Inventor · Sanford, FL, US

Michael A. Vidal

21Patents
10h-index
13Co-inventors
72Inventor score

Filing activity: Mar 16, 1979 → Aug 20, 2015

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
USD717948S1 Lower cap for a liquid dispensing syringe General 82 Active
USD588693S1 Liquid dispensing syringe General 56 Expired
USD750228S1 Piston for a liquid dispensing syringe General 43 Active
US6487756B1 Hand tool lanyard system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 41 Expired
USD738495S1 Piston for a liquid dispensing syringe General 40 Active
USD740412S1 Lower portion of a liquid dispensing syringe General 22 Active
US4239490A Carpet dyeing system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 17 Expired
USD663023S1 Liquid dispensing syringe General 14 Active
US5459446A Fluid splash barrier apparatus for aircraft circuit breakers and the like Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 13 Expired
US7070066B2 Liquid dispensing valve and method with improved stroke length calibration and fluid fittings Performing Operations; Transporting 10 Expired
US6732411B2 Hand tool handle modification system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 9 Expired
US7480964B2 Hand tool handle modification system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 8 Expired
USD623291S1 Liquid dispensing syringe General 8 Expired
US6237822A Hand tool retaining device Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 4 Expired
US9958067B2 Liquid dispensing syringe Human Necessities 4 Active
US7017236B2 Hand tool handle modification system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 3 Expired
US9757763B2 Side by side cartridge assemblies and related methods Performing Operations; Transporting 2 Active
US8136707B2 Compensating pressure controller for fluid dispenser and method Physics 1 Active
USD649892S1 Hair measuring assembly General 1 Expired
US8448345B2 Hair measuring assembly and single use cartridge Human Necessities 1 Active
US8365952B2 Compensating pressure controller for fluid dispenser and method Physics 0 Active

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