Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Rubber Tire Wheel Co.

116 F. 363, 53 C.C.A. 583, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4351
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 6, 1902
DocketNo. 1,071
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 116 F. 363 (Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Rubber Tire Wheel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Rubber Tire Wheel Co., 116 F. 363, 53 C.C.A. 583, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4351 (6th Cir. 1902).

Opinion

BURTON, Circuit Judge,

after making the foregoing statement ■of the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The subject of the controversy is the simple one of solid rubber -tires for vehicles. When Grant entered the field as an inventor of -rubber tires, he found it occupied by an army of patentees who had preceded him, and no less than 80 prior patents have been put in ■evidence as anticipations or as illustrations of the history of the •art. Grant, in part, seems to recognize the crowded character of the field open to him, for he concludes an account of his construction by claiming that, by his mode of construction, he has produced “a rubber tired wheel rim which is capable of more use and which will remain in position better than any other tire which has ■ever been put upon the market.”

The first claim of the Grant patent is for a combination of three ■elements: First. A metallic channel rim, having angularly projecting flanges, shown as b’ in Fig. 2, forming a channel with inclining •sides, into which the rubber fits. Second. A solid rubber tire having an inner portion adapted to fit in the channel rim and an outer [366]*366portion forming an angle or corner with the inner portion, the corner being somewhat below the top of the channel seat or metallic rim. Third. Independent retaining wires passing entirely through the rubber tires horizontally, and located below the outer periphery of the flaring sides of the channel seat. The drawings heretofore set out will better explain these parts, especially if examined in the light of the description of the patent also fully set out. The second claim is like the first, but adds a reinforcing strip of canvas across the bottom of the rubber tire.

'Metal channel tire seats in great variety of form appear in the earlier patents. In some the sides of the metal channel incline inwards, and thus aid in holding the tire in place, and this method characterizes a class of rubber tired wheels, where retaining bands or wires were not used, as “clincher” tires. In others the sides of the channel rim are perpendicular; in others there were ribs or projections on the inside of such channel sides which served to assist in holding the tire in its seat. In still others the sides are shown to flare outwards to a greater or less degree, as in Grant’s. The exposed portion of a rubber tire is liable to lateral expansion under compression from use, and to project over the sides of a metal channel or tire seat, and to be sheared or cut by such contact. Two ways of avoiding this kind of injurious cutting were taught in the old art, and in some cases both methods were combined. One obvious method was to round the edges of such rims. Another was to make the edges flaring; thus affording a space between the flaring side and the rubber tire into which the expanded tire might crowd itself without projecting over the edge of the metal .seat. Methods for preventing such flaring effects appear very early.in the art. Thus, in the English patent of 1884 to Clark, he says he forms his tire seat with “straight parallel sides slightly widened out at the mouth.” In the United States patent to Owen of 1887, he recognized this cutting from lateral expansion under compression, and shows two or more forms of metal channel in which the edges of the rim are flaring at the top. To further guard against the trouble, he, after referring to this expansion under compression, says in his specifications:

“I reduce the width of the tire outside of the rim or felly, making it either of a flat or concave form, or of other form falling within the semicircle, so that when subjected to pressure the lateral expansion or enlargement will not cause the tire to project beyond the rim.”

This, he says, is plainly shown by Figs. 5 and 6 of his drawings.

In the patents to Elliot, Nos. 440,701 and 440,702, the channel sides are shown to slightly flare. In one of his patents he says:

“By making the metallic tire in this manner, the rubber tire, when compressed by a direct or lateral pressure, and thereby overlying' the metallic edges, will not be cut or injured by said edges.”

In the English patent to Willoughby, of 1892, No. 18,030, very many forms for metallic channel tire seats are shown, two of them showing a slight flaring at top of sides. Examples are also to be seen in Myers, of 1892, No. 468,971, and Beirsmith, of 1890, No. 424,452. In the English patent to Robertson of 1890, the same [367]*367flaring sides are shown, and somewhat more emphatically than in any of the before-mentioned patents.

Grant describes his rubber tire as having a “peculiar shape.” He says:

It “is formed of substantially tbe same depth as, width. The outer periphery, however, Is formed on the arc of a circle of much smaller diameter than the width of the rim, the exposed sides of the tire being formed, preferably, on the lines, c2, at an angle to each other, and also to the flanges, b’, of the wheel rim. The unexposed portion of the tire, or that portion which is inclosed within the rim, is formed of substantially the same shape as the inner channel of the rim, that is to say, it is tapered from the outside inwardly, so that the sides of the inner or unexposed portion of the tire are also formed on the lines, c2, forming, with the lines, c2, an obtuse angle.”

This obtuse angle or corner he describes as falling below the outer periphery of the flanges, b’, and within the channel between said flanges. The “peculiar shape” is better understood by reproducing Fig. 2- of his drawings:

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Bluebook (online)
116 F. 363, 53 C.C.A. 583, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 4351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodyear-tire-rubber-co-v-rubber-tire-wheel-co-ca6-1902.