In re Riemenschneider

65 F.2d 464, 20 C.C.P.A. 1183, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 103
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1933
DocketNo. 3154
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 65 F.2d 464 (In re Riemenschneider) 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 Riemenschneider, 65 F.2d 464, 20 C.C.P.A. 1183, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 103 (ccpa 1933).

Opinion

Garrett, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

By appeal appellant brings to this court for review a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office, affirming the decision of an examiner, requiring cancellation, as containing new matter, of one claim (No. 39), and rejecting, for want of invention in view of the prior art, nine other claims (Nos. 82-38, inclusive, and No. 40) of an application for patent, bearing the title, “ Improvement in Method and Apparatus for Welding Hot Metal Stock.”

Two claims (Nos. 30 and 31), the phraseology of which seems to have been largely suggested by the examiner, were allowed by the' examiner, and these, it was held, embrace the only patentable features in appellant’s application.

There was no appeal to this court from the order to cancel claim No. 39. So, that is not before us, and we are concerned only with the eight that were rejected. All eight of these are apparatus claims, the method claims, which we understand were allowed, having been embraced in a companion application filed at the same time of the filing of the application here at issue.

Each claim contains some specific limitation or limitations not found in any one of the others, but claims 32, 33, and 34 seem to be generally typical:

32. In an apparatus for welding the edges of traveling stock material, means to move into and hold said edges in substantially parallel abutting relationship to form a seam cleft, and means for producing an elongated and substantially continuous heating zone at and parallel to said seam cleft for heating said edges, said means including a plurality of arc-producing devices positioned along the path of movement of said edges as closely together as is commensurate with efficient electrical action thereof, and means to move said edges relatively together to form a weld.
33. In an apparatus for electrically welding the edges of traveling stock material having the edges in substantially parallel abutting relationship to form a seam cleft, means for holding said edges in said relationship, a plurality of electric arc producing devices for heating the edges to he welded, said arc-producing devices being positioned along the path of movement of said edges as closely together as is commensurate with efficient electrical action thereof to form an elongated heating zone, a welding shoe supporting the underside of the stock and positioned across the seam cleft and extending within said heating zone, and means to move said edges relatively together to form a weld.
34. In an apparatus for electrically welding the edges of traveling stock material, means to move said edges in substantially abutting relationship and to hold said edges in said relationship, a plurality of electric arc producing devices for heating the edges to be welded, said arc-producing devices being [1185]*1185positioned along tlie path of movement of said edges and in such closely spaced relationship that the arcs from said are-producing devices form an elongated continuous electric arc extending along the seam cleft formed by the edges for raising the temperature of the edges continuously, and means to move said edges relatively together to form a weld.

The brief for appellant states that there “ are principally four groups of elements ”, in all the rejected claims taken together, “ each having certain characteristics ” which the brief describes as follows :

(1) Means for moving the traveling stock material, that is, the pipe forming or, in other words, the pipe-forming means bringing the edges in substantially abutting relationship.
(2) A group of closely associated arcs, placed directly over the seam cleft to virtually form an elongated continuous arc so as to produce a long narrow heating zone.
(3) Moving and closing means, to bring the heated edges toward each other to unite them and form the weld.
(4) A shoe or dam under the seam cleft to support the molten metal in the long narrow pool, preventing it from falling through the seam cleft. (Italics quoted.)

Eight references are cited as follows:

Hies, 1093010, April 14, 1914.
Smith, 1298590, March 25, 1919.
Sessions (Be.), 14927, July 17, 1920.
Knoll, 1381647, June 14, 1921.
Anderson, 1402906, January 10, 1922.
Anderson, 1402997, January 10. 1922.
Kay, 1435919, November 21, 1922.
Hand, 1739757, December 17, 1929.

At the hearing before this court, by consent of the court and of the parties, a demonstration of the operation of the device was given through the medium of moving pictures.

These pictures purported to show the complete operation, including some features not here involved. The demonstration showed the production, from flat metal strip, of the tubing intended to be welded, including its passage over forming rolls about a mandrel under a plurality of lieat-sources, the heat sources being described in some of the claims as “electric arc producing devices ” spaced in a relationship as expressed in different forms of phraseology in different claims. Certain claims, for example, speak of their being positioned “ as closely together as is commensurate with efficient electrical action thereof.” When the metal strip, or stock, has been brought to the tubular form and is ready for the welding operation, it shows a longitudinal seam, cleft upwardly, supported on a welding shoe. As the tube moves under the heat-sources, or electrodes for melting the edges, the temperature is gradually increased until the molten material takes the form of a long, narrow pool, extending along in the fissure, or seam cleft. This molten pool is held in the [1186]*1186seam cleft by being supported beneath by the welding shoe and supported at the sides by the edges. In this condition the tube passes between welding throat rolls which force the edges of the seam cleft toward each other to form the weld by means of the molten material. In its further passage the tube is engaged by rollers designed to roll down the weld and bring the tube to its finished contour.

Other mechanism, not in issue here, is designed to cut the finished tubing into the lengths desired.

Although the device for tube making is, in its entirety, a quite elaborate mechanism, it should be borne in mind that the claims here at issue relate only to a limited part thereof, to wit, the combination of mechanical features having solely to do with the welding process.

It is conceded that no one of the references of itself disclosed appellant’s combination, and appellant’s brief says:

* * * The primary examiner held that by combining five to eight prior patents he can obtain an apparatus similar to, although not exactly like, appellant’s, and concluded that this, the appellant’s invention, as defined by the claims here involved, was all obvious from the prior art. We contend that the Board was in error in sustaining this view.

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Bluebook (online)
65 F.2d 464, 20 C.C.P.A. 1183, 1933 CCPA LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-riemenschneider-ccpa-1933.