Published:
Surfware, Inc. Announces U.S. Patent Office Notice of Allowance for Engagement Milling (TrueMill)
CAMARILLO, Calif., Aug. 19 /PRNewswire/ -- Surfware, Inc., developer of
innovative CAD/CAM software for machining, announced today that it has
received a Notice of Allowance from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
(USPTO) for its Engagement Milling technology. A Notice of Allowance
signifies that the application has been examined and is allowed for issuance
as a patent.
The U.S. Patent Office accepted all key aspects of the company's patent
application.
"We are pleased to receive this Notice of Allowance because it serves to
protect the intellectual property and proprietary technology that we have
developed," says Stephen Diehl, President and CEO of Surfware. "The
mathematics and science behind Engagement Milling are revolutionary, and we
have incorporated that technology into our SURFCAM product line as
TrueMill(R). SURFCAM Velocity 4 Powered by TrueMill(R) creates toolpaths that
dramatically increase material removal rates (MRR), reduce cycle time, and
extend tool life.
"Milling pockets in Titanium or other exotic materials is easy with
TrueMill," Diehl states. "Actual machining tests demonstrate that the harder
the material, the more dramatic the results. We're delighted and proud that
the U.S. Patent Office agreed that we have a unique invention, and has allowed
all critical aspects of the application. These claims will provide strong
patent protection for current and future versions of TrueMill."
Three of the main components of the patent application are:
1. The isoloop method creates families of concentric circles that define
the path the tool will travel as it maintains constant engagement with
the material.
2. The tangent arc method creates efficient tool paths to machine corners
and slots while not exceeding pre-defined engagement.
3. The concentric circle method allows for different spacing schemes
between the circles (the stepover) to manage the tool engagement
angle.
While other machining methods generate tool paths based on a given
stepover value and the geometry being machined, this technology increases the
material removal rate (MRR) by creating engagement-controlled tool paths that
eliminate all sharp directional changes. Not having to slow the machine down
for corners allows far more aggressive cutting parameters, resulting in
dramatically reduced cycle times. The tool never plows into corners, and it
works on all part shapes.
The origin of the patent application goes back to early 2002 -- Surfware's
R&D Department. Robert (Pat) Patterson came up with the core idea for
engagement milling, and he and Surfware co-founder Alan Diehl, set out to
develop it into a workable product. Within one year they had developed two
different versions of TrueMill, both covered in patent applications.
Over the next several years, the pair went on to supervise the project
based on their core ideas, with some assistance from the SURFCAM product
manager. In 2005, the initial patent application for engagement milling was
filed with the co-inventors listed in alphabetical order, without regard to
their actual contribution.
"We are just beginning to demonstrate what this powerful technology can
do," Diehl states. "Because TrueMill is useful to a wide spectrum of
industries, Surfware will be providing custom and turnkey solutions, as well
as partnering with vendors of complementary technologies."
About Surfware, Inc.
Surfware develops SURFCAM Velocity CAD/CAM systems for two- through
five-axis NC programming and machining. The company grew out of three
generations of Diehl family machining experience. Surfware's current
president, Stephen Diehl, has thirty years experience in machining, physics
and programming and is personally involved in development of the TrueMill
technology. For additional information, visit http://www.surfware.com.
SOURCE Surfware, Inc.
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