Universal Winding Co. v. Foster Mach. Co.

16 F. Supp. 671, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1849
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 1, 1936
DocketNo. 4127
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 F. Supp. 671 (Universal Winding Co. v. Foster Mach. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Universal Winding Co. v. Foster Mach. Co., 16 F. Supp. 671, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1849 (D. Mass. 1936).

Opinion

McLELLAN, District Judge.

This is a suit for infringement of two patents, one granted to Franklin A. Reece on March 4, 1930, No. 1,749,355, for a traversing means for winding machines, and another to Swanson and Marcroft of February 13, 1934, No. 1,946,506, for a winding machine. The plaintiff is the assignee of both patents. The defense to each is invalidity and noninfringement.

Statements of fact in this opinion may be taken as findings of fact, and conclusions of law as rulings of law, in accordance with the equity rules.

Both patents in suit relate to winding machines, the object of which is to take yarn, thread, or anything of like nature which may be wound, from the bobbin or [672]*672spool on which it comes from the manufacturer and rewind it in the shape in which it is required for use by the consumer, usually a manufacturer of textiles.

The First Patent

A winding machine consists essentially of a spool on which the thread is wound and a guiding device to present the thread to the spool. In connection with the first patent, we are concerned only with the guiding device.

The claims in issue follow:

“4. A strand-traversing device for winding machines comprising a rotating element having on its peripheral surface a strand receiving and guiding groove consisting of crossing and connecting helices, and means at a crossing point to control the passage of the yarn through the crossing.
“5. A strand-traversing device for winding machines comprising a rotating element having on its peripheral surface a strand receiving and guiding groove consisting of oppositely extending crossing helices, and means at a crossing point to control the direction of the yarn at the crossing.
“6. A strand-traversing device for winding machines comprising a rotating element having on its peripheral surface a strand receiving and guiding groove consisting of crossing and connecting helices, and means at a crossing point to maintain the strand in that portion of the groove in which it is traveling and prevent it being diverted into the other portion of the groove.
• “8. A traversing-means for winding machines comprising a rotating element having on its peripheral surface a strand receiving and guiding groove consisting of opposite crossing helices, a portion of the groove at a crossing being deeper than the opposite portion of the groove at the crossing, and means at a crossing to prevent the strand being diverted from the direction in which it is traveling.
“10. A strand-traversing device for winding machines comprising a rotating element having on its peripheral surface a strand receiving and guiding groove consisting of oppositely extending crossing helices with a portion of the groove (sic) at a crossing cut away on its edge to prevent the strand as it travels in one direction in the groove being diverted into the oppositely extending portion of the groove.”

The invention covered by these claims lies in what the patentee describes in claim 4 as “means at a crossing point to control the passage of the yarn through the crossing.” In claims 8 and 10, respectively, he states his two distinctive features, “a portion of the groove at a crossing being deeper than the opposite portion of the groove at the crossing” (claim 8), and “a portion of the groove at a crossing cut away on its edge to prevent the strand as it travels in one direction in the groove being diverted into the oppositely extending portion of the groove” (claim 10).

As the prior art stood when the Reece patent was granted, the ordinary method of presenting the thread to the roll was by what is called a “reciprocating guide,” which traveled back and forth along the length of the roll, laying successive turns until the package was complete, “package” being the common term, or one of the common terms, by which the thread, closely packed on its spool or core, is designated. This method of winding was effective, but not as speedy as some producers desired. Reece, at the request of the plaintiff, turned his attention to the production of a speedier device.

Besides the reciprocating guide, the pri- or art also suggested that the thread could be presented to the spool by a revolving wheel or roll in contact with the spool or in close proximity to it, so grooved as to lead the thread back and forth as the roll revolved. This was the method described by a patent to Hill and Brown, No. 322,451, granted July 21, 1885, in which a grooved wheel or drum guided the thread to the package as it revolved, the groove making but a single turn over the surface of the wheel, so that there was no problem of intersections. As such a drum must be of sufficient diameter to carry the thread through several turns around the package at each revolution, the size of the device made it unsuitable for winding at high speeds.

A'patent to Wilcox, No. 477,196, granted June 14, 1892, for an improvement in fishing-reels, although not in the winding-machine art, came somewhat closer to the invention here considered. Wilcox devised a roll, traversed by a groove running in right and left spirals, to guide a fishing line onto a reel; and he suggested that the groove in one direction should be somewhat deeper than that in the other direction. The plaintiff’s expert Armington tes[673]*673tified that he had made a model of a roll grooved according to the description in the Wilcox patent, but could not make it work.

The real suggestion for what Reece was destined to accomplish came, not from the foregoing devices, but from a róll designed by Dickerson G. Baker. Baker had conceived the idea of dispensing with the reciprocating guide ordinarily used and substituting for it a cylindrical roll, grooved in such a way as to guide the thread back and forth along the axis of the package. His groove ran from one end of the roll to the other and back again in two spirals, one from right to left, the other from left to right, at an even depth. The two spirals necessarily crossed each other at several points on the roll, and Baker found, in the operation of the device, that the thread tended to take the wrong direction at a point of intersection. Instead of following the proper groove for the whole length of the spiral, the thread turned back in the other direction, so that it covered only a narrow area in the center of the package. Baker, who testified at the trial, said that he was unable to overcome this difficulty; and he finally designed an auxiliary guiding device which, by means of a cam, kept the thread in its proper path. For this combination of roll and auxiliary guiding mechanism, he obtained a patent, and a machine was built which was operated for about a year and a half, and then abandoned.

Reece saw, or is charged with knowledge of, the possibilities of the Baker roll, and studied the problem of the intersections. In discussing what he did, it is more convenient to speak as if there were two intersecting grooves, although in fact there is but one endless groove traversing the roll in two intersecting spirals.

Reece found that it was necessary to modify one groove at each “intersection. What he did was to shallow it at either side of the intersection by sloping the bottom upward to the edge of the traverse groove and down from the opposite edge, so that at the point of crossing the groove was but a sixteenth of an inch below the surface of the roll.

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Bluebook (online)
16 F. Supp. 671, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/universal-winding-co-v-foster-mach-co-mad-1936.