Handy Governor Corp. v. General Carburetor Sales Co.

104 F.2d 295, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 632, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4131
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 8, 1939
DocketNo. 161
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 104 F.2d 295 (Handy Governor Corp. v. General Carburetor Sales 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
Handy Governor Corp. v. General Carburetor Sales Co., 104 F.2d 295, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 632, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4131 (2d Cir. 1939).

Opinion

SWAN, Circuit Judge.

This is a patent infringement suit, presenting the usual issues of invalidity and non-infringement. The plaintiff Handy Governor Corporation, is the owner by assignment of the three patents in suit. The nominal defendant is a distributor in Brooklyn of the accused device, which is manufactured by Leibing Automotive Devices, Inc., a Michigan corporation. The latter openly assumed defense of the suit and will hereafter be called the defendant.

The patents relate to governors for internal combustion engines. A “govern- or” is a speed controlling device installed in the manifold for the purpose of regulating automatically the quantity of fuel supplied to the engine of a motor vehicle in order to prevent the driver thereof from exceeding a predetermined speed,' while permitting him to maintain such speed, within reasonable limits, regardless of changing conditions of load on the engine. The Handy & Bull patent, No. 1,584,929, May 18, 1926, although not the earliest issued, has the earliest filing date (May 21, 1920) and will be first considered. It discloses an unbalanced butterfly (governor) valve inserted in the manifold between the engine and the throttle (carburetor) "valve. The movement of this governor valve is intended so to vary the aperture through which the motor fuel passes from the carburetor to the engine that only enough fuel may reach the engine to permit it to maintain the desired speed under varying load conditions. Thus the governor valve causes the fuel supply to vary proportionately as the load upon the engine increases or diminishes.

There are two forces within the manifold operating upon the governor valve and tending to close it. One' is the difference in pressure within the manifold on the downstream (engine) and upstream (carburetor) sides of the governor valve. With the throttle valve wide open, its normal position for the predetermined maximum speed, the pressure on the upstream side of the governor valve will be substantially atmospheric; but if the governor valve is partially closed, as will be the case when the load on the engine is light, a partial vacuum will result on the downstream side, due to the suction created by the intake stroke of the engine’s pistons. Hence, the atmospheric pressure on its upstream side will tend to move it further toward a closing position. The second force tending to move it in the same direction, on account of its unbalanced character, is the impact of the flow of fuel on its upstream side. Since the governor valve cannot be permitted to^ close entirely and thereby cut off fuel for the engine, a spring is provided to resist the closing tendency of the governor valve. But the problem of supplying the proper resistance to the forces operating to close the governor valve is complicated by the fact that as an unbalanced butterfly valve moves toward a closed position, the torque (valve turning moment) has an unequal increment or curved line characteristic. Consequently, the resistance offered by the usual straight line spring, which has an equal increment characteristic, is inadequate. The plaintiff asserts that Handy & Bull were the first to realize the problem of torque and to provide a means whereby the torque of the governor valve is balanced in all its positions by a countervailing resistance. To the spindle on which is mounted their unbalanced butterfly valve, is attached a lever arm (43) which is in contact with another lever arm (41) to which is connected an ordinary helical spring. These lever arms are so shaped that, as the butterfly valve moves toward its closed position and the torque thereby increases, their point of contact is shifted radially so that at all positions of the governor valve the moment exerted by the spring counterbalances the closing effort of the valve. The balancing is arranged to position the governor so that the correct amount of fuel for the predetermined speed will be fed to the engine. In actual operation, there is a momentary state of unbalance when the load on the engine is altered, but the governor valve then moves to its correct position for that degree of load, and when the predetermined speed is again attained the balance is restored. Thus, if the load on the engine is increased, as by starting up' a hill, the engine speed will decrease and the suction of the engine will be lessened. This de[297]*297creases the vacuum above the governor valve and the rate of flow of fuel, with the result that the forces tending to close the governor valve are less than the force of the spring tending to open it. Hence, the valve is opened, more fuel is fed to the engine, and its speed is increased until at the predetermined speed the opposing forces are again brought into balance. The reverse operation occurs when the load is lightened.

As will be apparent from the above discussion, governor valves of the mixture-flow type disclosed by the Handy & Bull patent depend for successful operation upon their subjection to the normal forces within the manifold, that is, the impact of the flow of fuel upon the upstream side of the unbalanced butterfly valve and the difference in pressure upon its upstream and downstream sides, and the balancing of those forces by a countervailing resistance. If one of these forces is even partially removed, such balance will be destroyed. Such a situation will occur when the driver “cheats” or “steals” with his throttle valve. This means that he manipulates his throttle so as to speed up the engine above the predetermined limit. It can be accomplished by a partial closure of the throttle valve when the engine is running at the predetermined speed, because such closure results in a partial vacuum on the upstream side of the governor valve. Since the balance between the forces tending to close the governor valve and the spring resistance tending to open it has been adjusted upon the assumption that the upstream side of the governor valve will be subjected to atmospheric pressure when the engine is running at the predetermined speed, a reduction of the pressure upon that side destroys the balance and permits the govern- or valve to open too wide, thus supplying so much fuel to the engine that the predetermined speed may be exceeded. Huf-ford appears to have been the first to discover the reason why there can be “throttle-steal”, and his patent No. 1,5.37,944, issued May 19, 1925, application dated August 22, 1923, discloses means to prevent it. Hufford discloses a governor of the mixture-flow type, though of quite different construction than that of the Handy & Bull patent. The portion of the Hufford device material to the case at bar is the arrangement to prevent “stealing”. This consists (exhibits 10 and 11) of a piston P encased in an auxiliary cylinder, the lower end of the piston being subjected through an opening to atmospheric pressure and the upper end, through a passage to the manifold, to the pressure existing therein between the governor valve and the throttle valve. Consequently, when the throttle valve is wide open and the pressure on the upstream side of the governor valve is that of atmosphere, the piston P is inoperative; but when the pressure on the upstream side of the gov•ernor valve becomes less than atmosphere due to partial closure of the throttle valve, the piston P is advanced and moves a valve G', mounted concentric to the governor valve G, to the correct position for the particular degree of load under which the engine is laboring. Although Huf-ford’s drawings show two valves, the specifications state that the valve G' may be dispensed with and the piston P operatively connected with the governor valve G.

The Bull patent, No.

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Related

Leibing Automotive Devices, Inc. v. Wildermuth
104 F.2d 411 (Second Circuit, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
104 F.2d 295, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 632, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 4131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/handy-governor-corp-v-general-carburetor-sales-co-ca2-1939.