International Curtis Marine Turbine Co. v. William Cramp & Sons Ship & Engine Bldg. Co.

202 F. 932, 121 C.C.A. 290, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1621
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 1912
DocketNo. 1,622
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 202 F. 932 (International Curtis Marine Turbine Co. v. William Cramp & Sons Ship & Engine Bldg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Curtis Marine Turbine Co. v. William Cramp & Sons Ship & Engine Bldg. Co., 202 F. 932, 121 C.C.A. 290, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1621 (3d Cir. 1912).

Opinion

BUFFINGTON, Circuit Judge.

In the court below the International Curtis Marine Turbine Company, the. owner of certain patents, and the Curtis Marine Turbine Company, exclusive licensee thereunder for marine propulsion, brought suit against the William Cramp & Sons Ship & Engine Building Company for infringement thereof. The claims involved are 1 to 11, inclusive, of patent No. 566,969, granted September 1, 1896, to Charles G. Curtis for an elastic-fluid turbine, and the first four claims of patent No. 595,435, granted December 14, 1897, to said Curtis for an elastic-fluid turbine also.

[1] In order to secure an early hearing by a full bench by this court, and with its consent, a formal decree was entered by stipulation. On appeal the cause is now really heard at first instance and finally by this court. This, together with the fact that the patents involve the novel and important subject of steam turbines, accounts for the length of this opinion. A rotary steam engine had long been the engine builder’s goal, for the advantage thereof, as contrasted with a reciprocating movement in machinery, is apparent. In the hydraulic field the rotary principle had long been effectively used in wheels and in many effective types of turbines, which are really jacketed water wheels. In this latter branch the advance was marked, and the conservation of power, simplicity of parts, saving of space, and other desirable features of water turbines seemed to point out the method.by which steam could be similarly employed to move turbines. Theoretically the analogy between the use of steam and water in the same mechanical form of structure seemed clear. But the analogy was a mere surface one. In reality steam and water are, from the standpoint of motive power, essentially different. The motive power of water is gravity, that is, pressure exerted in one direction, while that of steam is expansion, that is, pressure exerte'd in all directions. The laws of hydraulics, as applied to water wheels, were well known and comparatively simple, while, as the outcome proved, the laws of steam as [934]*934applied to turbines were not known or appreciated. Moreover, water is unchanging in volume under different pressures; thus the velocity of the flow or jet of a stream is in inverse' proportion with the cross-section of path provided for it. But when-velocity is developed by diminution of pathway, it must be at the expense of a local deficit of pressure. Whenever the path contracts, velocity increases and pressure diminishes by a determinable amount. But with steam all is different. Only in few instances does steam act in the same way as water, and even where it does there is always present an intricate and mathematically inexpressible relationship between steam volume and pressure to complicate the relation between cross-section of path and •velocity of flow. Experience has further shown that steam turbines involve further perplexities in the form of absorption of energy caused by virtually every bend, change of cross-section, and tiny eddy. That steam could be used as a propulsive rotary force was, of course, well and long known. From the record before us we learn that a crude form of steam turbine was described by Hiero óf Alexandria 120 years before Christ which used steam as a kicking or propulsive force from which the discharging wheel reacted in the same way that rear-wardly discharged water drives in the opposite direction an ordinary rotary lawn sprinkler. So also, as early as 1629, the turbine of Branca, an Italian, showed how steam could be jetted against a vane to produce forward rotary motion. But while these two, almost forgotten, instances strikingly show that the two broad principles of operation on which, as we shall see, all modern turbine development is based, were thus known, no practical and efficient steam turbine, working on either principle, was developed prior to 1884. And this absolute dearth of outcome cannot be attributed to lack of effort; for in 1896, the date of the first patent in suit, Sosnowski’s Treatise “Roues et Turbines a Vapeur” gave a list with illustrations of 300 prior steam turbines. But apart from those of two inventors, Parsons and De Eaval, referred to below, no one had, in this broad field of effort, produced a practical and efficient device. The magazine Engineering, in an issue of August, 1894, said:

“Most engineers who are approaching middle age can remember when the idea of making a successful steam turbine was classed with the search for the philosopher’s stone. It was known of course that such a motor could be readily made to work, but the consumption of steam was excessive because the motive fluid left the apparatus at a high velocity and with much of its energy unutilized. * * * What was wanted was to construct a wheel that would run several times as fast as the spindle of a mule, and most mechanics regarded the matter as impossible.”

The experts appointed by the Court of Commerce of the Canton of Zurich, Switzerland, in certain litigation involving steam turbines, reported to that court that “the art of steam turbines was first brought into existence by Parsons and De Laval.” Indeed, this is in substance conceded by respondent’s expert, who, in answer to the question whether he agreed with the statement made by Neilson, in his work on Steam Turbines (4th Ed. 1908), that the Parsons and De Laval turbines were the only two turbines which had been made on other than an experimental scale up to 1895-96, said :

[935]*935“Limiting your question to steam turbines I should answer it that the Parsons steam turbine and the De Laval steam turbine are the only ones that I know of that were being manufactured prior to 1896, that are being manufactured for commercial use to-day.”

Passing by, therefore, the fruitless effort of prior inventors, we take up the practical and effective stage of the art with Parsons and De Laval. Parsons, the real pioneer of one branch of the art, was a British subject who in his English patent, No. 6,735 of 1884, gave the world its first effective steam turbine. A study of this patent shows that Parsons disclosed no undiscovered law- of nature or any .novel principle of operation. His basic principle of operation was the simple principle of reaction shown in prior devices; but, his being the first real practical and efficient device in a barren field of effort, Parsons has been justly regarded as the pioneer of the steam turbine art. As well said by one of complainants’ witnesses:

“It can therefore be said that, although Parsons did not introduce principles not known prior to his invention, he designed an efficient reaction turbine ; whereas, in all the structures devised previously no efficient conversion of the energy of the steam into mechanical work was possible.”

To the same effect is the testimony furnished by respondent in the address of Rateau, a French savant, in his Chicago address in June, 1904, who, in speaking of the production of an unworkable speed where steam expansion takes place in a single stage of a single wheel, says, evidently, from the context, referring to Parsons:

“A consideration of these circumstances has induced inventors to divide the expansion of the steam into successive stages, and -thus to produce turbines with multiple wheels, which are nothing but a series of simple turbines mounted upon the same shaft and driven successively by the same current of steam. This design of multiple turbines is by no means novel.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
202 F. 932, 121 C.C.A. 290, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-curtis-marine-turbine-co-v-william-cramp-sons-ship-ca3-1912.