Patents by Inventor Charles W. Cutler

Charles W. Cutler has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 5460039
    Abstract: A system for measuring the flow rate of gas includes a flow head having a sensor thermoresistor mounted transversely to the flow of gas, and a reference thermoresistor mounted parallel to the flow of gas, both thermoresistors having equal resistance versus temperature functions. Each thermoresistor is connected in a feedback control circuit, in which each thermoresistor is separately supplied with current to heat it, the current first passing through a fixed resistance in series with each of the thermoresistors. The current supplies are servo controlled to equalize the resistance of each thermoresistor with that of its associated fixed resistance. The power consumed by each thermoresistor at its equilibrium resistance is measured to provide a power indicative signal associated with each thermoresistor. The two power indicative signals are compared to generate a delta power signal. An empirically-derived flow rate-versus-delta power curve is stored as a look-up table in a computer memory.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 12, 1994
    Date of Patent: October 24, 1995
    Assignee: Bear Medical Systems, Inc.
    Inventor: Charles W. Cutler
  • Patent number: 5263369
    Abstract: A gas flow sensor system, using hot wire flow and temperature sensors, compensates and corrects for various factors, such as water vapor content and gas composition in the measured gas, gas temperature, physical differences in the sensors, ambient atmospheric pressure, and nonlinearities in the system. Physical differences in the sensors are corrected by adjusting the magnitude of the constant current flowing to the temperature sensor. Water vapor content and gas temperature corrections are made by modifying a flow temperature signal based on the resistance of the temperature sensor to form a flow reference signal indicative of a desired resistance difference between the resistances of the temperature and flow sensors, which resistance difference varies with the flow temperature signal. The flow reference signal is compared to a flow resistance signal (indicative of the resistance of the flow sensor) and the resulting flow correction signal is used to control the current flow to the flow sensor.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 24, 1992
    Date of Patent: November 23, 1993
    Assignee: Bear Medical Systems, Inc.
    Inventor: Charles W. Cutler
  • Patent number: 4044286
    Abstract: Beds, such as hospital beds, in which at least some portion of the bed is movably actuated by an electric motor (or motors) are provided with a control circuit to determine proper energization of the motor from an AC power source. Since the AC signal from the power source could be harmful to the person selecting a desired direction of travel of the movable portion of the bed, the selecting portion of the control circuit is isolated by appropriate transformers from the power portion that supplies the motor. Bidirectional switching devices, such as triacs, are utilized to convey the power to the motor. Other bidirectional switching devices, such as triacs, are used to gate the power handling triacs through appropriate gating transformers. A phase shifting arrangement is utilized in connection with the gating transformers to provide proper commutation of the power handling triacs.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 23, 1976
    Date of Patent: August 23, 1977
    Assignee: Hill-Rom Company, Inc.
    Inventors: James S. Adams, Charles W. Cutler
  • Patent number: 4016489
    Abstract: Ground-test device indicating when the connection to ground has become lost and passing no more than about 12 microamperes of current into the ground system. The device also develops an indication when the wiring from the source of a.c. power suffers from reversed polarity or when the common, or neutral, connection floats appreciably above ground. When no abnormality exists, the circuit introduces less than about 0.6 microamperes to ground.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 4, 1974
    Date of Patent: April 5, 1977
    Assignee: Hill-Rom Company, Inc.
    Inventors: James S. Adams, Charles W. Cutler