Application of Schutt

210 F.2d 293, 41 C.C.P.A. 781
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 3, 1954
DocketPatent Appeal 6003
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 210 F.2d 293 (Application of Schutt) 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 Schutt, 210 F.2d 293, 41 C.C.P.A. 781 (ccpa 1954).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United *294 States Patent Office affirming the decision of the Primary Examiner rejecting, for lack of invention over the references, all of the claims, 11-27, 29-31, in appellant’s application for a patent on •alleged improvements in a machine and method for molding concrete blocks or similar products.

Claims 14-25, 29, and 30 are for .the apparatus; claims 11, 12, 13, 26, 27, and 31 for the method. Claims .14 and 3.1 illustrate the nature of the involved subject matter. They read:

“14. A continuously cycling machine for molding concrete blocks or ' other products having in combination a frame, a pusher for pushing ' pallets from a stack to a molding ' position and at the same time push- ' ing a pallet of the molded product put of the machine, a mold box, means for lowering and raising the mold box, a strike-off drawer, means for moving the strike-off drawer ■ .forward above the mold box and for withdrawing it to position for filling, a plate over which the strike-off with its open bottom passes, a magazine for feeding the aggregate into the strike-off drawer when the drawer is below the open bottom magazine, the said drawer being provided with a rearwardly extending plate to seal the open bottom of the magazine when the strike-off drawer moves away from the magazine, vibrating means, a packer head, means for dropping the packer head upon the contents of the mold box and for raising the packer head, and means for operating the aforementioned elements in the following sequence: move an empty pallet into position and at the same time, move the pallet with the block out of the machine, lower the mold box, move the strike-off drawer forward over the mold box, stop the operating connections in the machine and cause the drawer to pause over the mold box for a determined length óf time, vibraté the mold box for a determined length of time of which the determined pause is a part, start the operating connections of the machine again, move the strike-off drawer back under the magazine, stop the machine a second time for a determined period of vibration of the packer head determined by the descent of the packing head in the mold box, strip the block or product by moving the mold box upwardly, and raise the packing head.
“31. The method of operating a continuously cycling automatic concrete block machine, which machine has a hopper, a mold which is raised and lowered, vibrating means for elements in contact with the contents of the mold, means for feeding pallets below the mold, the mold then being lowered onto the pallet, the means conveying away the pallet with the molded block when the mold is raised, a strike-off drawer operating on a table between the lower open end of the hopper and at the proper time conveying a drawerful of aggregate across the table to the open top of the mold after the mold is lowered onto the pallet, a packing head which is lowered onto the contents of the mold when the feed drawer is withdrawn, the said method comprising running the machine in continuously cycling operations in which there is no pause in passing from one cycle to the next cycle but stopping all the parts of the machine except the vibrating means during two separate vibrating operations, one while the feed drawer is dropping the aggregate into the mold and the other while the pressure head is on the contents of the mold, and timing the vibrating periods and the two dwells to suit the aggregate being used in the first dwell and to get the correct height of the block in the second vibration, whereby the speed of the shifting operations of the machine can be higher and the production capacity of the machine per unit of time increased.”

*295 Appellant’s improvement imparts a new and important characteristic to the old mode of operating block producing machines, the overall speed of which was limited by the maximum time required to mix and pack a load of the worst aggregate 1 by the vibration system. A dwell or rest period for other parts of the equipment was there provided during the mixing and packing operation. Appellant has provided two such dwell periods during two separate vibrating operations ; one while the feed drawer is dropping the aggregate to be mixed into the mold, and the other while the pressure or packing head is on the contents of the mold. Appellant times the extent of the vibration and the two dwell periods to suit the aggregate being used in the first dwell and to get the correct height of the block in the second vibration. As summarized by appellant in his specification:

“ * * * my improvement consists solely in improving the cycle of operation of the machine, and providing the necessary mechanism to stop and start the machine and the timing for this * * * ”

The examiner during the prosecution of appellant’s application, and in the first of two “final” rejections of the respective claims, relied upon the disclosures, singly or in combination, of the following references:

Romie 1,921,003 August 8, 1933; Derry et al. 2,054,476 September 15, 1936; Wellnitz 2,308,132 January 12, 1943; Gelbman et al. 2,366,780 January 9, 1945; Darden 2,400,631 May 21, 1946; Reed 2,446,061 July 27, 1948.

There, among the grounds of rejection applied in the disallowance of the claims, the examiner held:

“The Gelbman and Wellnitz patents are regarded as basic references which generally anticipate both the structure of the apparatus claims and the method of the method claims. Both Gelbman and Wellnitz disclose the feeding of plastic material into a mold, the application of a tamper or press head to the material into the mold and the vibration of the material in the mold to compact the same under the influence of the press head, followed by the removal of the molded article from the mold. Gelbman discloses that vibration may be affected during the filling of the material into the mold and during pressing of the material into the mold under the influence of the press head.”

The examiner further held that the elements incorporated by appellant consisted solely of old expedients, all of which would be obvious to any person having ordinary skill in the art, and that the improved results thereby achieved *296 were merely those normally to be expected.

On appeal to the board, appellant filed with his papers an affidavit containing additional data the purpose of which was to establish by a proper showing not only the superiority of his improvement over the methods and machines of the prior art but also the prompt and extensive adoption by the trade of the machine to which his improvement was applied.

The examiner subsequently submitted his- statement to the board and therein set. forth his second “final” rejection of the claims asserting that he relied upon the prior art acknowledged in appellant’s specification together with the affidavit hereinbefore described as constituting the.basic reference; and the patents to Gelbman. and Weilnitz as the secondary references.....

Appellant’s specification thus acknowledged the teaching of the prior art and described the 'distinguishing features of his alleged improvement:

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210 F.2d 293, 41 C.C.P.A. 781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-schutt-ccpa-1954.