Application of George J. Dean

291 F.2d 947, 48 C.C.P.A. 1072
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 7, 1961
DocketPatent Appeal 6707
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 291 F.2d 947 (Application of George J. Dean) 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 J. Dean, 291 F.2d 947, 48 C.C.P.A. 1072 (ccpa 1961).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of claims 1-8 of the applh cation of George J. Dean, Ser. No. 340,-571, filed March 5, 1953, for “Camera Shutter-Timing Apparatus.” No claims are allowed.

The Invention Disclosed

The title is accurately descriptive of the contents of the specification, which refers to two other applications. It first states that Willcox application Ser. No. 125,453, filed Nov. 4, 1949, describes combined shutter and timing mechanism for an aerial camera wherein there are two sets of shutter blades, one normally open and one normally closed and held in those positions by latches. A photographic exposure is initiated by tripping the latch of the normally closed shutter which opens, setting in motion an adjustable cam which after a time interval of desired duration trips the latch of the normally open shutter to close it and terminate the exposure. It is said that this mechanical timer is not readily adjustable from a remote point and that its accuracy may be affected adversely by ambient conditions in an airplane in flight. The second application referred to is that of Doyle, Ser. No. 340,557, filed concurrently with this application and said to describe an “improved” shutter-actuating mechanism which can be operated from a point remote from the camera “and including timing apparatus which may be adjusted at the operator’s station.” The instant invention is said to be an “improved and simplified timing apparatus for use in the shutter-actuating mechanism of” the Doyle device, about which no further information is given.

Against this background, the application drawing discloses, in purely diagramatic form, the circuitry of an electrical network adapted to be connected to a source of energy such as a 115 volt, *948 60 cycle current source. The operator-controlled portion of this network consists of two manually operated switches and an adjustable resistance. Its output or actuating portion consists of two electromagnets or solenoids “adapted to be individually coupled to the shutter-actuating elements A and B, respectively, as indicated by the dot-dash lines 12 and 13, respectively.” No camera or shutter or shutter element is shown, the lines 12 and 13 simply being marked, “To shutter actuator A” and “To shutter actuator B.” In practice, we understand, the two electromagnets which are part of the disclosed circuit are mounted on the camera shutter and connected by a three-wire electrical cable to the rest of the circuit and its controls, which may be at a point remote from the camera.

It will be understood that the timing of an exposure, that is to say whether it is a fiftieth of a second or a five-hundredth, is determined by the interval between the energization of the two electromagnets controlling the two shutter blades. As shown, actuator B is operated first and actuator A is automatically operated by the timer circuit at the desired interval thereafter.

The issues here do not require a detailed understanding of the circuitry. Suffice it to say that the solenoids for actuators A and B are in two distinct but interrelated circuits, each circuit being supplied with current from its own capacitor, the capacitors having first been charged from the current source and disconnected from that source when actuation of the shutter is initiated. When the operator moves a switch, the solenoid for actuator B receives an electrical pulse from the discharge of its related capacitor, moves its shutter element, and the current in this branch of the circuit drops to zero. When this happens, a thyratron tube in the circuit containing the solenoid for actuator A is rendered conductive, after a desired time interval which is determined by a time constant circuit, the interval depending on the operator’s manual setting of the adjustable resistence. The thyratron circuit, acting as a time delay switch, permits current to flow through the electromagnet for actuator A from its associated capacitor whereupon it operates its related shutter element. Thus the exposure cycle is completed. By reconnecting the capacitors to the current source they are recharged and the timer is readied for another exposure.

To summarize, what is disclosed is an electrical timing circuit, to be attached, on the one hand, by electrical connections to a source of current and, on the other hand, by mechanical connections, to a pair of shutter blades in a camera. 1 The stated objects of the invention are to provide “camera shutter-timing apparatus.” What is disclosed is camera shutter-timing apparatus. The opening paragraph of the specification states that “while it is of general application, it is particularly suitable for use with aerial cameras located in a position in the plane remote from the photographer.” After discussion of background, it is stated: “The present invention comprises an improved and simplified timing apparatus particularly suitable for use in the shutter-actuating mechanism of the said co-pending Doyle application.” [Emphasis ours.]

*949 What appellant wants to protect by-patent is camera shutter-timing apparatus as disclosed in the specification.

The Claims

The differences in the claims appear to be immaterial to the issues here and we may consider claim 3, which the parties have used in the proceedings below, to typify all of them. It reads:

“In a camera having a shutter mechanism including two independently operable shutter-actuating elements, a shutter-timing apparatus for effecting a precisely predetermined camera exposure comprising: [1] a pair of electro-responsive devices adapated to be individually coupled to said elements; [2] an alternating-current supply circuit; [3] a pair of rectifier circuits coupled to said supply circuit, each including an energy-storage condenser; [4] a pair of control eircuits individually coupled to said condensers each including one of said devices; [5] means for developing an electrical pulse in one of said control circuits to cause its associated device to initiate an exposure; [6] a normally non-conductive electron discharge device included in the other of said control circuits; [7] and an electrical time-constant circuit responsive to operation of said pulse-developing means for rendering said discharge device conductive to develop a delayed pulse in said other of said control circuits to cause its associated electro-responsive device to complete an exposure.”

We have inserted the numbers in brackets to designate the clauses describing the elements of the combination which is claimed and to facilitate the ensuing consideration.

The references relied on are:

Lee 2,577,774 Dec. 11, 1951
Watson (British) 553,949 June 11, 1943

The examiner rejected on four separately specified and considered grounds, summarized by the board as follows:

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291 F.2d 947, 48 C.C.P.A. 1072, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-george-j-dean-ccpa-1961.