Attachable gap blade device for twin-blade lawnmowers
Pith reviewed 2026-05-27 11:31 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A bolt-on spindle and L-bracket housing adds a third blade between the factory pair on twin-blade mowers.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
An attachable gap blade device for twin-blade lawnmowers comprising a spindle with blade and pulley received inside a housing that itself comprises a mounting bracket and a pulley bracket, the mounting bracket being an L-shaped bracket containing a fastener opening.
What carries the argument
The spindle-and-housing assembly whose L-shaped mounting bracket and pulley bracket allow the added blade to be driven in register with the factory blades.
If this is right
- The L-bracket fastener opening provides the sole mechanical attachment point to the mower deck.
- The pulley on the new spindle is intended to share drive from the existing belt system.
- The added blade operates in the physical gap between the two stock blades.
- No modification to the mower's original spindles or timing is required.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- If timing and balance remain intact, the device would reduce the width of uncut strips left between the two factory blades.
- A user could test the claim by measuring strip width before and after installation on the same mower.
- The design implicitly assumes the mower deck has sufficient vertical clearance and belt length for the extra pulley.
Load-bearing premise
The added assembly can be attached and run on existing twin-blade mowers without disturbing factory blade timing, balance, or safety interlocks.
What would settle it
Mount the device on any production twin-blade mower and observe whether the factory blades still rotate in correct phase and whether all factory safety switches continue to function.
read the original abstract
1 . An attachable gap blade device for twin-blade lawnmowers comprising: a spindle comprised of a blade and a pulley; and a housing that receives the spindle, the housing comprised of a mounting bracket and a pulley bracket, wherein the mounting bracket is comprised of an L-shaped bracket comprised of a fastener opening.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript consists of a single independent claim describing an attachable gap blade device for twin-blade lawnmowers. The device comprises a spindle (containing a blade and pulley) received by a housing that includes a mounting bracket (L-shaped with fastener opening) and a pulley bracket.
Significance. The submission advances no empirical, theoretical, or computational result. No drawings, performance data, or comparison to prior art are supplied, so the potential utility of the claimed geometry cannot be assessed.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract / Claim 1] The sole content is the legal claim language in the abstract (and repeated as the full text). No section, equation, table, or figure supplies a functional description, dimensions, or test results that would allow evaluation of operability or novelty.
minor comments (1)
- The manuscript format is that of a patent claim rather than a journal article; standard technical disclosure elements (drawings, methods, results) are absent.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the review. This document is a U.S. utility patent application whose statutory form is a set of claims; it is not a research article. Patentability is assessed on novelty, non-obviousness, and enablement under 35 U.S.C. §§ 102/103/112 rather than on experimental data or performance tables. We address the single major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract / Claim 1] The sole content is the legal claim language in the abstract (and repeated as the full text). No section, equation, table, or figure supplies a functional description, dimensions, or test results that would allow evaluation of operability or novelty.
Authors: The single independent claim is the entire statutory content required for a U.S. patent filing. Enablement is provided by the detailed description that accompanies the claim in the complete USPTO specification (not reproduced in the arXiv abstract). Novelty is evaluated by the examiner against prior art, not by empirical performance data. No equations or test results are required or customary in a utility-patent claim set. revision: no
Circularity Check
No circularity: patent claim contains no derivation
full rationale
The document is a US patent whose entire content is a single mechanical claim describing physical components. No equations, predictions, fitted parameters, ansatzes, or self-citations exist, so none of the enumerated circularity patterns can apply. The text is self-contained legal language with no derivation chain to inspect.
discussion (0)
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