In re Mock

117 F.2d 745, 28 C.C.P.A. 919, 48 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 545, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 35
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1941
DocketNo. 4412
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 117 F.2d 745 (In re Mock) 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 Mock, 117 F.2d 745, 28 C.C.P.A. 919, 48 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 545, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 35 (ccpa 1941).

Opinion

BlaNd, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Primary examiner in the United States Patent Office rejected all of appellant’s claims in an application relating to carburetors. The claims were numbered 8, 10, 13, 15, and 23 to 30, inclusive. The Board of Appeals affirmed the decision of the examiner, and appellant has appealed here from the decision of the board. As to claims 24 to 28, inclusive, appellant has moved to dismiss the appeal and the motion is granted and the appeal as to those claims will be dismissed.

The claims before us, being all the claims remaining in the application, are numbered 8, 10, 13, 15, 23, 29, and 30, and were rejected on the prior art. Although all the appealed claims differ somewhat in phraseology, claim 8 may be taken as illustrative and follows:

8. 'In a carburetor, a section designed to be attached to a part of the engine, a second section separated from the first mentioned section by heat insulation and including a fuel reservoir and a boss projecting therein, a bore in said boss, a fuel nozzle mounted in the bore of said boss and spaced from the walls thereof to form a well, means for supplying fuel from the reservoir directly to said well, ports connecting the well to the nozzle adjacent the midsection of the latter, and venting means at the uppermost portion of said well of sufficiently large cross-section to permit the escape of fuel bubbles therethrough.

The references relied upon are:

Udale, 1,618,244, February 22, 1927.
Ball et al., 1,881,256, October 4, 1932.
Blattner, 2,092,827, September 14, 1937.

Appellant’s invention is concerned with the improvement of carburetors so as to avoid what is now well-known in the art as “percolation.” Oldstyle carburetors were called updraft carburetors, i. e., the air and fuel went in at the bottom and traveled upward. The instant invention applies to newer models in carburetors known as downdraft carburetors, were the direction of the entrance of the air and fuel is reversed from that of the oldstyle carburetors. The problem of percolation, according to appellant (and his contention in this respect is not questioned here), was not present with updraft carburetors using oldstyle gasoline which had a higher boiling point than the more volatile varieties later produced. With the downdraft carburetor using highly volatile gasoline, the problem became a serious one when the engine became heated and was slowed down to an idling speed or stopped. The more volatile constituents in the gasoline began to boil, in which instance bubbles formed on the metal surface of the nozzle and increased in size by .agglomeration until a single large bubble occupied the entire cross-[921]*921section of the nozzle. The buoyancy of the large bubbles would cause them to rise and escape through the discharge end of the nozzle, pushing .ahead of them “slugs” of liquid fuel which would be discharged into the intake passage of the engine. This cycle continued to be repeated, and being similar to that which occurs in an ordinary coffee percolator, the engineers styled it “percolation.” The slugs which were discharged into the engine caused it to stall if running slowly, and when the engine was at rest they retarded the starting of the same. The old-style carburetor was located farther away from the engine exhaust manifold than in the newstyle carburetor. The hot exhaust manifold was the chief source of heat which caused the boiling of the fuel.

Figure 3 of appellant’s drawings, which is one of the embodiments of the invention and the one with which we are here concerned, together with the pertinent figures in the drawings of the references, are herewith reproduced:

The application of appellant describes the embodiment of his invention here involved, by referring to his drawings in the following terms (the numerals in brackets read on figure 3; in the specification other numerals; reading on other figures, are given, but the structure referred to is the same) :

Operation: The normal level of fuel in the carburetor when the engine is not running is indicated by the line L — L. If now the engine is started and the throttle valve opened sufficiently to draw fuel from the outlet 60, the fuel level in passage [80] will be lowered until air is bled into the bore 58 through port 66, chamber 62, passage [80] and ports [78], to form with the fuel an emulsion in the known manner.
[922]*922If the engine is allowed to stand while hot, or is run at such speed and temperature conditions as would otherwise cause “percolation”, vapor bubbles which form in well 54 can enter the bore 58 only by passing through the relatively small ports [78], which surface tension prevents their doing. Instead, they will gravitate toward the highest point in well 54, at which point a vent is provided in the form of passage [80]. The bubbles moving upwardly through this passage will carry some liquid fuel upwardly with them; but upon reaching the chamber 62 the vapor will separate itself from the liquid fuel and escape through port 66. The chamber 62 is of sufficient cross section and capacity to permit a considerable quantity of fuel to collect therein without being forced out of the port 66, and hydrostatic pressure will at all times tend to cause a return flow of liquid fuel through passage [80], to the fuel nozzle. The boiling or “percolating” of liquid fuel out of outlet 60 is therefore prevented.
‡ ‡ >H $
* * * The fuel enters the nozzle through a calibrated orifice 74 formed in plug 46, and thence passes through a slot 75 in the lower end of nozzle 36 to a well 76 communicating with well 54, which in turn communicates with the bore 58 of the nozzle through a series of ports 56 formed in the lower side of nozzle 36, the ports being of such size that they will not pass vapor bubbles. At its upper-end, nozzle 36 communicates, through a plurality of ports 78, with a passage 80 which leads to chamber 62. * * *

[923]*923The claims here involved were rejected by the examiner on the patent to Blattner in view of the patents to Udale and Ball et al.

The Board of Appeals devoted most of its attention to the claims concerning which the appeal has been dismissed in this court. It, however, agreed with the examiner that the claims at bar were not patentable over the prior art. As to claims 13 and 15, the board made the following statement:

Claims 13 and 15 are not clear as to the ports of aggregate capacity and greater fuel flow capacity than the restriction. The specification makes no such statement.

Appellant contends that the board is in error in making the last-quoted statement and points out that in his specification is a statement which fully supports the said controverted limitations in said claims 13 and 15. The Solicitor for the Patent Office states in his brief in [924]*924this court that in view of this fact the aforesaid objection to claims 13 and 15 should not now be insisted upon, and since we are in agreement with the solicitor in this respect we will give this question no further consideration.

Appellant’s device is so made that the gasoline comes in from the gasoline chamber in the carburetor to what is called a well which surrounds the nozzle.

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Bluebook (online)
117 F.2d 745, 28 C.C.P.A. 919, 48 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 545, 1941 CCPA LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mock-ccpa-1941.