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September 22, 2016 Robert MacWright, Ph.D., Esq. Director, Technology Transfer Office UMass Amherst Great Engineer Inventors And Why There Are So Many
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Great Engineer Inventors - umass.edu

Dec 25, 2021

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Page 1: Great Engineer Inventors - umass.edu

September 22, 2016

Robert MacWright, Ph.D., Esq.Director, Technology Transfer Office

UMass Amherst

Great Engineer InventorsAnd Why There Are So Many

Page 2: Great Engineer Inventors - umass.edu

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Famous Inventor Engineers Nikola Tesla James Watt Guglielmo Marconi Jan Ernst Matzeliger Karl Benz Martin Cooper Maria Beasley Samuel Colt

Thomas Edison Alexander

Graham Bell Rudolf Diesel The Wright

Brothers Samuel Morse Igor Sikorsky

Page 3: Great Engineer Inventors - umass.edu

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Some Simple Reasons Why

The Physical Realm is apparent Early machines as inspiration Commercial value perceptible Vast frontiers Key discoveries opened doors Equipment availability Patents to capture value

Page 4: Great Engineer Inventors - umass.edu

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Personal Qualities

Born problem solvers Pioneering spirit Vision – “seeing around corners”Willing to set impossible goals Dogged determination Belief solutions can be found Disdain for mediocrityWilling to fail again and again!

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Nicola Tesla• Studied at Austrian Polytechnic• Came to work for Edison in 1882• Edison refused to pay reward• Started Tesla Electric in 1886

• Patented first AC motor in 1888• Licensed to George Westinghouse• Battle between DC and AC• Powered 1893 World’s fair• Hydroelectric at Niagra Falls powers Buffalo• Radio control boat,1898• Worked 12-21 hours a day

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James Watt

• Self-taught as instrument maker• Given a workshop at U. Glasgow• Was asked to repair a Newcomen

engine, a 50-year old design• Realized 3/4ths of energy was lost

cooling the cylinder• 2 innovations in 1765: a separate

condenser and a steam jacket• First machine installed in 1776• Mechanized the Industrial Revolution

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Samuel F.B. Morse

• Charlestown, MA, Yale grad• Famous painter; Washington, Adams• England after wife, parents die• Charles Jackson’s electromagnets• 1-wire telegraph and code on voyage• Repeater with Leonard Gale at NYU• Code expanded to letters by Alfred Vale• Demo to Congress brings in $30K funding• Connected DC and Baltimore • O’Rielly v. Morse, US Supreme Court, declared

Morse the true inventor

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Guglielmo Marconi• Wireless telegraphy was a dream• Radio waves were a curiosity• At age 20, experiments in attic• Studied the growing literature • ½ mile at 21; 3.2 mi at 22• Acclaimed for lectures in 1898• Sent messages 1550 mi at 28!• Began regular transatlantic in 1907• Instrumental in Titanic rescues, 1912• Began broadcasts in 1922, to become BBC

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Jan Ernst Matzeliger

• Worked in machine shop at 10 • A sailor, came to MA at 22• Worked at Harvey Bros. Shoe Co.• “Lasting” of shoes by hand; 50/day• Lasters went on strike

• Worked long hours for 5 yrs • 6 patents from 1893-1891• Could last 150-700 pairs/day!• Cut cost of shoes in half!

Page 10: Great Engineer Inventors - umass.edu

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Karl Benz

• Invented spark ignition, spark plug, carburetor, clutch, gear shift, radiator

• 1883, formed Benz & Co with bike shop• Patented first self-propelled vehicle 1886• Bertha Benz’s famous road trip• 1909, Blitzen Benz reaches 141mph!

• ME from University of Karlsruhe• Fiancé buys out partner in

Factory for Machines• Patents to make money• 2-cycle engine in 1879

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Martin Cooper

• Illinois Institute of Technology• Led Motorola communications • Car phones already available• Cooper’s idea of a personal phone• 1973 Motorola approved the project,

team made “the Brick” in 90 days!• 1973 patent application on the cellular concept:

overlapping stations and handsets that can switch• First call to his competitor at AT&T!• 10 yrs to launch; $100M, 20 yrs before profits!

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Maria Beasley• Patented the life raft in 1880• Several patents on barrel

making machines, 1884-1888• Beasley Standard Barrel Making

Co. made 100s/day • Licensed the machine patents to

oil and sugar cos - $20,000/yr!• Occupation listed as “inventor”• Displayed her inventions at the

1884 Cotton Centennial Exhibit

Page 13: Great Engineer Inventors - umass.edu

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Samuel Colt

• At 15, dreams of the “impossible gun”• At 18 made a pistol that blew up!• 1st revolver patent at 23, in 1836• Cylinder locking bolt, percussion cap• 1st factory closed in 1843

• Texas Rangers and the Mexican-American War• 1855 Colt Armory was first assembly line factory• Fired Rollin White, inventor of the metal cartridge!• Sold revolvers to the North and the South• After his death, developed “The Peacemaker”

Page 14: Great Engineer Inventors - umass.edu

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Yvonne Brill No engineering degree because a woman 1940, only woman rocket scientist in U.S. Worked on NASA and IMSO Projects 1967, invented the hyrdozine resistojet Satellites need 2 engines: 1-5 lbs + milipounds Solved weight & complexity; one engine, one fuel Industry standard for geostationary satellites

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Why Engineers Don’t Patent “Only breakthroughs are patentable”

• IPhone patents include rounded corners, finger scrolling

“My developments are obvious”• Assume others think like them, apply hindsight

“Nobody would want it”• Millions of small-market products make money daily!

“Patents are un-academic”• Patents bring new products and services to the public

“All software should be free as the air”• Far more Windows users than Linux users

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Don’t Talk Yourself Out of It! If you are solving practical problems,

you are inventing! Sending a disclosure is easy The TTO is there to serve you! Some of the best inventions are

elegantly simple, some complex Wouldn’t it be exciting to see your

invention make it?

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If in doubt, CALL US!

We are patentability experts

We will search patents, markets

We will make it easy for you

More often than not there is something exciting!

You will learn about patents, and become an even better inventor

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Bob MacWrightDirector, Technology Transfer Office

UMass [email protected]/TTO

THANKS!