Ex Parte NordmanDownload PDFBoard of Patent Appeals and InterferencesMay 18, 201210654765 (B.P.A.I. May. 18, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARKOFFICE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE United States Patent and Trademark Office Address: COMMISSIONER FOR PATENTS P.O. Box 1450 Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450 www.uspto.gov APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE FIRST NAMED INVENTOR ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 10/654,765 09/04/2003 Paul S. Nordman 7784-000630 6910 65961 7590 05/21/2012 HARNESS DICKEY & PIERCE, PLC P.O. BOX 828 BLOOMFIELD HILLS, MI 48303 EXAMINER TOLIN, MICHAEL A ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1745 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 05/21/2012 PAPER Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding. The time period for reply, if any, is set in the attached communication. PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________ BEFORE THE BOARD OF PATENT APPEALS AND INTERFERENCES ____________ Ex parte PAUL S. NORDMAN ____________ Appeal 2010-004920 Application 10/654,765 Technology Center 1791 ____________ Before TERRY J. OWENS, PETER F. KRATZ, and JEFFREY T. SMITH, Administrative Patent Judges. KRATZ, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL This is a decision on an appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134 from the Examiner’s final rejection of claims 1, 3, 4, 7, 9-13, 15, 17, 20-22, 25, and 29-33. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 6. Appeal 2010-004920 Application 10/654,765 2 Appellant’s claimed invention is directed to a method of forming a structural window panel for an airborne mobile platform and a method of manufacturing a fuselage having a transparent window skin panel for use with such a platform. Layers of an optically transparent pre-impregnated resin tape comprising an aliphatic epoxy resin and fibers, which resin and fibers have generally matching indices of refraction are employed in the method. The resin tape layers are interleaved between a plurality of metal sheets, which metal sheets are used to form a frame structure, to substantially cover an entire surface portion of each one of the metal sheets, wherein the sheets define a contiguous peripheral edge forming an opening therein which opening is filled with the resin tape and the resin tape layers extending substantially to the metal sheet peripheral edges. In this regard, the resin tape layers and interleaved metal sheets are heated as a unitary assembly with a tool such that the resin of the tape layers melts and substantially covers the metal sheets and fills the opening to form a structural panel which, after curing, includes a see-through window portion in a metal frame structure (Spec. paras. 0007 and 0018-0027; Fig. 3). Claim 1 is illustrative and reproduced below: 1. A method of forming a structural window panel for an airborne mobile platform, comprising: using a plurality of non-fibrous, metal sheets to form a frame structure, wherein the metal sheets define a continuous peripheral edge forming an opening therein; providing a plurality of layers of generally optically transparent fiber pre-impregnated resin tape, where a resin of the tape comprises an aliphatic epoxy resin, and has an index of refraction that generally matches an index of refraction of a plurality of fibers of said tape; interleaving said plurality of layers of generally optically transparent, fiber pre-impregnated resin tape between the metal sheets to substantially cover an entire surface portion of each one of the metal sheets and to fill the Appeal 2010-004920 Application 10/654,765 3 opening, the layers of pre-impregnated resin tape extending substantially to outer peripheral edges of the metal sheets; heating the metal sheets and the fiber pre-impregnated resin tape layers as a unitary assembly within a tool such that the resin in each said pre- impregnated tape layer melts and substantially covers the metal sheets and fills the opening, said layers of optically transparent fiber pre-impregnated resin tape, said metal sheets and said aliphatic epoxy resin imparting a needed degree of structural strength to the window panel; and once cured, the generally transparent, fiber pre-impregnated resin tape layers and metal sheets form a structural panel having a see-through window portion in the frame structure. The Examiner relies on the following prior art references as evidence in rejecting the appealed claims: Graff 3,074,832 Jan. 22, 1963 Shorr 3,081,205 Mar. 12, 1963 Luvisi 3,534,004 Oct. 13, 1970 Bain 4,793,108 Dec. 27, 1988 Padden 5,500,272 Mar. 19, 1996 Day 5,665,450 Sep. 9, 1997 Demeester 5,885,714 Mar. 23, 1999 The Examiner maintains the following grounds of rejection: Claims 1, 3, 4, 7, and 9-12 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Day in view of the collective teachings of Demeester, Bain, Shorr, and Padden, and further in view of Luvisi. Claims 13, 15, 17, 20-22, 25, and 29-33 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over the aforementioned references further in view of Graff. We reverse the stated rejections. Day is directed to a transparent composite (polymer-fiber-polymer sandwich) in one embodiment and a transparent composite comprising a transparent polymer matrix and a glass ribbon having refractive indices that Appeal 2010-004920 Application 10/654,765 4 are substantially the same in another embodiment, and methods of making same (col. 3, ll. 27-38 and col. 4, ll. 18-38). Day teaches that the transparent composites can potentially be used as replacements for the plastic layer (PVB) typically used in laminated glass (col. 15, ll. 15-25). The Examiner acknowledges that Day does not teach the claimed method of forming a structural panel including the step of interleaving a plurality of metal sheets used to form a frame structure with a plurality of layers of fiber pre-impregnated resin tape as required by claim 1 (Ans. 4). Consequently, Day does not teach or suggest the subsequently recited steps of the method of claim 1, such as, heating the metal sheets and fiber pre- impregnated resin tape layers as a unitary assembly within a tool and forming a structural panel, after curing as required by claim 1. Nor has the Examiner established that Day teaches or would have suggested a method including the substantially corresponding steps of the other independent claim (claim 13) involving the layering of a metal sheet and pre-impregnated resin tape onto a tool, heating the same to from a skin panel with a plurality of see-through openings, and securing such a skin panel to the fuselage of a an airborne mobile platform. Demeester is directed to a window comprising laminated safety glass (two sheets of glass separated by plastified polyvinylbutyral (PVB)) for an airplane cockpit (abstract). Bain is directed to a plastic laminated window for a passenger air cabin having a peripheral edge insert (abstract). Shorr is directed to a safety glass glazing unit comprising two sheets of glass bonded to a thermoplastic sheet wherein a metal frames 7 and 8 are embedded in and bonded to the plastic sheet 3 and extend inwardly from the Appeal 2010-004920 Application 10/654,765 5 periphery of an extension thereof that extends beyond where the larger of the two glass sheets extend (Figs. 5 and 6). Padden is directed to a load transfer composite structure comprising thin perforated sheets of titanium interleaved between graphite/epoxy plies disclosed as being used in in an area where metal fittings are to be installed, wherein epoxy plugs are formed in some of the titanium sheet perforations, which plugs bond confronting surfaces of the epoxy plies (abstract). The other holes 22 in the perforated titanium sheets of Padden are aligned with holes in the epoxy plies and fitted with fasteners (col. 2, ll. 23-28). The Examiner has not established that Padden is directed to or suggests a method of forming a structural window panel and/or forming skin panels having see- through portions in a method of manufacturing a fuselage using layered pre- impregnated epoxy resin tape and interleaved or layered metal sheet(s) having openings for forming the see through portion (window) therein, as claimed by Appellant. Luvisi is directed to epoxide polymer compositions. Graff is directed to a plastic window plate structure wherein a metal frame is coated with a glass fiber reinforced plastic and a sheet of synthetic plastic can be mounted in the frame opening. A review of the appeal record including the opposing arguments and reasoning of Appellant and the Examiner reveals that the Examiner has not reasonably established that the proposed combinations of the several diverse applied references are attended by a suggestion that is found therein and/or derived via logical reasoning from the collective applied prior art teachings, which would have led one of ordinary skill in the art to a method corresponding to the method of either claim 1 or claim 13. Appeal 2010-004920 Application 10/654,765 6 In this regard and concerning the Examiner’s first stated rejection, the Examiner’s assertion that one of ordinary skill in the art at the time of the invention “would have been motivated to provide the window of Day with peripheral reinforcement in view of the collective teachings of DEMEESTER, BAIN, SHORR, and PADDEN†is conclusive and is not particularly directed to the particular materials and method steps required by claim 1 (Ans. 5). For example, the Examiner has not furnished a persuasive rationale for combining the teaching of Padden with respect to making a composite structure for facilitating load transfer from fittings installed therein with the method of making a transparent composite that is reinforced with glass as taught by Day, which latter composite is disclosed as being useful in forming windows, such as a replacement material for the plastic layer (PVB) typically used in laminated glass (Day, col. 15, ll. 15-25). In particular, the Examiner has not furnished a persuasive rationale that encompasses the teachings of Day, Padden and the other applied references and which rationale reasonably explains why one of ordinary skill in the art would have been led to a method corresponding to the claimed method based on the several applied references’ teachings. The additional application of Graff in the second stated rejection does not cure the deficiency noted above with respect to the first stated rejection. Rather, direction or instruction to arrive at performing the method of either independent claim 1 or independent claim 13 appears to be found only in Appellant’s Specification based on this appeal record as made evident upon consideration of Appellant’s arguments (App. Br. 7-15; Reply Br. 2- 8). Thus, it is our judgment that impermissible hindsight reasoning underpins the Examiner’s proposed modifications to Day as advanced in the Appeal 2010-004920 Application 10/654,765 7 rejections, rather than any impetus or instruction derived from the collective teachings of the applied references. It follows that we shall reverse both of the Examiner’s obviousness rejections. ORDER The Examiner’s decision to reject the appealed claims is reversed. REVERSED sld Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation