Application of Elmer Carl Kiekhaefer

299 F.2d 866, 49 C.C.P.A. 943
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 9, 1962
DocketPatent Appeal 6739
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 299 F.2d 866 (Application of Elmer Carl Kiekhaefer) 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 Elmer Carl Kiekhaefer, 299 F.2d 866, 49 C.C.P.A. 943 (ccpa 1962).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 1 and 2 in application serial No. 604,968, filed August 20, 1956, entitled “Forward Rake Gear Shift Outboard Motor.” This application is a division of application serial No. 301,704 and entitled to its filing date, July 30, 1952.

Appellant’s invention is directed to an improvement in forwardly 1 raked outboard motors, i. e., those in which the upper or motor unit is positioned forwardly of the lower or propeller unit so that in use the drive shaft slopes downwardly and rearwardly. The propeller unit includes a horizontal propeller shaft having an axial bore in its forward end. A clutch element, in the form of a flat bar, forwardly biased by a spring and plug within the bore, extends laterally of the shaft through a longitudinal slot therein, protruding from opposite sides thereof. Forwardly of, and in engagement with, the clutch element is a cylindrical clutch-actuating pin which extends axially beyond the forward end of the bore. Two bevel gears, located, respectively, forwardly and rearwardly of the clutch element, are rotatably mounted on the propeller shaft with their teeth, and also with clutch teeth, facing each other and the clutch element. A drive shaft, having a pinion at its lower end in engagement with both bevel gears, connects the motor unit and the propeller unit. Due to the rake of the entire motor, the drive shaft is forwardly raked. 2 Located parallel to the drive shaft, and hence also forwardly raked, is a gear *867 shifting control rod adapted to be rotated about its axis and having a cylindrical eccentric or offset crank portion at its lower end. A cylindrical bearing is mounted on the eccentric in “substantial alignment” with the propeller shaft’s clutch control pin. By rotating the control rod, the bearing carried on its eccentric may be moved rearwardly and into engagement with the clutch-actuating pin, causing the pin to push the clutch element rearwardly in the propeller shaft bore. Since the direction of rotation of the propeller shaft is controlled by the forward or rearward positioning of the clutch element, i. e., by the gear with which it is engaged, the propeller may be caused to run either forward or in reverse by rotation of the control rod.

Claim 1 is exemplary and reads as follows:

“1. In an outboard motor having an underwater gear housing and a generally horizontal propeller shaft extending rearwardly of said housing with reference to the direction of propulsion, the forward portion of said shaft having an axial bore opening from the forward end of said shaft and within said housing, drive means for said shaft including a forward and reverse clutch having a clutch member movable axially on said propeller shaft an actuator pin for said clutch member slidable within said bore and having a forward end projecting from said bore and extending forwardly of said shaft, said pin having a forward position providing the forward drive of the propeller and a rearward position providing the reverse drive of the propeller, a spring biasing said pin in the forward direction, and manually rotatable control means for moving said pin rearwardly against said spring and comprising a rod rotatably carried within said housing and having an eccentric engaging the projecting forward end of said pin so that a given rotation of said rod effects a rearward movement of the eccentric and pin, said rod having a substantial forward rake wherein the upper end of the rod is disposed forwardly of the lower end thereof and the upper angle between the rod and the pin is substantially greater than 90° so that said given rotation of the rod includes movement of the portion of said eccentric which is in engagement with said pin in an upwardly direction whereby the eccentric operates as a cam effecting a corresponding additional axial movement of the pin in a rearward direction against said spring.” [Emphasis ours.]

The references relied on are:

Kiekhaefer 2,623,490 Dec. 30, 1952

Konig (German) 747,280 Sept. 18,1944

The Kiekhaefer patent discloses an outboard motor substantially like that of the instant application except for the concept of forwardly raking the outboard motor and thereby increasing the angle between the control rod and the propeller shaft to more than 90°. The main distinction between the Kiekhaefer patent structure and the structure upon which appellant predicates patentability lies in the relationship between the cylindrical clutch-actuating pin and the cylindrical bearing element located on the control rod eccentric. In both disclosures, the forwardmost surface of the clutch-actuating pin is flat, vertical, and circular. Since in the Kiekhaefer patent structure the axes of the cylindrical bearing and pin elements are at right angles to each other, the area of engagement between the said pin surface and bearing is along a vertical line. In the corresponding structure of the application at bar a point contact exists between the cylindrical bearing and said circular pin surface because the forward rake of the bearing axis allows the outer periphery of the bearing to en *868 gage the circular pin surface only at the lowermost point of the pin.

Appellant considers his particular gear shift structure advantageous and patentable, inter alia, because:

1. Friction between the pin which rotates with the propeller shaft and the bearing element is minimized. When the application pin engages its associated bearing element it causes the bearing to rotate because of the previously noted point contact therebetween. In the Kiekhaefer patent structure the line contact between the elements allegedly prevents-such rotation.

2. Appellant’s control rod bearing and clutch-actuating pin are so related that when the bearing is moved rearwardly by rotation of the control rod, initial contact between the pin and the cylindrical bearing is at the upper portion of the bearing. Due to the forward rake of the bearing axis, as the bearing engages the pin and forces it rearwardly, the point of contact between the pin and bearing moves downwardly and rearwardly along the outer periphery of the bearing. The total rearward movement of the pin, consequently, is the sum of the rearward component of movement of the bearing as it rotates about its axis, plus the rearward component of the pin’s movement relative to the bearing due to the rake of the axis. In the Kiekhaefer patent structure, the rearward movement of the pin is limited by the rearward movement of the bearing on rotation, due to the perpendicular relationship between the bearing and pin axes. Appellant points to the fact that the pin movement in his new structure is not limited; a smaller control rod eccentric bearing assembly, therefore, can be used to impart a given rearward movement to the shaft pin. This being so, appellant further alleges that the lower propeller unit can be made smaller than was heretofore possible.

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Bluebook (online)
299 F.2d 866, 49 C.C.P.A. 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-elmer-carl-kiekhaefer-ccpa-1962.