National Tube Co. v. Spang

135 F. 351, 68 C.C.A. 59, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4334
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedFebruary 1, 1905
DocketNo. 7
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 135 F. 351 (National Tube Co. v. Spang) 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
National Tube Co. v. Spang, 135 F. 351, 68 C.C.A. 59, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4334 (3d Cir. 1905).

Opinion

GRAY, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought by the appellant, the complainant below, for alleged infringement of letters patent No. 581,251, granted April 20, 1897, to Peter Patterson, for an improvement in the manufacture of tubing, and by him assigned to the appellant, the complainant below.

The state of the art to which the alleged invention applies,, is thus described in the specifications of the patent in suit:

“My invention relates to the manufacture of butt-weld pipe or tubing from flat metal plates or strips, its object being to overcome certain existing defects and difficulties in this art and to facilitate the manufacture of the tubing, both as to the heating of the plates from which the tubing is formed [352]*352(including the time consumed for heating and the even heating of the same) and the ease of working, both for feeding the plates to the furnace and the withdrawal of the same therefrom. This class of tubing is formed of comparatively thin flat metal plates or strips, which are raised to a welding heat in a furnace and are then drawn through bell-shaped dies known as ‘welding-bells,’ in which the flat strips are bent into circular form and their edges butted together with sufficient force to cause them to weld. The bottom of the heating furnace has generally been formed of sand, gravel, or like loose material to withstand the high heat, receive the cinder produced by the melting and oxidation of the metal, and permit the plates to slide easily, and has been slightly inclined from front to rear to provide for the discharge of the cinder at the rear end of the furnace.
“The usual way of preparing the flat plates prior to heating and drawing them through the welding-bells has been to suitably trim the end to be introduced into the bell and thereby form a tongue thereon, and to bend up the edges of this tongued portion slightly to impart to it a tendency to turn in the bell in the direction in which the edges are bent, and either to secure to this tongued end a drawing-rod termed a ‘tag’ prior to heating the plate or to grasp the tongued end of the heated plate by tongs, and by the tag or the tongs draw it through the welding-bell. The regular method of heating the plate has been to introduce it with the square or untrimmed end foremost into the same end of the furnace from which the plate is to be withdrawn, and when the plate is heated to draw it out by means of the tag or tongs applied to the opposite or tongued eDd, so that the end of the plate which first enters the furnace is the last to be withdrawn therefrom. The plates or strips are thin and flexible and are generally from eighteen to twenty feet in length. They are difficult to handle, bending and sagging in the hands of the workmen, and are liable when* pushed into the furnace to scrape over and tear up the loose gravel bottom, so that it is found necessary to turn up the square or untrimmed end of the plate which is first introduced to enable it to slide over the loose furnace-bottom.
* * * * * * * ■ * * *
“The foregoing method of manufacturing butt-weld pipe has several objections or defects, among which are the following: The heat of the furnace is so high that the time required to introduce the plates (which are generally of'comparatively thin metal) and to withdraw them is a material part of the time required to bring them to the welding heat, and as the square end of the plate is the part first introduced into the furnace and the last part withdrawn therefrom the edges of that portion of the plate are often too highly heated before the edges of the opposite or tongued portion (which is connect: ed to the drawing-tag or is to be grasped by the tongs) are at a sufficiently high heat for welding, and consequently if the plate be left in the furnace until the edges throughout its entire length are brought to the welding heat some portion or portions are very liable to become overheated, to become too soft, or to be burned, as above referred to.
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“Another practical difficulty arising from the introduction of the plates into the same end of the furnace from which they are withdrawn is the interference between the gangs of men who handle and introduce the plates, known as the ‘feeders,’ and the ‘welder,’ who controls the heat of the furnace, determines'the time of heating, and superintends the withdrawal of the plates, both of whom must be stationed and work at the same end of the furnace. This interference necessarily delays the work, especially where several plates are heated in the furnace at the same time, and as soon as one is withdrawn another is introduced. Furthermore, this charging of plates in at the same end of the furnace from which they are withdrawn renders it impracticable to employ mechanical charges for feeding the plates to the furnace.
* *********
“It is the object of my invention to overcome the objections, defects, and difficulties hereinbefore enumerated; and to this end the invention consists, generally stated, in the method of making butt-weld pipe or tubing from thin flat plates or strips of metal, hereinafter more fully described and claim[353]*353ed, by introducing the strip or plate longitudinally tbrough the rear end of the furnace into the furnace-chamber, raising its edges to substantially uniform welding heat throughout its length, and drawing It by the end first introduced from the furnace at the opposite end thereof and through a welding-bell or bells, and thereby forcing the opposite edges of the plate into abutting and welding contact”

The claims of the patent are as follows:

“(1)' The herein-described method of forming butt-weld tubing from flat plates or strips of metal, which consists in introducing a flat plate longitudinally through the rear end of a furnace into a furnace-chamber, raising its edges to substantially a uniform welding heat throughout its length, and drawing it by the end first introduced through the opposite or front end of the furnace and through a welding-bell, and thereby forcing its edges together and welding it inte tubing, substantially as set forth.
“(2) The herein-described method of forming butt-weld tubing from flat plates or strips of metal, which consists in trimming and bending one end of a plate so as to form a raised tongue thereon, inserting the plate with its raised tongue end foremost through the rear end of the furnace into the furnace-chamber, raising its edges to substantially a uniform welding heat throughout its length, and drawing it by the raised tongued end through the, opposite or front end of the furnace and through a welding-bell, and thereby' forcing its edges together and welding it into tubing, substantially as set forth. !
“(3) The herein-described method of forming butt-weld tubing from flat, plates or strips of metal, which consists in feeding a series of flat plates successively side by side through the rear end of a furnace into the furnace chamber, raising their edges to a welding heat therein in the respective positions in which they rest when so fed, and drawing them successively by th< ends first introduced from the opposite or front end of the furnace and through a welding-bell, and feeding in a fresh or cold plate in line with throne being withdrawn, substantially as set forth.

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Bluebook (online)
135 F. 351, 68 C.C.A. 59, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-tube-co-v-spang-ca3-1905.