Potts v. Creager

44 F. 680, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1171
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio
DecidedJanuary 3, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 44 F. 680 (Potts v. Creager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Potts v. Creager, 44 F. 680, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1171 (circtsdoh 1891).

Opinion

Sage, J.

This suit is for the infringement of claim 6 of patent No. 822,898, July 14, 1885, and claims 1 and 2 of patent No. 368,898, August 23, 1887, both issued to C. & A. Potts for improvements in disintegrating clay. The purpose of these improvements is to disintegrate clay by means of a revolving cylinder, against which the clay is automatically pressed, as hereinafter described. The machine consists of a cylinder mounted on a shaft, having suitable bearings on the frame which supports it, the cylinder being of such length as to nearly fill the space between the side's of the frame. A series of steel bars is fitted into longitudinal grooves in the periphery of the cylinder, where they are held by flush screws at each end, or other suitable means, that they rnaji be so adjusted as to present a sharp corner projecting above the surface of the cylinder. Opposite the cylinder a -strong plate is mounted on the shaft, so as to swing in bearings on the frame. The central part of this plate is cylindrical in outline, the upper portion presenting a straight surface and the lower portion presenting to the cylinder a curved surface, corresponding to the periphery of the cylinder. This plate is caused to oscillate in its bearings by means of an eccentric wheel.

The opposed sides of the cylinder and the upper and centra1 portions of the plate form, together with sheet-metal end-plates which are secured to the frame, a trough, one side of which approaches and recedes from the other at intervals, and which has at the bottom a narrow opening of constant width.

The operation of the machine is as follows:

The upper end of the plate being swung back to the position furthest from the cylinder, the moist, untempered day is thrown into the trough above mentioned. The cylinder revolving rapidly, successive portions are [681]*681removed from the mass of clay, and carried through the opening between the plate and the cylinder by the scraping bars. At the same time the upper portion of the plate moves slowly towards the cylinder, thus keeping the mass of clay in close contact with the cylinder as successive portions are removed. The finely divided clay, after passing through the opening between the plate and the cylinder, falls upon the lower curved -portion of the plate, and from thence to an incline, which carries it away.

Claim 6 is as follows:

•‘In a clay disintegrator, the combination, witii cylinder, A, having a series of longitudinal grooves of the scraping bars, c, adjustably secured in said grooves, for the purpose specified.”

in patent No. 368,898 a plain cylinder, set oppositely to the cutting cylinder, and revolving therewith in close proximity, so that the raw clay may be fed, shredded, and discharged in an even and continuous manner, in readiness to be taken directly to the pug or other mill, is substituted for the swinging plate described in patent No. 322,393. This additional cylinder serves as a feeder, continuously pressing the clay towards the shredding cylinder, whereby an abutment is furnished for the shredding cylinder to act upon, which, while being unyielding and unchanging as to location, is at the same time continuously changing as to surface, distributing the wear evenly throughout the circumference of the periphery of the feed cylinder, and thus not operating to change or vary the width of the space between the two cylinders as rapidly as had resulted from the wear upon the plate in the old construction. The two cylinders being arranged in such a manner as to be adjusted towards or from each other, it is only necessary, when the feed cylinder becomes worn to such an extent as to render the space between the cylinders too wide for practical use, to adjust them until the space is reduced to the width desired, thus enabling the cylinder to be used for a long time; the wear upon its surface not resulting in changing the character of the abutment, as has been the case in the old construction, wherein the abutting portion of the plate would soon be worn into a flat condition, not suitable for practical use, requiring the substitution of a new one at considerable expense. The improved construction also obviated the objection of the clay sticking to the feeding device, the feeding cylinder being continuously rotated in one direction. Claims 1 and 2 of this patent are as follows:

“(I) In the supporting frame of a clay disintegrator, a rotating cylinder longitudinally grooved, and carrying cutting bars in and projecting beyond the grooves, in combination with a smootli-iaeed rotating cylinder, adapted to carry and hold the clay against the cylinder having the cutting bars thereon, which latter cut or shred the clay, and pass the same between the cylinders, substantially as sot forth. (2) In clay disintegrators, the combination, with the main supporting frame and with the rotating cylinder fixed therein, and having longitudinal cutting bars projecting beyond the face thereof, of a positive revolving companion cylinder, fixed opposite thereto in said frame, and having a smooth face or surface, with which said cutting-bars directly cooperate to shred or clip the clay as the same is fed by and passed between said cylinders, substantially as described,”

[682]*682The defenses are,'to the first patent, anticipation and want of novelty; to the second patent, anticipation, want- of invention, and non-infringement. Respondents rely upon eight prior patents. The first of these is the Butterworth patent of 1865, for an apple-grinding machine or cid'er-mill, in which is employed a cylinder having its periphery armed with knives or cutters having serrated or toothed edges, which form a series of cutting projections, with chisel-shaped edges. These cutters are so adjusted as to project beyond the periphery of the cylinder.

Second. The Ennis patent, September, 1865, for a machine for preparing paper pulp, in which an engine roll is found having on its periphery a series of cutters set-in grooves in the periphery of a cylinder, so as to he in close proximity one to the other.

Third. The Frost patent, April 3, 1866, for an improved construction of paper engine or pulping machine cylinders, which consists in so applying the grinding plates or knives that they may be moved outwardly from the circumference of the cylinder as they w'ear under the operation of grinding the pulp, provision being made to hold them firmly in position. as adjusted.

Fourth. The Van Name patent, January 8, 1884, which shows a construction of the peripheral surface of a roller for grinding-mills, with alternating bladés of hard and soft material, arranged in grooves around the surface, and parallel with the axis. The blades or cutting knives can be renewed from time to time, but no provision is made for adjusting the projection of their edges from the cylinder.

Fifth. The Peabody patent for .a cotton-seed huller, showing a revolving cylinder around the periphery of which, at equal distances apart, are arranged knives, each having a chisel-shaped cutting edge, and adjustable, for the purpose of increasing or diminishing the cut.

Sixth. The Mayfield patent, January 10,1871, for grinding-mills. The knives of the cutting cylinder are arranged tangentially. The cylinder is longitudinally grooved, and these grooves extend entirely through the rim of the cylinder, forming slots therein. The knives project inwardly through these slots, and are adjustably bolted inside the cylinder, the cutting edges of the knives projecting outwardly from the cylinder.

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Bluebook (online)
44 F. 680, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potts-v-creager-circtsdoh-1891.