In re Mason

87 F.2d 370
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 25, 1937
DocketPatent Appeal No. 3740
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 F.2d 370 (In re Mason) 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 Mason, 87 F.2d 370 (ccpa 1937).

Opinion

BLAND, Associate Judge.

After allowing certain claims in appellants’ application for a patent relating to fluid transmission, the Primary Examiner of the United States Patent Office refused to allow claims 1 to' 4, inclusive, and 7 to 12, inclusive, of which claims 1 and 11 are illustrative and read:

“1. In a water supply system comprising a main conduit and a pump for maintaining a water pressure, means for suppressing pulsations of the water pressure due to the pump comprising a side branch from said conduit adapted to retain a volume of entrapped air when the main conduit is filled with water, the dimensions of said branch being proportioned with respect to the normal water pressure to produce resonance in said branch at the pulsation frequency of said pump.

“11. .In a fluid transmission system, a conduit in which fluid may be conveyed, and means associated therewith for suppressing the undesired effects of periodic pressure impulses in said fluid comprising a closed chamber of uniform cross-sectional area opening into said conduit, said chamber containing a quantity of gas which will just fill'said chamber at normal atmospheric pressure P o and a mass of [371]*371said fluid, the length 1 of said chamber being defined by the equation

12= p s y

(P-Po)

P 0 w 2 p

in which P is the steady pressure of the enclosed gas, Y is the adiabatic constant for said gas, p is the density of said fluid and w is 2 x times the frequency of the periodic impulse to be suppressed.”

Upon appeal to the Board of Appeals, the action of the Examiner was affirmed, the grounds of the affirmance by the Board being substantially the same as those relied upon by the Examiner.

The alleged invention involved relates to the suppression of periodic pressure impulses of certain types in a fluid transmission system, and is especially applicable to water supply systems in which gravity tanks are used. According to appellants’ application, they accomplish the suppression of the periodic pressure impulses by a device which they term a vibration filter and which is attached to a transmission pipe. It operates under fixed conditions of fluid pressure and is supposed to absorb the pressure impulses or forced vibrations produced by some driving agency, such as a pump. The pressure pulsations from a pump are necessarily periodic, occurring at a definite interval of time depending upon the speed of the pump, the number of propeller blades, etc. Appellants state: “For example, if the pump is rotating at 1800 revolutions per minute and has four blades, the pressure impulses will have a frequency of 120 cycles per second.” These pressure impulses of the water are imparted to the .pipe which is set into vibration at the frequency of the pressure pulsations, and appellants further state “and possibly at harmonic frequencies thereof.” The vibrations of the pipe give rise to disturbing noises which, appellants state, are “of the same pitch as the vibrations.”

Appellants’ device consists essentially of one or more short sections of pipe having closed outer ends which branch off from the main pipe, preferably near the pump. They show them extending vertically from a horizontal section of the main pipe. When the main pipe is filled with water, a certain amount of water will enter the side branches and at the same time a certain amount of air is entrapped within the branch. Of the length of the side branch, appellants state: “In accordance with the invention, the length of the side branch is related in a particular manner to the water pressure and to the speed of the pump, both of which are fixed quantities for any given installation. By this proportioning, a certain predetermined volume of air is entrapped and the water within the side branch rises to a predetermined height thereby providing within the branch an air cushion of a particular degree of elasticity and a water piston having a particular mass. This combination makes a vibrating system which has a natural oscillation period dependent on the mass of the water and the elasticity of the air, and the desired result of vibration suppression is achieved by proportioning the amount of air and the amount of water so that the natural period of oscillation coincides with the period of the impulses set up by the pump. The exact relationship between the volume of air and the volume of water is obtained by simply choosing the right length of pipe for the side branch.”

The references relied upon are: Hopkins, 616188, December 20, 1898; Thoré, 912632, February 16, 1909; Johnson, 962355, June 21, 1910; McFarland, 1590587, June 29, 1926; Gallagher, 1712791, May 14, 1929; Timbs et al., 1776937, September 30, 1930; Pomeroy, 1779448, October 28, 1930; Thomas (Ger.), 156250, November 17, 1904.

The Hopkins patent relates to apparatus for preventing bursting of water pipes by freezing, and shows a water pipe with a plurality of side branches.

The patent to Thoré shows a water conduit and a side branch which “serves as an air chamber to relieve the shock from the sudden checking of the flow of water.”

Johnson cushions the hydraulic pressure in feed pipes shown, and discloses a main conduit connected with a surge tank and also a tank supplied with water and air under pressure.

McFarland is the main reference, and this patent relates to a pneumatic alleviator for hydraulic pumps. The pump shown has a discharge pipe having a side branch. To this side branch is connected a cylinder. Another cylinder is adjustably held to the first cylinder so as to. form an air chamber into which compressed air may be introduced through a pipe. A hollow plunger separates the air in the second chamber referred to from the fluid in the discharge pipe.

[372]*372Gallagher shows a relief valve which is used in connection with oil pumping lines.

Timbs et al. shows a slush pump water pressure shock absorber with a blow-off valve in which there is a cylinder which forms a branch off from a main fluid conduit. The patent shows a spring-pressed plunger in the cylinder.

Pomeroy shows a device for suppressing surges which includes a pump having a discharge pipe with side branch. The side branch leads to a sitrge dissipating device of the air cushion type.

The patent to Thomas is a German patent and relates to a multiple pipe line which has connecting extension parts at intervals which carry a closable cleaning tube. Each of these connecting extensions constitutes an air cushioning device in the conduit system.

The Examiner rejected all the claims, except claim 12, upon McFarland when taken either singly or in connection with the patent to Johnson. Qaim 3 was rejected by the Examiner for the same reasons, but the Examiner further stated: “Claim 3 was rejected on the references and for the reasons just above mentioned, since embodying merely the use of a plurality of air cushioning devices of the type shown by McFarland and Johnson, such plurality being broadly indicated to be old in a fluid distribution conduit by the patent to Hopkins and [the] German [patent] to Thomas.”

With further reference to the rejection of claims 1, 2, 4, and 7 to 11, inclusive, the Examiner also stated that he regarded the claims as “unpatentable over the structure of McFarland, taken either singly or in view of any of the patents to Johnson, Thoré, or Gallagher.”

With reference to claims 3, 9, and 12, the Examiner also stated:

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Related

Fluor Corp. v. Gulf Interstate Gas Co.
152 F. Supp. 448 (S.D. Texas, 1957)
In Re Arnold
185 F.2d 686 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
87 F.2d 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mason-ccpa-1937.