In re Solakian

155 F.2d 404, 33 C.C.P.A. 1054, 69 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 514, 1946 CCPA LEXIS 457
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 7, 1946
DocketNo. 5132
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 155 F.2d 404 (In re Solakian) 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 Solakian, 155 F.2d 404, 33 C.C.P.A. 1054, 69 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 514, 1946 CCPA LEXIS 457 (ccpa 1946).

Opinion

Bland, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The Primary'Examiner of the United States Patent Office rejected all of the claims, numbered 1, 7, 9,10,16 to 20, inclusive, and 22 to 24', inclusive, in appellants’ application for a patent relating to Furnaces for Heat Treatment of Metal. Upon appeal to the Board of Appeals it reversed the action of the examiner as to claims 10, 17, 23 and 24, and affirmed the examiner’s rejection as to the other claims.

From the decision of the board affirming that of the examiner as to said claims the appellants have here appealed. The claims involved are, therefore, claims 1,7,9,16,18,19,20 and 22.

Claims 9 and 22 seem to be representative of the appealed subject matter and read:

9. A furnace for the heat treatment of metal, Comprising a pot, a charge of salts therein, means for fusing the salts and maintaining them in fused condition including a source of heating current and electrodes immersed in the salt bath, means for controlling the temperature of said fusing means including a lens and an open-ended ray-collecting tube associated therewith having its open end spaced upwardly from the surface of the salt bath, and means for supplying a downward current of air to the interior of said tube so as to cool the same and maintain a clear sighting space between the upper surface of the bath and the lens, said tube being in an intermediate position with respect to said electrodes.
22. The method of treating high-speed steel for hardening which comprises immersing the steel articles in a bath of salts heated to a high temperature for fusing and fluid only at a high temperature, collecting heat rays emanating from the upper surface of the bath in a predetermined localized part thereof, and utilizing those rays to control the temperature of the bath.

[1056]*1056It will be noted that claim 22 is a method claim and it is the only-method claim in the case.

The references cited by the examiner (some of them are not discussed by the board, being regarded by it as cumulative) are as follows:

Siefert et al., 1,782,482, November 25,1930.
Beilis, 1,864,885, June 28, 1932.
Larsen et al., 2,054,382, September 15,1936.
Adam, Jr., 2,145,677, January 31, 1939.
Sordahl, 2,184,169, December 19, 1939.
Dike, 2,232,594, February 18,1941.
Brooke, 2,290,028, July 14,1942.
Titcomb, 2,291,007, July 28, 1942.
British Patent, 510,060, July 26, 1939.
Norwegian Patent, 63,295, March 3, 1941.

We think the invention is well described in the examiner’s decision and we quote therefrom as follows, omitting the references to numerals:

The aileged invention relates to an apparatus, and alleged method, for treating high speed steel for hardening in a fused salt bath furnace. The furnace is particularly characterized by having its electrodes immersed in the salt bath and provided with supporting shanks extended over the wall of the pot and the pot is square, the electrodes being arranged at the apices of a triangle, the middle electrode being located in one corner portion of the pot, and all three of the electrodes being on one side of a diagonal of the pot, to allow- space to insert the work. On a bridge member, supported above the electrode shanks, is mounted a radiation pyrometer, provided with a tube and lense for collecting and concentrating heat rays from the upper surface of the bath upon the thermopile. The pyrometer controls the current supply to the electrodes, and hence the temperature of the bath, in a usual manner. It is claimed that by not immersing the pyrometer in the fused salt bath corrosion thereof is avoided, and that by placing the lense at some distance above the open tube end, which is adjustable with respect to the bath level, clouding of the lense by the fumes from the bath will be prevented.

In rejecting the claims the examiner said:

Claim 22 is the only alleged “method” claim now in the case, and it stands finally rejected as not defining the alleged invention. The step of “utilizing” rays to control the temperature of the “bath” is clearly no more than the function of a machine. See in re Ernst et al. 1934 C. D. 595. It is not seen that there can he any novel method, ini the ease, in view of the fact that pyrometrie control of the temperature of a salt hath furnace is generally old, as is shown hy Adam, Jr. and also hy Titeomh. ' [Italics ours.]
Claims 1, 7, 9, 16 to 20, 23 and 24 stand finally rejected as based on the old and unpatentable combination of Adam, Jr., or Titcomb. There is no evidence that there is any cooperation between specific features of the electrode arrangement with respect to the furnace, and specific construction of the pyrometer and/or the support therefor. Each of these arrangements performs its function independently of the other. Both Adam, Jr. and Titcomb show that the combination of á pyrometrie control and a salt bath furnace whose temperature [1057]*1057is controlled thereby is old, and applicant indeed admits this state of the art in his specification.
Claims 1, 7, 9 and 22 stand finally rejected as unpatentable over Adam, Jr. or Titcomb, in view of Larsen et al., Sordahl, or Dike * * *, which show that the radiation pyrometer as claimed by applicant is old, in every essential detail. The Larsen et al. and Dike * * * arrangements are used to modify the temperature of bodies which they do not contact, and it is obvious that the Sordahl pyrometer may also be so used. This feature of applicant’s alleged invention is therefore thought not to be novel, or to confer patentability on any claims wherein it is recited. It is not seen that it is patentably material what part of a furnace or charge is used to activate a controlling pyrometer for the furnace. Any skilled mechanic will obviously choose such a part as .will produce the desired results, when used for this purpose.
Claims 10 and 16 to 20 stand finally rejected as unpatentable over the art as applied to claim 1 in view of Beilis or Seifert et al, which show that it is old to arrange electrodes, whatever their number may be, at one side of a pot, in order to leave the remaining surface of -the pot open and free, said pot, as shown in Beilis, may be the pot of a fused salt bath furnace. Attention is particularly directed to the statement in lines 71 to 75 of page 3 of Beilis that the single electrode * * * may be arranged adjacent to one side of the pot so that greater pot capacity is attained for receiving the metal objects to be treated. The Beilis patent shows also a like arrangement for two electrodes, and it is thought to be evident to any skilled mechanic that the same results as are obtained by Beilis with one or two electrodes may be obtained in the same way where three or any other number of electrodes is.used. The British and the Norwegian patents show that the use of three electrodes is old, and also show a rectangular pot as claimed. Sei&ert also shows a rectangular pot, so this feature also is not thought to be patentably material. Claims 23 and 24 stand finally rejected on the art as above applied to claim 10.

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155 F.2d 404, 33 C.C.P.A. 1054, 69 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 514, 1946 CCPA LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-solakian-ccpa-1946.