Inventor

Kenichi Mabuchi

45Patents
16h-index
8Co-inventors
70Inventor score

Filing activity: Dec 8, 1971 → May 13, 1983

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US4565189A Beauty treatment device Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1,470 Expired
US4088128A Beauty treatment device Human Necessities 115 Expired
US4513737A Beauty treatment device Human Necessities 111 Expired
US4566442A Massager Human Necessities 66 Expired
US3935909A Electric hand tool Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 65 Expired
US3996929A Massaging machine Human Necessities 41 Expired
US4253013A Electric heating device for warming the shaving head of an electric shaver Human Necessities 35 Expired
US3959706A Charger Electricity 30 Expired
US4168468A Radio motor control system Human Necessities 27 Expired
US4197672A Model racing car Human Necessities 24 Expired
US4272041A Model helicopter device Human Necessities 24 Expired
US3941618A Battery cassette and apparatus thereof Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 19 Expired
US4057677A Adapter Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 18 Expired
US4092556A Forced cooled electric motor Electricity 18 Expired
US3947743A Electric charger Electricity 17 Expired
US4275394A Radio control driving circuit device Electricity 17 Expired
US4050487A Electric sharpener Performing Operations; Transporting 16 Expired
US3940882A Motor-driven model airplane having a pusher propeller Human Necessities 15 Expired
US4021150A Battery powered pump Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 14 Expired
US3998516A Adapter Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 14 Expired
US4020245A Cell adapter Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 14 Expired
US3985322A Electric motor mounting fixture Electricity 14 Expired
US4160253A Radio controlled, battery-operated model toy Human Necessities 14 Expired
US4335318A Engine-driven model toy Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 14 Expired
US4311952A Battery charging system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 13 Expired

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