Application of Pappas

214 F.2d 172, 41 C.C.P.A. 989
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1954
Docket6033
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 214 F.2d 172 (Application of Pappas) 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 Pappas, 214 F.2d 172, 41 C.C.P.A. 989 (ccpa 1954).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the action of the Primary Examiner in finally rejecting claims 10, 12, 13, 14 and 19 of appellants’ application, Serial No. 568,-802, for a patent on “Airfoils.” No claim has been allowed.

Claims 10, 13 and 14 are considered representative and read as follows:

“10. An airfoil section derived from a basic thickness distribution contour having a chord, an elliptical forebody the longitudinal axis of which coincides with said chord and the transverse axis of which is normal to the chord at a point situated aft from the leading edge approximately forty per cent (40%) of the length of the chord, and an after-body convergent aft from the ends of said transverse axis.
“13. An airfoil section having a high limiting Mach number wherein its forward portion is a substantial ellipse with its major axis extending aft from the leading; edge a distance approximately equalling sixty-five per cent (65%.) of the length of the chord and having a maximum thickness of about eighteen per cent (18%) of the length of the chord at a point situated aft from the leading edge a distance equal to approximately forty per cent (40%) of the length of the chord, and its aftward portion tapers aft from the forward portion to a sharp trailing edge.
“14. An airfoil section derived from a basic thickness distribution contour having a substantially elliptical portion extending aft from the leading edge approximately sixty-five per cent (65%) of the length of its chord, a maximum thickness of about eighteen per cent (18%) of the length of its chord in a plane normal to the chord situated aft of the leading edge approximately forty per cent (40%) of the length of the chord, and a generally wedge shaped aft portion having its upper and lower surfaces tangential to the aft end of the elliptical portion.”

Claim 12 is similar to claim 13, but it adds that the major axis is cambered with respect to the chord and that the after portion is tangential to the aft end of the forward portion, while leaving out the limitation as to the maximum thickness of the airfoil and its location with respect to the leading edge. Claim 19 is similar to claim 14, but adds that the forebody is symmetrical, that the maximum thickness is not more than 18% and that the afterbody (tail portion) extends over substantially 35% of the chord.

The reference relied on is:

“Flight” Magazine issue of November 4, 1937 pages 450, 451.

As can be seen from the claims, appellants’ alleged invention is for an airfoil, said to give increased efficiency at high speeds, having an elliptical forward portion and a convergent rearward portion ending in a relatively sharp trailing edge. The airfoil has a maximum thickness of 18% of the length of the chord, which thickness is located at a point approximately 40% of the distance from the leading edge to the trailing edge. Also the elliptical portion of the airfoil extends over approximately 65% of the length of the chord, and of course, the tail portion extends over the remaining portion of the chord, approximately 35%.

The reference relied on is an article published in “Flight” magazine, which is apparently a statement of the conclusions reached by a Mr. C. N. H. Lock in a paper he gave before the Royal Aeronautical Society. The article states that “The main conclusion * * * is that it is very desirable when designing an *174 aircraft to'avoid points of high local velocity at which the local velocity of sound may be exceeded.” The article goes on to discuss five shapes shown in a figure, the. one which is pertinent here being the showing of. an elliptical airfoil and a streamline airfoil in the same drawing. The streamline airfoil is formed by the addition of a tail section, which converges to a relatively sharp trailing edge, to thé elliptical airfoil. This is set forth jn the article as follows: '

“In practice, the advantage of the ellipse is offset, by the risk of á breakaway at the rear;' this can be prevented by the addition of a -tail' as shown. . The tests in the American- high-speed tunnel suggest that the maximum thickness, should be 0.4 chords from the leading edge, which is nearer' the tail than the position for the usual Joukowski section; accordingly, for. the pur-', pose of the present report, a streamline shape is obtained by adding to an ellipse a tail of 25 per cent of the original chord length.”

A table is given in the article of various “Fineness Ratios” for a “Symmetrical Streamline aerofoil” which ranges from a value of 0.05 to 0.25. This is actually the thickness ratio of the airfoil, or the maximum thickness expressed as a percentage of the chord length, in the figure showing' the drawing of the streamline shape it is set out that the “Thickness ratio” of the streamline shape shown is “0.16.,” while the “Thickness ratio” for the elliptical shape is “0.20.” It shoúld be remembered that the streamline shape is shown as the same drawing as the elliptical shape, with 'the convergent tail added. The article also states that “The ideal shape is an ellipse with streamline tail and with center line slightly cambered * * * the maximum thickness should be at 0,4 chords from the leading edge.”

The examiner rejected all of the appealed claims as fully anticipated by the article in “Flight” magazine. This rejection was made in :a letter dated March 2, 1951, which stated that “By permission of .the Commissioner of Patents this case is reopened for further prosecution after decision favorable to applicants as rendered by the U. S. Court of Customs and Patent Appeals.” The previous case before this court was In re Pappas, 185 F.2d 695, 38 C.C.P.A., Patents, 746. In that case we held that the showing of appellants involved invention over a combination of a number of references.

After the examiner’s rejection, appellants submitted an affidavit by one Jerry Pavelka. This affidavit was to the effect that the “Flight” reference did not teach the alleged invention disclosed by appellants. ' The examiner held that the affidavit merely presented an argument against the rejection and treated it as part of appellants’ argument against the rejection. He then rejected all of the claims as being unpatentable . over the “Flight” reference and stated that all of the features set forth in the claims were fully anticipated by the reference. This seeond letter of the examiner also contained a “proof” that the shape relied on in-the “Flight” article had a forebody that extended over 66%’% of the chord and that the tail portion extended over the remaining 33%'% of the chord. This proof was made by a mathematical calculation, and there is no question raised as.to the correctness of the examiner’s calculations. This letter was the examiner’s final rejection of the claims.

On appeal the Board of Appeals affirmed this rejection. The board stated that the affidavit “merely states the opinion of the affiant with respect to the disclosure of the reference” and that it did not agree with the opinions of the affiant. The board also stated that it had checked the mathematics of the examiner and found them “to be without error.”

Appellants rely on six stated reasons for appeal.

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214 F.2d 172, 41 C.C.P.A. 989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-pappas-ccpa-1954.