Ex Parte Peczalski et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardApr 12, 201613096253 (P.T.A.B. Apr. 12, 2016) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 13/096,253 92689 7590 HONEYWELL/SLW Patent Services 115 Tabor Road P.O. Box 377 04/28/2011 04/14/2016 MORRIS PLAINS, NJ 07950 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Andy Peczalski 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 ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. H0025854 US 4159 EXAMINER BLOSS, STEPHANIE E ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 2864 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 04/14/2016 ELECTRONIC 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. Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the following e-mail address( es): patentservices-us@honeywell.com uspto@slwip.com SLW@blackhillsip.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte ANDY PECZALSKI and DINKAR MYLARASW AMY1 Appeal2014-005818 Application 13/096,253 Technology Center 2800 Before BRADLEY R. GARRIS, PETER F. KRATZ, and BEYERL YA. FRANKLIN, Administrative Patent Judges. GARRIS, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appellants appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134 from the Examiner's decision rejecting claims 1-12, 14--18, and 20. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6. We REVERSE. 1 Honeywell International Inc. is identified as the real party in interest. App. Br. 2. Appeal2014-005818 Application 13/096,253 Appellants claim a sensing system 200 comprising a radar-based vibration sensor 230 for obtaining vibration data from mechanical operation of a component in a machine, a machine-mounted vibration sensor 221-224, and a processing unit 250 configured to fuse or combine the vibration data from the machine-mounted and radar-based sensors, exclude relative vibration of the machine, and provide indications relating to the status of the machine component (independent claims 1 and 8, Fig. 2). Appellants also claim a method performed by such a sensing system comprising the steps of identifying relative vibration in the combined vibration data and filtering the combined vibration data by excluding the identified relative vibration "that is constant in operation of the operating machine" (remaining independent claim 15). A copy of representative claims 1 and 15, taken from the Claims Appendix of the Appeal Brief, appears below. 1. A sensing system comprising: a radar-based vibration sensor, the radar-based vibration sensor configured to obtain vibration data from mechanical operation of a component in a machine of interest using radio frequency energy directed at a first location; a vibration sensor mounted to the machine of interest, the machine mounted vibration sensor configured to obtain vibration data from mechanical operation of the component proximate to mounting at a second location; and a processing unit configured to analyze the vibration data obtained by the radar-based vibration sensor, analyze the data obtained by the machine mounted vibration sensor, fuse the vibration data obtained by the machine mounted vibration sensor with the vibration data obtained by the radar-based vibration sensor, exclude relative vibration of the machine of interest at the first location and the second location identified in the vibration data, and provide indications related to a status of the mechanical operation of the component in the machine of interest determined from the vibration data. 2 Appeal2014-005818 Application 13/096,253 15. A method performed by a sensing system, compnsmg: collecting a first set of vibration data from a radar-based displacement sensor, the radar-based displacement sensor being directed to measure vibrations from a region of interest on an operating machine using radio frequency energy, and the first set of vibration data including one or both of temporal and spectral data; processing the first set of vibration data collected from the radar-based displacement sensor to analyze vibration measurements from the radar-based displacement sensor; collecting a second set of vibration data from a multiple mounted vibration sensors configured to measure vibrations from an area proximate to the mounted vibration sensors on the operating machine, wherein the area proximate to the multiple mounted vibration sensors differs at least in part from the directed area measured with the radar-based displacement sensor; processing the second set of vibration data collected from the multiple mounted vibration sensors to analyze vibration measurements from the mounted vibration sensors; combining the second set of vibration data collected from the mounted vibration sensors in the area proximate to the multiple mounted vibration sensors with the first set of vibration data collected from the radar-based displacement sensor in the directed area; identifying relative vibration in the combined vibration data; filtering the combined vibration data that is common to the mounted vibration sensors and the radar-based displacement sensor, by excluding the identified relative vibration that is constant in operation of the operating machine; deriving a status of mechanical operation for the operating machine from the filtered vibration data; and providing user indications related to the status of the mechanical operation for the operating machine. Under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a), the Examiner rejects as unpatentable: 3 Appeal2014-005818 Application 13/096,253 claims 1 and 5-7 over Clearwater (US 4,887,087, iss. Dec. 12, 1989) in view of Breed (US 2009/0043441 Al, pub. Feb. 12, 2009); claim 2 over Clearwater, Breed, and Buell (US 6,672, 167 B2, iss. Jan. 6, 2004); claims 3 and 4 over Clearwater, Breed, and Lal (US 6,972,846 B2, iss. Dec. 6, 2005); claims 8-12 and 15-18 over Toomey (US 2003/0014199 Al, pub. Jan. 16, 2003) in view of Buell and Breed; and claims 14 and 20 over Toomey, Buell, Breed, and Clearwater. In the rejections of independent claims 1, 8, and 15, the Examiner finds that neither Clearwater nor Toomey discloses the claimed feature wherein relative vibration is excluded from the vibration data but that Breed discloses "[d]ata from multiple sensors is ... combined to remove errors (paragragh 0332, 0375) which the examiner takes to be able to include relative vibrations" (Final Action 3, 8-9). The Examiner concludes that it would have been obvious to combine each of Clearwater and Toomey with Breed so as to exclude relative vibration from the vibration data as claimed (id. at 3--4, 9-10). Appellants argue that Breed does not exclude relative vibration as required by the independent claims (App. Br. 16, 22). In response, the Examiner states that "the appellant fails to clearly define what this vibration is relative to[, and] [t]herefore any measure of vibration would be able to be qualified as relative vibration" (Ans. 4). Appellants reply by contending that the independent claim phrase "relative vibration" does not encompass any vibration as stated by the Examiner but instead defines vibration "that is constant in operation of the operating machine" as expressly recited in claim 15 and as disclosed in 4 Appeal2014-005818 Application 13/096,253 Specification i-f 36 ("relative vibration or other harmonics that are constant in operation of the system") (Reply Br. 3). We find persuasive merit in Appellants' contention. The record of this appeal contains meaningful support for interpreting the phrase "relative vibration" as defining vibration that is constant in operation of the machine and no support for the Examiner's interpretation that the phrase encompasses any vibration. Further regarding this claim phrase, we emphasize that the Examiner does not propose providing either Clearwater or Toomey with a processor configured to exclude, or a step of excluding, relative vibration that is constant in operation of the machine being assessed. For these reasons, none of the Examiner's§ 103 rejections will be sustained. The decision of the Examiner is reversed. REVERSED 5 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation