Application of Claus L. Sporck

301 F.2d 686, 49 C.C.P.A. 1039
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 1962
DocketPatent Appeal 6709
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 301 F.2d 686 (Application of Claus L. Sporck) 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 Claus L. Sporck, 301 F.2d 686, 49 C.C.P.A. 1039 (ccpa 1962).

Opinions

SMITH, Judge.

This appeal is from a decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals which affirmed the examiner’s rejection of claims 1-5, inclusive, of appellant’s application serial No. 536,086 for a method of forming hollow, frusto-conical articles from flat metal stock. The claims were rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103 as being obvious in view of the following references:

Kelley et al. 1,901,035 Mar. 14, 1933

Lindgren Re. 19,790 Dec. 17, 1935

British Patent 436,768 Oct. 17, 1935

Claim 1 is typical of the claims on appeal and reads as follows:

“1. The method of making a hollow generally conical-shaped article having a tapered side comprising the steps: working a blank having an annular portion of tapering cross [section]1 by mounting said blank on a spindle having a conical-shaped portion and while the spindle and blank are rotating, axially displacing said annular portion by making a roller move in a path non-parallel to the surface of the conical-shaped portion of the spindle so that the thickness of the side being formed taken at any point thereon in a direction generally parallel to the rotational axis of the spindle is equal to the corresponding thickness of the original blank.”

Appellant’s claims 1-3 are similar and for present purposes can be considered as one. Claim 4 recites the steps of mak[688]*688ing a cup-shaped blank with a tapered cross-section and claim 5 requires use of a cup-shaped blank with tapered cross-section.

The sole issue for determination is whether the board was correct under 35 U.S.C. § 103 in holding that appellant’s claimed invention was obvious at the time it was made to one of ordinary skill in the art in view of the disclosures in the cited references.

Appellant’s invention relates to a method of forming a hollow, frusto-conical article with a tapered wall from a flat or cup-shaped blank by spinning the blank and axially displacing the layers or strata of metal with a roller which moves relative to the face of a rotating spindle.

Appellant’s spinning method is similar in general to that used in the metal spinning arts, as shown by the Lindgren and British patents. A round metal blank is first clamped on the top of a spindle having a frusto-conical shape. As the spindle and blank are rotated, the roller pushes the metal along the tapered sides of the spindle to form a hollow frustocone and the metal is deformed to the shape of the spindle by axial displacement. To understand that operation it is necessary to visualize the starting blank as being composed of an infinite number of layers or strata lying in a plane parallel to the axis of the spindle. The roller is so directed during the spinning operation that the metal strata of the blank are axially displaced relative to each other, i. e., they slide relative to each other and are not compressed or elongated in length. Thus at any point on the surface of the spindle, appellant contends, the thickness of the frustocone wall, measured in a direction parallel to the spindle axis, is equal to the thickness of the original blank, measured in the same direction at an equal radial distance from the rotational axis. In forming a hollow frusto-cone by a spinning method utilizing the principles of axial displacement, as disclosed by the prior patents, the inner surface of the wall of the hollow frusto-cone is defined by the' spindle surface, and the outer surface of the cone wall is defined by the path of the roller which moves in a path parallel to the outer surface of the spindle.

Lindgren and the British reference, supra, both disclose the general method described. Appellant, however, predicates novelty and unobviousness of his method on the asserted fact that the methods of such references are unable to form by spinning a metal frusto-cone with a tapered or non-uniform wall thickness following the principle of axial displacement while he is able to do so. In appellant’s method, he first rolls or otherwise forms a tapered or cup-shaped blank from a flat piece of sheet metal. This tapered or cup-shaped blank is then spun on a frusto-conical spindle. To form a frusto-cone with a tapered wall, appellant’s roller is positioned to move along a path non-parallel to the spindle surface, so that it comes closer to the spindle as it moves along the spindle surface. Appellant asserts that this method results in axial displacement of the metal blank since the non-parallel roller path is so designed that the thickness of the tapered watt, measured in a direction parallel to the spindle axis, is the same as the thickness of the tapered or cwpshaped blank, measured in the same direction at the same radial distance from the spindle axis.

Appellant states his position in his brief:

“The change over the references is a simple one, the change being in the use of the tapered blank and in a non-parallel roller path being chosen so that the thickness of the side being formed, taken at any point on the side in a direction parallel to the axis of the spindle, is equal to the corresponding thickness of the tapered blank.”

The sole issue thus is whether, in using a blank having a tapered cross section and a roller path not parallel to the conical surface of the spindle, appellant has done anything more than would have been obvious to a worker of ordinary skill in the art at the time appellant’s [689]*689invention was made, having before him the method of forming cones taughi by Lindgren and the British patent, and faced with the problem of adapting that method to forming a cone with a tapered wall.

The board held that the use of a blank with a tapered cross section and a roller path not parallel to the conical surface of the spindle is a mere extension of the idea of axial displacement taught by the Lindgren and British references and was, therefore, but an obvious adaptation of that idea to the specific shape desired in the finished article and that the steps of forming a tapered blank from flat metal stock is fully shown by the Kelley et al. reference.

Appellant does not predicate any patentable significance on the steps relating to forming a tapered blank from flat stock.

Appellant’s contention is that the references do not suggest how the methods as therein disclosed can be used for forming cones with a tapered wall without relying on appellant’s disclosure. Specifically, appellant contends that Lindgren’s discussion of axial or strata displacement where the blank is flat and the roller moves parallel to the spindle surface and is spaced therefrom at a distance t2=ti sine k is not applicable to the process of forming a frusto-cone with a tapered wall.

In determining the issue here we are required by 35 U.S.C. § 103 to do so from the vantage point of one having ordinary skill in the metal spinning art and then to determine whether or not the claimed invention would have been obvious to such a person at the time the invention was made. This requires us to view the prior art without reading into that art the teachings of appellant’s invention. In re Murray and Peterson,

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Bluebook (online)
301 F.2d 686, 49 C.C.P.A. 1039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-claus-l-sporck-ccpa-1962.