the envelope defined by said rollers, said casing having an opening therein and comprising a slidable member in said opening adapted to be biased by resilient means against said rollers, thus permitting the interposition between said slidable member and said rollers of transfusion tubes of different diameters. An air-bubble detector is provided which stops the pump if an air bubble is present in the transfusion tube, and the failure of any electrical or mechanical member actuates an optical and acoustic alarm signal.