Pneumatic tool with muffler bypass mechanism

Details for Australian Patent Application No. 2001283284 (hide)

Owner Snap-On Technologies, Inc.

Inventors Bachman, Jose, R.; Nowak, Dennis, A.

Agent Davies Collison Cave

Pub. Number AU-B-2001283284

PCT Pub. Number WO2002/078911

Priority 09/821,253 29.03.01 US

Filing date 10 August 2001

Wipo publication date 15 October 2002

Acceptance publication date 6 October 2005

International Classifications

B25F 005/00 Details or components of portable power-driven tools not particularly related to the operations performed and not otherwise provided for

F01N 007/08 -

Event Publications

3 April 2003 Application Open to Public Inspection

  Published as AU-B-2001283284

6 October 2005 Application Accepted

  Published as AU-B-2001283284

24 November 2005 Application for Amendment

  The nature of the amendment is as shown in the statement(s) filed 28 Oct 2005. Address for service in Australia - Davies Collison Cave Level 15 1 Nicholson MELStreet BOURNE VIC 3000

2 February 2006 Standard Patent Sealed

27 April 2006 Amendment Made

  The nature of the amendment is as shown in the statement(s) filed 28 Oct 2005

22 June 2006 Assignment Registered

  Snap-On Technologies, Inc. The patent has been assigned to Snap-On Incorporated

8 March 2012 Application Lapsed, Refused Or Withdrawn, Patent Ceased or Expired

  This patent ceased under section 143(a), or Expired. Note that applications or patents shown as lapsed or ceased may be restored at a later date.

Legal

The information provided by the Site not in the nature of legal or other professional advice. The information provided by the Site is derived from third parties and may contain errors. You must make your own enquiries and seek independent advice from the relevant industry professionals before acting or relying on any information contained herein. Check the above data against the Australian Patent Office AUSPAT database.

Next and Previous Patents/Applications

2001283285

2001283283-Biological control of crown gall disease