Case ID: ccpa_52-2/html/0770-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Worley, Chief Judge, Rich, Judge, Smith, Judge,", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

336 F. 2d 604; 143 USPQ 21
    In re Homer G. Thomson
    (No. 6914)
    United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals,
    September 24, 1964
    
    Quarles, Fox, Seidel, Bateman and Hoar (Arthur H. Seidel and Thomas 0. Kloehn, of counsel) for appellant.
    
      Clarence ~W. Moore (Jack E. Armore, of counsel) for the Commissioner of Patents.
    [Oral argument January 9, 1963 by Mr. Seidel and Mr. Armore; reargued December 2, 1963 by Mr. Seidel and Mr. Armore]
    Before Worley, Chief Judge, and Rich, Martin, Smith, and Almond, Jr., Associate Judges; original argument before Worley, Chief Judge, and Rich, Martin, Smith, and Almond, Jr., Associated Judges.
    
      
       Petition for rehearing denied November 5, 1964.
    
   Worley, Chief Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal was originally argued January 9, 1963, and majority and dissenting opinions handed down April 25, 1963. A petition for rehearing subsequently filed by appellant was granted and the case set for further argument on December 2,1963. Pursuant thereto and after consideration of additional briefs filed on behalf of appellant and the Commissioner, the majority opinion of April 25, 1963, is withdrawn and the following is substituted therefor:

Appellant seeks reversal of the Board of Appeals’ decision which affirmed the examiner’s rejection of claims 1, 3 to 6, 9 and 12 of appellant’s application entitled “Composition Resistor With Embedded Terminal Lead Head” as unpatentable over the prior art. Two claims have been allowed.

The invention relates to molded composition electrical resistors of fixed resistance, comprising an elongated cylindrical body of molded thermosetting insulating material having minute conductive particles distributed therein to form a high resistance conducting path. Preferably, an outer portion of plain insulating material surrounds the portion forming the conducting path. Each end of the cylindrical body contains a terminal electrode consisting of a lead wire with an enlarged head. The latter is embedded in the resistor body in contact with the portion forming the conducting path. The specification states that the principal object of the invention is to devise a more satisfactory terminal head to overcome the disadvantages of the frusto-coni-cally shaped head of the prior art. Applicant states that the latter is particularly unsatisfactory in very small or miniaturized resistors.

Two head designs are disclosed. One construction consists of two enlarged annular portions separated by an annular groove extending completely around the head. The enlarged portion, extending farthest into the resistor body, has a smaller diameter than the outer enlarged portion, while the groove has about the same diameter as the lead wire. In his brief appellant refers to the head as being “dumbell” shaped. That is a fair description if we add that one side of the dumbbell is larger than the other. The second construction shown has a head having a frusto-conical shape, with the constricted or grooved portion defined by two transverse flat grooves on opposite sides of the head.

Claim 1 is representative:

1. A molded composition fixed resistor, comprising an integral body, made of moldable insulating material; minute conductor particles distributed throughout at least a portion of said insulating material to form a high-resistance conducting path therethrough; and at each end of said resistance path a terminal electrode, which comprises a lead-wire and an enlarged head, coaxial and integral therewith, the head being intimately embedded in the body in intimate conductive contact with the resistance path portion of said body; wherein each head comprises an inner enlarged portion, an outer enlarged portion, and a constricted portion between the two enlarged portions, the outer face of the outer enlarged portion being exposed through and flush with a face of the body and constituting an outwardly facing shoulder of the terminal electrode; all of the head inwardly from the exposed portion of the head being in intimate supporting contact with the body.

The examiner relied on the following references:

Bradley, 1,835,267, December 8, 1931.
Steenweg, 1,976,901, October 16, 1934.

As “background art” the board added:

Megow et ah, 2,271,774, February 3, 1942.
Kohring, 2,597,338, May 20, 1952.
Patla, 2,698,372, December 28, 1954.

The Steenweg patent discloses cylindrical resistors mounted on t'Park plugs. The most pertinent part of that reference shows a resistor unit comprising a molded tubular resistance element with terminals which engage the element at each end, and are embedded in an insulating binding cement within the element. The portion of the terminal element projecting into the cement has an annular groove interposed between twro enlarged portions of that element.

The Bradley patent was considered cumulative by the board. Since we shall not rely on it, it requires no discussion, nor does the Patla reference of which the board made no particular use.

Kohring discloses electrical resistors made of cylindrical ceramic shells having resistance cartridges inside. The resistance cartridge comprises a ceramic core on which there is a resistance element made of “spiral convolutions of hard carbon as cut in a coating formed in situ.” The ends of the resistance element are connected at each end to metal terminals which are anchored in the cores. Various shapes for terminals are shown, including one defined by the patentee as having “transverse or circular fins.” That element may be described as being dumbbell shaped.

The record before us includes three Megow et al. patents. Two are referred to in appellant’s specification as describing processes by which the resistors of the present invention, except for the head, may be made. The third patent was cited by the board as “background art. - It discloses molded electrical resistors consisting of an insulating sleeve of thermosetting material, a conducting core made of conductor particles dispersed in a thermosetting binder, and wire terminals at each end. The terminals have a shank or lead wire portion and an integral, generally frusto-conical head. The latter is shown in the drawings to be embedded entirely in the conducting core portion of the resistor body, with the narrower outer portion of the head flush with the end of the molded cylinder body.

The exact manner in which the references are relied on is somewhat obscured by the fact the board did not expressly combine them. The board gives the following resume of the examiner’s rejection:

The Examiner has rejected the claims as unpatentable over either Bradley or Steenweg. Although the Examiner has not given a detailed discussion of the references and the application thereof to the claims, it is evident that he considers the basic feature of the claimed resistor as anticipated by the resistors disclosed in the cited art.

In our opinion, that evaluation is most generous in view of the obvious shortcomings of the examiner’s answer.

The board found the claimed resistors to be of the type shown by Megow et al., Kohring, and Patla, as well as the Megow et al. patents referred to in appellant’s disclosure. It was of the opinion that the essence of the alleged novelty in the combination claimed is found solely in the shape of the enlarged head. Considering the Bradley reference to be cumulative, the board limited its discussion to the Steenweg patent, wherein it found the terminal element of a resistor unit having “a restricted portion interposed between two enlarged portions of the head embedded in the resistor composition,” with the inner enlarged portion of the head smaller, and portions of the outer enlarged portion embedded in the molded material. The board concluded, “consideration of the background of the asserted invention and the improvement over the admitted state of the art leads us to the conclusion that the claims do not patentably differentiate over the art before us”.

We agree with appellant that the issue is one of obviousness within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. 103.

Appellant’s specification states:

In spite of the difference of the head * * * from the frusto-conical head of the prior art * * * the resistor of the present invention may be made by the process shown and described in Patent No. 2,302,564 * * *. Or, if the entire body be made of resistor material, as suggested herein for extremely small resistors, the resistor may be made by the process shown and described in United States Patent No. 2,261,916 ⅜ * *.

In view of that statement, as well as our evaluation of the three Megow patents, it is clear that the sole difference between the claimed resistors and the prior art lies in the particular shape and structure of the terminal head on the lead wires. The immediate question, therefore, becomes whether a terminal head such as claimed by appellant is disclosed in the prior art, and if so, whether its use in a resistor such as claimed is suggested by the prior art. We think both questions must be answered affirmatively.

The only limitation in claim 1 which is not taught by the Megow patents defines the head as comprising “an inner enlarged portion, an outer enlarged portion, and a constricted portion between the two enlarged portions,” i.e. having the shape of an uneven sided dumbbell with the end having a smaller diameter extending inwardly into the body of the resistor. In our opinion, resistor terminal elements of the shape defined by claim 1 are clearly disclosed by Steenweg and also Kohring. That neither of those references discloses resistors 'identical to those of the Megow type we deem of little importance. What is significant is the teaching that in the electric resistor art dumbbell shaped metal terminal members are conventional. Each reference also shows the end with the smaller diameter to be inward.

The use of dumbbell shaped terminal elements being old in the art, we are faced with the question whether the use of such elements in resistors of the type shown by the Megow patents is fairly suggested by the references. We think it is. The frusto-conical heads shown in the drawings of Megow embody one shape which resists longitudinal movement after the thermosetting material hardens about the head, while the heads of dumbbell shape likewise resist such movement. In view of the obvious similarity in function between the terminal heads in the resistors of the Megow patents and the conventional dumbbell shaped head employed in the resistor art, use of the latter in the Megow type resistor is considered an obvious choice of terminal head to one skilled in the art. It is apparent that the Megow type resistor, modified as indicated, meets every limitation set forth In the appealed claims.

Appellant argues primarily that with miniaturized resistors considerable difficulty was encountered in meeting certain exacting military specifications, and that his recognition of the problem existing with respect to the prior art, helically wound, frusto-conically shaped heads, coupled with a solution thereof, is deserving of patent protection. He specifically singles out as error the board’s declaration that, since the claims are unlimited as to size, the disclosure affords no basis for an advantage over the prior art. Appellant urges that, since the exact dimensions are not critical, they do not belong in the claims but rather in a statement of the objects of the invention.

We do not agree with those contentions. The disclosure, as well as the brief, makes it abundantly clear that appellant’s invention, if any, lies in miniaturized resistors. It is only with respect to those that appellant, found peculiar problems, and it is only with respect to those that appellant may have discovered a solution. The claims, however, do not reflect either that invention or appellant’s arguments. We are not here concerned with the merits of appellant’s invention as it might appear in the disclosure, but are concerned with it only to the extent that the invention is defined in the claims.

Appellant’s contention that the problems of miniaturization were not encountered or taught by the prior ait is not relevant to the issue before us, since miniaturized resistors are not being claimed. A particular feature upon which an applicant predicates patentability must be recited in the claims; it is not sufficient merely to disclose it in the specification, In re Lindberg, 39 CCPA 866, 194 F. 2d 732, 93 USPQ 23.

Appellant has not separately argued the patentability of claims 3,4, 5, and 12 except for noting the additional limitations contained in each of these claims. We have considered them all and find they are disclosed by the prior art.

With respect to claim 6, wherein appellant; defines the enlarged portion of the head as being “annular lands” and the constricted portion as being “annular grooves,” we note that those limitations read on the aforementioned section of the Kohring patent.

The recitation in claim 9, that each head is a “columnar swaged head” has no patentable significance, since swaging the head is admitted by appellant to be old and therefore does not distinguish from the prior art.

In his petition for rehearing and his brief on rehearing, appellant argues that reference in the original opinion to the Megow drawings as showing a small concave depression extending around the head is improper because that construction of the Megow patents was not previously raised or discussed. Assuming, without deciding, that appellant is correct in that contention, the matter is moot since it should be clear that we have given no consideration to that aspect in concluding that the appealed claims are unpatentable.

The decision is affirmed.

Rich, Judge,

dissenting.

This opinion is in two parts. Part I is an opinion in the usual form developing the facts and issues as I see them, in more detail and I hope more accurately than does the majority opinion, and explaining the basis on which I believe the rejection should be reversed. Part II states the grounds on which I consider the majority opinion to be untenable regardless of the result reached.

Part I

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of claims 1, 3-6, 9, and 12 of application serial No. 720,845, filed March 12, 1958, for “Composition Resistor with Embedded Terminal Lead Head.” Claims 10 and 11 were allowed.

Background of the Invention

The invention relates to small molded fixed resistors of the type used as basic components in radio and TV sets and other electronic circuits. More particularly, the invention is an improvement in the type known as “end-molded resistors” which have easily bendable lead wires extending from each end by which the resistors are connected into circuits. The application at bar is assigned to Allen-Bradley Company, a manufacturer of such resistors in great volume, which owns other patents relating to their manufacture including two Megow and Thomson patents, No. 2,261.916 and No. 2,302,564, which are referred to in the specification as showing methods for making the resistors embodying the instant invention. Appellant was the coinventor with Megow in these patents. It will facilitate an understanding of the invention to explain how the resistors are made, using for illustration some drawings from Megow et al. ’916.

Fig. 7, below, shows a molded resistor having a body 1 and easily bendable lead wires 13. At 27 one sees the outer smaller end of a frusto-conical head which is buried in the body and forms a shoulder with wire 13.

The fixed electrical resistance is an inherent characteristic of the body which is molded from a homogenous mixture of thermosetting resin binder such as phenol-formaldehyde, carbon black as a high resistance conductor in the form of fine particles, and a filler such as ground quartz. These materials are thoroughly blended and made into a blank or preform in which the resin is in only a partially set condition. Figs. 4, 5, and 6 below show how wire terminals are attached to and integrated with the body blank, simultaneously with the complete setting of the resin by heat, to form the resistor of Fig. 7 which is thereafter covered with insulating paint and identifying markings.

Figs. 4 and 5 are elevations, partly in section, of the same apparatus in different positions. A recessed die 3 having a cylindrical horizontal chamber 2 is heated by a coil 4 to an appropriate resin-setting temperature. In chamber 2 a resistor body blank 1 is positioned. The blank shown is a preform with shallow openings in its end but their use is optional. Electrode-carrying plungers 12 are shown in Fig. 4 just entering chamber 2 and carrying lead wires 13 having frusto-conical heads, the outer smaller shoulders of which are engaged by plungers 12. Eocker arms 6,6 are moved by toggle links 7,7 when pivot 9 is moved downwardly by presser foot 10 to press plungers 12 against heads 27 and the ends of blank 1 with equal force. The only agency limiting the movement of the plungers is the volume of blank 1.

An example is given by Megow et al. of a 100,000 ohm resistor whose blank weighs 0.165 gm. made in a chamber of 0.14" diameter at a temperature of 425° F. and a pressure of 20,000 pounds per square inch applied intermittently at 3-second intervals for ½ second three times, after wdiich the resistor remains in the mold 30 seconds and is then removed with the plungers which are stripped from the wfires 13, yielding the finished resistor as shown in Fig. 7.

Fig. 5 shows the pressure being applied and Fig. 6 shows the resistor and plungers, both partly in cross-section, removed from the mold. The terminal lead head is seen at 27 embedded in the body 1 with its ■outer shoulder flush with the end of the body and abutting the end of the plunger which has pushed it into the body with great force, which force has also served to compact the material of the body solidly around the head. The inner end of the head having a greater diameter than the outer end, the compressed and molded body grips the head firmly. It will also be observed, however, that an axial pull tending to withdraw the head will cause it to exert a wedging action on the body due to the conical shape which tends to crack the body.

In resistors of the above-described type the head performs several functions. It anchors the lead wire mechanically. It makes electrical contact with the conductive particles in the body. When current passes through the resistors it generates heat in them and the metal head also serves to conduct that heat away, through the highly heat-conductive lead wire. In this connection it is useful to note that resistors are rated in watts according to the current they can withstand without overheating, the size increasing with the wattage and vice versa, common sizes being 2,1, and ½ watt.

Turning now to appellant’s specification, it states the background of and reason for the invention as follows:

In the most successful devices of this sort in the prior art, the head is frusto-conical, with the lead-wire integrally attached to the smaller end of the head, this smaller end being wider than the lead-wire, thus forming a shoulder, which shoulder is exposed at or about the surface of the body.
These prior art resistors have proved highly satisfactory in the past. But recently there has arisen a demand for smaller and smaller resistors of this sort. With these smaller resistors, the prior art frusto-conical head and its ■cooperation with the body of the resistor are not so satisfactory.
As an illustration of this trend to smaller and smaller resistors, it should he noted that there is already a demand for a 1/10 watt resistor, with a body 0.140” long and 0.067” in diameter, and with lead-wires 0.015” in diameter.
The principal object of the present invention is to devise a more satisfactory head ; not only to overcome the disadvantages of the frusto-conical head in the very small sizes, but also to have a better head in even the sizes in which the prior-art frusto-conical head is completely satisfactory.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a head which resists rotation with respect to the body.

As an example of requirements which must be met to provide a satisfactory resistor, the application quotes from the specifications of the Department of Defense of the United States as follows:

4.6.14.1 Direct Load. Resistance shall be measured as specified in 4.6.2. Resistors shall then be held by one terminal, and the load shall be gradually applied in the direction of the longitudinal axis of the resistor until the applied load reaches 5 pounds. The 5-pound pull shall be applied for at least 5 seconds. (See 3.17.1.)
4.6.14.2 Tivisting. Following the test specified in 4.6.14.1, terminals shall be bent through 90° at a point ¾ inch from the body of the resistor, with the radius of curvature at the bend approximately ½2 inch. The terminals shall be clamped to within ⅜4±⅛4 inch of the bend on the side between the bend and the remaining portion of the lead, away from the body. The body of the resistor shall then be rotated about the original axis of the bent terminal through 360° in alternating directions for five such 360° rotations at the rate of approximately 5 seconds per rotation. Measurements of resistance shall again be made after completion of the test. (See 3.17.2.)
3.17.1 Direct Load. When resistors are tested as specified in 4.6.14.1, resistor terminals shall withstand a pull of 5 pounds without mechanical damage.
3.17.2 Twisting. When resistors are tested as specified in 4.6.14,2, the resistance shall not change in excess of 1 percent or 0.5 ohm, whichever is greater, nor shall there be any evidence of breakage or other mechanical damage.

A11 affidavit of an electrical engineer engaged for 28 years in the development and manufacture of molded resistors with appellants assignee states that the frusto-conical heads of the prior art are not satisfactory for resistors of the now commercially available ⅛ watt size (dimensions above) and ¾, watt size (0.25" body length and 0.091" body diameter) for reasons stated including factors known to those skilled in the art which do not appear from the face of the bare patent disclosures. For example, it appears that the frusto-conical head which is formed on the end of a piece of solder-coated wire is created commercially by a swaging process which first forms an end section of wire into a helix of about 3 turns and then compacts the helix into the frusto-conical shape. It appears that in small sizes there is a tendency for the helix to unwind under load tests, for the head to bulge under molding pressures resulting in a loss of conical shape and gripping power, and that providing enough working surface on the small end for proper engagement by the molding plungers makes the larger end so big as to weaken the body of the resistor and prevent adequate flow of material around the head during molding. Thus the frusto-conical head being unsatisfactory, a problem existed requiring the development of a new head. The affidavit states that the problem had been worked on at Allen-Bradley Company for over ten years and was solved by Thomson’s present invention, which has gone into successful commercial use in the ⅛ and ¾ watt size resistors. It would seem, then, that a useful art has actually been advanced by this invention. We do not proceed on the assumption that it took ten years to make this advance, which seems unlikely, but on the basis that there is an advance resulting from a change in construction, now sought to be patented, making possible that which was not before possible with the old construction.

The Invention

Appellant’s invention does not require much description for it is simple, involving a new configuration for the head on the lead wire and its formation in a manner different from that previously used. The head configuration will be clear from the following figures from appellent’s drawings, showing two embodiments of the invention:

In each figure, 16 is the lead wire, Fig. 4 showing one form of head formed on its end and Figs. 5 and 6 together showing the other form, in views taken at right angles to each other, allowed claims 10 and 11 being limited to the latter form. The appealed claims are either generic to both forms or specific to the Fig. 4 form.

Utilizing the terminology of the claims and referring to Fig. 4, the head has an inner enlarged portion 18, an outer enlarged portion 19, and a constricted portion 21 formed by a groove 22 between the two enlarged portions, in the finished resistor the outer face of the outer enlarged portion 19 being exposed through and flush with the face of the body and constituting an outwardly facing shoulder of the terminal electrode, all of the head inwardly from the exposed portion of the head being in intimate supporting contact with the body. In the modification of Figs. 5 and 6, there is an inner enlarged portion 23, an outer enlarged portion 24, which are frusto-conical, with a constricted portion 26 defined by two opposite transverse flat grooves 27. It is to be noted that insofar as either head partakes of the frusto-conical form or outline, it is the reverse of that previously used in end-molded resistors, the smaller, rather than the larger, end being innermost. So much for mere form.

With respect to function, the specification says:

⅞ ⅜ ⅜ because of the wedge-action of the frusto-cone, the direct-load test tends to cause cracks in the body. Contrast the inner enlarged portion 18 of head 17 of the present invention, which without appreciable wedge action, locks under that part of the body which protrudes into groove 22 of the head.

It is pointed out that any loosening of the heads or any cracks, even though so slight as to be unobservable, are apt to change appreciably the electrical characteristics of the resistor.

A particular method of making these heads is described in the specification, differentiating from the old method by which the frusto-conical heads were made wherein a single-stroke punching (or swag-ing) operation first formed the helix which was then compacted into a head. In the present invention the heads are described as “columnar” and as made by “multiple-stroke swaging.” The specification gives the following definition and explanation:

A “columnar” bead is one formed by swaging without twisting that part of the wire or other stem which goes to form the head: in other words a swaged head with no latent helix.
The twisting test tends to unwind the latent helix of the prior art. The direct-load test tends to enhance this effect. 'The smaller the resistor, the harder to meet is the direct-load test. Even bending the wire in the course of installation may loosen the helix. The head of the present invention, having no latent helix, avoids these effects.

There is no contention that any reference contains a disclosure of such a columnar swaged head.

The Claims

Claim 1 reads as follows:

1. A molded composition fixed resistor, comprising an integral body, made of moldable insulating material; minute conductor particles distributed throughout at least a portion of said insulating material to form a high-resistance conducting path therethrough; and at each end of said resistance path a terminal electrode, which comprises a lead-wire and an enlarged head, coaxial and integral therewith, the head being intimately embedded in the body in intimate conductive contact with the resistance path portion of said body; wherein each head comprises an inner enlarged portion, an outer enlarged portion, and a constricted portion between the two enlarged portions, the outer face of the outer enlarged portion being' exposed through and flush with a face of the body and constituting an outwardly facing shoulder of the terminal electrode; all of the head inwardly from the exposed portion of the head being in intimate supporting contact with the body.

Claims 3-6 are dependent claims adding various limitations. Claim 9 is an independent claim identical with claim 1 through the words “wherein each head” from which point it concludes as follows:

* * * wherein each head is a columnar swaged head, forming an outwardly facing shoulder with the lead-wire, said shoulder being exposed through and flush with the end face of the body; all of the head inwardly from the exposed portion of the head being in intimate supporting contact with the body. [Our emphasis.]

Claim 12 was accurately characterized by the examiner to be a restatement of claim 1 in different terminology, though we would not speculate that the two claims would be adjudged to be of identical scope for the very reason that the terminology is different.

The Rejection

The examiner’s rejections of record and his answer cite and rely upon only the following two references:

Bradley, 1,835,267, Dec. 8, 1931.
Steenweg, 1,976,901, Oct. 16,1934.

His ground of rejection is somewhat obscure but we will accept the board’s construction of it which was that the claims are “unpatentable over either Bradley or Steenweg,” which we assume to be a rejection for obviousness. The board said the examiner considered the “basic feature of the claimed resistor” to be “anticipated” by the cited art. The board found that “the rejection is without reversible error” but did not rest with affirming it as made. In its first opinion it added three patents not cited by the examiner, referring to them as “background art,” as follows:

Megow et al., 2,271,774, Feb. 3,1942.
Kohring, 2,597,338, May 20,1952.
Patla, 2,698,372, Dec. 28,1954.

The Megow et al. patent is not one of those referred to in appellant’s specification but is very similar to the ’564 patent. The board started its opinion with the observation that appellant’s resistors “are of the type generally shown by Megow et al., Kohring, and Patla above cited as well as the Megow et al. patents referred to by appellant in his disclosure.” We do not agree with this observation with respect to Koh-ring and Patla but need not discuss it. Appellant’s own reference to the two other Megow et al. patents suffices to show the general type of resistor involved. The added background references add nothing to that.

The board then said it regarded the disclosure of Bradley as merely “cumulative” to that of Steenweg and devoted the balance of its opinion mostly to discussing the latter reference, concluding:

Consequently, a consideration of the background of the asserted invention and the improvement over the admitted state of the art leads us to the conclusion that the claims do not patentably differentiate over the art before us.

Considering all circumstances, it appears to us that the board’s view was that the claims are unpatentable because they define inventions which are improvements in the Megow et al. type of resistors which would be obvious in view of the disclosure of Steenweg. We therefore direct our attention to that reference.

Steenweg, a patent also issued to Allen-Bradley Company in 1934, shows a type of resistor once used in conjunction with automobile sparkplugs in the early days of auto radio (the application was filed in 1929). Figs. 2 and 3 will suffice for discussion and are here reproduced.

The resistors were attached to the sparkplugs to suppress ignition noises in the radio receiver. Alternatively they were to be built into sparkplugs. Fig. 2 shows one attached type wherein 5 is the spark-plug with porcelain insulator 6 and metal terminal 7. A hollow tubular resistance element 10 is secured to a metal angle-bracket 20 by means of a threaded bolt 22 extending through an insulating washer 23 and a metal plate 19. Threaded terminal 24 screws on the bolt as a nut and serves as the terminal for the sparkplug cable. The only use made of this structure by the board with reference to appellant's claim is in its statement that element 20, the bracket, “would be suggestive of the use of a lead wire.” Comparing Fig. 2 of Steenweg with Fig. 7 at the beginning of this opinion illustrates, we think, that the board was straining unduly to find non-existent similarities between appellant’s resistor structure and that of the reference, which is of an entirely different type.

Turning to Steenweg’s Fig. 3, we get to the crux of this case. Therein we find the same type of molded hollow tubular resistance element 10, again clamped between a pair of members 11 and 31 which are “in intimate engagement with the adjacent end[s] of the resistance element.” Here wye have an alternative to the bolt 22 and insulating washer 23 of Fig. 2 for holding these end-terminals in contact with the tubular resistor. It is described as follows :

* * * * the terminals [11, 31] each having a central projection 12 to snugly engage the bore 13 of the unit. The innermost ends of the projection[s] 12 are reduced and provided with annular grooves 14, which with the remaining space within the resistance element are completely filled with a binding cement C composed essentially of asbestos and a phenol composition product which being an insulating composition does not in any way affect the resistance value of the element 10, but serves to maintain the terminals 8 [or 31] and 11 in intimate contact with its ends.

This is the disclosure upon which the examiner and the hoard, relied to support the rejection. Fig. 1 of Steenweg, which we have not discussed, is like Fig. 3 except that the resistor is not built into the spark-plug. Instead it is made a separate unit, as is the resistor of Fig. 2. It resembles the resistor of Fig. 3 in form and the bottom terminal 8, corresponding to 31, is provided with a threaded bore extending into the projection 12 by means of which the resistor can be screwed onto the usual threaded post on the top of a sparkplug, avoiding the need for any bracket such as 25 in Fig. 2.

Appellant has characterized the metal end-terminals of Steenweg s resistors as “a hardware item produced from bar stock by a screw machine process” and argued that they bear little if any relation to the problems of attaching headed wire terminals in end-molded resistors, especially small ones wherein the problem existed. The characterization seems to us to be accurate and the argument to be sound, particularly in the solving of the problems which existed in the making of end-molded resistors in the very small 14 and Vio watt sizes. Inserting terminals into such resistors with their diameters of .091" and .067", respectively, by end-molding processes does not seem to us to bear any real relation to inserting terminals into the Steenweg tubular resistors of the Fig 3 type considering their diameters, which must have been of the order of % to ½ inch, by purely mechanical parts-assembly methods not concerned with molding, and securing them, moreover, with a filling of insulating cement rather than by molding the resistor composition around them. In Steenweg the tubular resistor is all made when the terminals are affixed to it.

Although the board did not discuss Bradley, which it considered to be merely cumulative to Steenweg, since the examiner relied on that reference in the rejection which the board affirmed we think it should be mentioned briefly. The resistor of that patent, the application for which was filed in 1925, was a relatively large molded article with metal end caps adapted to various forms of connection in circuits. Like Steenweg, all forms of caps are screw-machine products, made of brass or the like by turning, threading, counterboring and similar procedures, the diameter of the caps being the same as or greater than the diameter of the resistor bodies. There is no disclosure of a terminal formed on the end of a lead wire.

After giving much study to the grounds of rejection as stated by the examiner and by the board we think it would only confuse matters to discuss them. They were never precisely stated nor were the statutory grounds of rejection made clear. We know what the legal issue must be under the statute, regardles of what was said, and we will simply go to the point. Was the invention, as defined in the rejected claims, one which would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art of making end-molded resistors with wire terminal leads as of the time the invention was made (herein taken to be the filing date of the application) in view of the disclosures of the acknowledged Megow et al. patented prior art taken with the disclosures of either Steenweg or Bradley ? We think not. Neither Steenweg nor Bradley is in any way concerned with forming anchoring heads on the ends of lead wires nor with the problem of injecting them into resistor body blanks in the kind of machinery used to make such resistors. The most that can be said is that one can find in those two patents, when one is led for some reason (such as appellant’s application disclosure) to go look for it, one or more grooves cut on a stud buried in cement or in a molded body to help anchor it therein. In our opinion that is not enough.

Due to the great disparity in the types of construction involved in the Megow et al. patents, on the one hand, and in the SteenwTeg and Bradley patents which have been deemed below to make obvious appellant’s modifications in the Megow et al. type of resistors, on the other hand, we think there is no suggestion in either group of references to combine their disclosures with the others. In re Hortman, 46 CCPA 814, 264 F. 2d 911, 121 USPQ 218. The situation here seems to us of the type we dealt with in In re Herrmann, 47 CCPA 975, 278 F. 2d 527, 126 USPQ 59, wherein we said:

Hall was not confronted witli the problems -which have been solved by appellant.
While the change made by appellant seems, In retrospect, to have been comparatively simple, we do not feel that it can properly be said to have been obvious within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. 103. In view of the substantial differences between the construction and operation of the Lind and Hall engines, it is not likely that the latter would have been looked to for suggestions in solving problems arising in the former. Under such circumstances it becomes necessary to reverse the decision appealed from.

The decision of the board should be reversed.

Part II

The foregoing shows, I think, that the majority was not compelled to affirm by the evidence in the record. It also shows, I believe, that there are many factors bearing on the obviousness issue which the majority has not considered or, at least, not discussed.

What I now propose to show is that the majority affirms in large part on grounds never stated in the Patent Office.

Men may reasonably differ on the issue of obviousness in view of the prior art and I have stated my views above. But in this court anyone’s judgment on obviousness must be based, under 35 U.S.C. 103, on what the references show to one shilled in the art and, under 35 U.S.C. 142, 143, and 144 and general principles of appellate procedure, on a review of rejections actually made by the Patent Office. We are not at liberty to make neiv rejections. In my opinion, the majority has clearly done that.

Appellant, in his Brief on Kehearing (39 pages) has more than adequately pointed out the matters discussed below, notwithstanding which the majority has found only one point of error in its original opinion. While the majority might be conscientiously able to find no error in its decision that the claimed invention would have been obvious, I cannot see how that view can be retained as to its new opinion, any more than as to its original opinion, in view of what appellant has brought to the court’s attention.

I think a fair reading of the majority opinion shows that the decision that the claimed subject matter is obvious proceeds according to the following argument: 1. The novel feature of the claim is the shape of the head on the wire terminal which is that of a dumbbell with the inner “side” smaller than the outer. 2. The Steenweg patent shows a terminal element in a resistor which projects into an insulating binding cement and has a groove between two enlarged portions. 3. The Kohring patent discloses a dumbbell-shaped terminal in a resistor. 4. The Megow et al. patents show frusto-conical terminal heads embedded entirely in the conducting core of the resistor body. 5. Dumbbell-shaped metal terminal members are, therefore, “conventional” in the resistor art. 6. The Megow et al. frusto-conical heads resist longitudinal movement and so do the heads of dumbbell shape, so there is “obvious similarity in function” between the Megow heads and the “conventional dumbbell shaped head[s] employed in the resistor art.”

Based on the foregoing assumed facts, the majority then reached its conclusion in the following words:

In view of the obvious similarity in function between the terminal heads in the resistors of the Megow patents and the conventional dumbbell shaped head employed in the resistor art, use of the latter in the Megow type resistor is considered an obvious choice of terminal head to one skilled in the art. It is apparent that the Megow type resistor, modified as indicated, meets every limitation set forth in the appealed claims. [Emphasis mine.]

Appellant justifiably pointed out that this is a rejection (originally stated in slightly different words) on a ground never used by the Patent Office, citing our decision in In re Kalter, 50 CCPA 1191, 316 F. 2d 747, 137 USPQ 347, in support of the contention that we are without authority to make such a rejection. In that case the majority opinion by Judge Almond stated the well-established rule as follows:

We are without authority to advance new grounds of rejection, but are limited to deciding the issues before us.

The rule is not only based on fundamental principle but is one of very long standing in this court. In In re Mooney, 25 CCPA 1269, 97 F. 2d 144, 37 USPQ 736 (1938), the court said:

We are not at liberty to affirm the decision of the Board of Appeals upon the ground urged by the Solicitor, above quoted, for such ground of rejection was not relied upon either by the examiner or the Board of Appeals. In re Tucker and Reeves, 19 C.C.P.A. (Patents) 810, 54 F. (2d) 815.

And in the Mooney case the court pointed out that had the ground urged by the solicitor been assigned by the board it might have been inclined to affirm such ground. In the leading Tucker and Beeves case the court granted a rehearing to consider the question:

* * * was it proper for this court to affirm the action of the Board of Appeals and the examiner in rejecting the claims on grounds other than the grounds of rejection set out and relied upon by the lower tribunals? [My emphasis.]

It concluded:

We feel, therefore, constrained to hold that even if the board’s rejection of the claims involved is regarded as proper, when reasons other than those assigned by it are considered, we would not be justified in affirming such action on such grounds.

It withdrew so much of its former opinion as was not limited to the grounds relied upon by the board. In In re Sebald, 31 CCPA 1148, 143 F. 2d 366, 62 USPQ 90 (1944), the court said:

In In re Tucker and Reeves * * * we originally held that we had an inherent power equivalent to that exercised by courts in other jurisdictions to affirm a decision appealed from if it was right for any reason. Our holding there that we might affirm a decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals upon grounds other than those applied by the Patent Office tribunals attracted great interest among members of the patent bar. Rehearing was granted * * *. Upon due consideration * * * we * * * came to the conclusion that [our] * * * former decision was “extrajudicial” and that it should be withdrawn. Our holding in In re Tucker and Reeves * * * has become the settled law of this court, and we have seen no disposition on the part of Congress to broaden our jurisdiction in this respect. [My emphasis.]

So much for the law. I turn to consideration of the new grounds on which the majority’s rejection here rests.

In order of appearance, the first new finding of the court relied on appears in connection with the Kohring patent. (Item 3, supra, in my analysis.) As my opinion, Part I, shows, the examiner never mentioned Kohring. The board was the first to cite it and every word it said about it appears in the sentence:

The resistors are of the type generally shown by Megow et al., Kohring, and Patla above cited as well as the Megow et al. patents referred to by appellant in his disclosure. [My emphasis.]

It is worth looking at the Kohring disclosure for two purposes: (1) to show that even what the board says is not so and (2) to make it clear beyond peradventure that the use made of it by the majority is new and entirely different from any use made of it by the board. I here reproduce the relevant figures of Kohring’s drawings.

Referring to the above figures collectively, the relevant portion of the specification states [my emphasis]:

Tlie detail structure of resistance cartridge involves a core of ceramic tody 7 on which is a resistance element 8 * ⅜ * this being in spiral convolutions of hard carton as cut m a coating formed in situ. And connecting the end of the resistance element to the terminal 9 is a metal layer 10 which may be from an applied metal coated on or may be a pressed-on end cover. This assures firm union with both resistance element and terminal. A casing or cover 11 of insulating plastic * * * is molded onto and over the resistance and core such as to completely envelop and protect. * * ⅜ Desirably, a flexible sleeve 12 is then slid over the plastic casing 11 * * *. Where paper is employed, * * * such sleeves may be initially in flattened or compressed form, as shown at Fig. 11 * * *. As illustrated in Fig. 5, thus the sleeve envelops the enclosed encased resistance and affords protection about the end portions. * * *
The ceramic core 7 * * * may have a central bore, or at least at each end an open bore 15 molded or drilled, and within which the terminal 9 is axially driven or pressed, to hold by surface deformation. Thus, the terminal as of tinned copper may be of non-circular cross-section, for instance squared as in Fig. 8, or triangular in section as in Fig. 9, or with transverse or circular fins as in Fig. 10, or of other desired form which is non-circular, whereby on being axially driven into the bore there is sufficient deformation in the contacting surfaces to seize and hold. Desirably, the entering end of the terminal is tapered to a smaller diameter, to facilitate entry.

In other words, the terminals are driven like nails into preformed bores in a hard ceramic core, hard enough to distort the metal, whatever shape it may be, in order to grip it. The metal terminal is deformed in the bore. Nothing is molded around it. It grips by friction in a hole by engaging its wall. Mere reading of the foregoing is enough to show that the board was wrong in saying that Kohring’s resistor is of the general type of appellant’s end-molded, plastic binder and carbon particle resistors.

Now as to what the majority did with this reference, instead of using it merely as an indication that end-molded resistors were old as a type, as did the board (even though Kohring is not of that type), it found Fig. 10 in the disclosure of Kohring and then proceeded to rely on it to support a contention never made by the Patent Office, namely, that dumbell-shaped terminals are “conventional” in the resistor art. The Patent Office, on the other hand, never made any contention that such heads are conventional and never mentioned Fig. 10; in fact it never referred to any aspect of Kohring’s disclosure. Even the Patent Office Solicitor’s brief on the original hearing fails to rely on any aspect of Kohring beyond the board’s statement it was “background” and showed a type of resistor. The use made of Kohring was, therefore, definitely new in the case and in support of a ground of rejection which the appellant had never heard of before reading the court’s opinion herein. If rejection was to be predicated in any way on Fig. 10 of Kohring, with its flanges for engagement with the smooth walls of a bore in a hard ceramic core, appellant had the right to know it and to have his day in court. Kohring is obviously a very different structure from appellant’s and made in a very different way. The statute, 35 U.S.C. 132, requires that the Commissioner shall state the reasons for the rejection so that the applicant can judge “of the propriety of continuing the prosecution of his application.” The grounds stated by the majority and predicated on its application of the Kohring disclosure are reasons for rejection of which appellant had never been advised until the decision of this court, in violation of the spirit if not the letter of the statute.

I now turn to the majority’s use of the Megow et al. patents.

As with Kohring, the examiner did not cite the Megow et al. patents, which were cited by the board only as background art and relied on by it only to show what appellant’s specification admits by reference to those patents, namely, that end-molded resistors were a known type of resistor. And as it did with Kohring, the majority found and relied on structure in the Megow et al. disclosures, which was relied on by neither the board nor the examiner to support its finding of obviousness.

The new majority opinion says that the Megow et al. patents show frusto-conical heads which have “obvious similarity in function” with respect to the “conventional dumbbell shaped head employed in the resistor art * *

The reasoning of the original majority opinion, now withdrawn, relied heavily for obviousness on a “small concave depression extending around the head” (to quote from the last paragraph of the new opinion). Appellant has convincingly established the factual non-existence of that depression and the majority has at least been persuaded not to rely on it any more and to regard the propriety of relying on it as “moot” without conceding the non-existence of the depression. Its original opinion has, however, been changed in no respect other than to delete reliance on that depression and in all other respects the Megow et al. patents are still relied on. It would be well, therefore, to make clear the lead terminals which they disclose by reference to the following drawings:

Fig. 4 of patent ’774 shows a head 8 and Fig. 9 of patent ’564 shows a head 23 having the identical frustoconical shape of the heads in patent ’916. They all have perfectly smooth sides. The ’916 patent, where the only written description of them appears, says they are “frustoconical” so that the slight taper of the heads aids in their retention, the “inclined sides” forming retaining ledges. The same patent says “The particular shape, however, is a matter of secondary importance, since any suitable configuration is appropriate as long as the same is sufficiently large and massive with respect to the diameter of the shank portion 26 [27 in Fig. 10 of ’5641 as to render the same relatively nondeformable.” Patent ’774 merely refers to “embedded head portion 8” or “lead wire heads 8” without further description. Patent ’564 says no more than “heads 23.” It is perfectly clear, then, that the heads in no way resemble appellant’s heads.

Figs. 2 and 10 show the same heads 8 and 23 as they appear in a cross-section of the finished resistor. The only difference between these two figures is that Fig. 2 shows a film of “contact material 5” coated on the end of head 8.

The first Megow el al. patent '916 discloses that molding pressures may be as high as 50,000 pounds per square inch. If Figs. 9 and 10 of '564 be compared, it is seen that the outer rim of the head might get slightly flared by the pressure, at least in spots. And the location of this flare is on the outside face of the finished resistor. Even if there is some flare, however, the body of the head, which alone is gripped by the molded resistor, is grooveless, unlike appellant’s heads. We are concerned, of course, only with preventing axial movement in a direction to withdraw the head from the body and what holds the head in is its frusto-conical shape with the larger end inside.

In changing its rationale from a reliance on a nonexistent concavity in the Megow et al. heads to reliance on “similarity in function” with appellant’s heads, the majority has merely removed one error and replaced it with two others. First, it is assumed that there is similarity of function, which flies straight in the face of the record which shows that appellant’s heads function in a superior manner of which the Megow et al. heads are incapable. Second, it assumes as a matter of law that similarity of function makes out a case of obviousness of structure.

On the latter point we have just pointed out in two very recent opinions (one unanimous and one dissented from solely by the author of the majority opinion here) that functional equivalence does not establish obviousness under 35 U.S.C. 103. In re Scott, 51 CCPA 747, 323 F. 2d 1016, 139 USPQ 297, and In re Flint, 51 CCPA 1230, 330 F. 2d 363, 141 USPQ 299.

The majority’s case for obviousness is clearly weaker in its new opinion than it was before, since a prop it formerly relied on has had to be removed.

It clearly appears to me that neither the “conventionality” assumption nor the functional similarity assertion, on which the majority has predicated its obviousness decision will bear analysis, that they are not facts, that they are contrary to the record, contrary to law, and in any event they are entirely neto grounds of rejection.

The majority opinion expresses dissatisfaction with the reasoning of both the examiner and the board in their decisions of the issue. Certainly this does not justify the assertion in this court of new and different grounds of rejection. Such action is “extrajudicial.” In re Sehald, supra. If the court cannot agree with the rejection made by the Patent Office, it must reverse it or, if the rejection below leaves the court in doubt as to its propriety—which, at the very least, would appear to be the situation here—then applicant is entitled to the benefit of that doubt. That rule is too well established to require citation of authority.

The final point of the majority opinion is: “appellant’s invention, if any, lies in miniaturized resistors. * * * The claims, however, do not reflect either that invention or appellant’s arguments.”

The function of claims is to point out what has been invented, not the problems that gave rise to it. The invention here is not a miniaturized resistor but a specific structure which contributes to making them successfully and which is also advantageous in larger sizes, as the specification points out. The majority does not suggest just how size should be injected into the claims. The solicitor, however, makes it perfectly clear what the Patent Office position would be if it were. His brief on rehearing says:

The court correctly noted that size is not reflected on [In] the claims and therefore cannot be a basis for patentability (Decision—9, top). But even if miniaturizatimi were claimed, it would amount to a mere difference in size * * *. [My emphasis.]

Furthermore, the majority’s conclusion that the invention lies in miniaturized resistors flies straight in the face of the specification from which we derive our knowledge of what the invention is. I have quoted it above in PART I. The opinion appears to suggest the necessity of including in the claims some sort of size limitation to which the Patent Office admittedly would pay no attention, and with good reason. As to claiming size limitations, the majority might bear in mind one of the common “negative tests” for determining the presence of what used to be called “invention.” As stated in Walker on Patents § 68 (6th ed. 1929) : “It is not invention to change the size or degree of a thing, or of any feature or function of a machine or manufacture.” That is still a test generally applied in the Patent Office and Courts.

In conclusion, the majority opinion is not a review of the rejection made in the Patent Office, which is all that is within our power. It is a new rejection based on the finding of new grounds in references, which grounds were neither found nor asserted by the Patent Office. It is legally untenable.

Smith, Judge,

dissenting.

While I join in the dissenting opinion written by Judge Rich, I think it is desirable to amplify the discussion of an important point which arises in the following excerpt from the majority opinion:

* * * In view of the obvious similarity in function between the terminal heads in the resistors of the Megow patents and the conventional dumbbell shaped head employed in the resistor art, use of the latter in the Megow type resistor is considered an obvious choice of terminal head to one skilled in the art. [Emphasis added.]

First, I am at a complete loss to determine where, in the prosecution of this application, an issue of “similarity in function” was raised. The majority thus predicates its opinion on what I believe to be a totally new ground of rejection, stated for the first time in the present majority opinion of this court. 35 U.S.C. 144 requires that our decision “shall be confined to the points set forth in the reasons of appeal.” I do not find the issue of similarity of function set forth in any reason of appeal herein. This is due, I think, to the fact that issue was not raised by either the examiner or the board. Thus appellant did not argue the factual questions raised in connection with this issue. To deny now his claims on this basis, as the majority would do, seems to me to be a denial of appellant’s right to be heard.

Moreover, I agree fully with the view of Judge Rich in his dissenting opinion that such a statement merely begs the statutory question of obviousness of the invention. As Judge Rich indicates, we have held in the several cases which he cites that functional similarity per se cannot be equated with obviousness.

If, however, we assume the propriety of making such a new ground of rejection, it should be predicated on the technical facts rather than upon judicial assumptions of such facts. The judicial assumption of technical facts upon which the majority would act is clearly and demonstrably wrong. The dumbbell-shaped head used by appellant is not “conventional” in any resistor art of record. While Steenweg shows a dumbbell-shaped terminal head, the significant technical differences between the Steenweg resistor and that of appellant make a comparison of the terminal heads wholly without significance. In Steenweg, the terminal head is not imbedded in resistive material as are the terminal heads claimed by appellant. Instead, the Steenweg terminal head is imbedded in a core of insulating composition which can have no effect upon the resistance value of the resistive element. This core merely serves to hold the terminal head firmly in place. Electrical connection is made between the upper, cap-like portion of the terminal head and the end of the resistive element. The Steen-weg device is of relatively high power, and is used to absorb transient, high voltage oscillations which interfere with automobile radio reception. Because of the transient nature of the energy dissipated, because of the relatively large size of the resistor, and because of the location of the resistive element, arrangements for carrying away the heat generated in the resistive material do not depend so critically upon the thermal conductivity characteristics of the portion of the terminal head which is embedded in the insulating core. Further, there is no problem of electrical contact and conductivity with respect to the embedded portion of Steenweg’s terminal head.

Such is not the case with appellant’s device, however. As stated in the specification, appellant’s terminal heads are “highly conductive of both electricity and heat,” and further:

It should, be noted that any loosening of the helix [of the prior art frusto- • conical terminals], even though so slight as to be unobservable, or any cracks in the resistance path, even though so slight as to be unobservable, are apt to change appreciably the electrical characteristics of the resistor.

Thus, appellant faced at least three distinct problems with respect to terminal head design which were of little or no consequence to Steenweg: 1) the need for a terminal head which would provide good thermal contact and conductivity, since the only effective way to dissipate heat generated in the resistive material, in a resistor like appellant’s, is to conduct it away by means of the terminal leads; 2) the need for a terminal head would provide good electrical contact and conductivity; and 3) the need for a terminal head whose mechanical design would resist displacement due to stress and thus ensure continued good physical contact with the resistive material.

There is no doubt that appellant’s device overcomes these problems and there is no doubt that the Steenweg device is not subject to them. There is no suggestion in any prior art of record that appellant’s dumbbell-shaped terminal head would be effective to establish and maintain satisfactory electrical and thermal contact with the surrounding resistive material and also to provide sufficient thermal conductivity. The areas of contact between appellant’s dumbbell-shaped heads and the resistive material result not only in high mechanical strength, but, even more importantly, they provide the intimate surface contacts necessary to assure both electrical and thermal stability.

We are dealing here with electrical devices of a relatively high order of precision. They are effective only so long as they retain that precision. Thus a resistor of a certain rated wattage and resistance must retain those characteristics within predetermined tolerance limits if it is to be effective. Heat build up in such a resistor can so disrupt the electrical path that the resistance may well fall outside the set tolerance limits; indeed, it may destroy the resistor altogether. Excess heat may also affect adversely the physical contact between the terminal heads and the resistive material, resulting in further undesirable variation in the operating characteristics of the resistor. There is no suggestion in any of the art of record of any “similarity in function” in these respects.

I agree with Judge Rich that the appealed decision should be reversed. 
      
       Serial No. 720,845, filed March 12, 1958.
     
      
       U.S. Patent No. 2,261,916, issued Nov. 4, 1941, and U.S. Patent No. 2,302,564, issued Nov. 17, 1942.
     
      
       Judge Smith authorizes me to say that -where I have used the first person plural “We” or ‘Us” in Part I it may be assumed to refer to both of us.
     
      
       In another form of the resistor, usually the larger sizes, an insulating tubular sleeve of thermosetting resin containing no carbon may surround the conductive body, in which case no painting is necessary except for the identifying markings. We need not consider this type, the making of which is described in Megow et al. No. 2,302,564, since the invention before us is applicable to either type but more particularly the one we are describing which is best adapted to resistors of smallest size.
     
      
       Allowed claim 10 is identical with appealed claim 1 except for the addition of the words: “wherein the constricted portion of the head is flattened to enable the head to resist turning with respect to the body.”
      Claim 11 likewise is identical with claim 1 with words added to the end limiting it to the head shape of Fig. 6, namely, “wherein the head is a frusto-cone, the larger end thereof being axially disposed with respect to the leadwire and integrally attached to one end thereof, and wherein the constricted portion of the head is defined by two opposite transverse lateral grooves.”
     
      
       It is the same In the 5th Ed. (1917) and in Deller’s Edition, § 31 (1937).