Application of Gordon H. Jones

298 F.2d 944, 49 C.C.P.A. 893
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 1962
DocketPatent Appeal 6749
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 298 F.2d 944 (Application of Gordon H. Jones) 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 Gordon H. Jones, 298 F.2d 944, 49 C.C.P.A. 893 (ccpa 1962).

Opinion

WORLEY, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the rejection by the Primary Examiner of all three claims in appellant’s patent application Serial No. 588,798 filed June 1, 1956, titled “Process of Machining."

Claim 1 is representative and reads:

“The process of machining a workpiece from numerical data computed directly from a design drawing of the piece and without any intermediate step of fashioning patterns,, templets, control cams or the like, which comprises, applying digitally to a record device the precise numerical values, including their signs, of the incremental changes between successive sets of coordinates which fix the locus of successive increments of motion of a cutter required to produce the designed shape on the workpiece and also applying to such device the precise numerical value of an assigned time period for completing each such increment, converting said numerical values into a plurality of modulated signal traces on a magnetizable tape or the like with one trace for each coordinate and in which each trace modulation varies during each assigned time period in a sense and by an amount corresponding respectively to the sign- and numerical value of the incremental change of the coordinate which said trace represents, transporting the tape to the site of a machine tool which has variable speed,, reversible drive mechanisms for effecting relative movement between a cutter and a workpiece in each of the several directions of said coordinates, and utilizing the traces on-said tape to modulate correspondingly the operation of respective ones of said drive mechanisms while machining the workpiece.”

The following references were relied' on by the board:

Leaver et al. 2,475,245 July 5, 1949
Livingston et al. 2,537,770 Jan. 9, 1951
“A Numerically Controlled Milling Machine,” published by Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge 39, Mass. Preliminary Report published 1951, Fart 1 of Final *945 Report published July 30, 1952, Part 2 of Final Report published May 31, 1953.
“Digitron,” published by Parsons Corporation, Traverse City, Michigan, February 8,1952.

Appellant’s application discloses a process of machining workpieces of metal or other materials by using data derived from a design drawing to control a milling machine automatically. A study of the drawing of the article to be formed is first made to determine the machine movements and corresponding time periods necessary in the machining operation. The results are tabulated. Ordinarily the tabulation of movements is in terms of three right angularly related coordinates constituting the familiar “x,” “y” and “z” axes of an orthogonal coordinate system since they correspond to the directions of relative motion of the workpiece and cutter customarily afforded in machine tools. The process then involves the following four steps:

1. Forming a digital record of the tabulated values representative of distance, direction and time for movements of the machine by punching said values in a tape, preferably according to the binary system of numbers.

2. Converting the numerical values on the punched tape into a plurality of modulated electrical signals, including a reference signal and a signal carrying the information necessary for controlling movement along each of the three coordinates, and recording the signals simultaneously on a magnetizable tape.

3. Transporting the magnetizable tape from the location where step 2 was performed to the location of the machine tool which is to machine the workpiece.

4. Playing back the magnetizable tape to reproduce the modulated electrical signals and applying those signals to control means associated with the machine tool.

The publication of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, comprising three reports and entitled “A Numerically Controlled Milling Machine,” and the publication of the Parsons Corporation, entitled “Digitron,” together describe a system for automatic control of a milling machine referred to by the Board of Appeals as the “MIT system.”

That system utilizes data representing increments of relative movement of the milling machine cutter and workpiece, as well as the corresponding periods of time, determined from drawings of the workpiece to be produced. A first mechanism permits application of the data to a punched paper tape. Complex electronic mechanism then converts the data on the tape into modulated electrical signals representative of the movements along the x, y and z axes and the corresponding time periods. The signals are then applied to means which respond thereto to control the milling machine.

Referring to that system, the Parsons publication states:

“Transmission of Digitron Data. Since the punched tape is compact and easily portable, economies in computing and tape preparation might be effected by centralizing this function and having one organization process blueprints and provide punched tape for a number of different companies — in much the way that teletype news services now furnish coded punched tape which can be fed directly to typecasting machines. Telegraphic reproduction of the tape is also possible if desired.”

The Livingston et al. patent discloses controlling the operation 'of a machine tool automatically by means of modulated electrical signals recorded on a magnetizable tape. The signals are originally produced from the tool movements which result while the tool is operated by manual control to machine the workpiece into the desired configuration. The signals are recorded on the tape. Playing back the tape reproduces the signals which are then applied to control means on the machine tool to cause a repetition of the original machining operation. Thus, additional pieces of work of the same configuration as that produced under manual *946 control can be produced automatically under control of the tape.

The Leaver et al. patent also discloses making a magnetizable tape recording of electrical signals representative of the movements of a machine tool in producing an article which it is desired to reproduce. It is disclosed that the recording may subsequently be employed to operate the same machine tool or a plurality of like machine tools.

The board regarded the claimed method as a modification of the MIT system with “the use of magnetizable tape to separate the system into components” being “the feature of the recited method upon which appellant is predicating patentability.” Appellant does not dispute that evaluation but does argue that, if what he did “is a ‘separation’ of the MIT system, it is one that involved much more than a routine splitting of one operation into two parts.” He contends that it “involved adding two steps to the previous procedure and resulted in advantages far out of proportion to what ordinarily might be expected.”

It seems to us that what appellant has done is separate the MIT apparatus into two parts. The first part consists of the steps up to and including production of the modulated electrical signals which are suitable for application to the control device of the milling machine.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
298 F.2d 944, 49 C.C.P.A. 893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-gordon-h-jones-ccpa-1962.