Baldwin-Southwark Corp. v. Tinius Olsen Testing Mach. Co.

88 F.2d 910, 32 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 336, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3276
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedFebruary 13, 1937
DocketNo. 6074
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 88 F.2d 910 (Baldwin-Southwark Corp. v. Tinius Olsen Testing Mach. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin-Southwark Corp. v. Tinius Olsen Testing Mach. Co., 88 F.2d 910, 32 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 336, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3276 (3d Cir. 1937).

Opinion

BUFFINGTON, Circuit Judge.

This patent case concerns machines for ascertaining and recording the breaking point of, for example, concrete under compression and steel under tension. As stated, by the court below: “Testing machines have to deal with tremendous forces but they must measure them with the highest degree of precision. The crushing of a block of cement or the breaking of a bar of steel requires a powerful and rugged machine, but unless it can register with exactness the breaking point it will be of little value in modern. ' engineering practice.”

In such machines the breaking force,, known as the “load force,” is exerted, against the article to be tested, and such “load force” is a great one. For example, the proof in reference to a testing machine in the National Bureau of Standards at Washington is: “This machinéis for testing specimens in either tension, or compression and has a capacity in tension of 1,150,000 lb. on specimens of any length up to 34 ft. 4 in. after straining, and a capacity in compression of 2,300,000 lb. on specimens of any length up to 33 ft. l-% in. between platforms-36 in. in diameter.” And machines made-by the defendant “for slab and long column tests” are described as adapted to-tests up to 10,000,000 pounds.

Such being the conditions which confront a testing machine, it has been found, that it is impracticable to balance millions of “load force” pounds against millions of specimen pounds, and the art resorted to using instrumentalities located between the “load force” and the ascertaining and recording mechanism-,, whereby a lesser force than the actual' “load -force,” but proportionate thereto,, could be exerted on the ascertaining and recording measuring mechanism. In accord therewith it was customary, roughly speaking, in the graduated beam or lever and counterweight in weigh scales, to use-levers, to one end of which the “load force” is applied and at the other a counter balance weight, movable by hand.

[911]*911In his handbook on the art (published in 1899), Professor Adolph Martens, director of the Royal Testing Laboratories of Berlin and at Charlottenburg, says: “The same principles which apply to scales, gauges, etc., also apply to the load-indicators of testing-machines. There are some additional special features which have individually been adopted more or less generally in testing-machines. The scale, especially the beam-scale, is frequently such a predominant feature in the design of the testing-machine, that it becomes apparent at the first glance in the modern machine.”

Indeed, that the lever type machine was the prevalent one in use, is shown by defendants’ catalogue, where, referring to the accompanying picture, in which will be seen the graduated lever weight beam and the movable counter, the defendant says:

“The above illustration is of our 100,-000, 150,000 and 200,000 pounds capacity Olsen New Automatic and Autographic Universal three-screw type motor-driven Testing Machine as used by all up-to-date testing laboratories throughout this country and abroad. * * *
“These testing machines are the recognized standard for high-grade testing throughout the world. They excel in accuracy and sensitiveness, are designed for maximum strength, durability, and ease in operation.”

Incident to the operation of a lever, and necessarily so, a “knife edge” was required, and this resulted in inaccuracy. The testimony introduced by defendant shows this. Its Exhibit 5, Yale and Towne Bulletin, says:

“The corner-stone of all existing systems of weighing machines is the ‘knife-edge’. This consists usually of a triangular piece of hardened steel, resting on a flat plate of the same material, and forms the fulcrum on which the scale beam or lever oscillates.”
“Theoretically, the knife-edge rests and oscillates upon a mathematical line, and the more nearly practice conforms to theory in this respect, the more accurate will be the scale. In practice, however, and particularly in large scales, the knife-edge is required to support heavy loads, and its bearing surface must thus have a sensible area to prevent the crushing of the material. This is sought by increasing the length of the knife-edge, the usual rule being to limit the pressure to a maximum of 12,000 lbs. per inch of length. As a result the knife-edges in large scales have considerable length, and this fact introduces another element of error, viz., the difficulty of fixing the knife edge in absolute parallelism with the axis of rotation of the beam or lever, and of preventing flexure of the knife-edge under pressure, so that it does not bear uniformly on the whole of its length. Obviously the least want of coincidence in either of these respects would introduce a large and variable element of error. Even assuming a knife-edge to be originally true in all respects, its bearing surface brought to a perfect and sharp edge, its axis exactly normal to the plane in which the beam vibrates, and the two plates on which the ends of the knife-edge rest to be true planes and perfectly aligned, how long is it probable that all of these conditions can be maintained? Oxidation tends always to disturb them; the pressure and shock due to heavy loads is a still greater cause of variation; and any disturbance in the frame or setting of the machine may also introduce error. All of these causes of disturbance are constantly at work in most cases, and as a result the sensitiveness and accuracy of such scales constantly deteriorates.”

Quoting further from such exhibit, we find this statement of the Howe Scale Company:

“It is self-evident that the less number of knife-edge bearings the less the friction, and the more sensitive will be the scale.
“All the'main parts of the tract scale are almost indestructible, but the vital parts are the knife-edges. These are the delicate sensitive parts, and are subject to wear. When worn, the scale becomes dull, and more weight has to be placed on the platform to affect the beam than when first built.”

The art, though recognizing for a long period the objectionable features of levers in testing machines, found no satisfactory way of eliminating them. And the desirability of doing so became all the more apparent when the Bourdon measuring and recording device came into use. It was an accurate recorder which in no way affected the other parts of a measuring machine or the operation there[912]*912of, it being acted upon by the other elements. It consisted of a coiled metal tube of elastic character, one end of which was fixed in position and the other end free. When oil, which is incompressible, is forced into it, the free end uncoils in proportion to the amount of forced in oil. That the possibility of doing away with the levers and the use of Bourdon’s device was a possibility is shown by the statements of Professor Martens in 1899, quoted below, but it is equally true that he did not solve it or pretend to have solved it, and that the elder Emery also did not solve it1, and that, if solved, Bourdon’s tubes could not be used in the device of Emery. And it further appears that though Martens called the possibility of an improvement to the attention of manufacturers, his suggestion “remained fruitless.” Emery, Sr., the father of the present patentee, in his patent No.

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Bluebook (online)
88 F.2d 910, 32 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 336, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-southwark-corp-v-tinius-olsen-testing-mach-co-ca3-1937.