Hartford Machine Screw Co. v. Reynolds

26 F. 528, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1969
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 9, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 26 F. 528 (Hartford Machine Screw Co. v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartford Machine Screw Co. v. Reynolds, 26 F. 528, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1969 (circtdct 1886).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

This is a bill in .equity to restrain the infringement of reissued letters patent No. 9,290, issued July 13, 1880, to Christopher M. Spencer, assignor to the complainant, for an improved machine for making metal screws. The original patent, No. 143,306, was dated September 30, 1873. The machine, asa whole, isa very important and useful one. The brief statement which the inventor gives, in the reissued specification, of the character of the invention is as follows:

“The machine automatically makes screws upon the end of a rod. This, my improved, machine has been organized with special reference to operate upon the end of a rod, form a screw, remove the threading tool from the screw-thread cut on the rod, cut off the said screw, and then to automatically 'feed the rod forward, and make another screw, and so on until the rod is exhausted. By my plan the intermittent feeding of the rod is effected by a frictional feeding device made as a slotted, rotating, and reciprocating tube, and the rod is rotated by a rotating chuck having jaws, the chuck having no function whatever in the forward movement of the rod, and, in connection with such mechanism, to feed forward and rotate the rod at the proper time. I have combined and arranged a rotating tool-carrying turret, the tools of which are brought intermittingly into proper position to turn down and thread the end of the rod; and the screw having been threaded, and the threading tool removed from it, a cutting-off tool is moved forward, and made to cut the screw from the end of the rod. By feeding the rod forward, by means of a friction feed, such as herein employed, rather than by a chuck, I am enabled to simplify the construction of the chuck, as it has but one motion, viz., that of'rotation; and by employing a rotary tool-carrying turret, and cutting-off tool, as hereinafter set forth, I am enabled to form and thread the screws and cut them off all in the simplest and most expeditious manner; my mechanism, by reason of its simplicity and mode of operation, increasing the speed of manufacturing screws, and decreasing their cost beyond what would be the case if the turning-down and threading tools were operated by independent carriers; and so, also, by withdrawing the threading tool from [529]*529the screw before it is cut from the rod, the use of a screw-driver to remove the, screw from the threading tool is obviated.”

It will be seen that tlie mechanismis threefold: First,, for feeding forward and rotating the rod; second, for forming and threading the screw npon the end of tho rod; and, third, for cutting off the completed screw. The alleged infringement relates to the first-named portion of the machine, and to the fourth claim of the reissue. This part of the mechanism is described by Mr. Shepard, one of the plaintiff’s experts, as follows:

“These parts consist of a revolving'chuck provided with suitable holding jaws. This chuck is mounted upon tho end of a revolving shaft, which has no longitudinal movement; the shaft being made hollow to receive the friction-feed device and the rod from which the screws are to bo formed. The .friction-feed device consists of a tube of a size which will allow the rod to pass through it, said tube being split at its forward end, and The two opposite sides impinge upon the rod with sufficient friction to carry the rod forward when the tube is moved in the direction of the chuck; while, on the other hand, if the rod is pinched between the jaws of the chuck, the feed device or split tube will slip upon the rod as it is drawn back. One end of the feed device is provided with an annular groove to receive a projection on a slide or slipper, which slide is reciprocated by a cam, thereby imparting iho necessary reciprocating movement to tho feed device. Tho jaws are forced together and permitted to open by means of a conical-ended sleeve,, which is outside of the friction-feeding device or feeding tool. This sleeve is also provided witli a shipping groove, connected, by means of a suitable slide, to another cam, whereby a reciprocating movement is imparted to the conical-ended sleeve. These cams, feed device, and conical-ended sleeve are so combined with each other and with the chuck that the feeding device is fed forward at a time when the conical-ended sleeve is withdrawn, so as to permit the jaws to open, and, after the feeding device has readied the extent of its forward movement, said conical-ended sleeve operates to close the jaws, and hold the rod from slipping backward while the feeding device is drawn back to get a fresh hold on the rod. This friction-feed device reaches well up towards the jaws, so that it will feed the rod until only a very short piece is left.”

The friction-feed device or tube runs inside the conical-ended sleeve, which runs inside the revolving shaft or mandrel, Thus there are throe concentric sleeves, the mandrel being outside.

In the application for tho present reissue the patentee claimed, as a distinct invention, “the friction-feed device made as a tube, slotted at its end, and sprung together to grasp the rod;” but acquiesced in the refusal of the patent-office to allow that claim, and erased it from the application. It must be assumed, therefore, that the invention consists in the combination of the devices mentioned in the respective claims. The gist of that part of the invention which relates to the feeding mechanism was the automatic feeding device, acting in connection with the jaws, to feed the rod forward when tiie jaws are open, — the chuck and rotating shaft having no longitudinal movement, — and, when tho jaws are shut, and the stock is being held and operated upon, to slip back and take a new hold, preparatory for a new feed, and the location of the feeding device' [530]*530within the sleeve which closes the jaws, whereby the stock can be worked up with great economy of material. It is thus apparent that, although the friction tube must be considered to be old, it is a very important member of the combination which includes the feeding mechanism.

This part of the machine is claimed in the first claim of the original patent, as follows:

“In combination with revolving chuck, A, having jaws, o, o, the inner and outer sleeves, c, w; the former, by intermittent reciprocating motion produced by cam, H, feeding the stock a suitable length through chuck, A; the latter by a similar motion produced by cam, L, alternately opening jaws, o, o, to permit the passage of stock, and closing them to ho.ld stock to be operated upon by suitable tools. ”

The same ’combination is claimed in the fourth claim of the reissue, as follows:

“In combination, the revolving chuck, g, provided with jaws, g, the frietion-feed device, d, to grasp the rod, and the sleeve, f\ the cam, c, or its equivalent, to reciprocate the sleeve/4, to close the jaws while the rod is being rotated, and the tube, d, drawn back, and to permit the jaws to be opened as the tube is moved forward to feed the rod forward, all substantially as described. ”

This claim is, in its most important particulars, a reproduction of the first claim of the original patent, and differs from the second and third claims of the reissue in that they specify that the conical-ended sleeve is located between the friction sleeve and the hollow shaft.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. 528, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-machine-screw-co-v-reynolds-circtdct-1886.