Kim, Most patents may now be accessed without charge through Google
Patent Search. The main search page is at http://www.google.com/patents
but you may have more success in their "advanced" search page where you
may enter date ranges, etc.: http://www.google.com/advanced_patent_search
If you don't find exactly what you're looking for, try some different
words -- these are old documents converted via OCR, and there are
misspellings in some of the titles/names/text.
This evolution of searching is interesting to me personally, because
I used to _pay_ to have patent searches done. Later, I searched the
U.S. Patent Office's on-line database, http://www.uspto.gov/patft/ using
a combination of Classification and brute force. I even wrote software
to retrieve the images for a date range so that I could browse them
conveniently. Research has changed!
I also might warn that patent drawings were made for the purpose of
gaining a patent, not necessarily for production. Therefore there may
be huge changes between patent drawings and actual schematics!
Todd Augsburger
http://www.organettehouse.com/
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