The field of the invention is air cargo containers.
Air cargo containers have been used for the transportation of cargo by aircraft for many years. Cargo such as cartons, smaller shipping containers, etc. are loaded into the containers. The containers are then loaded into an aircraft. Use of air cargo containers is much faster than loading cargo directly into the cargo space of the aircraft because the individual cartons need not be separately placed and secured within the aircraft. The air cargo containers can also be loaded at locations remote from the airport. Furthermore, because the cargo containers are typically designed and constructed to correspond to the interior dimensions of the aircraft cargo space, the containers fit more securely in the cargo space and do not shift during flight. These and other advantages of air cargo containers have made air cargo containers widely used in the air freight and airline industry.
New fuel efficient cargo aircraft are designed to carry so-called “high cube” cargo containers. These containers are containers are taller than standard cargo containers, with high cube containers typically 88, 96, 108, or 118 inches tall. Cargo personnel typically have difficulty loading and unloading packages into the top areas of high cube containers, especially at heights greater than about than 88 inches. On the other hand, if the cargo container can be filled with cargo up to its full height, the load density of the container is maximized. Since the load capacity of the aircraft is generally limited by cargo volume and not by weight, completely filling the air cargo containers allows the aircraft to carry more cargo, since empty space in the cargo containers is minimized.
While ladders or step stools allow cargo allow cargo personnel to reach the upper areas of the cargo containers, they have not been widely used. One disadvantage with use of a ladder is that the ladder may not be conveniently available, since it is removed from the air cargo container after each use. Another factor is that a ladder may not always be stable, especially when the floor of air cargo container is uneven, due to built in design elements, such as structural channel sections, fasteners and tie downs projecting up from the floor, or due to in-use wear, deformation, or damage to the floor.
Accordingly, engineering challenges remain in designing an air cargo container that allows cargo loading personnel to readily reach and place packages in upper areas of air containers.
In a new air cargo container, a light weight yet rigid platform structure may have rollers at each end rolling on a horizontal track on each side wall of the container. The platform may be incrementally moved horizontally from near the rear wall to near the front door opening of the container, as the container is loaded. A latch on the platform may be used to secure the platform into a desired position. The platform may be for example 8-20 inches higher than the floor of the container, to allow cargo personnel to conveniently step up onto to the platform, and reach the upper areas of the container while standing on the platform. If desired, after the back upper areas of the container are loaded, the loading platform can be sequentially moved towards the front of the container, to allow continued loading of remaining forward upper areas of the container. With the platform adjacent to the front of the container, the platform may optionally be rotated from horizontal into a vertical storage position, and then optionally secured to a front post of the container. In the storage position, the platform may act as a structural barrier between the cargo and the container door.
As shown in
As shown in
Turning to
In use, with the platform 50 initially closer to the front of the container, as shown in solid lines in
Before the door 22 of the container is closed, the platform 50 may be pivoted into the vertical storage position shown in dotted lines in
The platform may also have an alternative vertical storage position adjacent to the back wall 18, with the rear vertical storage position design optionally being a mirror image of the front vertical storage design. A cutout in the channel 40 may be provided near the back end of the channels, to allow the front rollers 56 to lift up and out of the channel, as the platform is pivoted into the rear vertical storage position. A rear link 70 on one or both sides may optionally be used to secure the platform 50 to the rear post 38. With the platform 50 in the rear storage position, the interior of the cargo container is open and unobstructed, and is then virtually the same as a conventional cargo container. This allows the container 10 to be used without the platform 50, if desired. For example, the container 10 may be used to hold a pallet. With the platform 50 out of the way at the rear storage position, a pallet may be placed into the container 10 via a fork lift truck, in the same way as with a standard air cargo container.
Thus, a novel air cargo container has been shown and described. Various changes and substitutions may of course be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. The invention, therefore, should not be limited except by the following claims and their equivalents.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
305199 | Kiel | Sep 1884 | A |
369292 | Livingston et al. | Aug 1887 | A |
598801 | Minter | Feb 1898 | A |
884526 | Ripson et al. | Apr 1908 | A |
1137579 | Cohn | Apr 1915 | A |
1832158 | Vance | Nov 1931 | A |
2261839 | Bergmann | Nov 1941 | A |
2491870 | McLaughlin | Dec 1949 | A |
2559699 | Bard et al. | Jul 1951 | A |
3073476 | Heacock | Jan 1963 | A |
3238004 | Goebel | Mar 1966 | A |
3385459 | Wellman, Jr. | May 1968 | A |
3456826 | Pavlik | Jul 1969 | A |
3801177 | Fylling et al. | Apr 1974 | A |
4538663 | Looker | Sep 1985 | A |
5180078 | Looker | Jan 1993 | A |
5217132 | Looker | Jun 1993 | A |
5312180 | Tieder et al. | May 1994 | A |
5427446 | Glomski | Jun 1995 | A |
5601201 | Looker | Feb 1997 | A |
5630537 | Sciacca | May 1997 | A |
6530475 | Penney | Mar 2003 | B1 |
6824338 | Looker | Nov 2004 | B2 |
7063227 | Looker | Jun 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
13591 | Jul 1980 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20140103032 A1 | Apr 2014 | US |