Inventor · Yotsukaido, JP

Hideo Kuguminato

15Patents
7h-index
46Co-inventors
66Inventor score

Filing activity: Oct 21, 1974 → Dec 7, 1999

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US4978583A Patterned metal plate and production thereof Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 33 Expired
US6266983A Method and apparatus for detecting flaws in strip, method of manufacturing cold-rolled steel sheet and pickling equipment for hot-rolled steel strip Physics 13 Expired
US5587027A Method of manufacturing canning steel sheet with non-aging property and superior workability Chemistry; Metallurgy 11 Expired
US5360676A Tin mill black plate for canmaking, and method of manufacturing Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 11 Expired
US3950191A Cold rolled steel sheets having an excellent enamelability and a method for producing said cold rolled steel sheets Chemistry; Metallurgy 11 Expired
US6063214A Method of producing high-strength steel sheet used for can Chemistry; Metallurgy 10 Expired
US6221180A Steel sheet for can and manufacturing method thereof Chemistry; Metallurgy 8 Expired
US6042952A Extremely-thin steel sheets and method of producing the same Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 7 Expired
US4586965A Production of a base steel sheet to be surface-treated which is to produce no stretcher strain Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Expired
US4561909A Method of manufacturing T-3 grade low temper black plates Chemistry; Metallurgy 3 Expired
US6171416A Method of producing can steel strip Chemistry; Metallurgy 3 Expired
US5725697A Method of manufacturing cold-rolled can steel sheet having less planar anisotropy and good workability Chemistry; Metallurgy 3 Expired
US5496420A Can-making steel sheet Chemistry; Metallurgy 2 Expired
US5759306A Method for making a steel sheet suitable as a material for can making Chemistry; Metallurgy 1 Expired
US4955126A Process for fusing steel slabs in longitudinal direction thereof Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Expired

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