Conrader v. Judson Governor Co.

238 F. 349, 151 C.C.A. 365, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1357
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 1, 1916
DocketNo. 304
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 238 F. 349 (Conrader v. Judson Governor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conrader v. Judson Governor Co., 238 F. 349, 151 C.C.A. 365, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1357 (2d Cir. 1916).

Opinion

CHATFIEED, District Judge.

[1] This action was brought by Rudolph Conrader, the patentee, and the Jarecki Manufacturing Company, holding an exclusive license to five patents issued at various times to Conrader.

The earliest patent was issued December 25, 1900, No. 664,468, upon an application filed January 31, 1900.

The second patent was issued upon the 26th of November, 1901, under No. 687,449, upon an application filed September’ 10, 1900, which it will be noticed was prior to the date of allowance of the first patent.

A third patent was issued February 18, 1913, under No. 1,053,904, upon an application filed October 26, 1910. This third patent was withdrawn from the action at the time of trial.

Another patent to Conrader, issued November 2, 1904, under No. 775,391, on an application'filed January 29, 1902, is set forth in the record and has been considered in the development of the art.

These patents are stated by the patentee to cover improvements in governors for pumping or compression engines.

The fourth patent in suit was issued on January 16, 1906, under No. 810,109, upon an application filed January 23, 1905. It shows a form of governor or regulator for a pumping engine to create a vacuum, that is, to pump from a receptacle, containing a medium at less than the atmospheric pressure into a space where the pressure is as much as that of the atmosphere. The District Court held this, patent invalid for lack of invention.

A fifth patent was issued upon the 9th day of September, 1913, under No. 1,072,576, upon an application filed October 26, 1910. This patent claims certain improvements in controlling devices for compressors, by describing “a centrifugal governor with improvements within the governor itself, and controlling mechanism operating upon the relief device of the compressor, together with a pressure device acting upon the governor valve.”

It will be pointed out later that employment of a relief device was the outstanding feature of this patent, but the general style of the [351]*351machine used by the patentee as an illustration, and the application of the ideas shown in his earlier patents to the form of machine described in this latest patent, must be carefully kept in mind in considering the present case. The District Court held this patent valid and infringed as to the claims included in the action, viz. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 12, 14, 15, and 16.

The District Court has found and the record shows that a govern- or for a pumping engine, in the sense of a device which will direct 'the operation of the pumping engine, so as to restore the desired pressure of the compressed vapor or fluid when this pressure is too greatly increased or reduced by use and withdrawal, was old in the art in mechanical combination with the ordinary centrifugal steam governor which, by the outward movement of the centrifugal balls, shuts off the motive fluid in case the speed of the engine, doing the pumping, becomes excessive.

It is evident that, if the amount of withdrawal was less than the supply compressed by the engine, the pressure would increase, would thereby increase the load or work of the engine piston at each stroke, and might stall the engine, even though the pressure did not reach a dangerous point in so doing. It was also well known that when starting up, that is, when pumping into an empty receiver, the pumping engine could run at its maximum speed without need of interference until 0the pressure in the compression receptacle had reached a point where the pumping should be checked.

As shown by the prior art, Conrader recognized the then evident' proposition that the so-called centripetal force, which opposed the outward motion of the centrifugal balls, consisted of the weight, that is the force of gravity acting upon the mass of these balls, or of a spring, if the center of gravity was as high as the point of suspension and a contracting spring was present. He found in the prior art certain patents and forms of device in which regulation of the supply of motive fluid was accomplished by the operation of a lever which forcibly and directly closed the steam valve by acting upon the stem of the centrifugal governor without regard to the position of the centrifugal balls. Clayton, No. 315,244, April 7, 1885, and Gardner, No. 638,412, December 5, 1899, were of this type. In another form of device the pressure governor, by a separate attachment apart from, and independent of, the speed governor, shut off the supply of motive fluid, as in Reynolds, No. 239,194, of March 22, 1881.

The usual method of accomplishing this result was the use of a weighted lever, ivhich would be required to exert force enough to overcome the mass and velocity of the parts moved, or which would throw upon the engine and the speed governor the effect of stoppage of the engine by means as independent as would be the act of the engineer, if, in response to some signal, he should shut dowñ the engine. The engine would not start itself after stopping and was-apt to stop if the speed was slow and the load heavy.

Conrader sought to apply to a speed governor an indirect or automatic control, by which, whenever the pressure of the compressed vapor became too great, no matter what the cause, the centrifugal balls-[352]*352of the speed governor would be caused to move out, thus closing down the stem of the steam valve, but which, when more compression or greater speed was needed, would raise the stem and set the engine at work.

In discussing these patents we will assume that steam is the motive power, and that the stem of the speed governor is maintained in a vertical position, until it is necessary to consider a different form of device.

Conrader employed a speed governor in which the center of gravity was as high as the plane of rotation of the balls of that governor, and inserted centripetal springs to take the place of gravity. It was'still true that the outward movement of the centrifugal balls would cause a downward movement of the stem in shutting off the steam. Con-rader reasoned that a weakening of the centripetal spring would cause the balls, under rotation at any given speed, to move further out and to, thus, shut off the steam. In place of the engineer whose mind should direct the shutting off of the steam, or in place of the lever which by overpowering force should overcome the resistance of the parts, when the pressure created by the work of the steam engine became too great, he caused this pressure to exert an influence against the centripetal springs. Thus weakened, these springs would allow ■ the centrifugal balls to move outward, without any increase of speed, the steam would be shut off, and the work which the engine was doing thereby diminished and the pressure then relieved. If the pres-.' sure diminished, it would restore the tension of the centripetal spring, the stem would be raised, and the steam would again be supplied for work.

Conrader in his earliest patent, No. 664,468, describes his invention in Claim 1, as follows:

“In a pump governor, the combination of a centrifugal element; a centripetal element arranged to act in opposition to said centrifugal element; and means actuated by -tire pumped fluid for varying tbe relative strength of one of the elements within the limits of the power exerted by the other element.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 F. 349, 151 C.C.A. 365, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conrader-v-judson-governor-co-ca2-1916.