Application of Bender

203 F.2d 760, 40 C.C.P.A. 958
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1953
DocketPatent Appeal 5951
StatusPublished

This text of 203 F.2d 760 (Application of Bender) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of Bender, 203 F.2d 760, 40 C.C.P.A. 958 (ccpa 1953).

Opinion

COLE, Judge.

The application on appeal presents for ■our consideration alleged inventive means for measuring the alignment and disposition of steerable vehicle wheels whereby camber, caster, and kingpin inclination of such wheels is gauged by a device magnetically attached to the machined end face ■of the wheel hub.

Camber may be defined as that amount in inches or degrees that each wheel is tilted outward at the top. Caster is the amount in degrees of the backward tilt of the axle and kingpin. Kingpin inclination is the amount in degrees that the tops of the kingpins are inclined toward the center ■of the vehicle.

Three claims are in issue. Claim 19 is drawn to the wheel testing device per se while the others, claims 13 and 21, have relation to the gauge in combination with the machined face of the hub of a kingpin mounted wheel. Claims 1, 2, 8, 11, 12, 15, 16, 17, and 20 have been allowed by the Patent Office.

The Board of Appeals affirmed the decision of the Primary Examiner in rejecting all the claims on appeal, holding that the reference patents constituting the prior art (Peters — 2,292,968, issued August 11, 1942, and Graham — 2,308,808, issued January 19, 1943) presented sufficient justification therefor.

Claims 19 and 21 read as follows:

“19. A gauge for reading kingpin inclination as well as the camber and caster of a kingpin-mounted wheel having a hub that is provided with an annular outwardly directed and accurately machined vertical face, said gauge comprising a body provided with kingpin — , camber,— and caster-reading means, and a permanent magnet carried by an end of said body and having a flat and verticle outer face, said face being adapted to magnetically engage said face of a wheel hub to support the gauge in its entirety from the wheel and hold said reading means on the body disposed outwardly of the wheel, and readable from a position at the side of the wheel, said face of the magnet being dimensioned to span across at least two spaced portions of the mentioned hub face, whereby the face of the magnet is slidable and rotational relative -to the hub face and the gauge is thereby slidably and rotationally mounted on the wheel hub to enable adjustment of said gauge .during the readings aforementioned.
“21. The combination with a spindle-mounted wheel having a hub provided with an outer end face that is machined normal to the axis of said spindle, of a wheel-gauging device comprising a gauge-mounting body and a magnet fixedly mounted in said body and having at least one flat end pole face, said latter face magnetically engaging said end face of the wheel hub to secure said gauging device to the wheel and thereby supporting said gauging device in its entirety from the hub.’’

It is readily observed, therefore, that the principal objective of the present applicants is to provide a device for obtaining readings of the camber, caster, and kingpin inclination of a vehicle wheel. If to mount magnetically such a testing device as the claims discuss on the end .face of a wheel hub is patentable, the petitioners should prevail.

The case is free from any dispute between the parties as to legal principles applicable to the controversy. It is primarily a question of fact. During the oral argument, counsel left with the court one of the devices in question.

Before proceeding further, it is well to note, by way of simplification, that the applicants are disclosing a measuring device which is attached by means of a permanent magnet to the end face of a wheel hub, the magnet having a flat surface to accomplish said attachment, and the wheel hub having an accurately machined outer face. The engagement of gauge and wheel hub is a sliding and rotational arangement, enabling adjustment during actual readings.

*762 An exceptionally clear and understandable analysis of the claims in question is found in the respective opinions of the Primary Examiner - and' the Board of Appeals. It is well to read much of it at this juncture, omitting reference numerals when applicable.

Quoting from the decision' of the Primary Examiner, it is said:

“The patent to Peters, Serial No. 2,-292,968, shows a wheel’ gauge for measuring camber, caster,'and kingpin inclination as well as other parts to be measured comprising a projection tube which is mounted on any surface to be tested by permanent magnets. In Figures 21 and 22 Peters shows a modification of this- structure which includes two adjustable levels in planes at right angles to each other mounted on the tube. These levels also give an indication of the 'camber, caster, and kingpin inclination, when the gauge is mounted on a vehicle wheel. Peters contemplates applying his gauge magnetically against any part of the vehicle frame whose relative inclination he desires to check, including the wheels, brake drums, and frame.
“The Graham patent, S'erial No. 2,-308,808, shows a wheel alignment gauge fofl measuring camber and caster. Usually the gauge is applied against the steering knuckle assembly, but it may be applied against the wheel hub. As will be shown later this can only be against the machined end face of the hub.
* * * * * *
“Claim 21 is the broadest claim. Applying the Peters patent to this claim it is seen that Peters shows-the combination with a spindle mounted wheel having a hub, of a wheel guag-ing device comprising a gauge-mounting body and magnetic clamps having leveled ends adjustably mounted on body [gauge-mounting body] and having at least one flat end pole face, said latter face magnetically engaging the part to be tested (for instance, the wheel) to secure -the gauging device to the wheel and thereby supporting said gauging device in its entirety from the wheel. The claim distinguishes over Peters taken alone only in the fact that the gauging device is applied against the hub rather than the wheel. The distinction that the magnet is ‘in’ the gauge-mounting body rather than ‘on’ it is not considered a patentable distinction. It is the Examiner’s position that no invention would be involved in supporting the Peters gauge'shown in Figures 21 and 22 from the machined end of the wheel hub rather than the wheel itself, particularly in view of Graham, who applies his gauge against the end of the wheel hub. That Graham, applies his gauge to the end of the hub rather than .a side thereof is-clear * * * [in the .Graham patent, the inventor states that ‘if camber alone were to be taken it might even be taken from the wheel hub by bringing the contact points there against. Such camber reading however, would be indicated by the caster spirit level 22’.] The camber of a wheel is normally read on a level which lies in a plane perpendicular to the plane of the wheel. If Graham’s level 22 is to indicate the camber as he states, his arm 14 must be positioned in a plane perpendicular to the plane of the wheel and thus the only portion of the hub to which the wheel could be applied would be the end face. As Peters shows that magnetic and mechanical engaging means are equivalents in this art, it is believed he would be entitled to engage his magnetic means against the hub.

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203 F.2d 760, 40 C.C.P.A. 958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-bender-ccpa-1953.