In re Hooker

175 F.2d 558, 36 C.C.P.A. 1164
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 28, 1949
DocketNo. 5589
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 175 F.2d 558 (In re Hooker) 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 Hooker, 175 F.2d 558, 36 C.C.P.A. 1164 (ccpa 1949).

Opinion

Johnson, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Four of the twenty claims in appellant’s application for a patent for improvements in a Photo-Electric Marksmanship Device were rejected by the Primary Examiner in the Patent Office, the remaining sixteen claims being allowed. That rejection was affirmed by the Board of Appeals of the Patent Office. The basis of rejection was that of lack of patentability over the prior art. The inventor has appealed to this court from that rejection and its affirmation by the Board of Appeals. E. S. 4911, 35 U. S. C. A. 59a.

The prior art references cited by the Patent Office tribunals are:

Foisy, 2,042,174, May 26,1936.
Kollmayer et al., 2,089,901, August 10, 1937.
Schlesinger, 2,227,007, December 31, 1940.

[1166]*1166The appealed claims read as follows:

8. In a photo-electric marhmanship apparatus, in combination, a source of light modulated in a predetermined manner for defining a target, aimable photosensitive means adapted to be directed at said target, means operably controlled by said photosensitive means for giving an indication when said photosensitive means is aimed at a luminous target the luminosity of which is modulated in substantially the same predetermined manner aforesaid.
15. In photo-electric target apparatus, in.combination, a light source, target-image defining means movably mounted in the path of light from said source, means for moving said image-forming means to cause corresponding motion of the target image defined thereby, means for modulating the target image light.
16. The combination of claim 15 further characterized by the provision of means movable relative to said source, at least, for selectively maneuvering the target image light with respect to a desired receiving surface.
24. Photoelectric apparatus including a plurality of sources of fluctuating light having different rates of fluctuation and adapted to be directed upon a receiving member, a photoelectric device actuated by light on said receiving member, electrical translating means actuated by said photoelectric device and selectively responsive only to the rate of fluctuation of a desired one of said sources, and indicating means actuated by said translating means in the selected operation thereof as aforesaid.

The invention comprises a “gun” containing a photoelectric cell, aimable at a movable luminous target image which is superimposed upon an animated motion picture background. The light projecting the target image is modulated or tuned to a high frequency by means of a multi-apertured disc rotating before the light source, producing a high number of interruptions per unit of time. The photoelectric cell in the gun barrel is adjusted to register only light impulses of a frequency or modulation corresponding to that projecting the target image. When the gun is aimed correctly at the target and the trigger depressed, the photoelectric cell is activated and operates an amplifier which in turn actuates a hit-counter unit. Projecting the motion picture background onto the target screen necessarily involves wide fluctuations of light intensity on the screen. But for the tuned or modulated quality of the projected target image light and the cooperating photosensitive means, the gun would possibly register a hit when directed toward light flashes of the motion picture background. Avoidance of such a contingency is considered to be one of the unique features of the invention. The desirability of projecting the target image against the realistic background provided by the motion pictures while retaining the widest freedom of movement for the target image in relation to the background, unobtainable where the photoelectric cell and amplifying means is normally responsive to light of varying fluctuations, is secured by restricting the sensitivity of the photoelectric cell and amplifier to the range of frequency or modulation of the image light source.

[1167]*1167The invention is adapted to marksmanship training for members ■of the armed forces. A mirror is provided which when manipulated by an instructor will project the target image on a screen or wall surface increasing greatly the freedom of target movement deemed suitable for training conditions.

The patent to Foisy describes an apparatus consisting of a phonograph-like turntable to which is strapped a flashlight in horizontal position. The turntable is positioned so that the light beam sweeps across a screen as the device operates. A rifle with a photoelectric cell attached to the barrel is connected in circuit with the turntable. ■When the rifle is correctly aimed at the spot of light sweeping across the target screen, the photoelectric cell will, when the trigger is pressed, close the circuit operating an electro-magnet which stops the turntable, thus registering a “hit.”

The Kollmayer et al. reference is a marksmanship device consisting of a simulated gun, target screen, with movable aircraft images as targets and a background of moving clouds. Photosensitive means are not employed in the device; rather, an arrangement of trip pins is provided which, when the gun is properly aimed at a moving target, become aligned actuating electro-mechanical means causing the aircraft target image to appear to fall out of the “clouds.” The clouds and target are projected onto the screen by means of two rotors positioned in front of a light lens in such a manner that cloud scenes depicted on the one rotor and aircraft representations trunnioned to the other are projected onto the screen as the rotors revolve.

The Schlesinger patent concerns the generation of synchronizing impulses in the transmitter of television systems. The invention employs a rotary disc provided with slots in its surface. A beam of light from a lamp is trained on the rotating disc face. A photoelectric cell positioned behind the disc registers the interrupted light flashes as a high frequency oscillation. The rotary disc also has a second series of slots, somewhat shorter than the first series, and interspersed therewith. The effect of the light passing through the shorter slots is to produce oscillations of a lower frequency, as a modulation of the higher frequency oscillations. The photoelectric cell is connected to an amplifier tuned to the basic frequency generated by the slots. The lower frequency impulses go through a filter and amplifier. The high and low frequency modulated voltage variations are then used as synchronizing signals in television systems.

Claim 8 was rejected on Foisy and Foisy in view of Schlesinger. The board held that the claim does not require that the photosensitive means be responsive solely to a modulated source of light. The examiner had likewise held that the claim does not require the indicat-[1168]*1168tag means to be sensitive only to the predetermined modulation of the target light source. The board and examiner both considered that the movement of Foisy’s flashlight beam across the screen, or even the action of the lens on the light, broadly viewed was modulation of the light. Thus Foisy, it was held, taught all of the elements of the claim: a source of light modulated in a predetermined manner, aimable photosensitive means, and means operated by the photosensitive means to register a hit.

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

Related

Barr Rubber Products Company v. Sun Rubber Company
277 F. Supp. 484 (S.D. New York, 1967)
Application of Don Cornish
277 F.2d 185 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1960)
Application of Bernard Harmon
222 F.2d 743 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1955)
Application of Hansen
183 F.2d 92 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 F.2d 558, 36 C.C.P.A. 1164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hooker-ccpa-1949.