Patents by Inventor George J. Beyer

George J. Beyer 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: 4289547
    Abstract: A composition and a method for applying a lubricant coating to clean metal surfaces prior to subjecting them to metal forming operations. The composition comprises a concentrate which is adapted to be diluted with water, if desired, to produce an aqueous acidic operating bath containing a controlled effective amount of phosphate ions to form a phosphate coating on the clean metal surface in combination with an emulsified organic lubricant agent, an emulsifying agent and an iron chelating agent. The coating composition may further optionally contain a controlled amount of a corrosion inhibiting agent and heavy metal cations for activating the coating bath. The coating composition is applied to a clean metal surface such as by flooding, immersion, spraying, or the like, at temperatures from ambient up to about 200.degree. F. for a period of time sufficient to effect a desired coating magnitude whereafter the parts are dried, preferably at elevated temperatures before forming.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 24, 1980
    Date of Patent: September 15, 1981
    Assignee: Hooker Chemicals & Plastics Corp.
    Inventors: Peter F. King, George J. Beyer
  • Patent number: H2142
    Abstract: A bodymaker coolant in an aluminum drawing-and-ironing operation often is a slurry in water of a predominantly organic “neat lube” that includes a boron-amine complex as one of its constituents. The neat lube is consumed during use and therefore needs to be replenished in the bodymaker coolant, but chemical analysis of the neat lube in bodymaker coolant has proved to be difficult in practice.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 28, 1999
    Date of Patent: January 3, 2006
    Inventors: Edward Elizondo, George J. Beyer, Andrew M. Hatch