Application of Hugh Rodman and Hugh Rodman, Jr

223 F.2d 281, 42 C.C.P.A. 951
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1955
DocketPatent Appeal 6101
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 223 F.2d 281 (Application of Hugh Rodman and Hugh Rodman, Jr) 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 Hugh Rodman and Hugh Rodman, Jr, 223 F.2d 281, 42 C.C.P.A. 951 (ccpa 1955).

Opinion

COLE, Judge.

The sole issue presented here is whether the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office erred in holding certain material limitations appearing in claims 45 to 48 inclusive of appellants’ application for a patent for improving “Quenching Oils” to be without requisite basis in the specification disclosure. No prior art is therefore involved.

The appealed claims define an oil blend composition used as a coolant or “quenching” agent in a bath where red-hot steel, heated above its critical temperature, is immersed so that it can be rapidly cooled and thereby hardened to withstand wear and abrasion. While the use of various oils and oil blends for the stated purpose is a known expedient, appellants state that the characterizing feature of their disclosure is the production of oil blends in which the base oil of the blend is a mineral oil having a viscosity substantially lower than the viscosity of any base oil previously employed in producing such oil blends. Appellants urge that their quenching oil composition satisfies a long recognized need for a cooling medium producing exceptional results in greatly increased capacity for hardening steel.

Preliminary to setting forth claims representative of those on appeal, and discussing the subject matter comprehended thereby, this brief explanation of certain terminology employed in the quenching oil art will be helpful.

It is known that the degree of hardness obtained through use of oil as a quenching medium is largely determined by the “initial quenching speed” thereof. This term, or IQS as it is referred to in the appealed claims, may be defined as being a calorimetric determination of the percentage of available heat removed from a test piece of steel at 1500° F. when it is immersed for five seconds in the quenching agent at 100° F. In other words, the term has reference to the amount of heat removed from steel during the first five seconds of the quenching process. There is also a ten second quenching speed test which is identical to the test for determining the IQS of the coolant, except that the quenching time interval is ten seconds instead of five. Each of these tests thus indicates the effectiveness of the quenching medium in cooling (and simultaneously hardening) the steel under treatment. The five second speed (IQS) of the coolant is a factor of the utmost importance as it is during this initial period of the quenching operation that principal hardness is imparted to the steel. Many efforts have been made to increase the IQS of oils used as quenching agents, and IQS-increasing additives for this purpose are in common usage.

It further appears that the particular viscosity rating of a given oil or oil blend is a material consideration affecting its value as a cooling medium. The viscosity of a fluid may be defined in terms of its consistency at 100° F. measured in seconds by a viscosimeter. More specifically, a test for measuring viscosities of liquids is to ascertain the period, measured in seconds, of liquid flow through a submerged orifice of definite size while the liquid exists at a defined temperature, such as 100° F.

Appellants assert that there are vast differences between the heat absorbing characteristics of low and high viscosity base oils. The principal constituent of appellants’ blend is a low viscosity base oil. Small amounts of additives in varied proportions are mixed with the base oil to increase the IQS of the blended com *283 position. The preferred embodiment of appellants’ oil blend to effect the results claimed is set forth in their application as consisting of a mineral base oil of viscosity about 38 to 45, blended with about 5% of an additive, the final blend having a viscosity between about 40 and 50 seconds, and an IQS of 30 to 35.

As aforesaid, the question for decision is whether there is adequate disclosure in appellants’ specification to support the claims as drawn. More particularly, the issue is confined to whether a viscosity range for the blended oil of from about 38 to about 55 seconds is in conformity with ranges in the application as filed and, secondly, whether there is support in the specification for an IQS-increasing additive (per se old in the art) in amount sufficient to produce an IQS (initial quenching speed) in excess of 22% for the blended oil.

Appealed claims 45 and 48 respectively illustrate the relationship of each of the limitations in question to the subject matter of the claim. It is to be noted in the claims that the abbreviation “SUS” (Saybolt Universal Seconds) is a term having the same significance as viscosity, the terms for our purposes herein being interchangeably employed. The representative claims read:

“45. A quenching oil blend for use in hardening steel, having an IQS within the range of from about 30 to about 40, a 10 Second Speed in excess of 53 and a viscosity within the range of from about 38 to about 55 SUS at 100° F, at least 85% of which consists of a mineral base oil having a viscosity within the range of from about 34 to about 50 SUS at 100° F with the remainder consisting substantially entirely ■of an IQS-increasing additive.
“48. A quenching oil blend for hardening steel having an IQS above 22 and a 10 Second Speed above 53, and consisting of a mineral base oil having a viscosity between 34 and 50 SUS at 100° F blended with an IQS-increasing additive in an amount sufficient to produce an IQS in excess of 22.”

As to the first limitation in issue, i.e., the viscosity range of about 38 to about 55 for the blended oil, the Board of Appeals clearly stated its position with regard thereto as follows:

“Considering first the preferred embodiment of the invention, it is quite clear that it fails to teach this range since the final blends of this embodiment have viscosities ranging from 40 to 50 SUS at 100° F.
“As regards the data set forth in the Table on page 14 of the specification, we agree with the appellants that it appears from these data that where viscosity of the base oil is 41.5 SUS at 100° F. the viscosities of the blends will vary from 42.5 to as high as 52 SUS, depending on the amount of IQS-increasing additive employed and that the best results are obtained by viscosities of the blends ranging from 43.2 to 47.2 SUS. However, we fail to see how these data teach the specific range of viscosities which the Examiner held to be without basis in the present specification.
“As regards the showing in the graph [of the specification] that a slight increase in viscosity over a viscosity of 37.2 of the base oil occasions a substantial increase in the hardening effect of the blend, we are at a total loss to understand how this disclosure per se or in combination with the preferred embodiments of the invention and the data presented on page 14 of the specification teach the range in question.”

Appellants’ brief on appeal does not with any real degree of particularity point out specific error in the board’s conclusions. The arguments advanced therein do not go to the essence of the controversy, but are instead framed in generalities which do not readily lend themselves to interpretation of purpose. We believe, however, that the rejection was entirely proper for reasons we now *284 give in supplementation of those of the board.

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Bluebook (online)
223 F.2d 281, 42 C.C.P.A. 951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-hugh-rodman-and-hugh-rodman-jr-ccpa-1955.