Eibel Process Co. v. Minnesota & Ontario Paper Co.

267 F. 847, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1006
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedSeptember 30, 1920
DocketNo. 769
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 267 F. 847 (Eibel Process Co. v. Minnesota & Ontario Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eibel Process Co. v. Minnesota & Ontario Paper Co., 267 F. 847, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1006 (D. Me. 1920).

Opinion

HALE, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity to enjoin the infringement of United States letters patent to William Eibel, No. 845,224, dated February 26, 1907, for an improvement in Fourdrinier paper-making .machines. The patent seeks to construct and arrange such machines, so that they may be run at a higher speed and produce a more uniform sheet of paper. For many years the Fourdrinier machine has been the best known and most widely used paper-making machine. In describing it, I follow substantially the plaintiff’s details. It consists, primarily, of an endless wire-cloth sieve, or “wire,” passed over a series of rolls at a constant speed. At the “breast roll” end, or wet end, of this wire there is discharged upon it from the “flow box,” or “pond,” a constant stream of paper-making stock, consisting generally of fibers of wood pulp, mixed with from 135 to 200 times their weight of water, and having the appearance of diluted milk. This sieve is woven with 60 or 70 meshes to the inch, and may be 75 feet long and 100 inches or more wide. As it travels forward, the fibers are deposited upon the wire, as the water drains out; the wire being given a sidewise thrust or “shake” to insure their proper felting and interlocking. The stock is carried along on the wire, draining off its water as it goes, until the “couch rolls” at the further end of the wire are reached. The stock is pressed between the “couch rolls,” and then, in the form of a uniformly distributed wet pulp, is strong enough to hold together, and be carried through a series of pressing and drying rolls and calenders, which constitute the “dry end” of the machine. In order to aid in the extraction of the water from the pulp, there is placed, somewhere about 20 feet from the “breast roll,” a series of “suction boxes” beneath [848]*848and in contact with the under surface of the wire. A partial vacuum is maintained within these boxes, so that the greater part of tire water remaining in the paper stock .is sucked out into the boxes, and very little free water remains in the wet web of paper after it has passed beyond this point.

There are many details of construction to which attention is called. The “flow box” is the box in which the stock is stored up, and from which it is discharged upon the moving wires, through the “slice,” namely, the horizontal gate extending across the wire, by raising which the 'stock is discharged from the “flow box” upon the wire, in a stream having the width of the desired sheet of paper, and having a thickness dependent upon the height of the “slice” opening. The “deckle straps” are rubber bands, resting upon the wire at each side of the stream of pulp. They travel with the wire, so as to form lateral walls, to confine the stream of stock until it has reached a condition of such dryness that it no longer tends to flow. The “table rolls” are a series of parallel, horizontal rollers between the “breast roll” and the “couch roll,” upon which the active portion of the wire is supported, so as fi> present a plane surface. The “dandy roll” is a roller, faced with the wire cloth, placed above the wire at a point beyond the first suction box and in contact with the upper surface of the paper. It imparts to-the upper surface of the paper a texture similar to that which the lower surface receives from its contact with the wire. This “dandy roll” may also carry the design which impresses the watermark on the sheet, in case a watermark is desired. The last roller for supporting the wire is larger than the others, and is called a “guide roll,” since it is equipped with a device for automatically varying the position of its axis, so as to guide the wire and keep it running straight. After the wire passes over the “guide roll,” it drops at an angle below horizontal to the “couch roll.” Fourdrinier machines are very expensive; and so for purpose of economy, they are operated day and night; and it is the constant endeavor of all paper manufacturers to run these machines at the utmost possible speed consistent with the production of good paper.

Prior to Eibel, as the proofs show, 450 feet of paper per minute was-the substantial maximum at which good paper could be made. At speeds exceeding this limit, great commotion was caused in the stock on the wire, So that the paper formed was uneven, or “wild.” It had waves, ripples, and wrinkles in it, during the critical period while the paper was forming, thus preventing an even formation. If higher speed, was attempted, the sheet would sometimes break, stopping the machine.

The plaintiff says that Eibel made the discovery that the reason for this commotion of the stock, when high speeds were given to the wire, was the excessive difference of speed between the wire and the stock; and that such commotion could be avoided if the stock could be speed-ed up to equal the wire speed, at the point where active paper forma-, tion begins.

Eibel observed — so plaintiff alleges — that, so long as the actual difference between stock speed and wire speed did not exceed say 100’ feet per minute, there was no great trouble, because the “drag” or [849]*849friction of the wire was sufficient to accelerate the stock to such an extent that speed equality and the consequent quiescence of stock was accomplished before the stock lost its fluid character. ITe saw the reason why “wild” paper was produced at high speed to be that there was too great a difference between stock speed and wire speed to be overcome by “drag,” and that the under part of the liquid was dragged along faster than the upper part, thus causing waves and ripples. In order to meet these conditions, Eibel gave the wire “a sharp, downward pitch from Ihe ‘breast roll’ to the ‘guide roll’; and thus called in the aid of gravitation to speed up the stock on the wire, and to bring it up to speed equality with the wire”; his effort being to use gravity, in correlation with the other elements then in use, with the purpose of making the stock catch up with the speed of the wire. , The plaintiff contends that the above is substantially Eihel’s inventive thought. Translating that thought into a machine, he took the old Eourdrinier machine, and raised the “breast roll” end to a substantial elevation above the level. As a process, plaintiff says that Eibel’s invention consists in giving a rapid flow of stock under the influence-of gravity, due to a substantial wire pitch, and correlating this pitch with the speed of the wire in such a way that the initial difference of velocity between stock and wire is overcome under the influence of gravity, so that the waves and ripples, which would otherwise be present at the point of paper formation, are done away with; and plaintiff urges that Eibel had in mind the fact that small elevations of the wire had, up to that time, been used, but that these pitches were mainly for drainage requirements, and that no one had conceived the idea of applying a substantial elevation of the “breast roll” end of the wire to the purpose to which he applied it.

‘ In his specification, Eibel calls attention to the prior art as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
267 F. 847, 1920 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eibel-process-co-v-minnesota-ontario-paper-co-med-1920.