Application of Otis J. McCullough

289 F.2d 524, 48 C.C.P.A. 987
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1961
DocketPatent Appeal 6684
StatusPublished

This text of 289 F.2d 524 (Application of Otis J. McCullough) 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 Otis J. McCullough, 289 F.2d 524, 48 C.C.P.A. 987 (ccpa 1961).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals sustaining the examiner’s final rejection of claims 1 through 11, 13 through 16 and 18 in application Ser. No. 654,435, filed April 22, 1957, for reissue of Patent 2,750,583, granted June 12, 1956 and entitled “Radioactive Guiding System For Motor Vehicles.” No claims are allowed and the appeal is only from the refusal of claims 8, 14, 15, 16 and 18.

The vehicle guidance system disclosed uses a substantially continuous guiding line of radioactive material to determine the path which is to be traveled automatically by the vehicle. A radiation detector positioned on the vehicle senses deviations from the guiding line and provides a control signal which indicates the presence of a deviation by flashing a light or ringing a bell and which, additionally, corrects for the deviation by controlling a servomechanism to automatically steer the vehicle. Automatic vehicle guidance is said to be especially *525 desirable for motor vehicle highway travel and airplane landings, especially under hazardous conditions arising from fog, rain, darkness and other factors which substantially impair visual observation.

Claim 8 is exemplary and reads:

“8. A radioactive guide system for mobile vehicles, comprising, the combination with a mobile vehicle having a steering apparatus, of. a substantially continuous radioactive guide line defining a travel path on a surface traversed by said vehicle, of a radiation detector means positioned on said vehicle to move therewith relative to said guide line, said radiation detector being constructed and arranged to receive radioactive radiations from said guide line in amounts varying in proportion to the variations in the position of said vehicle to said guide line, of a servomechanism controlling said steering apparatus, and means connecting said detector to said servo-mechanism for actuating said servo-mechanism in accordance with the variations in indication received by the detector from said guide line.” [Emphasis ours.] 1

Several modifications are disclosed for application to highway guidance, one using radioactive material in the center line of the highway and another having the radioactive material in a guide line along which the center of the vehicle passes. In either case, however, the application says that a “generally well known radiation detector * * * such as a Geiger-Muller counter, ionization chamber, scintillation counter or the like,” located on the vehicle, senses changes in the quantity of radiation received from the guide line. “Conventional electrical circuit [s]” connect the detector output to “visual and audible indicating devices” or “other known signalling arrangements,” the detector output also being connected to “a suitable and generally conventional servo-mechanism” for controlling the vehicle’s steering system. Since we consider the details of these circuits unimportant, at least insofar as the claims involved are concerned, suffice it to say that the output from the radiation detector is amplified, the amplifier output energizes a relay and the relay in turn actuates a single-pole, double-throw switch which controls the current to a reversible servomotor. The reversible motor is operatively connected to the steering mechanism of the vehicle to actuate it in response to the received signals to maintain the course of the vehicle.

The references are:

Paulus et al. (1) 2,317,400 Apr. 27, 1943

Paulus et al. (2) 2,339,291 Jan. 18, 1944

Hamilton 2,520,680 Aug. 29, 1950

Stern (British) 664,192 Jan. 2, 1952

Throughout the prosecution of the application involved, the Paulus et al. patents have been considered identical insofar as their broad disclosures and their application to the claims involved is concerned. Therefore, of these two patents we find it necessary to consider only No. 2,317,400, later filed but first to issue. It discloses a vehicle and mobile body guidance system which uses a current-carrying conductor as a “substantially continuous” guiding line. A detector *526 located on the vehicle and responsive to the .magnetic field surrounding the current-carrying conductor has two pick-up coils which detect changes or variations in the magnetic field resulting from deviations by the vehicle from the guide line. Signals from the pick-up coils are applied to a pair of amplifiers connected in a balanced bridge type circuit. In response to the output or unbalance of the bridge circuit a “galvanometer type” sensing device visually indicates the direction of deviation and also operates a servomechanism to steer the automobile.

Hamilton discloses a corn planter which deposits radioactive material each time a seed is planted. When the next row is planted, a detector on the planter senses the radioactive material deposited during the planting of the previous row and so controls the planter that the seeds being planted are evenly spaced, corresponding to the spacing in the adjacent row. While Hamilton apparently prefers a reflecting or fluorescent material which can be detected by a light source, he clearly contemplates depositing in lieu thereof “a radioactive or previously magnetically energized material which then without special excitation * * * would * * * cause operation of the marker dropping and seed dropping mechanisms.” Hamilton' also mentions other inert substances such as nickel and iron which could “be electrically or magnetically detected.” However, no automatic guidance of the tractor which draws the planter is contemplated and, moreover, when the mai'king is done by substances which are not visually detectable, the operator could not use the markings as an aid in guiding his tractor.

In the British patent to Stern, a plurality of spaced buoys mark the boundaries of marine channels which are to be traveled. Radioactive material within each buoy is shielded so as to emit one or more beams of radiation, or, alternatively, a single rotating beam. The ship traversing the paths marked by the buoys has a radiation detector which may indicate quantity as well as direction of radiation, the quantity being inversely proportional to the square of the distance between the buoy and the ship. The patent also says that such a system can be used to provide a “directional aid on land and for aircraft.” As in Hamilton, however, no automatic steering is disclosed.

The board reversed the examiner’s rejection of the claims as being anticipated by either Stern or Hamilton alone, affirming, however, their rejection as being unpatentable over the Paulus et al. patents in view of either Hamilton or Stern. Paulus et al. was said to disclose a continuous guidance and control system and the secondary references were said to disclose “the use of radioactive material * * * in guiding the position of the land vehicle in Hamilton and a ship in Stern.” The board said:

“ * * * it seems to us that a person skilled in this art, and cognizant of the disadvantages of using a continuous current-carrying cable, would be led by the teaching in the Hamilton patent to substitute a line of continuous radioactive material in place of the continuous current-carrying cable of Paulus et al.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
289 F.2d 524, 48 C.C.P.A. 987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-otis-j-mccullough-ccpa-1961.