Inventor · West Henrietta, NY, US

Curtis D. Lamb

14Patents
6h-index
19Co-inventors
63Inventor score

Filing activity: Feb 11, 1999 → Nov 8, 2019

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6405711B1 Fuel delivery module for fuel injected internal combustion engines Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 22 Expired
US6148798A Coaxial flow through fuel rail with a damper for a recirculating fuel system Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 21 Expired
US6679228B1 Low evaporative emissions integrated air fuel module Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 21 Expired
US6260537A Side feed fuel injector and integrated fuel rail/intake manifold Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 18 Expired
US6338333B1 Integrated fuel delivery module for direct injection Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 15 Expired
US6520154B2 Side feed fuel injector and integrated fuel rail/intake manifold Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 7 Expired
US6871699B1 Engine coolant conduit with integral alternator and exhaust gas recirculation valve Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 5 Expired
US6732717B2 Fuel rail permeant collection system Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 4 Expired
US10801457B1 Fuel rail assembly providing connection to a fuel injector Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 3 Active
US7896952B2 Cartridge adsorber system for removing hydrogen sulfide from reformate Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Active
US7758989B2 Modular fuel cell cassette spacers for forming a solid-oxide fuel cell stack Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US11454200B2 Fuel system with an arrangement which seals between a fuel injector and a fuel rail socket Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 0 Active
US7118092B2 Method and apparatus for assembling a vane-type valve Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Expired
US10794350B1 Fuel line assembly having a fuel line and a fuel injector socket Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 0 Active

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.