Conley v. King Bridge Co.

187 F. 137, 109 C.C.A. 412, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4503
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 1911
DocketNo. 3
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 187 F. 137 (Conley v. King Bridge 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
Conley v. King Bridge Co., 187 F. 137, 109 C.C.A. 412, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4503 (3d Cir. 1911).

Opinion

BUFFINGTON, Circuit Judge.

In the court below Thomas Conley filed a bill in equity against the King Bridge Company, charging infringement of all claims of patent No. 701,544, issued June 3, 1902, for a guide for punching presses, and of claim 2 of patent No. 735,-469, issued August 4, 1903, for a gauge for punching presses. That court held the respondent infringed neither of said patents, and from its decree dismissing the bill complainant appealed. These patents concern the punching of bridge or building beams or girders, which may be of great length, weight, and value. In punching bolt and rivet [138]*138holes in them — all of which must be done at the place of manufacture — the utmost exactness of location is imperative, since variations of a minute fraction of an inch from predetermined standards of measurement will destroy exact coincidence of bolt holes in beams intended to be joined together, and either render the false punched -beam useless or necessitate the delay, extra work, and readjustment incident to the non-fitting of assembled parts. Moreover, the great weight, length, and unwieldiness of structural steel beams render it exceedingly difficult to secure the exact hole spacing necessary, while the requirement for minute exactness is rigid. The problem of accurately punching in advance in a mill the numerous and large sections of a bridge or a modern building so that the beams and girders will accurately assemble and bolt or rivet together when brought to their place over a stream or in a lofty building evidence the importance of the field of mechanical exactness to which these patents are addressed. They concern power punching presses, wherein, by the use of an adjustable guide or stop, holes are punched in beams at exact predetermined points. Previous to the device of patent No. 701,544, in the usual method of identically punching a number of such beams, either a scale on the bed of the table was used to regulate the location of the holes, or else the work was laid out by clamping to the beam a wooden pattern with bored guide holes. By these means the places for punching were marked by indenting the metal at each hole with a center punch. Both of these methods were slow, inaccurate, and expensive, and the work was done by a skilled mechanic. But even the most skilled operator could not make the holes exact duplicates in location, and thus more or less hand fitting adjustment was required before the beams could be used in construction work.

[1] The device by which Conley obviated these objectionable features is briefly described in his specification, as follows:

“This invention has relation to punching presses of that class known as ‘power punching-presses,’ and has for its object the provision of means whereby a duplicate number of articles may be speedily and accurately punched with hut little, if any, danger of false punching and without the aid of skilled labor. This invention consists in the provision of an attachment or adjunct for punching-presses and consisting of an adjustable guide or stop which can be set to guide and hold the metal to he operated upon by the punch so that it will be punched at exact predetermined intervals either the same or different distances apart.”

To secure these results, Conley used a power punch and adjoining table, both of common, well-known construction; the table being-placed slightly below the level of the press anvil. Upon such table were placed rails or tracks on which traveled a car provided at its forward end with a grasping- jaw to hold the beam in position under the punch. This car was moved backward and forward by- a boy who walked alongside the track. Parallel with the track, at one side thereof and slightly above it, was a guide or support rail of angle iron riveted in L shape. This rail carried a number of slotted blocks or stops, each adjustably removable, and adapted to be secured in any position desired by means of a set screw. The car had at its side a reciprocating, spring-impelled rod, which, when in normal position, en[139]*139gaged a block and stopped the car, and, when drawn back, disengaged itself from such block, and permitted the car to advance until the rod engaged the next one. The working of the device is well described in the specification, as follows:

•‘If, for instance, ¡1 number of pieces, .say, twenty feet long, are to be punched at regular intervals of twelve inches apart, nineteen of the stops. G. are placed on the guide-rail and secured by means of their fastening screws exactly twelve inches apart. The meial to he punched is then placed under the punch and the first hole punched in its proper position. The end of the piece is then placed between the jaws and the jaws closed by means of the handle, E'. The car is now pushed forward by the helper until the projecting end of the rod comes into contact with the first block. The metal is now in position under the punch to have the second hole punched. The rod or shaft is now moved out of contact with the block by means of th<pivoted lever and the car moved forward on its tracks till the end of the rod comes into contact with the next block, the alternate moving forward and stopping and punching the rod being continued till the piece is finished. * * * xt will be seen that when the stops are properly placed and fastened on the guide-rail, G, any number of pieces can be punched and all of them will be exact duplicates. It will also lie seen that no skill is required to operate the mechanism and that a much larger number of pieces can be punched in the saíne time on the same machine than where the metal must be accurately adjusted at each manipulation of the punch.”

By means of this device the precise location of the hole is figured out in advance, the stops set to make the hole center accordingly, and, when the machine is thus set, an unskilled attendant can punch with great rapidity, in any number of successive beams, holes uniformly located. Moreover, the range of adjustability is such that either uniform or varying spaces can be left between the holes. This device was new in the metal punching art. The Perkins patent No. 634,246, for punching regular lines of needle perforations in paper, threw no light on the problem of bridge section punching. It bore no relation to the adjustment of punched parts through the instrumentality of bolts and rivets. Perkins’ object was in one punching operation to so hold in place a large number of sheets of paper that they could all be punched at once. Conley’s aim was to so insure the accurate centering of each individual hole in each individual beam that the first and last beams of a large series would be so precisely identical that the. rivets or holts connecting the two parts of a bridge, building, or other structure would accurately fit the holes of two connecting beams or sections without filing or fitting. Perkins simply held his sheets so that the whole number of clamped sheets remained in exact relation to each other while his line of needles made perforations, while Conley’s object was to so adjust his machine that on every successive beam precisely the same punch centering was absolutely secured. It is clear, therefore, that the perforating of paper and the punching of bridge sections were so wide apart that the patents of the two inventors had wholly different objects in view, and contributed no helpful information to each other. So, also, save that they involved the metal punching art, the two Morgan patents, Nos. 167,461, and reissue 8,251, did nothing to solve Conley’s problem, for they were simply addressed to punching a regular line of holes along the edge of boiler plates.

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Related

Conley v. Thomas
211 F. 655 (Third Circuit, 1914)
Conley v. Thomas
204 F. 93 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 F. 137, 109 C.C.A. 412, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conley-v-king-bridge-co-ca3-1911.