In re Herrmann

261 F.2d 598, 46 C.C.P.A. 739, 120 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 182, 1958 CCPA LEXIS 129
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 1958
DocketNo. 6381
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 261 F.2d 598 (In re Herrmann) 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
In re Herrmann, 261 F.2d 598, 46 C.C.P.A. 739, 120 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 182, 1958 CCPA LEXIS 129 (ccpa 1958).

Opinion

Rich, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

[740]*740This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the primary examiner’s rejection of claims 2, 4, 5, 7, 8y 12, and 13 of the application of Karl L. Herrmann, Victor L. Barr, and Gerald A. Henwood, serial No. 244,486, filed August 31,1951, entitled “Needle Boiler Bearings.” Six claims stand allowed. Claim 8, which is representative of the appealed claims, reads:

8. A cylindrical roller bearing comprising a symmetrical race ring having side ribs thereon spaced to form a raceway between them and provided with annular bearing surfaces, a tubular cage making a loose slip fit with said annular surfaces- and having slots therein forming roller windows, said windows extending entirely across but not beyond said raceway and having bars between them each having throughout greater circumferential width than radial thickness and forming side walls for the respective windows having substantially parallel surfaces over at least a portion of their radial thickness, and cylindrical, symmetrical rollers in said raceway and windows and having their centers of rotation in a pitch circle approximately coincident with said annular surfaces, said rollers each having a length several times its diameter and being guided by contact at approximately the pitch circle of its circumferential surface with portions of said parallel walls adjacent to the corners formed thereby with a circumferential surface of said cage.

Claims 4, 8,12, and 13 are limited to “needle” roller bearings, while claims 2, 5, and 7 are expressed in broader terms.

The subject matter of appellants’ application is a roller bearing of the so-called “needle” type in which the rollers have a length at least three times as great as their diameter and their diameter does not ordinarily exceed 5 mm. It is well known that “needle” bearings have distinct advantages for some applications over so-called “square” roller bearings which have rollers of smaller length to diameter ratio. Appellants contend that some of the advantages of “needle” bearings have heretofore been offset by a tendency of the rollers to skew under load and to jam with the roller spacing cage, resulting in greater friction and loss of bearing life. This skewing tendency is claimed to be eliminated by appellants’ bearing design which includes a roller spacing-cage that “floats” with respect to the rollers rather than riding on the rollers and which contacts the rollers in allegedly more desirable areas for guiding purposes.

As shown and described, appellants’ bearing comprises rollers arranged in a cii'cle between inner and outer cylindrical race rings. The outer member or ring is provided with inwardly extending flanges which are spaced apart at their inner radial surfaces approximately equal to the length of the rollers, to provide a raceway. The height of the flanges from the load bearing surface of the raceway is equal to one-half the diameter of the rollers so that each flange terminates in a circle passing through the axis of the rollers, known as the pitch circle. Thus substantially half of each roller lies in and half out [741]*741of the raceway. The rollers are held in spaced relationship by means of a tubular roller cage which comprises a cylindrical member having spaced roller-receiving windows, each having a length substantially ■equal to that of the rollers-and a width substantially equal to the roller diameter, with appropriate clearances in each direction. The outer cylindrical surfaces at the ends of the cage beyond the windows are continuous rims which rest with a slip fit on the cylindrical surfaces of the race ring flanges so that the cage is rotatable with respect to them. The cage is thus supported in running contact with the flanges of the outer race ring.

The line of contact between the cage rims and the flanges is preferably coincident with the pitch circle, but may vary within a zone having a radial width on either side of -the pitch cirele not exceeding 10 percent of the diameter of a roller. Each roller end area thus, contacts, substantially at the pitch circle, a radial end wall formed by the cage at the inner radial surface of the end of its window and the inner radial surface of the race ring flange, these two roller-contacting areas moving in opposite directions with respect to each other, and essentially on opposite sides of the pitch circle. There is also disclosed a bearing wherein the flanges are on the inner race-ring but operating on the same principles.

The claims were rejected as not patentably distinguishing over prior art references. The sole issue before us is the propriety of this rejection.

The references relied on are:

Bott, 1,765,648, June 24, 1930
Heim, 2,044,168, June 16, 1936
Reiss, 2,503,070, April 4, 1950

The Bott patent discloses a bearing comprising cylindrical rollers each having a length approximately equal to its diameter, so-called “square” rollers. The rollers are arranged in á circle about the inner race ring which is provided with spaced outwardly extending flanges forming a raceway in which the rollers are received. The height of the flanges is approximately one-fourth the roller diameter. The rollers are held in spaced relation by a cylindrical cage member provided with roller receiving windows. The cage is provided with continuous rims at the ends of the windows and the inner cylindrical surfaces of the ends of the cage rest upon the raceway flanges.

The patent to Heim discloses a roller bearing generally similar to that of Bott, but the flanges which form the raceway have a height apparently equal to one-half the roller diameter and therefore terminate in the pitch circle. The continuous rims of Heim’s cage, however, do not rest on'the flanges of the raceway, but are spaced [742]*742radially outwardly therefrom, the cage being supported by the rollers and not by the raceway flanges.

The Eeiss patent was cited merely to show a roller bearing, of the “needle” type, wherein the length of the rollers is more than three times their diameter, which bearing also includes a cage.

Claims 2, 5, and 7 were rejected on Bott in view of Heim, and the remainder of the appealed claims, 4, 8, 12, and 13, were rejected on the same references in view, of the “needle” roller bearing shown by Eeiss.

The two features upon which appellants rely for patentability are found in varying breadth in all of the appealed claims: (1) support ■ of the roller guiding cage on the raceway ribs at the pitch circle, and ' (2) arrangement of the structure so that the rollers are guided by •contact at the pitch circle.

The Bott patent is the basic reference. Appellants point, out that v the flanges which form the walls 'of the raceway in the Bott construction extend only about half way from the bottom of the raceway to the pitch circle, and that approximately half of the bearing cage lies on each side of the pitch circle, and argue that because of these features in Bott’s operation “roller'end areas moving in opposite directions engage the same radial surface which cannot wash out the opposed forces and, thus, the roller end areas tend to move along such radial surface and create friction, heat and the skewing action * * * ,” which does not occur in appellants’ design because the radial surfaces of the flange and the cage meet at the pitch circle.

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Related

Roller Bearing Co. of America v. Bearings, Inc.
328 F. Supp. 923 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
261 F.2d 598, 46 C.C.P.A. 739, 120 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 182, 1958 CCPA LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-herrmann-ccpa-1958.