Patents by Inventor Neil H. Jagoda

Neil H. Jagoda 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: 4185205
    Abstract: A remote load controlling apparatus receives a disconnect signal on a line that is filtered and voltage limited. This disconnect signal sets a flip-flop which enables an oscillator and a solid-state switch. The enabled switch energizes a relay to disconnect the load from electric service. A counter counts the output of the enabled oscillator and provides a flip-flop reset signal after a local time delay that is determined by a particular incremented count state of the counter. The reset flip-flop disables the oscillator and solid-state switch to de-energize the relay and reconnect the load to electric service. The flip-flop may also be reset by a remote signal to disable the oscillator and solid-state switch and reconnect the load before the counter is incremented to its particular incremented count state. A second counter and a second solid-state switch may be added to ensure that the load is connected to electric service if a component of the apparatus should fail.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 9, 1978
    Date of Patent: January 22, 1980
    Assignee: American Science & Engineering, Inc.
    Inventors: Neil H. Jagoda, John S. Ballas, Klaus Kubierschky
  • Patent number: 4012734
    Abstract: A remote meter-reading system interrogates meter stations over power lines and receives encoded meter readings over the power lines in synchronism with the power line frequency by superimposing a digitally modulated signal over the 60-Hz power frequency. The central control station transmits at a data rate of 60-baud and receives at a data rate that is 60-baud or a submultiple thereof, to reduce the demands on the remote meter station transceiver as compared to those on the central control unit transceiver. The bit clock at the central control unit and the meter stations is derived from the 60-Hz power line phase available at each station. Each meter station achieves message synchronization by continuously monitoring the data bit stream for a preset synchronization code and thereafter treats the following 21 data bits as address and function codes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 9, 1976
    Date of Patent: March 15, 1977
    Assignee: American Science & Engineering, Inc.
    Inventors: Neil H. Jagoda, Klaus Kubierschky, Adrian G. Roy, Jr.