Warren Steam Pump Co. v. Blake & Knowles Steam Pump Works

163 F. 263, 91 C.C.A. 19, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4557
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 10, 1908
DocketNo. 746
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 163 F. 263 (Warren Steam Pump Co. v. Blake & Knowles Steam Pump Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren Steam Pump Co. v. Blake & Knowles Steam Pump Works, 163 F. 263, 91 C.C.A. 19, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4557 (1st Cir. 1908).

Opinion

COLT, Circuit Judge.

This bill was brought for the infringement of two patents for improvements in pumping engines, the Whiting & Wheeler patent, No. 526,913, dated October 2, 1834, and the Hall & Gage patent, No. 522,938, dated July 10, 1894. The application for the Whiting & Wheeler patent was filed January 18, 1892, and the application for the Hall & Gage patent was filed June 10, 1892. The Hall & Gage patent is for an "improvement on the Whiting & Wheeler structure. The Circuit Court held the patents valid, and that the defendant’s pumping engine infringed. The fundamental question upon this appeal is whether the patents are void for want of invention in view of the prior art.

The patents relate to the type of pumping engine known as the “air pump,” which is used for withdrawing the water and air from a steam [264]*264■engine condenser for the purpose of maintaining a vacuum in the condenser. '

The Whiting & Wheeler specification begins by stating that it is advantageous in steam vessels to malee use of an independent engine to drive the air pump, and then follows a statement that the object of the invention is to apply a direct-acting engine to the air pump or combined air and circulating pump in such a way as will secure economy of space and accessibility of the different parts:

“With engines employed, upon steam vessels it is advantageous to make use of a separate engine to drive the ‘air pump,’ in order that the vacuum in the condenser may be maintained independently of the movement of the main engine, and in war vessels especially it is of great importance to have the engines and machinery in as compact a space and as light as possible. The circulating water that passes through the condenser can also be advantageously pumped by the same independent engine that operates the air pump.
“The object of our invention is to apply a direct-acting engine to the air pump or combined air and circulating pump in such a manner that the whole will occupy very -little space and at the same time to furnish facility for access to the valves and other parts of the pumping engine.”

The specification then refers to the drawings:

“Figure 1 is an elevation partially in section of our improvement applied to a vacuum pump or as it is usually termed in marine engine practice an ‘air pump.’ * * * Figure 3 is an end elevation.”.
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[265]*265The specification then proceeds to describe the general structure •shown in the drawings, comprising the air cylinders, frame, buckets, valves, walking-beam, links, etc., referring to the features of accessibility, the permanent and rigid connection between the engine and the pumps, the direct action of the steam cylinders upon the pump buckets, and the unifying action of the walking-beam.

The specification then proceeds:

“Henee wo are able to make Ibis pumping engine very compact and uniform in its operation and entirely Independent of the main engine.”

The specification further says:

“Single and compound engines being well known are available with the present Improvements, and in instances where only a vacuum is required, both cylinders, A and A', are fitted with the proper buckets and valves for maintaining the proper vacuum, and in cases where a water circulating pump is required, both cylinders, A and A', may be used for pumping water, and where it is desired to combine in one engine an air pump and a water circulating pump, one cylinder, A', may be for water, and the other cylinder, A, for air.
“In pnmps that have heretofore been made with an engine elevated above the walking-beam and pump, the piston or plunger has been adapted to forcing water. In pumps that are used with a condenser, especially those fitted into vessels, it is important to have the buckets move vertically, and there is usually but little head room for the engine.
“By our present improvements tho lifting buckets and valves work vertically, and .the inlet water way being below and between the pumps, but little space is occupied and Lhe engine piston rods being coupled direct to the rods of the lifting buckets, the vacuum pump and engine are brought into the smallest possible space, and the walking-beam being between the engine and pump, renders the action uniform because the buckets are hung by tension from the ends of the beam and their actions balanced as nearly as possible by the two engines acting simultaneously and directly on tho rods of the buckets, but at the two ends of the beam and controlled by it. Hence the operations of the vacuum pump are more reliable than heretofore and the conditions of uso are the reverse of those in the ordinary direct-acting force pump.”

The claims are as follows:

“1. The combination with the two vertical pump cylinders and their lifting buckets and valves, of direct-acting steam cylinders and pistons with their piston rods in line and connected to the rods of the buckets, a frame and columns connecting with the pump cylinders and on which frame the steam cylinders are directly connected, a walking-beam between the pump and the engine and a pivot for the same upon a bearing extending down from the frame, and link connections at the respective ends of tho walking-beam to the cross-heads of the piston rods for unifying the action of the engine directly upon the lifting buckets substantially as set forth.
“2. In a direct-acting pumping engine, the combination with a pair of pump cylinders having lifting buckets and valves and valves in the lower part of tho pump cylinders, of steam cylinders and piston rods connecting the buckets of the pump and the pistons of the engine, a walking-beam between the pump cylinders and tho steam cylinders, links connecting the ends of the walking-beam with the piston rods, and a frame extending up from the pumps and to which the steam cylinders are directly connected and which frame also supports the pivots of tho walking-beam substantially as set forth.
“3. Tho combination in a pumping engine of two vertical pumping cylinders, buckets and rods for the same, a frame upon the pump cylinders, and steam cylinders directly connected to and supported by the frame, the piston rods of the engine being in line with and directly connected to the rods of the pumps, a walking-beam between the pump and the engine and links connecting' the [266]*266walking-beam and the. cross-heads of the piston rods, the parts being arranged so that the links are in the same plane or nearly so as the piston rods at the termination of the respective strokes substantially as set forth.”

It may be noticed that claim 2 is substantially like claim 1, while claim 3 is somewhat more limited.

Prior to the Whiting & Wheeler invention, vertical bucket air pumps were controlled by the main engine or by a crank and fly-wheel or by a water circulating pump.

Looking now at the drawings of the Whiting & Wheeler patent in connection with the specification and claims, it may be observed:

First. These drawings show a vertical twin bucket air pump.

Second. This pump is independent of the main engine; in other words, it is not attached to or controlled by the main engine.

Third.

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Bluebook (online)
163 F. 263, 91 C.C.A. 19, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 4557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-steam-pump-co-v-blake-knowles-steam-pump-works-ca1-1908.