[1268]*1268WALD, Circuit Judge:
This case poses the problem of whether a “neutral gate,” set up by a construction contractor to insulate neutral employers at a common site from the impact of union picketing, lost its protected status when supplies, intended to be used by the primary employer1 but ordered and owned by the owner of the construction project, were delivered through the gate. The primary employer, J. F. Hoff Electric Company, filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board when the Local 323, Int’l Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, picketed the gate, charging that the Union had violated the “secondary picketing” ban of Section 8(b)(4)(i) and (ii)(B) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 158(b)(4)(i) and (ii)(B).2 The NLRB ruled that the gate had lost its neutral status, at least temporarily, and dismissed Hoff’s unfair labor practice complaint. Hoff has appealed the dismissal. We affirm the Board’s action.
FACTS
Hoff, which employs non-union workers, was engaged to install the electrical system on a residential construction project in North Palm Beach, Florida. The project itself was located at the extreme southern end of a site which was more than 1600 feet long. There were only two gates into the project; the “reserved” north gate, at the far end of the site away from the project, which was marked for the use of Hoff’s employees, suppliers, and certain other subcontractors, and the “neutral” south gate near the construction project which was used by everyone else connected with the project. During the course of construction, once or twice a week as needed by Hoff but not on any fixed schedule, Consolidated Electric Supply Company delivered electrical fixtures ordered by the project owner to a trailer on the site. Hoff employees picked up the fixtures at the trailer and installed them in the new buildings. Consolidated used the south gate for such deliveries. In November, 1977, the Union began picketing at the north gate publicizing and protesting the fact that Hoff employees were paid less than Union wages. In December, 1977, picketers saw Consolidated delivering electrical fixtures through the south gate and moved their pickets to that [1269]*1269gate. They also began picketing along the fence between the south gate and the southernmost boundary of the project. After four days Hoff wrote the Union assuring it that Hoff and its suppliers would henceforth use only the north gate; on its attorney’s advice, the Union’s pickets thereupon withdrew from the south gate. They continued to picket in front of the area of construction work, however, several hundred feet away from the south gate.3
THE BOARD’S DECISION
The Board adopted the findings of its Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), ruling that the neutrality of the south gate had been breached by delivery of Consolidated’s fixtures to be installed by Hoff and thus the Union committed no violation of 8(b)(4) by picketing at that gate. The Board relied on Int’l Union of Operating Engineers, Local No. 450 (Linbeck Construction Corp.), 219 NLRB 997 (1975), enforced, 550 F.2d 311 (5th Cir. 1977), for the proposition that “any gate used to deliver materials essential to the primary employer’s normal operations is subject to lawful picketing,” 550 F.2d at 318.4 The Board also unanimously found that the picketing along the southernmost end of the project site was lawful and unrelated to any secondary intent, applying the four-prong test set out in Sailors’ Union of the Pacific (Moore Dry Dock Company), 92 NLRB 547 (1950), which is used to determine the permissible scope of picketing a site shared by many employers.
THE PERMISSIBLE SCOPE OF CONSTRUCTION SITE PICKETING
1. Settled Principles: It is settled that a union may picket a primary employer with which it has a labor dispute; indeed, such picketing is expressly exempted from the prohibitions contained in section 8(b)(4).5 The Union may not, however, picket a neutral employer in order to force that employer to cease doing business with the primary employer. Such picketing is “secondary” in that it constitutes an attempt to draw a neutral party into the dispute between the union and the primary employer, a dispute in which the secondary employer has no direct interest, and which it is powerless to resolve. On construction sites, where many subcontractors work side by side and are dependent upon each other, the attempt to reconcile these principles and to accommodate both the legitimate interest of the union in bringing economic pressure to bear on the primary employer through picketing, and the interests of neutral employers who wish not to be involved in the dispute, has proved especially difficult. In an attempt to strike a reasonable balance among the competing interests in this situation, certain rules and practices have been evolved by the Board and approved by the courts. In Moore Dry Dock, supra, 92 NLRB 547, the Board announced several criteria which, if met, raise a presumption that common situs picketing is directed against the primary and not a secondary employer. Those rules are:
[Picketing of the premises of a secondary employer is primary if it meets the following conditions: (a) The picketing is strictly limited to times when the situs of dispute is located on the secondary employer’s premises; (b) at the time of the [1270]*1270picketing the primary employer is engaged in its normal business at the situs; (c) the picketing is limited to places reasonably close to the location of the situs; and (d) the picketing discloses clearly that the dispute is with the primary employer.
Id., at 549 (footnotes omitted).
It has also been decided by the Board and the courts that in order to isolate a labor dispute and to minimize disruption of the entire work force in common work situs situations, special gates may be reserved for the subcontractor who is the object of picketing. So long as the employees and suppliers of that subcontractor are limited to that gate, the union may not picket the “neutral gate” used by others not involved in the dispute. A case involving picketing at a plant owned by the primary employer, Local 761, Int’l Union of Electrical Workers v. NLRB (General Electric), 366 U.S. 667, 81 S.Ct. 1285, 6 L.Ed.2d 592 (1961), established the legitimacy of a limitation of picketing to specially designated gates used by the primary object of the picketing. At the same time, the Court cautioned against any “mechanically applied” tests that disregard the fundamental criteria: the object of the picketing, if it is to be legitimate, must be limited to disruption of the primary employer’s business. If, from all the circumstances it can be determined that the object of the picketing is inducement of secondary employees to strike, thus forcing their employer to cease doing business with the primary employer, the picketing is unlawful secondary activity. The Court acknowledged:
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[1268]*1268WALD, Circuit Judge:
This case poses the problem of whether a “neutral gate,” set up by a construction contractor to insulate neutral employers at a common site from the impact of union picketing, lost its protected status when supplies, intended to be used by the primary employer1 but ordered and owned by the owner of the construction project, were delivered through the gate. The primary employer, J. F. Hoff Electric Company, filed an unfair labor practice charge with the National Labor Relations Board when the Local 323, Int’l Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, picketed the gate, charging that the Union had violated the “secondary picketing” ban of Section 8(b)(4)(i) and (ii)(B) of the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 158(b)(4)(i) and (ii)(B).2 The NLRB ruled that the gate had lost its neutral status, at least temporarily, and dismissed Hoff’s unfair labor practice complaint. Hoff has appealed the dismissal. We affirm the Board’s action.
FACTS
Hoff, which employs non-union workers, was engaged to install the electrical system on a residential construction project in North Palm Beach, Florida. The project itself was located at the extreme southern end of a site which was more than 1600 feet long. There were only two gates into the project; the “reserved” north gate, at the far end of the site away from the project, which was marked for the use of Hoff’s employees, suppliers, and certain other subcontractors, and the “neutral” south gate near the construction project which was used by everyone else connected with the project. During the course of construction, once or twice a week as needed by Hoff but not on any fixed schedule, Consolidated Electric Supply Company delivered electrical fixtures ordered by the project owner to a trailer on the site. Hoff employees picked up the fixtures at the trailer and installed them in the new buildings. Consolidated used the south gate for such deliveries. In November, 1977, the Union began picketing at the north gate publicizing and protesting the fact that Hoff employees were paid less than Union wages. In December, 1977, picketers saw Consolidated delivering electrical fixtures through the south gate and moved their pickets to that [1269]*1269gate. They also began picketing along the fence between the south gate and the southernmost boundary of the project. After four days Hoff wrote the Union assuring it that Hoff and its suppliers would henceforth use only the north gate; on its attorney’s advice, the Union’s pickets thereupon withdrew from the south gate. They continued to picket in front of the area of construction work, however, several hundred feet away from the south gate.3
THE BOARD’S DECISION
The Board adopted the findings of its Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), ruling that the neutrality of the south gate had been breached by delivery of Consolidated’s fixtures to be installed by Hoff and thus the Union committed no violation of 8(b)(4) by picketing at that gate. The Board relied on Int’l Union of Operating Engineers, Local No. 450 (Linbeck Construction Corp.), 219 NLRB 997 (1975), enforced, 550 F.2d 311 (5th Cir. 1977), for the proposition that “any gate used to deliver materials essential to the primary employer’s normal operations is subject to lawful picketing,” 550 F.2d at 318.4 The Board also unanimously found that the picketing along the southernmost end of the project site was lawful and unrelated to any secondary intent, applying the four-prong test set out in Sailors’ Union of the Pacific (Moore Dry Dock Company), 92 NLRB 547 (1950), which is used to determine the permissible scope of picketing a site shared by many employers.
THE PERMISSIBLE SCOPE OF CONSTRUCTION SITE PICKETING
1. Settled Principles: It is settled that a union may picket a primary employer with which it has a labor dispute; indeed, such picketing is expressly exempted from the prohibitions contained in section 8(b)(4).5 The Union may not, however, picket a neutral employer in order to force that employer to cease doing business with the primary employer. Such picketing is “secondary” in that it constitutes an attempt to draw a neutral party into the dispute between the union and the primary employer, a dispute in which the secondary employer has no direct interest, and which it is powerless to resolve. On construction sites, where many subcontractors work side by side and are dependent upon each other, the attempt to reconcile these principles and to accommodate both the legitimate interest of the union in bringing economic pressure to bear on the primary employer through picketing, and the interests of neutral employers who wish not to be involved in the dispute, has proved especially difficult. In an attempt to strike a reasonable balance among the competing interests in this situation, certain rules and practices have been evolved by the Board and approved by the courts. In Moore Dry Dock, supra, 92 NLRB 547, the Board announced several criteria which, if met, raise a presumption that common situs picketing is directed against the primary and not a secondary employer. Those rules are:
[Picketing of the premises of a secondary employer is primary if it meets the following conditions: (a) The picketing is strictly limited to times when the situs of dispute is located on the secondary employer’s premises; (b) at the time of the [1270]*1270picketing the primary employer is engaged in its normal business at the situs; (c) the picketing is limited to places reasonably close to the location of the situs; and (d) the picketing discloses clearly that the dispute is with the primary employer.
Id., at 549 (footnotes omitted).
It has also been decided by the Board and the courts that in order to isolate a labor dispute and to minimize disruption of the entire work force in common work situs situations, special gates may be reserved for the subcontractor who is the object of picketing. So long as the employees and suppliers of that subcontractor are limited to that gate, the union may not picket the “neutral gate” used by others not involved in the dispute. A case involving picketing at a plant owned by the primary employer, Local 761, Int’l Union of Electrical Workers v. NLRB (General Electric), 366 U.S. 667, 81 S.Ct. 1285, 6 L.Ed.2d 592 (1961), established the legitimacy of a limitation of picketing to specially designated gates used by the primary object of the picketing. At the same time, the Court cautioned against any “mechanically applied” tests that disregard the fundamental criteria: the object of the picketing, if it is to be legitimate, must be limited to disruption of the primary employer’s business. If, from all the circumstances it can be determined that the object of the picketing is inducement of secondary employees to strike, thus forcing their employer to cease doing business with the primary employer, the picketing is unlawful secondary activity. The Court acknowledged:
Important as is the distinction between legitimate “primary activity” and banned “secondary activity,” it does not present a glaringly bright line. The objectives of any picketing include a desire to influence others from withholding from the employer their services or trade. “[IJntended or not, sought for or not, aimed for or not, employees of neutral employers do take action sympathetic with strikers and do put pressure on their own employers.” ... But picketing which induces secondary employees to respect a picket line is not the equivalent of picketing which has an object of inducing those employees to engage in concerted conduct against their employer in order to force him to refuse to deal with the struck employer.
However difficult the drawing of lines more nice than obvious, the statute compels the task. Accordingly, the Board and the courts have attempted to devise reasonable criteria drawing heavily upon the means to which a union resorts in promoting its cause. Although “[n]o rigid rule which would make ... [a] few factors conclusive is contained in or deducible from the statute,” ... “[i]n the absence of admissions by the union of an illegal intent, the nature of acts performed shows the intent.”
Id. at 673-74, 81 S.Ct. at 1289 (citations and footnotes omitted). In upholding the struck employer’s right to assign a gate to independent contractors not involved in the dispute in order to insulate them from the effects of picketing, the Court was careful to assure the Union that the practice could not be used to keep pickets away from customers or suppliers of the primary employer:
The Union claims that, if the Board’s ruling is upheld, employers will be free to erect separate gates for deliveries, customers, and replacement workers which will be immunized from picketing. This fear is baseless. The key to the problem is found in the type of work that is being performed by those who use the separate gate. It is significant that the Board has since applied its rationale, first stated in the present case, only to situations where the independent workers were performing tasks unconnected to the normal operations of the struck employer-usually construction work on his buildings. In such situations, the indicated limitations on picketing activity respect the balance of competing interests that Congress has required the Board to enforce. On the other hand, if a separate gate were devised for regular plant deliveries, the barring of picketing at that location would make a clear invasion on traditional pri[1271]*1271mary activity of appealing to neutral employees whose tasks aid the employer’s everyday operations.
Id. at 680-81, 81 S.Ct. at 1293 (emphasis added).6
In a second “reserved gate” case, United Steelworkers of America v. NLRB (Carrier Corp.), 376 U.S. 492, 84 S.Ct. 899, 11 L.Ed.2d 863 (1964), the Court found picketing legitimate at a special railroad spur track, owned by and reserved for employees of the neutral railroad to get onto the primary employer’s premises to make deliveries and pick up shipments. The determinative fact was not that the gate-belonged to a neutral party, the railroad, but that the neutral deliverymen were furnishing routine services essential to the employer’s normal operations and so were legitimate objects of the picketing union’s appeal. Again the Court emphasized, speaking about General Electric :
The legality of separate gate picketing depended upon the type of work being done by the employees who used that gate; if the duties of those employees were connected with the normal operations of the employer, picketing directed to them was protected primary activity, but if their work was unrelated to the day-to-day operation of the employer’s plant, the picketing was unfair labor practice.
376 U.S. at 497-98, 84 S.Ct. at 903. The Court specifically rejected any rule which would make picketing unlawful at gates used only by delivery personnel as opposed to employees of the primary employer:
Picketing has traditionally been a major weapon to implement the goals of a strike and has characteristically been aimed at all those approaching the situs whose mission is selling, delivering or otherwise contributing to the operations which the strike is endeavoring to halt. In light of this traditional goal of primary pressures we think Congress intended to preserve the right to picket during a strike a gate reserved for employees of neutral delivery men furnishing day-today service essential to the plant’s regular operations.
376 U.S. at 499, 84 S.Ct. at 904 (emphasis added).
Thus, so long as the Moore Dry Docks limitations are met, a union may legitimately picket at a common work situs in such a way that all employees, suppliers, and customers of the primary employer are reached by the pickets; neutral employers may insulate themselves from the picketing only if the reserved gate practice is faithfully observed. These principles are not in dispute in this case; since Consolidated concededly used the neutral south primary gate regularly, our analysis would end here were it not for the argument advanced by Hoff that Consolidated was not one of its suppliers, but rather a supplier to the project owner who ordered and paid for the fixtures, and thus was in fact simply another subcontractor on the project, making deliveries to the owner, and properly using the neutral gate. The issue of who must use the reserved gate in order to avoid the legitimate picketing of an assertedly “neutral” gate is the focus of the dispute in this case.
2. The Legal Ownership Argument: In NLRB v. Denver Building & Construction Trades Council, 341 U.S. 675, 71 S.Ct. 943, 95 L.Ed. 1284 (1951), the Supreme Court established the principle that, despite their interdependence, not all subcontractors on a construction project can be considered legitimate objects of picketing when the dispute is with but one of them. The case concerned a strike the avowed object of which was to force a general contractor on a construction project to terminate its contract [1272]*1272with a particular nonunion subcontractor. The Court found such a strike to be prohibited under Section 8(b)(4). Rejecting an argument that the mutual reliance of one contractor on all others at a construction site renders the entire project a legitimate object of the union’s pressure, the Supreme Court held that the mere fact that each is working on the same project does “not eliminate the status of each as an independent contractor or make the employees of one the employees of the other.” Id. at 689-90, 71 S.Ct. at 952. Hoff argues that here both Consolidated and the project owner were “independent” of it because Hoff neither owned the fixtures nor was contractually bound to supply them, therefore the neutrality of the south gate was not breached and picketing directed to Consolidated’s deliveries was unlawful secondary activity.
Hoff’s interpretation of Denver Building would expand that case far beyond its scope, and would in fact permit a primary employer to largely insulate itself from the economic pressures legitimately exerted by those with whom it has a dispute simply by having another “neutral” contractor on the job accept delivery of, and retain title to, the supplies used by the primary employer. Our reading of Denver Building is not so broad. We note that in its decision, the Supreme Court carefully differentiated the situation involved in another case decided the same day, NLRB v. Int’l Rice Milling Co., 341 U.S. 665, 71 S.Ct. 961, 95 L.Ed. 1277 (1951), in which union pickets sought to convince a customer’s employees not to enter the employer’s grounds. It appears to us that Denver Building was merely clarifying the fact that Section 8(b)(4)’s ban on secondary activity applies between subcontractors or between contractors and subcontractors on the same construction project despite their common employment and the inevitable “relatedness” of each one’s work as to the other’s. We can thus find in Denver Building no abiding principle to control this case. The decision does not answer the question of who is a customer or supplier of a primary employer; it simply held that not all contractors on a construction project can be considered the same employer for the purposes of picketing and strikes.
In this case, in contrast to the facts of Denver Building there is not the slightest hint that the pickets tried to induce employees of the other subcontractors working on the project to strike in order to force their employer not to deal with the project owner until he ceased to deal with Hoff. They were simply trying to put a stop to deliveries of electrical supplies to Hoff for its use in its business, in order to disrupt its day-to-day operations, perceiving Consolidated to be a “supplier” and thus a permissible object of the picketers’ appeal under established rules. Steelworkers, supra, 376 U.S. 492, 84 S.Ct. 899, 11 L.Ed.2d 863. The picketing stopped when assurances were given that all deliveries of Hoff supplies would be through the reserved gate. Although Denver Building stands for the proposition that mere co-existence on a common situs as independent subcontractors for a common contractor does not automatically provide sufficient work relatedness to justify picketing of all subcontractors, as agents, employees, or suppliers of the main contractor, it does not deal with the question of the permissible scope of picketing when one subcontractor delivers goods to a job site to be used solely by another subcontractor who is the primary employer.
In attempting to define the customers and suppliers who must use a reserve gate in order to protect a neutral gate from picketing, we find more guidance in the General Electric decision.7 The Court concluded in that case with the observation:
[1273]*1273... if Gate 3-A was in fact used by employees of independent contractors who performed conventional maintenance work necessary to the normal operations of General Electric [the primary employer in the labor dispute], the use of the gate would have been a mingled one outside the bar of § 8(b)(4)(A). In short, such mixed use of this portion of the struck employer’s premises would not bar picketing rights of the striking employees.
366 U.S. at 682, 81 S.Ct. at 1294 (emphasis added).8
This is, of course, the reasoning contained in Linbeck Construction Corp. supra, 550 F.2d 311, 331, where gravel owned by the general contractor but intended for the use of the primary subcontractor was delivered through a neutral gate, triggering picketing of that gate by the Union. The Board found and the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit agreed that such deliveries-regardless of where legal title to the raw materials lay-were the equivalent of use of the neutral gate by the suppliers of the primary employer, and so justified picketing.
The question in this case is whether legal ownership by a neutral employer of the materials to be used by the primary employer in its normal course of business removes the delivery of these materials from its traditional role as an activity subject to picketing by those who do demonstrate against the primary employer.... [T]he controlling question is not who has title to the goods, but is for whose use they are intended. Thus, any gate used to deliver materials essential to the primary employer’s normal operations is subject to lawful picketing.
Id at 317-18. Applying the principles underlying General Electric to the question of who is a “supplier” or “customer” to whom the pickets may legitimately appeal, we agree with the Board’s rejection of any formalistic notion of legal ownership of materials delivered in favor of a more realistic analysis focusing on the intended use of the supplies. Thus if in fact and practice, Consolidated was delivering supplies which in the normal course of its business Hoff used and installed, Consolidated was a “supplier” of Hoff, no matter where legal title to the supplies might lie, and by using the south gate Consolidated contaminated its neutrality, permitting its picketing by the Union.
This test, while based on the same principles, is not as broad as the General Electric “work-relatedness” test developed for industrial plants where the struck employer is the owner of the plant.9 Practically speak[1274]*1274ing, all subcontractors on a common construction site are doing “related” work, in that if any one of them were shut down, the project would eventually grind to a halt. If Denver Building survived the General Electric decision; decided a decade later, the scope of permissible picketing in the construction industry is not so broad. The present status of the Denver Building principles need not be decided by us today, because we conclude that even if Denver Building retains its full vitality, the Board’s decision in this case is correct. While not all subcontractors on a construction project are a proper object of picketing simply because they are doing related work, neither does Denver Building mandate an artificial test to determine who are a primary employer’s suppliers and customers, based on contractual ties and legal ownership. “Suppliers” are a legitimate object of the picketer’s appeal, and the common sense notion of a supplier is a party which delivers goods for the direct use of the primary employer in the normal course of its business. This is a far narrower concept than the General Electric “work-relatedness” test, and is fully consistent with Denver Building.
An “ownership” or “contractual responsibility” test as urged by Hoff here, would be too narrow, and encroach on the Union’s legitimate rights. The Supreme Court has already rejected opportunities to look to legal ownership principles as a guideline to the permissible scope of picketing, in cases where the ownership of the situs of the dispute was urged as a distinguishing factor. In General Electric, the Court rejected the notion that ownership of the picketed premises by the primary employer rendered the picketing of the entire premises per se permissible.
In rejecting the ownership test in situations where two employers were performing work upon a common site, the Board was naturally guided by this Court’s opinion in Rice Milling, in which we indicated that the location of the picketing at the primary employer’s premises was “not necessarily conclusive” of its legality. 341 U.S. at 671, 71 S.Ct. at 964. Where the work done by the secondary employees is unrelated to the normal operations of the primary employer, it is difficult to perceive how the pressure of picketing the entire situs is any less on the neutral employer merely because the picketing takes place at property owned by the struck employer.
366 U.S. at 679, 81 S.Ct. at 1292. And in Carrier Corp., supra, 376 U.S. 492, 84 S.Ct. 899, 11 L.Ed.2d 863, the fact that the railroad spur onto the primary employer’s premises was owned by the neutral employer made no difference to the legality of the picketing at that location.10 We find support in these cases for our conclusion that lack of legal ownership of materials which would otherwise be “supplies” of the primary employer does not affect the legality of picketing at their delivery point.
Finally, a rule which would require the Union to divine the legal complexities of the contractual relationships on a construction site, at the risk of committing an unfair labor practice, would be unfair and unrealistic. Surely the workers on the site and the Union picketers did not know and could not be expected to discriminate as to whether Hoff or the project owner owned the fixtures at the moment they passed through the gate. The picketers only saw Hoff employees pick them up, carry them out to the buildings, and install them. In that sense Consolidated was much more identified with Hoff than would have been suppliers of screws, tape or other material commonly used for a variety of purposes, no matter what their special use by Hoff or [1275]*1275whether Hoff had title to them. A union engaged in a dispute with a primary employer has a right to picket to carry its appeal to that employer’s “employees,” “customers,” and “suppliers.” The Board’s decision to apply a common sense definition to those words is reasonable, and furthers the purposes of the Act.
3. The “Raw Materials” Argument: Hoff next argues that even if the Linbeck principle were to be approved as a Board standard, this case is distinguishable on at least two grounds. It points out that in Linbeck, the deliveries were of crushed stone, raw materials to be used by the primary employer in its job of constructing storm sewers and parking lots. Hoff contends that a ruling by the Board to the effect that electrical fixtures are similarly “supplies” of their installer, and therefore their delivery can be picketed, has broad potential for mischief and will eventually destroy the careful balance of interests in common situs picketing situations. It is argued that while deliveries of wires, screws, or masking tape, the ingredients of electricians’ work, might be picketed as “supplies” because they are “raw materials,” necessary to an electrician’s own work, the finished product, the light fixtures that are installed, are the work product of another independent subcontractor ordered by the owner.
We are not persuaded by Hoff’s-or the dissent’s-doomsday predictions that our ruling might be susceptible of covering virtually all suppliers or independent contractors in any integrated construction project, with “supplies” including the plaster for the walls or ceilings into which the fixtures are installed or the floors or beams on which the electricians stand to install them. We find it significant that this supplier delivered products used only by Hoff, not other subcontractors; therefore any disruption caused if the Union should be successful in its appeal to Consolidated’s deliveries would not spread to anyone but the primary employer. The ease with which any impact on the other, neutral subcontractors on the site could be completely avoided, simply by requiring Consolidated to deliver its products through the reserved gate, illustrates the limited intended impact of the Union’s action. We need not engage in any sophisticated discussions of more attenuated connections in other cases. We repeat Judge Prettyman’s invocation that “[w]e do not intend here to make a ruling broader than the case before us.” Seafarers Int’l Union v. NLRB, 265 F.2d 585, 590 (D.C.Cir.1959).
How far beyond these facts the Board’s practical approach in defining “supplier” might go, we do not venture. The “for want of a nail, the shoe was lost” line of reasoning takes us too far afield from this case and involves easily distinguishable situations. The facts here are fully consistent with the Board’s conclusion that the Union’s picketing of the south gate was motivated entirely by a desire to reach the suppliers of Hoff, in order to disrupt Hoff’s day-to-day activities through permissible economic pressure. Hoff could not install fixtures if they did not arrive; it is hard to think of a supply more essential to electrical installation work than light fixtures. We thus reject Hoff’s contention that the notion of “supplies” is limited to raw materials which will be used by the primary employer.
4. The “Change in Practice” Argument: In this case, the ALJ, and subsequently the Board itself, rejected Hoff’s final argument that in Linbeck the critical fact was that the general contractor had altered prior procedures in delivering the supplies, thus evidencing an intent to bypass exposure to legal picketing at the reserved gate.
In Linbeck, the primary employer and the “neutral” contractor who received and retained title to the crushed stone had deliberately altered their business practices to attempt to avoid the impact of picketing. Whereas the primary employer had initially ordered and received delivery of the raw materials, when it appeared picketing was imminent, legal title, ordering and delivery were simply shifted to another contractor. Thus if the primary employer were successful in convincing its own employees to cross the picket line and remain on the job, it [1276]*1276could continue its day-to-day operations unaffected by the Union’s efforts to carry its message to the public, simply picking up its supplies as it needed them from the other contractor. This would completely eliminate a major element of the Union’s right to picket, the right to try to persuade a primary employer’s supplier not to deal with it for the duration of the labor dispute. We can see no difference in the impact on the Union’s rights between this circumvention being accomplished in a deliberate attempt to diffuse the impact of picketing and its being accomplished by the contractual relationships set up at the beginning of the construction project. In either case, we approve the Board's looking to the realities of the relationships involved rather than to the formalities of legal title.11 We affirm the Board’s conclusion that no unfair labor practice was committed by the Union’s picketing of the south gate.
THE SITUS PICKETING
Although the Union had originally picketed only the north gate, after it withdrew its pickets from the south gate, it continued to picket along the fence to the southern edge of the site, nearest the buildings which were under construction. Hoff argues that this indicates that in fact, the Union’s intent in moving from the north gate was to enmesh neutral employers in its dispute with Hoff. Hoff contends that since there was a reserved gate, at which the Union’s message could be carried to all Hoff employees, there was no need to picket the southern fence in order to accomplish that concededly legitimate end, and thus an improper motive could be inferred. The Board dealt with this allegation by analyzing the propriety of the southern fence picketing on its own merits. Finding the southern picketing entirely lawful under the Moore Dry Dock standards, the Board concluded that no unlawful intent could be inferred from it.
There cannot be any serious dispute that picketing the southern fence in fact satisfied the strictures of Moore Dry Dock. The picketing only occurred while Hoff employees were working on the new buildings, Hoff’s workers were engaged in their normal business of doing electrical work, the picketing disclosed that the dispute was only with Hoff, and, since the project was located at the extreme southern tip of a 1600 foot construction site, picketing outside the fence at that point was clearly “reasonably close” to the situs of the dispute, where the Hoff employees were working.
Hoff is correct in its point that Moore Dry Dock is only an evidentiary tool, merely raising a presumption that the picketing is lawful absent affirmative evidence of unlawful secondary intent. Hoff contends that the very existence of a reserved date at which picketing could occur, plus the fact that other workers employed by neutral contractors could presumably also see the pickets, constitutes such evidence. We agree with the Board that this is not necessarily sufficient to rebut the presumption raised by satisfaction of the Moore Dry Dock standards. There is no evidence in the record of any direct appeal to employees of neutral contractors to engage in strikes or concerted activity, in order to force their employers to cease doing business with Hoff. The pickets did not ask [1277]*1277other unions to honor their picket line, to cease work, or to ask their employers to bring pressure on Hoff. Rather, the Union simply picketed, with signs indicating that its only dispute was with Hoff, as near as possible to where Hoff’s employees were working. Its picketing was clearly targeted at Hoff’s employees, and was thus lawful primary picketing.
The Board’s dismissal of Hoff’s unfair labor practice charges is affirmed.