Inventor · Endwell, NY, US

William J. Summa

15Patents
11h-index
26Co-inventors
68Inventor score

Filing activity: Jun 4, 1975 → Feb 7, 1994

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US5126192A Flame retardant, low dielectric constant microsphere filled laminate Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 87 Expired
US5153986A Method for fabricating metal core layers for a multi-layer circuit board Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 74 Expired
US5103293A Electronic circuit packages with tear resistant organic cores Electricity 65 Expired
US4745215A Fluorine containing dicyanate resins Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 56 Expired
US4728751A Flexible electrical connection and method of making same Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 54 Expired
US4659425A Continuous process for the manufacture of printed circuit boards Electricity 38 Expired
US5288542A Composite for providing a rigid-flexible circuit board construction and method for fabrication thereof Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 26 Expired
US4873123A Flexible electrical connection and method of making same Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 23 Expired
US4024305A Method for producing a resin rich epoxy prepreg and laminate Chemistry; Metallurgy 20 Expired
US4697923A Method for visual inspection of multilayer printed circuit boards Electricity 17 Expired
US5378306A Composite for providing a rigid-flexible circuit board construction and method for fabrication thereof Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 11 Expired
US5319244A Triazine thin film adhesives Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 11 Expired
US5206074A Adhesives on polymide films and methods of preparing them Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 9 Expired
US5015719A Aromatic dicyanate/aromatic diepoxy compositions, cured products and methods Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 7 Expired
US5250347A Mechanically enhanced, high impact strength triazine resins, and method of preparing same Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 3 Expired

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