1.Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to non-drip devices for bottles, which devices are adapted to avoid or at least to limit formation of drops that run down along the body of the bottle, on the outside face thereof, after pouring.
2.Description of the Related Art
After pouring out a glass, it is frequent for one or more drops of the bottled liquid to run down from the neck, along the bottle, which is unattractive and which can give rise to soiling of the hands of the user and/or of the surface on which the bottle is then put down (table, tablecloth, etc.).
Various devices have been devised for eliminating or endeavoring to limit that phenomenon.
Some of such devices consist of rings with absorbent material that are positioned around the neck of the bottle. But those structures are often unattractive; they need to be positioned around the neck and to be removed therefrom. In addition, even if they are relatively simple, such devices are nevertheless sources of additional costs.
Another solution to the problem, proposed, for example, in Document GB-754 582, consists in associating the neck of the bottle with a small peripheral lip, which is of square or rectangular section in that document, and that projects outwards.
Unfortunately, in practice, that peripheral lip structure is not very effective and is thus not entirely satisfactory.
Seeking to remedy that drawback, the Applicant has shown that by modifying the structure of such a peripheral lip, it is possible to improve very significantly the effectiveness of the desired non-drip function.
For this purpose, the non-drip device of the invention, for a bottle, is in the form of an outwardly projecting peripheral lip that has a triangular section of thickness that decreases out to an outer tip, said lip being defined by a top side and by a bottom side that, between them, form an angle lying in the range 5° to 45°, and more preferably lying in the range 25° to 35°.
Such a peripheral lip structure almost always prevents drops from forming, and from running down along the bottle after pouring.
The top side of the peripheral lip is advantageously in the form of a plane ring.
According to another feature, the outwardly projecting length of the peripheral lip advantageously lies in the range 0.1 millimeters (mm) to 0.8 mm (and preferably lies in the vicinity of 0.5 mm or of 0.6 mm).
In a particular embodiment, this non-drip device is provided at the top circular edge of a tubular skirt forming a cover of the engagement type for a bottle.
This cover may be obtained in integrally formed manner by molding a plastics material (e.g. by molding high-density polyethylene).
Preferably, the top side of the peripheral lip extends in the plane of the top circular edge of the cover skirt.
According to another feature, the top circular end of the skirt is associated with a closure structure, said top circular end of the skirt and said closure structure being interconnected by means arranged to facilitate separating them (these interconnection means advantageously consist of a plurality of attachment bridges obtained in integrally formed manner).
The closure structure is thus very easy to remove manually or by using a tool, in order to obtain a top end rim for the cover that is clean-cut and attractive (in particular a top rim that is geometrically perfect, and that is coaxial with the neck of the bottle).
In a particular embodiment, the closure structure is in the form of a circular disk, which disk is provided with two side slots, defining between them a pull tab for separating said disk from said skirt.
In a variant embodiment, the closure structure includes an integrally formed stopper, extending coaxially with the skirt in the tubular volume defined by said skirt.
According to yet another feature, the inside face of the cover skirt is provided with means for locking it to a circular ring that is provided at the collar of the bottle, at some distance from the end of the neck.
These locking means advantageously consist firstly of a bottom circular shoulder, designed to come to position itself against the bottom circular rim of the bottle ring, and secondly of a top circular shoulder, or indeed of a plurality of integrally formed lugs distributed over a common circular line, which shoulder or lugs are designed to come to position themselves against the top circular rim of said bottle ring. In this case, from said bottom shoulder, the top portion of the cover skirt advantageously extends upwards with a substantially constant diameter, so as to enable an annular space to be provided between said skirt and the facing portion of the bottle, above the top rim of the ring.
The invention also concerns the bottle having a body terminated by a collar and a neck, which bottle includes a non-drip device as defined above.
According to a first embodiment, the peripheral lip is formed integrally at the neck of the bottle, its top side extending in the plane of the orifice of said neck.
In another embodiment, the bottle is equipped with a cover of the engagement type having its top edge equipped with the peripheral lip of structure of the present invention.
The top edge of the cover skirt, as provided with the peripheral lip, is then advantageously positioned at some distance from the neck of the bottle, so as to optimize the obtaining of the desired non-drip structure.
In a preferred embodiment, the bottle includes an integrally formed circular ring provided at its collar, and some distance from its neck, which ring is defined by a top circular rim and by a bottom circular rim; the associated fitted cover has a closure structure, and the means provided on said cover for the purpose of facilitating separating the skirt from said closure structure, are arranged to form the top edge of the skirt between said top circular rim of the ring and the top end of the neck of the bottle (e.g. at a distance below the plane of the neck of the bottle lying in the range 1 mm to 4 mm).
The invention is further illustrated, without being limited in any way, by the following description of two particular embodiments, given merely by way of example and shown in the accompanying drawings, in which:
The cover 1 (or cap) shown in
This closure disk 6 is of generally circular shape and extends in a plane that is perpendicular to the axis 7 of the skirt 2.
The skirt 2 and the disk 6 are formed integrally by molding a plastics material, e.g. high-density polyethylene.
The medium thickness of the skirt 2 may be about 0.8 mm; the closure disk 6 then has a medium thickness of about 1 mm. Such thicknesses make it possible to impart good strength to the cover 1 in order to make it easier, in particular, to be fitted by being engaged over the collar of the bottle that is to be equipped with it.
The tubular skirt 2 and the closure disk 6 are interconnected by means adapted to enable them to be separated more easily, in particular in order to enable the disk 6 to be removed easily and in order to obtain a top circular margin 5 for the skirt 2 that is in the form of a clean-cut and geometrically well-defined edge 8.
For this purpose, in the embodiment shown, the top edge 8 of the skirt 2 and the peripheral edge 9 of the disk 6 are secured together by a plurality of integrally formed attachment bridges 10 (the number of bridges lying, for example, in the range 3 to 12, and advantageously in the range 4 to 8).
The interconnection zone 11 between the skirt 2 and the disk 6 consists of a circular line that extends perpendicularly to the axis 7 of the skirt 2 and that is situated at or immediately below the bottom face 6′ of the disk 6.
As shown in detail in
This integrally formed lip 12 extends over the entire periphery of the top circular edge 8 of the skirt 2; it has a triangular section, the base of which is connected to the skirt 2, and the thickness of which decreases progressively to the outer tip 12′.
This triangular section is constant over the entire periphery of the lip 12.
The top side 13 of the lip 12 is plane and extends outwards from the top circular edge 8 of the skirt 2, and in the plane of said edge (perpendicularly to the axis 7). Its bottom side 14, which connects the tip 12′ to the skirt 2 is plane or substantially plane; it extends in reentrant manner downwards, at an angle a relative to the plane of the top side 13, which angle lies the range 5° to 45° (preferably in the range 5° to 40°, more preferably in the range 25° to 35°, and even more preferably about 30°).
In addition, the length l of the circular lip 12, starting from the outside face of the skirt 2, lies in the range 0.1 mm to 0.8 mm, and preferably lies in the vicinity of 0.5 mm or 0.6 mm.
As explained below, positioning of the circular edge 8 of the skirt 2 is, in this example, adapted in such a manner that, once the cover 1 is put in place on the collar of the bottle, said skirt is not in direct contact with the outside face of the neck.
The positioning of the attachment bridges 10 is also adapted so as not to interfere with the non-drip function of the top edge 8 with its lip 12; in particular, for this purpose, they are preferably provided on the inside of the edge 8 (as can be seen in
In
The top face of the disk 6 may receive a logo or any other information.
It is advantageously adapted to form a backing zone for receiving a duty stamp (e.g. by pad-printing).
In addition, the inner face of the cover skirt 2 is provided with means adapted to ensure it is locked effectively on the collar of a bottle equipped with a circular ring provided some distance away from its neck. Such ringed bottles are conventionally used in particular for bottling wine.
These locking means, visible in
In a variant embodiment, the lugs 19 may be replaced with a top circular shoulder.
In
After bottling the liquid and stopping the bottle using a stopper D, the cover 1 is positioned by force-engagement by means of a suitable tool.
At the end of the force-engagement, the shoulder 18 comes to be positioned against the bottom circular rim of the ring B, and the lugs 19 (or the replacement circular shoulder) come(s) to be positioned against the top circular rim of said ring B. The cover 1 is thus correctly locked on the collar C of the bottle.
As can be seen in detail in
In addition, this top edge 8 of the skirt 2 is positioned at some distance from the neck G (so as to optimize the desired “non-drip” function). In the detail view of
For this purpose, as specified above, the wall portion 2′ of the skirt 2 that is situated facing the bottle ring B is extended upwards by a top portion 2″ of the same diameter, or of substantially the same diameter (whereas the facing diameter of the outside face of the neck G is less than the outside diameter of the ring B).
In order to open the bottle equipped in this way, it suffices to take hold of the tab 16 and to apply upward traction thereon, in order to tear off the closure disk 6 by breaking the attachment bridges 10. It is then possible to remove the stopper D by means of a conventional corkscrew.
A bottle is obtained as shown in
This skirt edge 8 associated with the lip 12 provides the above-described non-drip function that makes it possible, in effective manner, to avoid formation of drops that run down along the outside face of the bottle, when said bottle is returned to its standing position after pouring.
In a variant embodiment, the inside face of the top portion of the skirt 2 may be pressed against the bottle (the above-mentioned space H is then removed or minimized).
Such a bottle cap/cover is easy to manufacture and to position; it is attractive both before its closure disk is removed and thereafter, and, in addition, it offers an advantageous non-drip function.
By way of a variant, the simple disk 6 may be replaced with a closure structure equipping an integrally formed stopper, in such a manner as to obtain a full integrally-formed cover-and-stopper assembly equipped with a peripheral skirt having a non-drip function.
In yet another variant, the closure structure 6 may be quite simply removed so as to obtain a cover constituted solely by a tubular skirt, the top edge of which is equipped with a projecting non-drip peripheral lip.
In another embodiment shown in
This bottle A is made by molding a plastics material, e.g. polyethylene terephthalate (PET).
The outside face of its collar F is provided with an integrally formed thread 20, provided on cylindrical portion 21, for receiving a screw cap (not shown).
This cylindrical portion 21 is extended by a cylindrical end portion 22, of smaller diameter, from the free end of which the non-drip lip 12 extends, projecting outwards (provided at the neck M).
This non-drip lip 12 is of structure and of size that are identical to the structure and size described above with reference to
The top side 13 of the lip 12 extends in the plane of the orifice of the neck M, perpendicularly to the axis 23 of said neck M.
The difference in diameter between the cylindrical portions 21 and 22 of the collar F of the bottle A is adapted to match the length l of the lip 12, so as not to hinder putting on and taking off the screw cap.
In this embodiment too, such a lip 12 makes it possible almost always to avoid formation of drops that run down along the bottle, after pouring.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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09 02978 | Jun 2009 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR2010/051220 | 6/17/2010 | WO | 00 | 12/19/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2010/146317 | 12/23/2010 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2014033 | Smith | Sep 1935 | A |
2785841 | Westgate | Mar 1957 | A |
2796205 | Kuzma | Jun 1957 | A |
2818209 | Hiesinger et al. | Dec 1957 | A |
3926348 | Lutzker | Dec 1975 | A |
6079579 | De Cuyper | Jun 2000 | A |
8205541 | Barberio et al. | Jun 2012 | B2 |
20080121607 | Marsollier | May 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
941 772 | Jan 1949 | FR |
972 279 | Jan 1951 | FR |
2 877 644 | May 2006 | FR |
754 582 | Aug 1956 | GB |
Entry |
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International Search Report, dated Nov. 4, 2010, from corresponding PCT application. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120097633 A1 | Apr 2012 | US |