Application of Joseph F. Stephens

314 F.2d 589, 50 C.C.P.A. 1107
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 6951
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 314 F.2d 589 (Application of Joseph F. Stephens) 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 Joseph F. Stephens, 314 F.2d 589, 50 C.C.P.A. 1107 (ccpa 1963).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

Joseph F. Stephens, appellant, appeals from the decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 7, 8 and 10, all of the claims in his application, 1 as unpatentable over the prior art.

The invention claimed resides in a method for making tubular pipe insulation which includes the following steps:

(I) Advancing a perforated mandrel axially toward a winding zone. (II) Winding a mat of insulating material impregnated with an uncured resin around the advancing mandrel to form a helical winding about the mandrel. (III) The helically wound mat is then encased in a pair of perforated mold members. (IV) The entire assembly is then passed through a curing oven so that hot air passes radially through the mat curing the resin to form a continuous length of insulation. The cured insulation is then cut into sections of desired length and slit longitudinally so that the finished product may be conveniently snapped over the pipe to be insulated without the aid of clamps or other means to hold the insulation securely to the pipe.

The references of record relied on are:

Collins 2,723,705 November 15, 1955.

Stephens et al. 2,778,759 January 22, 1957.

The Collins patent discloses a method of making resin impregnated laminated glass fiber pipe which comprises the steps of advancing an imperforate mandrel in the direction of its axis, spirally wrapping sheets of glass fibers containing a resin coating and advancing the covered mandrel into a heating chamber to cure the resin. The patentee further teaches slitting the tube in the direction of its length by cutter means ei *590 ther before or after the curing operation, other cutting means serving to cut the continuous length of tubing transversely into suitable lengths.

The Stephens et al. patent discloses a method of making tubular pipe insulation comprising the steps of winding a glass fiber mat impregnated with synthetic resin on a perforated mandrel which is placed within a perforated mold. Hot gas from an oven is fed through the mandrel to cure the resin. A longitudinal slit is then cut along the cylinder of insulation which, as desired, may extend radially or at an angle.

Claim 10 is the basic claim upon which claims 7 and 8 are dependent. Claim 10 reads as follows:

“10. A method of making tubular pipe insulation including the steps of advancing a perforated mandrel axially toward a winding zone, winding a mat of insulating material impregnated with an uncured resin around said advancing mandrel at said winding zone to form a helical winding about the mandrel, encasing the helically wound mat with a pair of perforated mold members, and directing curing air radially through said encased assembly including said helically wound mat as said assembly passes through said curing zone to cure said impregnating resin to form a finished continuous length of insulation.”

The board, in sustaining the examiner’s rejection of the claims in issue as unpatentable over Collins in view of Stephens et al., asserted that there is no dispute regarding the actual teachings of the two patents.

The critical aspects of appellant’s claimed invention, as disclosed by his specification, would seem to reside in the asserted novelty of his method of continuously producing tubular pipe insulation of any length without modification of the apparatus employed to accomplish the method.

In his brief and argument made before us, appellant’s contentions are summarized as follows:

“Collins fails to show or suggest the manner in which the process of Stephens et al could be carried out to produce continuous lengths of insulating material.
* *****
“Stephens et al do not suggest directing curing air radially through a traveling pervious assembly as it passes through a curing zone.
* * * * * *
“The only suggestion for aggregating the showings of Collins and Stephens et al in the manner proposed by the Board of Appeals arises from appellant’s disclosure.
******
“A process resulting from the aggregation of the showings of Collins and Stephens et al would not be the equivalent of appellant’s process.
******
“Appellant’s continuous process for producing continuous lengths of tubular insulating material is inventive over the prior art discontinuous step-by-step process for producing tubes of predetermined, relatively short length.”

It is apparent, as stated by the board, that the Stephens et al. patent does not disclose a continuous tubular production by spiral winding upon an advancing mandrel and that Collins does not disclose passing curing air radially through the composite assembly including a perforated mandrel and perforated mold members. The rejections were predicated on a combination of the references. Treating Collins as the basic reference, the question occurs as to whether the noted omitted features of Collins would have been suggested to one of ordinary skill in the art, realizing the advantages of air flow curing from Stephens et al., to adopt the latter’s perforated mandrel and perforated mold members.

*591 We shall undertake to answer this inquiry as we proceed to .discuss other salient and relevant features of the claimed invention in the light of the combination of the cited references.

It is apparent from the record that the concept of the production of the described insulation is not novel with the appellant. Stephens et al. discloses the making of insulation by winding fibrous material, impregnated with an uncured resin, around a mandrel. The material after winding is encased in perforated mold sections and treated through the application of heated gases through the interior of the perforated mandrel to cure the resin followed by slitting the product longitudinally.

In addition to features already noted, and observed by the board, claim 10 distinguishes over Stephens et al. in specifying a helical winding around the mandrel and that the resin be cured as the helically wound mat is advanced through a curing zone. As hereinabove noted, the Collins patent discloses a resin coated ribbon of fibers helically wound around an advancing mandrel which mandrel so wrapped is advanced through a heating-chamber curing the resin, thus forming a reinforced plastic tubing. The Stephens et al. mandrel is hollow and both the mandrel and the mold are perforated. The fiber formed mat is sheared while in its green or uneured stage.

We perceive no reason, and the record discloses no evidence to the contrary, why it would not be obvious to one skilled in the art to adopt the perforated mandrel of Stephens et al. for unsheared

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Bluebook (online)
314 F.2d 589, 50 C.C.P.A. 1107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-joseph-f-stephens-ccpa-1963.