Octane measuring

Number of patents in Portfolio can not be more than 2000

United States of America Patent

PATENT NO 4366701
SERIAL NO

06159512

Stats

ATTORNEY / AGENT: (SPONSORED)

Importance

Loading Importance Indicators... loading....

Abstract

See full text

Automatic octane measurements are made very rapidly with standard test engine using an all-electronic control that automatically lowers the fuel-air ratio to bring the knock intensity below standard, then automatically adjusts the compression to bring the knock intensity to standard, then intermittently increases the fuel-air ratio, after the first or second intermittent increase permits automatic compensatory compression changes only in the decreasing direction to compensate for departures from standard knock intensity and conducts these compensatory compression changes at a rate too slow for adequate compensation if the fuel-air ratio increase causes a substantial increase in knock intensity, and then indicating the compression ratio reading after the knock intensity remains standard during two to four successive fuel-air ratio increases. Maximum knock fuel-air ratio is indicated by subsequently automatically lowering the fuel-air ratio an amount corresponding to the fuel-air ratio increases during which knock intensity remained at standard. Finally for some purposes the test engine can be permitted to stabilize at the maximum knock fuel-air ratio. Electronic memory can be used to translate compression ratio to octane number, and barometric correction can be made electronically.

Loading the Abstract Image... loading....

First Claim

See full text

Family

Loading Family data... loading....

Patent Owner(s)

Patent OwnerAddress
MEESPIERSON N V445 PARK AVENUE NEW YORK NY 10022

International Classification(s)

  • [Classification Symbol]
  • [Patents Count]

Inventor(s)

Inventor Name Address # of filed Patents Total Citations
Bittner, John M Trenton, NJ 2 5

Cited Art Landscape

Load Citation

Patent Citation Ranking

Forward Cite Landscape

Load Citation