Application of Flick

210 F.2d 832, 41 C.C.P.A. 799
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 23, 1954
DocketPatent Appeal 5994
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 210 F.2d 832 (Application of Flick) 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 Flick, 210 F.2d 832, 41 C.C.P.A. 799 (ccpa 1954).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the action of the Primary Examiner in finally rejecting claim 15, the only claim of appellants’ application, Serial No. 772,940, for a patent on a “Piston Rod Seal.”

The appealed claim reads as follows:

“15. A leak-proof seal, for a piston rod adapted to reciprocate through the head of a pressure cylinder, comprising: a flexible packing having an axially extending sleeve portion provided with a bore to make a close sliding fit with a piston rod for substantially the entire length of said packing, the front of said sleeve portion being beveled externally and forming a sharp annular lip at the front end of the bore; a pressure ring having a cylindrical bore which exceeds the diameter of the bore in the packing by less than .003 of an inch and having a rear internal bevel making an angle with respect to the axis of the bore which is a few degrees greater than that of the packing bevel; and a spring for yieldingly urging the beveled portion of said ring rearwardly against the end of the lip of said beveled portion of said packing.”

The references relied on are:

Gits 2,021,414 Nov. 19 1935;

Hunt 2,071,204 Feb. 16, 1937.

*833 Appellants’ alleged invention, as is apparent from the quoted claim, is for a leak-proof oil seal for a reciprocating piston rod. The seal comprises a flexible packing member, usually leather, having an axially extending bore which makes a close sliding fit with the piston rod. The forward edge of the packing is beveled externally to provide a thin annular lip. A ring is positioned over the piston rod with a clearance of less than ?iooo of an inch and is provided with an internal bevel which is slightly larger than the bevel of the packing. The larger bevel of the ring, which is forced against the packing by a spring, holds the lip tightly against the outer surface of the rod. The spring which forces the ring against the packing is preferably a wave spring, which may be pretensioned to any degree. Appellants have submitted an affidavit in which it is stated that the seal is effective for pressures in excess of 5,000 pounds per square inch.

The Gits patent relates to oil seals for rotating or reciprocating shafts or rods. The patent discloses an oil seal comprising a packing that is arranged to be spaced away from the shaft or rod and is tapered inwardly so that only the outer marginal edge is in contact with the shaft or rod. The edge of the seal is held against the shaft or rod by means of an axially shiftable ring which has a frusto-conieal portion which bears against the tapered rim of the packing member. The ring is pressed axially, to contact the rim of the packing, by a plurality of springs. From an inspection of the drawing it is obvious that the taper of the frusto-conical portion of the ring is greater than the taper of the packing. The packing and the ring are designed so that there will only be a line contact between the packing and the shaft or rod.

The patent to Hunt relates to valves for pressure lines utilized in transmitting air, water, oil or other fluids under pressure. The valve may be operated either by longitudinal movement or by a combined rotary and longitudinal movement. In general terms the device of Hunt includes a by-pass valve body, a valve sleeve, packing means interposed between the valve body and the valve sleeve, and spreader means engaging the packing means to urge it toward a sealing position at all times. In its rejection, the Patent Office relied on Figure 8 of the Hunt patent. Specifically, this figure discloses a fragmentary sectional view of a valve in which the valve body is surrounded by a valve sleeve. Interposed between the valve body and valve sleeve is a u-shaped packing ring, the inner annular flange thereof having its outer edge beveled. A spreader ring, having a cylindrical bore substantially exceeding the bore of the packing, surrounds the valve body and is forced into the open portion of the packing ring by a compression spring. The portion of the spreader ring that engages the packing ring is beveled to conform to the beveled edge of the packing ring. In this manner the inner annular flange of the packing ring is yieldingly urged into sealing abutment with the valve body by the beveled edge of the spreader ring.

Appellants’ single claim was rejected as unpatentable over the disclosure of Hunt in view of the disclosure of Gits. It was held by the examiner that no invention was required to make the bevel of the spreader ring and packing ring of Hunt taper to a sharp edge, with the taper of the spreader ring slightly greater than the taper of the packing ring, in view of the teaching of the Gits patent. The examiner admitted that there was no disclosure of the amount of clearance between the pressure ring and the axially movable shaft or rod, as required by appellants’ claim, i. e., “less than .003 inches,” but held that this was a mere matter of degree and not a patentable distinction. The Board of Appeals agreed with the examiner and affirmed his rejection.

Appellants argue that the combination of references relied on by the examiner and the Board would not produce the structure specified in the claim. Apparently, it is the appellants’ view that to make the combination one must substi *834 tute the pressure ring of Gits for the pressure ring of. Hunt and the packing of Gits for the packing of Hunt. Then they go on to argue that this combination would not have a pressure ring with a cylindrical bore nor a packing that makes a close sliding fit with the rod for substantially its entire length.

If the combination suggested by the examiner and approved by the Board were as stated by appellants then we would be inclined to agree that the combination did not meet the claimed structure. However, we cannot agree with appellants’ interpretation of the combination as applied by the examiner and the Board against the claim. The combination does not call for the substitution of some parts from one reference for those of the other reference. Instead, it is based on the application of the teaching of one reference to the disclosed structure of the other reference.

Specifically, Gits teaches the construction of an oil seal in which the packing is beveled to form a sharp annular lip and is held in contact with the shaft or rod by means of a pressure ring having an internal bevel greater than that of the packing. It is this teaching which is applied to the oil seal of Hunt. Hunt discloses an oil seal in which the packing has a beveled edge, but the beveled edge does not form a sharp annular lip, and the packing is forced into contact with the rod by a pressure ring having an internal bevel equal to that of the packing. In applying the Gits teaching to the Hunt structure one would increase the bevel of Hunt’s packing so that it would form a sharp annular lip and increase the bevel of the pressure ring to a greater angle than the packing. That this is the combination intended by the examiner and the Board is clear from the following excerpt from the Board’s decision:

“The Examiner has held that it would be within the scope of mechanical skill to form the bevel of Hunt’s packing sleeve with a sharp edge and the pressure ring with a greater angle than the bevel of the sleeve as shown by Gits.”

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Bluebook (online)
210 F.2d 832, 41 C.C.P.A. 799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-flick-ccpa-1954.