Fleming, Jr.
Malcolm N. Fleming, Jr., Syracuse, NY US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
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20140137598 | Scrubber System With Moving Adsorbent Bed - A regenerative carbon dioxide removal system ( | 05-22-2014 |
20140216261 | Regenerative Scrubber System With Single Flow Diversion Actuator - A regenerative scrubber system is provided for removing a selected gas from an atmosphere within a closed environment. The scrubber system includes a scrubber module having a first scrubber and a second scrubber, each housing a porous mass of regenerative adsorbent material for adsorbing the selected gas, a first flow diversion device disposed upstream of the scrubber module with respect to the gaseous flow from the closed environment, a second flow diversion device disposed downstream of the scrubber with respect to the gaseous flow from the closed environment, and a single actuator operatively associated with each of the first flow diversion device and the second flow diversion device. | 08-07-2014 |
Otis Fleming, Jr., New Orleans, LA US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
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20140184426 | Traffic Camera Detector - This invention is an electronic device powered by your vehicle's adaptor or other outside power source, to detect the presence of traffic cameras or radars associated with traffic cameras. | 07-03-2014 |
Robert H. Fleming, Jr., Dunlap, TN US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
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20140260437 | Skin-Contacting Tubular Fabric Underlay For Use Beneath A Therapeutic or Prosthetic Device - A skin-contacting fabric underlay for use beneath a therapeutic or prosthetic device on a human or animal body part is formed as a tube of knitted fabric. The yarns forming the fabric have a core of elastic material surrounded by moisture-transporting filaments of substantially non-elastic material, the yarn having elasticity, the fabric having a warp-knitted structure characterized by an artificial terry surface on an inner skin-contacting surface of the tube. The artificial terry surface is formed by underlaps of the yarn, in which the elasticity of the yarn causes the underlaps to draw up and form artificial terry loops that contact the skin of the body part about which the tube is sleeved. The artificial terry loops serve to space overlaps of the yarn from the skin and to move moisture away from the skin. | 09-18-2014 |