Detailed information about the 100 most recent patent applications.
| Application Number | Title | Filing Date | Disposal Date | Disposition | Time (months) | Office Actions | Restrictions | Interview | Appeal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 17136673 | PHYSICS-CONSTRAINED SENSOR ASSIGNMENT OPTIMIZATION METHOD FOR THERMAL HYDRAULIC SYSTEMS | December 2020 | July 2024 | Allow | 43 | 3 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 17255889 | METHOD FOR PREDICTING THE PRESENCE OF PRODUCT DEFECTS DURING AN INTERMEDIATE PROCESSING STEP OF A THIN PRODUCT WOUND IN A ROLL | December 2020 | April 2024 | Allow | 39 | 1 | 1 | Yes | No |
| 17126135 | TEST RIG AND METHOD FOR BLADE PITCH MEASUREMENT SYSTEM | December 2020 | July 2024 | Abandon | 43 | 4 | 0 | No | No |
| 15734824 | EQUIPMENT MONITORING APPARATUS, EQUIPMENT MONITORING METHOD, AND MONITORING SYSTEM | December 2020 | December 2022 | Abandon | 25 | 2 | 0 | No | No |
| 17104825 | MEASURING CHANNEL AND PROCESS FOR SPATIALLY ARRANGING A SENSOR COMPONENT OR SENSOR ARRAY IN A MEASURING CHANNEL | November 2020 | May 2024 | Allow | 42 | 2 | 0 | No | No |
| 17057934 | METHOD OF COMPENSATING TEMPERATURE INFLUENCE IN CAPACITIVE MEASUREMENTS | November 2020 | March 2024 | Allow | 40 | 3 | 0 | Yes | Yes |
| 17056411 | MONITORING METHOD FOR CRACKING STATE OF BLADE, MONITORING SYSTEM, AND BLADE | November 2020 | March 2023 | Abandon | 28 | 2 | 0 | No | No |
| 17073774 | SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR PROPELLER BALANCING | October 2020 | December 2023 | Abandon | 38 | 3 | 0 | No | No |
| 17073214 | METHODS AND SYSTEMS FOR PERFORMING NON-DESTRUCTIVE TESTING | October 2020 | September 2024 | Allow | 47 | 4 | 0 | No | No |
| 17063044 | MULTI-MODE MICROWAVE WAVEGUIDE BLADE SENSING SYSTEM | October 2020 | December 2022 | Allow | 26 | 2 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 17036459 | SUBSURFACE CHARACTERISTIC MODELING | September 2020 | May 2023 | Allow | 31 | 1 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 17019905 | MULTI-LOCATION TIME-DIVISION WATER QUALITY MONITORING SYSTEM | September 2020 | April 2024 | Abandon | 43 | 1 | 0 | No | No |
| 16999707 | SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR MEASURING THE RATE OF ANGULAR DISPLACEMENT USING MAGNETIC FIELD SENSING | August 2020 | April 2023 | Allow | 32 | 2 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 16996193 | METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR MANAGING COMPONENT FAILURES AMONG AUTOMATION SYSTEMS | August 2020 | December 2024 | Allow | 52 | 5 | 0 | No | No |
| 16947764 | Estimating Pore and Fluid Characteristic Properties in Rock Samples Using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Analyses | August 2020 | February 2024 | Allow | 42 | 1 | 0 | No | No |
| 16770352 | APPARATUS FOR DETERMINING AGRICULTURAL RELEVANT INFORMATION | June 2020 | December 2024 | Allow | 54 | 6 | 0 | No | No |
| 16893308 | METHOD FOR CHARACTERIZING THE PREVALENCE OF A BIOCHEMICAL CONDITION WITHIN A POPULATION | June 2020 | December 2024 | Abandon | 54 | 3 | 1 | No | No |
| 16879947 | METHODS AND SYSTEMS FOR FLAGGING EVENTS IN A TIME SERIES AND EVALUATING A DOWNHOLE OPERATION | May 2020 | April 2024 | Allow | 47 | 4 | 0 | Yes | Yes |
| 16759911 | Method for Determining Damage Which Occurs to a Vehicle in the Event of an Accident Between a Vehicle and a Collision Partner | April 2020 | March 2023 | Allow | 34 | 2 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 16851863 | SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR DETECTING AND ACCOMMODATING LOSS OF TORQUE ON GAS TURBINE ENGINES | April 2020 | July 2024 | Allow | 51 | 4 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 16849647 | TRACKING DRUM ROTATIONS | April 2020 | August 2023 | Allow | 40 | 3 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 16755734 | SENSOR FAILURE DIAGNOSIS IN A PUMP MONITORING SYSTEM | April 2020 | December 2022 | Allow | 32 | 2 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 16817701 | PROBE GUIDING | March 2020 | December 2024 | Allow | 57 | 6 | 0 | Yes | Yes |
| 16790689 | METHOD FOR DETERMINING TEMPERATURE-INDUCED SAG VARIATION OF MAIN CABLE AND TOWER-TOP HORIZONTAL DISPLACEMENT OF SUSPENSION BRIDGES | February 2020 | October 2023 | Abandon | 44 | 2 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 16723335 | MOBILE CRANE | December 2019 | July 2024 | Allow | 55 | 2 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 16603917 | CONDITION MONITORING DEVICE FOR MONITORING THE CONDITION OF A MECHANICAL MACHINE COMPONENT | October 2019 | November 2024 | Allow | 60 | 6 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 16481797 | CONDITION MONITORING SYSTEM AND WIND TURBINE | July 2019 | November 2022 | Abandon | 40 | 2 | 0 | No | No |
| 16503190 | APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR TESTING ADDITIVELY MANUFACTURED ENGINE COMPONENTS | July 2019 | April 2023 | Allow | 46 | 2 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 16462778 | METHOD FOR CHECKING AND/OR MONITORING THE USE OF A TIRE | May 2019 | May 2023 | Allow | 48 | 2 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 16349828 | MONITORING ARRANGEMENT FOR DOMESTIC OR COMMERCIAL ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES | May 2019 | July 2023 | Abandon | 50 | 4 | 0 | Yes | No |
| 16344002 | PRESSURE SENSOR | April 2019 | March 2023 | Abandon | 46 | 2 | 1 | No | No |
| 16306270 | LIVE DETECTION METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR A HIGH-VOLTAGE SWITCH CABINET | November 2018 | July 2022 | Allow | 43 | 2 | 0 | No | No |
| 16158345 | ANGULAR SPEED DERIVATION DEVICE AND ANGULAR SPEED DERIVATION METHOD FOR DERIVING ANGULAR SPEED BASED ON OUTPUT VALUE OF TRIAXIAL GYRO SENSOR | October 2018 | March 2023 | Allow | 53 | 3 | 1 | No | No |
| 16076065 | VEHICLE CONTROL APPARATUS | August 2018 | July 2023 | Allow | 59 | 2 | 1 | No | No |
This analysis examines appeal outcomes and the strategic value of filing appeals for examiner BRAUNLICH, MARTIN WALTER.
Filing a Notice of Appeal can sometimes lead to allowance even before the appeal is fully briefed or decided by the PTAB. This occurs when the examiner or their supervisor reconsiders the rejection during the mandatory appeal conference (MPEP § 1207.01) after the appeal is filed.
In this dataset, 25.0% of applications that filed an appeal were subsequently allowed. This appeal filing benefit rate is below the USPTO average, suggesting that filing an appeal has limited effectiveness in prompting favorable reconsideration.
⚠ Filing a Notice of Appeal shows limited benefit. Consider other strategies like interviews or amendments before appealing.
Examiner BRAUNLICH, MARTIN WALTER works in Art Unit 2858 and has examined 34 patent applications in our dataset. With an allowance rate of 70.6%, this examiner has a below-average tendency to allow applications. Applications typically reach final disposition in approximately 43 months.
Examiner BRAUNLICH, MARTIN WALTER's allowance rate of 70.6% places them in the 34% percentile among all USPTO examiners. This examiner has a below-average tendency to allow applications.
On average, applications examined by BRAUNLICH, MARTIN WALTER receive 2.79 office actions before reaching final disposition. This places the examiner in the 78% percentile for office actions issued. This examiner issues more office actions than most examiners, which may indicate thorough examination or difficulty in reaching agreement with applicants.
The median time to disposition (half-life) for applications examined by BRAUNLICH, MARTIN WALTER is 43 months. This places the examiner in the 17% percentile for prosecution speed. Applications take longer to reach final disposition with this examiner compared to most others.
Conducting an examiner interview provides a +38.9% benefit to allowance rate for applications examined by BRAUNLICH, MARTIN WALTER. This interview benefit is in the 85% percentile among all examiners. Recommendation: Interviews are highly effective with this examiner and should be strongly considered as a prosecution strategy. Per MPEP § 713.10, interviews are available at any time before the Notice of Allowance is mailed or jurisdiction transfers to the PTAB.
When applicants file an RCE with this examiner, 31.5% of applications are subsequently allowed. This success rate is in the 67% percentile among all examiners. Strategic Insight: RCEs show above-average effectiveness with this examiner. Consider whether your amendments or new arguments are strong enough to warrant an RCE versus filing a continuation.
This examiner enters after-final amendments leading to allowance in 11.1% of cases where such amendments are filed. This entry rate is in the 12% percentile among all examiners. Strategic Recommendation: This examiner rarely enters after-final amendments compared to other examiners. You should generally plan to file an RCE or appeal rather than relying on after-final amendment entry. Per MPEP § 714.12, primary examiners have discretion in entering after-final amendments, and this examiner exercises that discretion conservatively.
When applicants request a pre-appeal conference (PAC) with this examiner, 100.0% result in withdrawal of the rejection or reopening of prosecution. This success rate is in the 75% percentile among all examiners. Strategic Recommendation: Pre-appeal conferences show above-average effectiveness with this examiner. If you have strong arguments, a PAC request may result in favorable reconsideration.
This examiner withdraws rejections or reopens prosecution in 100.0% of appeals filed. This is in the 94% percentile among all examiners. Of these withdrawals, 25.0% occur early in the appeal process (after Notice of Appeal but before Appeal Brief). Strategic Insight: This examiner frequently reconsiders rejections during the appeal process compared to other examiners. Per MPEP § 1207.01, all appeals must go through a mandatory appeal conference. Filing a Notice of Appeal may prompt favorable reconsideration even before you file an Appeal Brief.
When applicants file petitions regarding this examiner's actions, 0.0% are granted (fully or in part). This grant rate is in the 5% percentile among all examiners. Strategic Note: Petitions are rarely granted regarding this examiner's actions compared to other examiners. Ensure you have a strong procedural basis before filing a petition, as the Technology Center Director typically upholds this examiner's decisions.
Examiner's Amendments: This examiner makes examiner's amendments in 0.0% of allowed cases (in the 27% percentile). This examiner makes examiner's amendments less often than average. You may need to make most claim amendments yourself.
Quayle Actions: This examiner issues Ex Parte Quayle actions in 0.0% of allowed cases (in the 34% percentile). This examiner issues Quayle actions less often than average. Allowances may come directly without a separate action for formal matters.
Based on the statistical analysis of this examiner's prosecution patterns, here are tailored strategic recommendations:
Not Legal Advice: The information provided in this report is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. You should consult with a qualified patent attorney or agent for advice specific to your situation.
No Guarantees: We do not provide any guarantees as to the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the statistics presented above. Patent prosecution statistics are derived from publicly available USPTO data and are subject to data quality limitations, processing errors, and changes in USPTO practices over time.
Limitation of Liability: Under no circumstances will IronCrow AI be liable for any outcome, decision, or action resulting from your reliance on the statistics, analysis, or recommendations presented in this report. Past prosecution patterns do not guarantee future results.
Use at Your Own Risk: While we strive to provide accurate and useful prosecution statistics, you should independently verify any information that is material to your prosecution strategy and use your professional judgment in all patent prosecution matters.