Patents by Inventor John H. MacNeill

John H. MacNeill 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: 5315648
    Abstract: A retainer member uses a simply curved surface to engage the yoke-receiver handset juncture. The retainer member includes a top portion which matches the handset receiver circuitry and includes end portions that engage the substantially circular receiver portion of the handset to provide a further distribution of applied forces. The top portion of the retainer member is provided with an end plug bore or opening having a top surface to prevent the end plug from becoming dislocated within the receiver portion. Also, a separate telephone wire channel is provided to keep separate the telephone wires from the flexible stranded cable thus insuring that no damage will occur to the telephone signal wires when the handset is subsequently stressed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 9, 1992
    Date of Patent: May 24, 1994
    Inventors: Allen W. Vogl, John H. MacNeill
  • Patent number: 5007079
    Abstract: A pay telephone station having a lower housing coin chute (14) which is provided with a coin fraud prevention unit (10) in the form of a thin base (15) arranged in a slot (11) of a coin channel cover plate (12). The base (15) is provided with a pawl (23) having a tooth (24) with a chamfered face ( b 25) which is biased into the path of a coin passing through a coin path (39) by a torsion spring (26). An anchor (59) for connecting a handset (56) to the upper housing coin dial unit (50) of the station includes a base with apertures (63, 64) and a V-shaped body (65) with a notch 66 defined between surfaces (69, 70). A long thumbscrew member (74) with a textured gripping surface connects the anchor (59) to a projector (51) integral with the upper housing (50). The handset cord assembly (A) is first passed through an aperture (54) in the projection (51) and then through the aperture (64) in the base (60).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 20, 1989
    Date of Patent: April 9, 1991
    Assignee: International Teleservice Corporation
    Inventors: Allen W. Vogl, Steven C. Poe, John H. MacNeill, Douglas J. Buron
  • Patent number: 4918724
    Abstract: A pay telephone station having a lower housing coin chute (14) which is provided with a coin fraud prevention unit (10) in the form of a thin base (15) arranged in a slot (11) of a coin channel cover plate (12). The base (15) is provided with a pawl (23) having a tooth (24) with a chamfered face (25) which is biased into the path of a coin passing through a coin path (39) by a torsion spring (26). An anchor (59) for connecting a handset (56) to the upper housing coin dial unit (50) of the station includes a base with apertures (63, 64) and a V-shaped body (65) with a notch 66 defined between surfaces (69, 70). A long thumbscrew member (74) with a textured gripping surface connects the anchor (59) to a projector (51) integral with the upper housing (50). The handset cord assembly (A) is first passed through an aperture ( 54) in the projection (51) and then through the aperture (64) in the base (60).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 15, 1989
    Date of Patent: April 17, 1990
    Assignee: International Teleservice Corporation
    Inventors: Allen W. Vogl, Steven C. Poe, John H. MacNeill, Douglas J. Buron
  • Patent number: 4205586
    Abstract: A locking pin for retaining a body on a drilled shaft or stud has a first straight section the end of which passes through the aperture in the stud. Opposite the aforesaid end the straight section terminates in a long sweeping 270.degree. section that straightens out into a leg of a U-shaped section having two legs lying astride the stud and lying at right angles to the straight section. The legs of the U-shaped member pass over the straight section and are angled down to contact the surface of the body to be retained on the stud whereby to provide a locking pin only two diameters of the wire high, having three lines of contact with the surface to prevent wobble and to prevent a line or rope from getting under the pin and lifting it off the stud. The pin is readily removed by placing a thumb nail under the base of the "u" or an opposed loop and lifting until the legs of the U are raised above the end of the stud.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 27, 1977
    Date of Patent: June 3, 1980
    Inventor: John H. MacNeill
  • Patent number: 4136978
    Abstract: A high speed printing head comprises a circular array of stylii drivers for printing characters in a dot matrix format. Each driver includes a permanent magnet and bucking coil electromagnet which when energized causes a stylus to impact a printing surface. The stylus is carried on the end of an arm supported by crossed horizontal and vertical supporting flexures at its other end whereby the arm pivots about a virtual axis lying near the plane of the working air gap of the electromagnet to reduce wear of the pole piece and armature and increase impact rebound of the arm. The magnetic structure and arm structure intersect only above the pole piece reducing flux leakage and size and weight of the structure. The arm and flexure structures are non-magnetic except at said region of intersection to reduce, in conjunction with the single region of intersection of said structures, cross-talk between adjacent drivers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 11, 1977
    Date of Patent: January 30, 1979
    Assignee: Optical Business Machines, Inc.
    Inventors: James E. Bellinger, Jr., John H. MacNeill
  • Patent number: 3955049
    Abstract: A printing head provides an array of stylii and stylii drivers for forming characters in accordance with a desired matrix of dots. Each driver comprises a flat piezoelectric ceramic wafer and a levered beam having a stylus secured to one end and providing at the stylus end a multiplication of the movement of the wafer of approximately 4 to 1 to 7 to 1. The wafers and supporting structure are circular and structured to nest preferably coaxially, with each levered beam lying at a small angle relative to its adjacent beams so that the printing ends of the stylii may be constrained to lie along a straight line perpendicular to the direction of movement of the head.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 4, 1974
    Date of Patent: May 4, 1976
    Assignee: Florida Data Corporation
    Inventors: John H. MacNeill, James E. Bellinger
  • Patent number: RE34200
    Abstract: A pay telephone station having a lower housing coin chute (14) which is provided with a coin fraud prevention unit (10) in the form of a thin base (15) arranged in a slot (11) of a coin channel cover plate (12). The base (15) is provided with a pawl (23) having a tooth (24) with a chamfered face (25) which is biased into the path of a coin passing through a coin path (39) by a torsion spring (26). An anchor (59) for connecting a handset (56) to the upper housing coin dial unit (50) of the station includes a base with apertures (63, 64) and a V-shaped body (65) with a notch 66 defined between surfaces (69, 70). A long thumbscrew member (74) with a textured gripping surface connects the anchor (59) to a projector (51) integral with the upper housing (50). The handset cord assembly (A) is first passed through an aperture (54) in the projection (51) and then through the aperture (64) in the base (60).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 8, 1991
    Date of Patent: March 23, 1993
    Assignee: International Teleservice, Inc.
    Inventors: Allen W. Vogl, Steven C. Poe, John H. MacNeill, Douglas J. Buron