Application of George C. Sullivan

326 F.2d 810, 51 C.C.P.A. 909
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 23, 1964
DocketPatent Appeal 7082
StatusPublished

This text of 326 F.2d 810 (Application of George C. Sullivan) 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 George C. Sullivan, 326 F.2d 810, 51 C.C.P.A. 909 (ccpa 1964).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This is an appeal from that part of the decision of the Board of Appeals which affirmed the examiner’s rejection *811 of claim 5 to 12 of appellant’s application serial No. 633,480 filed January 10, 1957 for BUILDING PANELS AND THE LIKE. No claim is allowed.

The application involved in this appeal is stated to be “a continuation of Application Serial Number 375,982, filed August 24, 1953, which is a continuation-in-part of my Application Serial Number 173,998, filed July 15, 1950.”

Claims 5, 7 and 9 are representative and read:

“5. A laminated structure comprising a pair of confining surface sheets, a honeycomb spacer element embodying a plurality of uniform open-ended cells positioned in substantially perpendicular relation to said confining surface sheets, a cured adhesive foam layer formed from a foamable mixture of an alkyd resin having an acid number of 5 to 80 and a liquid diisocyanate blowing agent, said foam layer expanded to completely fill the cross-section of the interstices of said spacer element whereby said confining surface sheets are bonded to the edge portions of the walls of said spacer element.
“7. The method of fabricating an article of the type described, which includes the steps of coating a surface with a foam-forming mixture prepared from a foamable alkyd resin having an acid number of 35 to 45 and an isocyanate blowing agent, arranging a reinforcing apertured spacer core on said surface in contact therewith while said mixture is still in a liquid state, maintaining the apertured spacer core and surface in contact, reacting and expanding said mixture into a cellular foam layer, to bond said surface and said core into a unitary article without the use of additional adhesive.
“9. The method of preparing a laminated sandwich structure comprising the steps of (1) placing a thin layer of a foamable mixture prepared from a foamable alkyd resin having an acid number of 35 to 45 and an isocyanate blowing agent on a facing sheet and pressing a rigid uniform honeycomb spacer element embodying a plurality of open-ended cells into the foamable mixture, (2) placing another facing sheet having a thin layer of said foamable mixture, on top of the spacer element and maintaining the sandwich structure in assembled relationship, and (3) completing the sandwich structure by expanding the foamable mixture until the upper and lower ends of the interstices of the spacer element are substantially completely filled with foam and the spacer walls are adhesively joined to the facing sheets by a layer of adhesive foam on each facing sheet.”

Appellant’s application describes a laminated structure consisting of two outer surface sheets of “metal sheets, plywood, veneer, cardboard, glass, plastic sheets, or the like” spaced apart by an internal reinforcing spacer member of “cardboard, metal, plastic, or the like.” ' The spacer member is formed of sheet material so that an “egg crate” or “honeycomb” cellular construction is achieved. A cellular resin lamination or layer serves as a permanent adhesive to secure the spacer member to the outer surface sheets.

In preparing the laminated structure, appellant applies to the inner surfaces of the surface sheets a liquid adhesive composition of a foamable mixture of an alkyd resin having an acid number of 5 to 80 and a liquid diisocyanate blowing agent. The internal reinforcing spacer member is arranged between the surfacing sheets and the adhesive composition and allowed to react in situ to set up and harden as a foam adhesive so as *812 to secure the spacer member and surfacing sheets together.

Reproduced below are Figs. 1 and 2 of appellant’s application:

Fig. 1 is a fragmentary perspective view of one form of building unit of appellant’s invention with edge portions of the unit appearing in cross-section, while Fig. 2 is an enlarged fragmentary longitudinal sectional view of the unit illustrated in Fig. 1.

Referring to Figs. 1 and 2, appellant’s unit comprises generally, spaced outer sheets 10 and 11, an internal structure 12 which in Figs. 1 and 2 is a reticulated assembly of slitted inter-fitting strips 15, and laminations 13 of the cellular adherent material. Inter-fitting strips 15 define substantially square or rectangular air spaces 14. Appellant states in his application that the “spaced oppositely facing slits in the strips 14 [sic] are indicated at 9.” Appellant has submitted a sample 1 of a structure which is representative of his invention.

Appellant’s laminated structures provide “building units such as panels, slabs, blocks, tiles, and the like, of the prefabricated type suitable for incorporation in buildings and other structures of *813 widely varying types.” states the structures are “inexpensive to manufacture, are easy and simple to handle, transport and install, are light in weight and yet strong, and have excel-The application lent thermal and acoustical insulating characteristics.”

The references relied on by the examiner and the board are:

Carter 2,099,598 Nov. 16, 1937

Del Mar 2,556,470 June 12, 1951

(filed Nov. 22, 1947)

Kropa et al. 2,576,073 Nov. 20, 1951

(filed Jan. 19, 1946)

Simon et ah 2,577,279 Dec. 4, 1951

(filed June 25, 1948)

Pace 2,744,042 May 1, 1956

(filed June 21, 1951)

de Bruyne et al. 577,790 May 31, 1946

(British)

Carter discloses a laminated construction which consists of fiat surfacing .sheets with an adhesive coating on the inner surfaces and a corrugated core member bonded therebetween.

Del Mar discloses plates coated on the inner surface with a synthetic resin bonding agent and a honeycomb core element bonded therebetween.

Kropa et al. disclose a structural material comprising a reinforcing core strip of corrugated configuration, surfacing sheets and an expanded resinous alkyd resin.

Simon et al. disclose a foamable mixture prepared from alkyd resins having acid numbers from 5 to 20 and 25 to 60 and a diisocyanate foaming or blowing agent.

Pace discloses a method for manufacturing panels wherein a honeycomb spacer is filled with a foamed resin.

de Bruyne et al. disclose a honeycomb .structure adhered to surface “skins” by a foamed synthetic resinous adhesive.

Claims 5 to 12 were rejected by the examiner as unpatentable over either Kropa et al. or de Bruyne et al., each in view of Simon et al. In the opinion of the examiner appellant distinguishes over Kropa et al. or de Bruyne et al. only in the specific foam adhesive used. The substitution of one well-known foamed adhesive such as that of Simon et al. for another foamed adhesive was not considered by the examiner to involve “patentable ingenuity.” The board sustained that rejection for the reasons given by the examiner.

The board also affirmed the examiner’s rejection of claims 9 to 12 as unpatentable over Carter or Del Mar in view of Simon et al.

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326 F.2d 810, 51 C.C.P.A. 909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-george-c-sullivan-ccpa-1964.