Difference between revisions of "Patent US-1911-982336"

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m (Text replacement - " Inventor location " to " Inventor location ")
m (Text replacement - "* [http://worldwide.espacenet.com/publicationDetails/biblio?FT=D&CC=US&NR=" to "{{USpatentsources|")
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=== Sources ===
 
=== Sources ===
 
* https://www.google.com/patents/US982336
 
* https://www.google.com/patents/US982336
* [http://worldwide.espacenet.com/publicationDetails/biblio?FT=D&CC=US&NR=982336 espacenet] instrument for measuring acceleration, gradients, and other physical aspects of a potentially moving vessel, using two magnetic discs on a spring, within an encompassing magnetic field
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{{USpatentsources|982336 espacenet] instrument for measuring acceleration, gradients, and other physical aspects of a potentially moving vessel, using two magnetic discs on a spring, within an encompassing magnetic field
 
Inventor location (imputed by [[HistPat]]): Chelsea, London, England
 
Inventor location (imputed by [[HistPat]]): Chelsea, London, England

Revision as of 19:10, 8 April 2019


Year filed 1910
Year granted 1911
Office US
Patent number 982336
Inventors Harry Egerton WIMPERIS
Inventor country GB
Applicant person
Applicant firm
Applicant type
Applicant is inventor? 1
Original title Accelerometer
English title Accelerometer
Tech fields instrument
Filing date 1910-08-12
Full specification filed date
Application number
Grant date 1911-01-24
Granted? 1
Publication date
Supplementary to patent
Related to aircraft? Partially
Serial number 576808
Patent agent
Assigned to George Keith Buller Elphinstone (½), London, England
National tech categories USPC 244/175
IPCs
CPCs
Family year 1911
First filing?
Cites these patents
Citations from after 1930
Application ID
INPADOC family ID
Number of text pages
Number of diagram pages
Number of figures
Number of claims

Sources

{{USpatentsources|982336 espacenet] instrument for measuring acceleration, gradients, and other physical aspects of a potentially moving vessel, using two magnetic discs on a spring, within an encompassing magnetic field Inventor location (imputed by HistPat): Chelsea, London, England