Goldschmidt Thermit Co. v. Alumino-Thermic Corp.

25 F.2d 196, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1795
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJuly 22, 1926
DocketNo. 163
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 25 F.2d 196 (Goldschmidt Thermit Co. v. Alumino-Thermic Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldschmidt Thermit Co. v. Alumino-Thermic Corp., 25 F.2d 196, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1795 (D.N.J. 1926).

Opinion

BODINE, District Judge.

Three United States letters patent, No. 900,366 to Hans Goldschmidt and Felix Lánge, No. 1,075,709 to Hans Goldschmidt and No. 1,153,435 to Felix Lange, assigned to Goldschmidt Thermit Company, are sued upon. Questions of unfair competition were raised at the trial. ■The patents will be separately considered in the order" of issue.

' The plaintiff company was organized in 1904 by Prof. Hans Goldschmidt, the discoverer of the alumino-thermie art. His miraculous achievements were before the Circuit Court of Appeals for this Circuit in Goldschmidt Thermit Co. v. Primos Chemical Co., 292 F. 362. Goldschmidt discovered how to obtain the alumino-thermie reaction in a smooth and even manner. In a cold crucible, he placed a mixture of powdered'aluminum and metallic oxide. This mixture, when lit at one point, gradually reacted, so that the oxygen was transferred from the metal to the aluminum, so that at the end of the operation the crucible contained a pure metal and an aluminum oxide slag. The pure metal was at the bottom and the aluminum slag at the top. The metal is estimated to have a temperature of 5,000° F. This is 2,000° F. above the .melting point of steel. The slag has a somewhat lower temperature.

It is the plaintiff’s contention that the three patents in suit were three great forward steps in the alumino-thermie art, advancing the art of thermic welding from a place of academic interest to the fore rank of industrial use. Plaintiff enjoyed a complete monopoly until the defendants, Spilsbury and Barnes, former employees, organized the defendant company to carry on alumino-thermie welding. These men had been in the plaintiff’s employ six or eight years, and were undoubtedly familiar with every detail of the business. The defendants, in their catalogue and other advertising, give the tribute of their praise to the Goldschmidt discoveries and process.

The real issue, with respect to patent No. 900,366, is that it constitutes no invention. Tire specifications, so far as pertinent, are as follows (the italics are mine);

[197]*197“This invention relates particularly to the joining or welding of rails, girders, bars, and similar articles by means of superheated molten metal. * ! *

“In welding by this alumino-thermal process, it has been found in practice that the super-heated molten metal is cooled considerably when brought into contact with the rail or other article and the mold, owing to the coolness of such article and mold. In order to prevent this, and at the same time reduce the quantity of superheated molten metal which is necessary to produce the desired result, and in order also to make the process of joining and welding as cheap as possible, the mold spaces formed between the mold and metallic article to which the superheated molten metal is to be connected should be as narrow as possible. * * *
“We are aware that, in the employment of the alumino-thermal process, the heating of the metal part or parts has heretofore been practiced; but our invention is distinguished therefrom in that highly heated gas is forced through the mold space, preferably through a mold space consisting of a series of narrow channels, which are afterwards filled with superheated metal for the purpose of filling out a solid metal part or uniting two metal articles. * * ®
“With regard to the quality of the rails after they are subjected to the present process, we have found that the heating of the mold and such rails or other parts to a red heal before the superheated molten metal is run into the mold prevents the blistering of the steel; whereas, when this superheated molten steel or iron is run into the mold without any previous heating of such mold, the steel of the rails has often suffered a great deal.”

The secondary part of the invention is disclosed as follows:

“According to this part of our invention, not only the mold and rail or other metal article are to be heated before the superheated molten steel or other metal is run into the mold, but the mixture of aluminum and a metallic compound from which iron or steel is to be reduced also contains pieces of iron or stoel which have been previously heated. When the alumino-thermal reaction takes place, and the iron or steel is reduced from the mixture, the excessive temperature resulting from the reaction is reduced by the presence of these pieces of iron or steel, and the volume of the molten metal resulting from the ignition of the mass is increased. These pieces of iron or steel may be healed in any suitable manner, the most obvious source of beat for such preliminary heating being the hot gases from the blacksmith’s fire. Usual- • ly these pieces, which are pieces of wrought iron or steel, are heated in a shallow vessel to a bright heat and afterward thrown into the superheated molten metal resulting from the reaction of aluminum and ferric oxide or similar compound. * * *
“When the rails or other parts to be joined have reached a bright red heat and the mold is of a corresponding temperature the pipe r and the barrier a are removed and the mold assumes the form shown in Fig. 1. * •» *
“At the same time that the mold and metal parts are heated, a crucible should be filled with a mixture of granulated aluminum and oxide of iron. In this mixture a quantity of wrought iron or steel (for example, 30 per cent, of the weight of such mixture) may be placed. * * ®
“The free spaces of the mold are of such size that the rail or other metal part is almost or entirely surrounded by the molten steel or metal, and such metal part or parts will be heated up by the molten metal to such an extent as to form therewith a weld or joint.”

The plaintiff’s position with respect to this patent is that specifically it contains the idea of heating the combined work pieces and mold by a forced current of closely confined gas. In practice a torch is nsed. The defendants’ position is, however, that the patent is broadly for preheating the parts in welding — a thing so old and so necessary that no one can tell when it started.

It must be borne in mind, however, that the alumino-thermic art was distinctly new and most unusual. The slag floats at the top of the crucible, the pure metal is at the bottom. If the crucible is poured in the ordinary way, the slag first comes in contact with the parts to be welded. The prior art taught heating in a reverberatory furnace and with coke fires, but only to “dark red beat.”

Specifically, the patent teaches the application of heat after the mold and the solid metal are in position; the heat being applied by forcing heated gases through the narrow channels of the mold spaces. The patent further teaches the heating to a bright red heat. Clearly, the art is a very special one. The teachings of the patent have been closely followed since the patent was applied for and with marked commercial success.

From an abundance of necessary caution, the defendants admitted little at the trial. [198]*198or upon the argument, of this case. They do not, however, contend that they do not infringe this patent.

Mr. James Otis Handy, defendants’ expert, a metallurgist of great learning, who had no practical experience in thermit welding,' had observed some welding being done on the streets of Pittsburgh.

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25 F.2d 196, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldschmidt-thermit-co-v-alumino-thermic-corp-njd-1926.