Handy Governor Corp. v. General Carburetor Sales Co.

23 F. Supp. 214, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2141
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 5, 1938
DocketNo. 8237
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 F. Supp. 214 (Handy Governor Corp. v. General Carburetor Sales Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York 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., 23 F. Supp. 214, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2141 (E.D.N.Y. 1938).

Opinion

BYERS, District Judge.

These patents deal with a speed governing device installed in the conduit between the carburetor and the engine, of automobiles, buses, tractors, etc.

The intake stroke of the piston in the interior combustion gas engine cylinder creates suction in the manifold above the carburetor; into that conduit there is introduced a valve or gate, which is held in place by a shaft the ends of which are so engaged at the interior of the conduit that the valve can rotate about its axis; by reason of the higher degree of vacuum above the valve (toward the engine) than below, the valve tends to move across the conduit toward a closing position, and thus to reduce the flow of fuel from the carburetor to the engine. If the closure were complete, the fuel supply would be cut off, instead of being controlled.

Since the valve is designed as a speed control agent, it is necessary to prevent full closure. The problem is complicated by the additional fact that the closing tendency is not constant, but increases during the movement from the fully opened to the fully closed position, so that, since it is desired to maintain the valve in position between these two extremes, it is requisite to provide a countervailing force which will resist the closing tendency; this force must vary in intensity according to the demands made upon it.

A secondary impulse causing the valve to close, is the impact of the flow of fuel against the lower side of the valve or gate.

The practice has been employed in the plaintiff’s devices under examination, of placing the axis off center, whereby one wing or section of the valve is larger than the other, and of necessity the mounting of the shaft in the conduit is also off center. Thus the valve is subject to two forces which tend to close it; the reduced pressure above it, and the fuel impact from below, whidh is unevenly.distributed across the surface of the valve.

The evidence has covered a wide field, but it is necessary to center attention upon the problem of providing the variable offsetting force to oppose the closing tendency of the valve, so that the latter may be held within a desirable range of response to a predetermined speed (revolutions per minute), in order to ascertain whether the plaintiff’s solution of the problem constitutes patentable invention; and whether the defendant’s device is the same thing mechanically as the plaintiff’s.

The limit of speed having been determined, the governing aciion consists in accommodating the fuel supply to the varying requirements of road conditions, such as change of grade ánd wind resistance. In other words, more power is required to move a given truck up-hill than bn a level stretch of road, and the governor must admit of a change in the fuel supply up to the desired limit of speed, so that the requisite power may always be njaintained.

The ideal result would indicate precision of governance, but practically that is not desired, for there must be a margin of tolerance or failure to govern, of from 10% to 15%, to meet road, traffic, and other operating conditions.

The governing device, as so designed, was operative so long as it was accepted by the drivers of buses and trucks as a desirable part of equipment; they discovered, however, that its function could be frustrated by disabling it through manipulation of the antecedent manually operated throttle valve. The latter is also a disc or gate, between the carburetor and the governor valve, the office of which is to control the volume of fuel emerging from the carburetor and presenting itself to the governor valve.

Under normal operation of the governor valve, the throttle valve is wide open; that is, it is parallel to the walls of the conduit. In that position, the flow of fuel is unimpeded and the pressure is substantially that of the atmosphere, in the region below the governor valve. If the throttle valve is partially closed, however, the drop in the volume of the flow of fuel (and change in its velocity?) thereby induced, tends to increase the vacuum, or to decrease the pressure below the governor valve, so that the functioning of the latter, i. e., the,maintenance of its balance, is thereby disturbed, and it fails, or tends to fail, to govern the [216]*216operations of the engine so that a predetermined speed may not be exceeded.

In order to restore the conditions so disturbed, an element had to be supplied which would tend to move the governor valve as though the pressure below'it had not been changed. That agency was added in the form of a piston moving laterally against the governor valve, which was actuated by atmospheric pressure. Thus the nearly atmospheric pressure formerly existing directly below the governor valve, though absent because of the change in position of the throttle valve, was in effect reinstated through the action of the piston which was exterior to the conduit. This is known as the “anti-steal” or the “throttle steal” element.

The foregoing is thought to portray, in plain language, the bare outline of the territory in which this controversy has been conducted.

The plaintiff’s cause is based upon three patents: Hufford No. 1,537,944, Handy No. 1,584,929, and Bull No. 2,048,423.

The defendant’s unpatented device is said to infringe upon them, and the pathway to adjudication is thought to lie through the wavering precincts of earlier appropriation, because not otherwise can the competing structures be understandingly compared.

The Handy patent (filed May 21, 1920, granted May 18, 1926) is for such a governor as has been discussed; i. e., a single unbalanced butterfly valve the closing effort of which is accelerated through the difference in pressures above and below; the effort is “substantially balanced at all positions” of the valve “when the motor is operating at a constant predetermined speed, and * * * said effort is over or under-balanced at other speeds.”

The disclosure presently important is of a linkage between the valve and a spring which opposes the former’s closing - effort, so designed that the energy of the spring, which would otherwise be expended in a constant or linear aspect, is acfually rendered variably effective in response to the changing demands made upon it, by the variable turning effort or torque of the valve.

The Hufford patent -(filed August 22, 1923, granted May 19, 1925) is said to deal with a flow responsive valve, which manifestly is not of the type here involved. The complex mechanical arrangement of the valve itself does not require exposition. The important feature of the patent is the throttle steal device which it was the first to teach; its place in the plaintiff’s case is to justify the presence of the latter’s throttle steal assembly, and its adaptation to the combination shown in the third patent.

The Bull patent (filed June 8, 1929, granted July 21, 1936) is described as being for a “stabilizer for suction governors.” It is in effect a combination of the structures of the first two patents; that is, the valve is of the butterfly type, with yielding means to offset its closing effort, and the throttle steal piston in mechanical association. The latter is said to augment the closing effort of the valve, to prevent fluttering of the valve, and to prevent stealing.

The discussion as to validity will be largely confined to the Handy patent, because the Hufford and Bull teachings are subordinate to it.

Handy No. 1,584,929: The claims in suit are 3 and 16, as follows:

“3.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. Supp. 214, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/handy-governor-corp-v-general-carburetor-sales-co-nyed-1938.