In Re Kaufmann

193 F.2d 331, 39 C.C.P.A. 769, 92 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 141, 1951 CCPA LEXIS 365
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 18, 1951
DocketPatent Appeal 5819
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 193 F.2d 331 (In Re Kaufmann) 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 Kaufmann, 193 F.2d 331, 39 C.C.P.A. 769, 92 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 141, 1951 CCPA LEXIS 365 (ccpa 1951).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office. The board’s decision affirmed *332 the holding of the Primary Examiner rejecting as unpatentable claims 13 and 14, the only remaining claims in appellant’s application for a patent on a “Testing Arrangement For Electrical Appliances.” The claims were rejected as unpatentable over a combination of references cited by the examiner.

Appellant’s device comprises a test circuit arrangement for testing an electrical appliance having a heating element and a thermostatic switch for controlling the supply of current to this .element. This test circuit arrangement, as disclosed by appellant, includes a first branch having a conventional male plug, a conventional manually operated switch, a conventional female plug, and the primary coil of a transformer connected in series in the order recited. The secondary coil of the transformer supplies current to a relay winding which, when energized, actuates a resilient arm which is pivotally mounted adjacent one end of the relay coil. The free end of this arm has a Contact thereon which, through pivotal movement of the arm, may be brought into alternate engagement with either a front or back contact, these latter contacts being suitably mounted adjacent the opposite sides of the free end of the arm. There is a small spring attached to the arm at a point between its pivot end and the relay core so as to bias the arm away from the relay and into normal engagement with the so-called back contact. The contact on the pivotable arm is connected by suitable wiring to the first branch at a point between the manually operated switch and the female plug. The front contact is connected in series with a colored bulb (referred to, for convenience, as the red bulb); the back contact is connected in series with a bulb of a different color (referred to, for convenience, as the green bulb). These bulb and contact circuits are in parallel arrangement and are suitably connected to the first branch circuit so that current flows through one or the other depending on whether the contact on the pivotable arm is in engagement with the front or the back contact. All these elements are mounted on any suitable member.

The device is used as follows: The male plug is inserted in any suitable commercial source of alternating current; the appliance to be tested (appellant discloses, as an example, a common flatiron having an adjustable thermostatic heat control switch) is connected in series with the other elements of the first branch circuit by plugging it into the female plug. When the manual switch is closed, if no current flows through the appliance, current will flow through the back contact and the green bulb. This indicates (1) that the power source is supplying current, and (2) that the thermostatic switch is open and/or the appliance operating element is not functioning. However, assuming the thermostatic switch of the appliance to be closed and its operating element to be functioning, when the manually operated switch is closed, current will flow through the first branch series circuit. The current flowing though the primary transformer coil in this first branch causes the transformer secondary coil to supply current to the relay winding. This in turn energizes the relay so that it will pull the pivoted arm towards it against the pull of the spring, bringing the contact on the arm into engagement with the front contact and thereby causing the green bulb to go out and the red bulb to light; at the same time, due to the cyclic nature of alternating current, the interaction of the relay and the spring on the resilient arm produces a hum thus giving an additional audible signal. These signals serve to indicate (3) that the operating element of the appliance is functioning and that the thermostatic switch is closed. If desired, the duration of these signals may be timed to determine (4) how long the adjustable thermostatic ' switch remains closed at any given setting of the switch.

The appealed claims read as follows:

“13. For use in testing electrical appliances having an automatically thermostatically controlled switch and having a connector, a testing circuit having two branches and having a first connector for connecting said testing circuit with a source of alternating current and a second connector for connecting said testing circuit with an appliance to be tested, a manual testing switch in a first branch of said testing circuit, current responsive control means operatively connected with the second branch *333 of said testing circuit, two signal circuits connected in parallel with the first branch of the testing circuit between said manually-operated testing switch and said second connector, signal producing devices in said signal circuits, said devices being controlled for alternative operation by said current responsive control means selectively opening and closing a resilient switch in said signal circuits; one of said devices in a first signal circuit indicating the presence of a voltage without current flow in an appliance under test, the other device in the second signal circuit indicating the presence of current flow in the testing circuit and in an appliance under test, the successive alternative operation of said devices indicating correct operation of an automatic thermostatically controlled switch in an appliance under test.

“14. The structure of claim 13 including spring means continuously urging said resilient switch to close said first signal circuit, said resilient switch thus forming an additional signalling means actuated when there is current flow in said testing circuit, said additional signalling means being audible.”

The references relied on by the Patent Office are: Hunt 1,461,215 July 10, 1923; Varley 1,485,098 Feb. 26, 1924; Connell et al. 2,194,820 Mar. 26, 1940; Stearns 2,304,-513 Dec. 8, 1942.

The following references were cited in the examiner’s statement as cumulative references: Geiger 1,704,736 Mar. 12, 1929; Ashworth 2,250,214 July 22, 1941; Lowell 2,424,243 July 22, 1947.

The patent to Connell et al. shows a cooking and heating utensil having a resistance heating element. This reference discloses a circuit having a conventional male plug, a pushbutton switch, an adjustable thermostatic switch, a primary transformer coil, and the said resistance heating element in series. The transformer secondary coil supplies current to an indicating bulb. When the male plug is inserted in any convenient power outlet, upon operation of the switch, current will of course flow through all the elements of the series circuit. The voltage induced by this in the transformer secondary coil causes the indicator light to go on. When the utensil has been heated sufficiently, the thermostatic switch opens thus interrupting the flow of current in the series circuit and causing the indicator light to go out, thereby indicating that the proper temperature has been reached.

The patent to Stearns discloses an electrical testing apparatus. Among other things, this patent shows a relay-operated pivoted arm having a contact on its end that may alternately engage one of two contacts which are connected to two parallel signal circuits. One of these circuits has a green bulb; the other has a red bulb and an audible indicator such as a bell or horn.

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Bluebook (online)
193 F.2d 331, 39 C.C.P.A. 769, 92 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 141, 1951 CCPA LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kaufmann-ccpa-1951.