Patents by Inventor Paul W. L. Graham

Paul W. L. Graham 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: 6133999
    Abstract: Apparatus for measuring glass layer thickness in the sidewall of a glass container in which a container is placed in a bath of oil having an index of refraction matching that of the container outer sidewall surface. The body of the container is engaged within the bath to permit rotation while restraining lateral motion as the finish of the container is rotated. Light energy is directed through the bath and tangentially through the sidewall of the container so as to establish a pattern of light energy as a function of sidewall layer thickness, and layer thickness is determined as a function of such light pattern. As applied specifically to measuring thickness of the casing glass layer in a cased glass container in accordance with the preferred method of the invention, such casing glass thickness is determined as a function of the pattern in the light energy that emerges from the oil bath.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 10, 1998
    Date of Patent: October 17, 2000
    Assignee: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc.
    Inventors: Ronald T. Myers, Paul W. L. Graham
  • Patent number: 4822646
    Abstract: A solid film lubricant composition for hot glass contacting surfaces of glass handling equipment and metal molds used in manufacturing glass articles. The solid film lubricant composition is a solution of a solvent, graphite, a solvent-soluble, further curable organopolysiloxane, and NaOH to make the solution alkaline. The solution is easily sprayed on hot glass contacting surfaces such as the interior of the molds to form a coating that is curable at room temperature.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 23, 1987
    Date of Patent: April 18, 1989
    Assignee: Owens-Illinois Glass Container Inc.
    Inventors: Robert N. Clark, Paul W. L. Graham
  • Patent number: 4806257
    Abstract: A solid film lubricant composition for hot glass contacting surfaces of glass handling equipment and metal molds used in manufacturing glass articles. The solid film lubricant composition is a solution of a solvent, graphite, a solvent-soluble, further curable organopolysiloxane, and NaOH to make the solution alkaline. The solution is easily sprayed on hot glass contacting surfaces such as the interior of the molds to form a coating that is curable at room temperature.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 12, 1985
    Date of Patent: February 21, 1989
    Assignee: Owens-Illinois Glass Container Inc.
    Inventors: Robert N. Clark, Paul W. L. Graham
  • Patent number: 4740401
    Abstract: A glass bottle forming system is described in which a main glass melter is connected to a forehearth with a fairly conventional feeder provided at the delivery end of the forehearth. The feeder opening in the bottom of the forehearth is closed by a first orifice member through which a molten core glass will flow. Beneath the first orifice there is positioned a second orifice member that has an orifice that is slightly larger than the orifice in the first orifice member. A small melter contains a glass of essentially the same composition as that in the main melter, but with a coefficient of expansion slightly less than that of the core glass. This lower expansion glass is fed to the second orifice member so that it can flow out of the orifice with the core glass in surrounding relationship with respect thereto.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 2, 1987
    Date of Patent: April 26, 1988
    Assignee: Owens-Illinois Glass Container Inc.
    Inventors: Marvin L. Barkhau, Frank J. DiFrank, Paul W. L. Graham, Harry N. Mills
  • Patent number: 4691830
    Abstract: A completely automated system for inspection and sorting of molded containers, such as glass bottles, as a function of mold cavity of container origin. In a first system section, finished containers are one hundred percent inspected for defects, and a cavity identification device is controlled to reject all containers from cavities associated with defective containers. The cavity identification device is also coupled to feed sampled containers from selected cavities to an automatic sampling indexer wherein the sampled containers are fed to one or more stations for testing physical container properties, such as rupture pressure, wall thickness and internal volume. The cavity identification device and the automatic sampling indexer are controlled by a hierarchy of interconnected computers which receive cavity and test information from the various sections and stations of the system and control the sampling and sorting process based upon predetermined quality standards.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 26, 1985
    Date of Patent: September 8, 1987
    Assignee: Owens-Illinois, Inc.
    Inventors: Alan D. Ahl, Joseph F. Billmaier, Paul W. L. Graham, Mark B. Schenk, Stephen H. Zylka
  • Patent number: 4396655
    Abstract: This invention relates to a method of sealing a container mouth, and especially the mouth of a glass container, and the glass container so sealed. The method involves oxidizing the container rim portion, applying a first annular thin coating of an organo-functional silane compound and then a second annular thin coating of an ethylene acrylic acid copolymer over the first coating on the rim portion. A thin imperforate membrane such as aluminum foil having a thermoplastic sealing material such as Surlyn copolymer over its sealing surface is sealed to the container rim portion with heat and pressure.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 8, 1982
    Date of Patent: August 2, 1983
    Assignee: Owens-Illinois, Inc.
    Inventors: Paul W. L. Graham, Ronald W. Bradley, Norman M. Bouder, Jr.
  • Patent number: 4231778
    Abstract: This invention relates to a process for strengthening glass articles immediately after their formation and prior to annealing to remove stresses, and more specifically to increasing the strength of glass containers in terms of internal pressure retention as well as in thermal shock and impact resistance. The process involves allowing the newly-formed glass containers to cool down to a limited extent immediately subsequent to their formation, subjecting the defect-bearing exterior surfaces of the glass containers, which contain surface checks or cracks, to an elevated temperature for a brief period of time to physically alter the crack geometry of the defects and partially heal the same, and then annealing the glass containers to remove stresses therefrom.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 18, 1979
    Date of Patent: November 4, 1980
    Assignee: Owens-Illinois, Inc.
    Inventors: Paul W. L. Graham, Thomas W. Moore, Jr.