Bruce G. Marks
16Patents
6h-index
16Co-inventors
63Inventor score
Filing activity: May 18, 1977 → Mar 28, 1997
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US4370592A | Color picture tube having an improved inline electron gun with an expanded focus lens | Electricity | 38 | Expired |
| US5534746A | Color picture tube having shadow mask with improved aperture spacing | Electricity | 18 | Expired |
| US5730887A | Display apparatus having enhanced resolution shadow mask and method of making same | Electricity | 15 | Expired |
| US4535270A | Resonant degaussing without residual magnetism | Electricity | 11 | Expired |
| US4127313A | High voltage electron tube base with drip relief means | Electricity | 10 | Expired |
| US5583391A | Color picture tube shadow mask having improved mask aperture pattern | Electricity | 8 | Expired |
| US5030881A | Color picture tube with shadow mask having improved aperture border | Electricity | 6 | Expired |
| US4148541A | Interlocking electron tube base and adapter | Electricity | 6 | Expired |
| US4076366A | High voltage electron tube base with separate dielectric fill-hole | Electricity | 5 | Expired |
| US5243253A | Color picture tube having shadow mask with improved tie bar grading | Electricity | 5 | Expired |
| US4952186A | Method of making a color picture tube electron gun with reduced convergence drift | Electricity | 4 | Expired |
| US6124901A | Cathode-ray tube mounting within a cabinet | Electricity | 4 | Expired |
| US5010271A | Color picture tube having an electron gun with reduced convergence drift | Electricity | 3 | Expired |
| US5000711A | Method of making color picture tube shadow mask having improved tie bar locations | Electricity | 3 | Expired |
| US5309189A | Method for screening line screen slit mask color picture tubes | Electricity | 0 | Expired |
| US4870320A | Color picture tube having an electron gun with reduced convergence drift | Electricity | 0 | Expired |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.