General Electric Co. v. City of Dunkirk

211 F. 658, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1012
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJune 11, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 211 F. 658 (General Electric Co. v. City of Dunkirk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Electric Co. v. City of Dunkirk, 211 F. 658, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1012 (W.D.N.Y. 1913).

Opinion

HAZEL, District Judge.

The patent in suit, No. 924,546, granted June 8, 1909, to William L- R. Emmet, assignor to complainant corporation, relates to an improvement in the construction of steam turbines, and is especially adapted to the utilization of steam for driving dynamo electric machinery at a high rate of velocity. In its operation, as is commonly known, the turbine is different from the reciprocating engine, in that it has revolving disks, or wheels, or a drum surrounded by a plurality of vanes or buckets uniformly spaced side by side, or one succeeding another, forming a passage through which the steam flows parallel to the shaft.

A detailed discussion of the steam turbine and its bearing upon the use of modern high-power machinery, and of the existing differences between the impulse and reaction types of turbines—the latter the discovery of Mr. Parsons of England, the former 'of Mr. De Laval of Sweden—is not necessary to a decision of this controversy. Those interested in the subject are referred to the exhaustive and comprehensive opinion of Circuit Judge Buffington in International Curtis Marine Turbine Co. et al. v. Wm. Cramp & Sons Ship & Engine Bldg. Co., 202 Fed. 932, 121 C. C. A. 290. It is sufficient here to state that the reaction and impulse types of turbinés are alike in appearance, although they differ somewhat in the principle of operation. In the reaction type, Parsons utilized a multiplicity of sets of rotating and stationary vanes, buckets, or blades around the rotor, through which the steam flowed from one side to the- other, with the result that the heat energy produced a slower rotation; while in the impulse type, De Laval used a single wheel or rotor with one set of vanes, thereby achieving a higher rate of speed. Subsequently Curtis, an American .inventor, who retained in his construction the Parsons’ feature of rotary and stationary vanes, operating them on the De Laval principle, was given letters patent for improving both types of turbines. The Emmet improvement 'in suit is usable with these various types of turbines. The specification states generally: •

“Elastic fluid turbines, as commonly constructed, are provided with one or more sets of rotary vanes or buckets arranged on the periphery of a wheel or cylinder, and between the rotary vanes, when more than one set is used, are other vanes or buckets which receive the motive fluid from one set of moving vanes, and direct it into a second set, this action being repeated for each set of moving and stationary vanes. The vanes or buckets of the moving element may be cut from the solid stock, or may be made detachable; in either evgnt it is desirable to provide means for covering or closing in the ends of the buckets in order to form fluid passages of definite and predetermined cross-sectional area and to reduce losses by leakage. The same closing in of the ends is desirable on the stationary vanes or buckets and for the same reasons.”

[660]*660And in recognizing that prior to his improvement, to prevent the escape of steam, turbines had cover strips fastened to the ends of the vanes on the rotor, the patentee states :

“Previous to my invention all turbines of tbe above-described class with which I am familiar were provided with covers made of continuous steel rings shrunk or pressed on over the ends of the vanes of the revolving element, and retained in place by screws. Such a cover is expensive and inconvenient to machine, and with the speeds ordinarily used the strain on the holding devices due to centrifugal action is excessive. Owing to the construction of the parts it is often not practicable to make each one of these attachments strong, ■and consequently the cover is liable to be a source of danger and a limitation upon the safe design of a machine.”

It was known long before the Emmet invention in suit that the vanes were liable to injury from the vibrations of the rotor, owing to the tremendous speed and resulting strains. Parsons, appreciating this, as hereinafter more particularly specified, provided for holding the vanes firm, a blade tie, which the complainant, however, claims did not succeed in performing the functions of the Emmet cover strip. To insure a clear understanding of the invention involved Pigs. 1 and 4 of the drawings of the patent in suit are herewith reproduced:

It will be observed that the cover plate is divided into sections and positioned over the vanes or buckets, which are integral with the base of the wheel blank, though they may be detachable; that the steam flows through the spaces between the vanes; that at the ends of the vanes there are tenons having two flat surfaces and two curved surfaces, formed integrally with the vanes to fit apertures in the cover sections ; and that each section has straight ends notched to receive half a tenon or projection. The claims in controversy are as follows:

[661]*661“3. In a turbine, tbe combination of a plurality ■ of vanes, a sectional covering for tbe ends of tbe vanes, eaeb section being provided with a plurality of openings registering with tbe vanes, and tenons wbicb pass through tbe openings and are riveted over to bold tbe sections in place.
“21. In a turbine, tbe combination of vanes or buckets having curved front and rear faces, tenons formed on tbe buckets, having two flat surfaces and two surfaces, which partake of tbe curvature of tbe buckets, and a cover having openings therein, which register with and correspond in shape to the tenons.
“23. In an axial-flow turbine, the combination of a support, a plurality of radiating vanes carried thereby, tenons formed integral with the vanes and projecting from their outer ends, and a cover confining the steam to the bucket spaces applied to the free ends of the vanes, and provided with openings to receive the tenons and through which the latter extend, such cover transmitting its centrifugal strains radially to the support through the vanes.
"32. In a turbine, the combination with the vanes or buckets and a support therefor, of tenons made integral with the buckets and a discontinuous or Jointed cover confining the steam to the bucket spaces having openings through which the tenons pass, the cover being secured to the buckets by the riveting of the tenons thereon.”

■ Claim 3 specifies the jointed cover plate, with a series of opening through which the tenons are projected; claim 21 particularizes the peculiarly shaped tenons and cover openings; claim 23 specifies the principal elements of the combination, and refers to an axial-flow turbine ; while claim 32 is more specific as to the cover strip and the means for attaching it to the vanes. It is clearly shown in the specification, and the proofs support the complainant’s claim that the object of the patentee was to overcome the objectionable excessive strains caused to prior covers or rings by centrifugal action, and to prevent the leakage of steam and consequent loss of energy, which interfered with the desired velocity of the rotors. The rotor element should be included by implication in the claims from which it was omitted; but I think a construction of the claims so broad as to include the stationary element, which was not susceptible to rotary stresses, would not be warranted.

The defenses are want of novelty and invention, anticipation, and noninfringement.

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Bluebook (online)
211 F. 658, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-electric-co-v-city-of-dunkirk-nywd-1913.