More than one year before the patent application was filed, it was known to use a horizontal mold with a multi-piece plug to manufacture an open back ring with a straight inner radius on the ring shank. |
More than a year before the filing of the present invention, it was known in the art to use a vertical mold with a multi-piece plug to form a ring of solid construction, i.e, no hollow portion, with a rounded or beveled inside diameter. |
More than a year before the filing of the present invention, it has also known in the art to manufacture a hollow jewelry ring using a lost-wax casting process. The hollow wax replica ring used for the lost-wax casting is formed by molding plastiwax around a water soluble wax core insert in a vertical metal mold. The vertical mold is closed around a cylindrical core or mandrel. The wax core insert is generally arcuate in shape and has a respective spacer pin extending radially inwardly from each end of the arcuate core insert. The arcuate extent of the arcuate core insert is substantially 130°. A sprue terminating with an alignment peg extended radially inwardly from a central part of the arcuate core insert. The cylindrical mandrel is formed of two pieces which are locked together t form the mandrel while defining a receptacle to accommodate the alignment peg of the wax core. After the wax replica is formed around the core insert, the core insert is dissolved to yield a hollow |
space within the replica. The hollow wax replica is then used for a conventional lost-wax (investment) casting step. The prior art ring has an inner (finger-facing) surface that was cylindrical. That is, the prior art ring has a ‘flat’ inner radius design. |