McNab v. Nathan Manuf'g Co.

32 F. 155, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2333

This text of 32 F. 155 (McNab v. Nathan Manuf'g Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNab v. Nathan Manuf'g Co., 32 F. 155, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2333 (circtsdny 1887).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

This is a bill in equity to restrain the defendant from the alleged infringement of letters patent No. 106,150, granted August 9, 1870 to William Gee, as inventor, for an improved self-feeding lubricator. The patentee’s description, in his specification, of the nature and character of the invention, is as follows:

“The want of some means of observing the operation of self-feeding lubricators has long been recognized. With a view to provide for this want, and to facilitate the proper adjustment of the' feed-regulating device, the reservoirs have been made of glass, or with glass sides, through which the quantity of oil contained therein might be seen; but the facility thus afforded for ascertaining whether the lubricator was feeding properly was very imperfect, as the action could only be determined by watching the gradual diminution of the level of the oil in the reservoir, which was necessarily tedious. The object of this invention is to provide for the better observation of the operation ; and, to this end, it consists in the provision below the reservoir and the feed-reguiating device, and the contracted orifice through which the oil escapes from the reservoir, of a chamber of such capacity that the oil or other lubricating material drips through the said chamber, instead of trickling down over the surface of the passage leading from the reservoir and feed-regulating device to the bearing or other device to be lubricated; such chamber having openings in its sides, or being partly constructed of glass, and thereby enabling the dripping of the oil within or through it to bo distinctly [156]*156seen. In order to insure the dripping instead of the trickling of the oil or lubricating material from the reservoir through the said chamber, one feature of this invention consists in providing a teat around the orifice, through which the oil or lubricating material passes into the said chamber. Figure 1 in the drawing is a central vertical section of a lubricator with myimprovement. Figure 2 is an elevation of the drip-chamber, detached from the reservoir and feed-regulating device. Similar letters of reference indicate corresponding parts in both figures. A is the reservoir; B the feed-tube; and C, the adjusting valve or plug for regulating the feed.
These are represented of a well-known construction, serving as well as any other to illustrate the application of my invention; but the reservoir and feed-regulating device may be of any other known or suitable construction, whereby a contracted orifice is provided at the bottom of the reservoirfor the escape of the oil or other lubricating material. F, H, I, is the drip-chamber, arranged below the reservoir and feed-regulating device, and between the said device and the hollow stem* G, which is inserted into the support for the lubricator. This chamber is formed, in part, of a hollow cylindrical shell of metal, F, which is made in the same piece with or attached to the bottom of the feed-tube, B, and in part by a socket, I, provided on the stem, G, the shell, F, screwing into this socket. To render the interior of the said chamber visible, holes, E, E, of suitable size, are provided in the sides of the cylindrical shell, F; and to prevent the entrance of dust, while still permitting the interior to be seen, the said shell is lined with a glass tube, H, or small plates of glass may be fitted to the holes, E, E, for the same purpose. At the top of the said chamber, surrounding the lower orifice of the feed-tube, is the teat, a, on which the oil or lubricating material collects to form the drip. The operation is as follows: The oil or other lubricating material, passing the feed-regulating valve or plug, 0, collects in the lower part of the feed-regulating tube, until there is a sufficient accumulation at the lower orifice of the said tube to form a drip, which drips through the chamber, F, H, I, to> the bottom thereof, whence it passes through the hollow stem, G, to the place to be lubricated. The dripping, taking place frequently, can be observed through the openings, E, E, of the chamber, and the quantity supplied can [157]*157be so easily determined as to enable the feed-regulating device to be properly adjusted. The delivery ot the oil in drips is better insured by the teat, a, formed around the lower oriíice oí the feed-tube, or, by what would be equivalent, by the making of the interior of the upper part of the chamber of convex form. This invention dilfers from all other lubricators, not in allowing the, oil to be seen, but in feeding with a visible drip, the frequency or cessation of which can bo at once ascertained.”
[156]

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Bluebook (online)
32 F. 155, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnab-v-nathan-manufg-co-circtsdny-1887.