Campbell v. Kavanaugh

11 F. 83, 20 Blatchf. 256, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2373
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 23, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 F. 83 (Campbell v. Kavanaugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. Kavanaugh, 11 F. 83, 20 Blatchf. 256, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2373 (N.D.N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Blatchford, C. J.

This suit is brought on reissued letters patent No. 8,391, granted to the plaintiffs, September 3, 1878, for an “improvement in burrs for knitting-machines;” the original patent, No. 43,636, having been granted to W. H. Carr and M. P. Akin, July 26, 1864, for an “improvement in knitting-machine burrs,” on the invention of said Carr. The specification of the reissue is not signed by Carr, but is signed by Campbell and Clute. It is as follows, including what is inside of brackets and what is outside of brackets, omitting what is in italics:

“ Figure 1 is an end view [.] Figuro 2 [is] a side view, with part of the blades removed [.] and figure 3 [is] a section [as indicated by] at or about the [lines ] line 0,0, in figure 1 [.] of a knitting-machine burr embodying my invention; and figure 4 is a side view of one of the [wings or] blades [.] and figures 5 and 6 [are] perspective views of the two parts of the slotted huh which holds the blades, and figure 7 [is] a side view of the [screw bush] pari by which the two parts of the slotted hub are secured together [.] with at burr; like Like [letters of referenco indicate like] parts [in the several] being marked by the same letters in all the figures, [figures of the drawings. ] Before this invention burrs for knitting-machines had bee?i made with removable wings or blades, clamped in a slotted hub in such manner that the blades, when broken or worn out, could be readily removed and replaced by new ones, 'upon simply loosening or removing the devices by which the blades were damped in the slotted hub, examples of such knitting burrs being shown in the specifications and drawings of English patent No. 10,724, granted in the year 1845, and United States letters patent No. 35,565, dated June 10, 1862. But, in such knitting burrs, the removable blades were secured in a slotted hub by rings or disks damped; against the lateral edges of the blades, outside of the slotted pari of the hub, at its ends; so that part of the body of the burr which held the blades had a considerably greater thickness than the slotted part of the hub in which the blades were inserted, which greater Lhiekness rendered the burr much more bulky and far less eonvenient to use in some kinds of knitting-machines that the common knitting burr having blades of like width soldered fast in a simple slotted hub. [This invention consists in the peculiar construe[84]*84tion of the removable wings or blades of knitting-machine burrs, and also in the combination of such wings or blades with the hub and bush, whereby a more complete and efficient knitting-machine burr is produced than heretofore, and in which the necessity for clamping the removable blades at their extreme ends, as has heretofore been done, is avoided. * * ■ *] Now one part of my invention consists in making the inner ends of removable wings or blades, A, of knitting-machine burrs, each with a dovetail or flaring projection, b, figure 4, and two shoulders, c, c, one on each side of the said flaring projection, in such manner that blades thus formed can be firmly secured in a hollow slotted hub of suitable construction by means of devices located within or inside of the hub, instead of at the outer ends or on the outside thereof. Another part of my invention consists in making a slotted [the] hub [is constructed] for a knitting-machine burr of two separate rings, D, D’, [see figures 5 and 6, which are provided with central holes to receive the screw bush] having equal series of slots, e, e, in and around them, and held together end to end by a central screw bolt, F, or its equivalent, and [with oblique slots, e, e, figures 5 and 6, and have] having the unslotted inside parts of their inner ends, g, g, made hollowing or inclined outward towards each other, [substantially as shown in figures 3,5, and 6,] so as to form thereby an outwardly narrowed annular space, h, [see] figure 3, between the two hub rings [.] in such manner that a series of separate knitting burr blades of suitable size and shape can be fully inserted and firmly clamped within and by the said united hub rings themselves, without the aid of any other device or devices. [The hub ring, D’, is provided with a screw thread, substantially as shown in figure 5. The central screw bush, F, or its equivalent, is constructed, substantially, as shown in figures 3 and 7, of a diameter to fit the central hole in ring D, and is provided with a central hole, (see figure 3,) to receive the arbor or stud upon which the burr revolves. This is provided upon one end with a collar of somewhat longer diameter than the central hole in ring D, (see figures 3 and 7,)- and upon the other end with a screw thread which fits and.screws into the screw into the central hole of ring.D’., The blade or wing, A, (see figure 4,) is constructed from sheet metal of proper thickness in the ordinary way, and is provided with and has attached to its inner edge the dovetail or flaring projection, b, wider at its inner extreme end than at the point where it is joined to the blade or wing. The ring, D, is placed upon the screw bush, F, close to the collar, (see figure 3,) and the ring, D’, is screwed upon the screw of the bush, F, a proper distance. The rings were adjusted so that the slots, e, e, exactly correspond with each other, when on the bush, F. A series of wings or blades, A, are placed in proper position successively in the slots, e, e, with the dovetails or flaring projections, b, extending into the outwardly narrowed annular recess, h, formed by and between the ends, g, g, of the hub rings, D, D’, (see figures 3, 5, and 6,) and the screw bush, F, is then firmly screwed into the ring, S’. This action of the screw closes together endwise the two hub rings, D, D’.] And another part of my invention consists in the arrangement of a series of knitting-burr blades, A, each having on its inner end a dovetail or flaring projection, b, and shoulders, c, c, on both sides thereof, in combination with a knitting-burr hub composed of two rings, D, S’, having equal series of slots, e, e, in and around them, and held together end to end, by a.central screw bolt, N, or its equivalent, [85]*85with the inside unslotted part, g, g, of their inner ends inclined outward towards each other in such manner [as to cause their] that the said inclined inner ends, g, g, [to] of the huh rings clamp against the inclined edges, i, i, of the flaring projections, [or dovetails on,] h, of the blades [or wings] and [thus] thereby draw and hold [them into place] the blades into and with their [edges] shoulders, c, c, [tightly pressed,] tight against the bottoms of the [oblique] slots, e, e, in the hub rings [.] and thus produce [from this it will be seen that] a cheap and durable knitting burr [is produced] from which any or all of its blades can be readily removed and replaced by others, [by] upon simply [unscrewing the screw husli, E, thereby,] loosening the hub rings [and] in which the blades are clamped [.] in a slotted hub, not only by means of devices located inside of the hub, hut by means of the inner ends of the two united huh rings that constitute the slotted hub itself. [This] A'rid such a knitting burr is thinner and lighter and generally

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Bluebook (online)
11 F. 83, 20 Blatchf. 256, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-kavanaugh-nynd-1882.