pith. sign in

USPTO: us-12622416 · published 2026-05-12 · patents · A01K 15/025· A01K 5/00

Modular treat dispensing pet toy

Pith reviewed 2026-05-17 11:01 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification patents A01K 15/025A01K 5/00
keywords pet toytreat dispensermodular apparatustube arrangementanimal feeding device
0
0 comments X

The pith

A pet toy with a central hub connected to five distinct tubes dispenses treats through exit holes.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The patent describes a treat dispensing apparatus built around a center portion joined to five separate tubes, each ending differently and featuring at least one exit hole. The arrangement lets treats move from the center through the tubes and out the holes to a pet. A sympathetic reader would see this as a specific geometric layout claimed to improve treat delivery in a modular way. The description repeatedly emphasizes that each tube and each tube end is distinct from the others.

Core claim

The treat dispensing apparatus consists of a center portion connected to five different tubes, each with its own distinct end, plus at least one exit hole that allows a treat to pass through.

What carries the argument

The five-tube apparatus centered on a hub that routes treats to distinct exit points.

Load-bearing premise

The specific arrangement of five tubes around a center portion is novel, non-obvious, and useful enough to qualify as an invention.

What would settle it

Prior art showing a pet toy or dispenser with five tubes joined to a central portion and at least one exit hole.

read the original abstract

1 . A treat dispensing system for dispensing treats and/or food to a pet, the treat dispensing system comprising: a treat dispensing apparatus, wherein the treat dispensing apparatus includes: a first tube, a first tube end, a second tube, a second tube end, a third tube, a third tube end, a fourth tube, a fourth tube end, a fifth tube, a fifth tube end, a center portion, and at least one exit hole for allowing a treat to pass through said at least one exit hole, wherein the center portion is connected to the first tube, the center portion is connected to the second tube, the center portion is connected to the third tube, the center portion is connected to the fourth tube, the center portion is connected to the fifth tube, the center portion is located between the first tube, the second tube, the third tube, the fourth tube and the fifth tube, the first tube is a different tube than the second tube, the first tube is a different tube than the third tube, the first tube is a different tube than the fourth tube, the second tube is a different tube than the third tube, the second tube is a different tube than the fourth tube, the third tube is a different tube than the fourth tube, the fifth tube is a different tube than the first tube, the fifth tube is a different tube than the second tube, the fifth tube is a different tube than the third tube, the fifth tube is a different tube than the fourth tube, the first tube end is a different end than the second tube end, the first tube end is a different end than the third tube end, the first tube end is a different end than the fourth tube end, the second tube end is a different end than the third tube end, the second tube end is a different end than the fourth tube end, the third tube end is a different end than the fourth tu

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 1 minor

Summary. The manuscript is a U.S. patent application that recites a treat-dispensing apparatus comprising a central portion joined to five distinct tubes, each tube possessing a distinct end, together with at least one exit hole sized to permit passage of a treat.

Significance. If the recited geometry were shown to confer a measurable functional advantage, the design could be of modest practical interest to pet-product designers; however, the text supplies no performance data, comparative trials, or mechanical analysis that would allow such an advantage to be evaluated.

major comments (1)
  1. [Claim 1] Claim 1 (and the corresponding description): the central claim consists solely of a verbal enumeration of structural elements and their distinctness; no equation, measurement, or test result is offered to establish that the five-tube arrangement produces any non-obvious dispensing behavior or durability benefit.
minor comments (1)
  1. [Abstract] The provided abstract text terminates mid-sentence; a complete claim set should be supplied for review.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading of our patent application. The submission describes a modular treat-dispensing apparatus whose inventive step resides in the specific five-tube radial geometry and the resulting treat-dispensing paths. Below we address the single major comment.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [Claim 1] Claim 1 (and the corresponding description): the central claim consists solely of a verbal enumeration of structural elements and their distinctness; no equation, measurement, or test result is offered to establish that the five-tube arrangement produces any non-obvious dispensing behavior or durability benefit.

    Authors: We respectfully note that a U.S. patent application is not required to contain experimental data, equations, or comparative trials. Patentability is assessed on whether the claimed structure is novel, non-obvious, and useful. The recited five-tube configuration with distinct ends and centrally located exit holes defines a specific mechanical arrangement that was not found in the prior art. The functional advantages (multiple independent dispensing trajectories, modular assembly, and reduced jamming) are inherent to the geometry and are enabled by the written description. No performance data are necessary to support the structural claim as filed. revision: no

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No derivation or prediction present; patent recites structural features only

full rationale

The document is a U.S. patent application that enumerates a geometric arrangement of five distinct tubes joined to a central portion with exit holes. It advances no equations, no empirical measurements, no theoretical derivations, and no falsifiable predictions. Consequently no load-bearing step exists that could reduce to its own inputs by construction, self-citation, or fitted-parameter renaming. The circularity criteria are inapplicable and the score is therefore zero.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The patent rests on the legal axioms that the described arrangement is novel and non-obvious; no free parameters, scientific axioms, or invented physical entities are introduced.

axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The recited five-tube geometry is novel and non-obvious under U.S. patent law.
    Implicit in every patent claim; required for the document to have legal effect.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5666 in / 1053 out tokens · 16224 ms · 2026-05-17T11:01:54.464764+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Lean theorems connected to this paper

Citations machine-checked in the Pith Canon. Every link opens the source theorem in the public Lean library.

What do these tags mean?
matches
The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
supports
The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
extends
The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
uses
The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
contradicts
The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
unclear
Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.