I will try to explain the question I am facing now by giving a fictional example that resembles my case.
We developed a method and a system for automatic irrigation of a lawn. The method involves providing small amounts of water mixed with a liquid fertilizer to the soil directly surrounding the roots of the grass. The primary system according to the invention comprises a dense grid of perforated tubing that has to be installed just below the surface prior to the sowing of grass seeds for the creation of the lawn. The use of a mixture of water and liquid fertilizer, the construction of the grid and the method of positioning the grid are novel.
Then there is a mobile system that can be used for existing lawns that don't have the grid system. This mobile system has a matrix of tubes protruding perpendicularly to the plane of the system. These protruding tubes can be pressed into the ground in order to deliver the water/fertilizer mixture close to the roots of a certain percentage of the grass plants of the lawn. With this mobile system a much smaller percentage of the grass of the lawn will receive the water/fertilizer mixture in the direct vicinity of the roots. Nevertheless, the mobile system provides some improvements over existing systems.
My question is: Should we try to incorporate the mobile system in the same application or should we put it in a separate application? We consider the use of a mixture of water and liquid fertilizer, the construction of the grid and the method of positioning the grid to be the core of the invention. Basically, the only thing the mobile system has in common with this is the use of the mobile system for the delivery of the water/fertilizer mixture.
Thank you in advance for your thoughts/advice.