Claims
- 1. A beverage can tray for holding a quantity of cans of beverage, said tray comprising:
- a tray floor having a top surface, a bottom surface and a periphery, and a plurality of spaced apart can seating means distributed over the top surface for seating a plurality of cans in spaced apart relationship to one another;
- upstanding sidewall means extending upwardly from the floor top surface around the periphery of the floor for confining and stabilizing the cans supported on the floor, said sidewall means being of open construction with openings therein through which the sides of cans supported in the tray are exposed around the periphery of the tray; and
- heel protector means extending across a bottom portion of said openings to protect the heels of cans supported in the tray from damage due to contact with means outside the tray, said heel protector means comprising relatively narrow upstanding bands extending across said openings above said floor.
- 2. A beverage can tray as claimed in claim 1, wherein:
- said sidewall means comprises a plurality of upright, spaced apart pillars extending upwardly from their lower ends at the periphery of the tray floor to an upper end spaced above the tray floor, said openings extending between said spaced apart pillars; and
- the bands forming said heel protector means are joined to and extend between the lower ends of the pillars.
- 3. A beverage can tray as claimed in claim 2, wherein:
- said can seating means comprise circular rings having an annular upper can seating surface, some of said circular can seating rings being disposed at the periphery of the tray floor; and
- said heel protector bands are arcuately shaped, and are substantially concentric with the circular can seating areas in radially spaced relationship therefrom.
- 4. A beverage can tray as claimed in claim 3, wherein:
- a bottom outer surface of said heel protector means and said pillars is downwardly and inwardly tapered to facilitate insertion of a lifting implement under the tray.
- 5. A beverage can tray as claimed in claim 3, wherein:
- a band-like tray top rail is supported on the upper ends of the pillars, said top rail extending substantially continuously around the periphery of the tray and having a substantially smooth, flat, uninterrupted, vertical outer surface.
- 6. A beverage can tray for holding a quantity of cans of beverage, said tray comprising:
- a tray floor having a top surface, a bottom surface and a periphery, and a plurality of spaced apart can seating means distributed over the top surface for seating a plurality of cans in spaced apart relationship to one another;
- upstanding sidewall means extending upwardly from the floor top surface around the periphery of the floor for confining and stabilizing the cans supported on the floor; and
- at least one portion of the periphery of the tray floor being deformed upwardly to define recess means under the periphery of the tray floor, unconnected with the sidewall means, and defining shaped finger access openings under an edge of the tray floor for insertion of a finger or fingers beneath the edge of the tray floor, said finger access openings forming a lifting surface at the periphery of the tray floor to facilitate lifting of the tray.
- 7. A beverage can tray for holding a quantity of cans of beverage, said tray comprising:
- a tray floor having a top surface, a bottom surface, a periphery, and a plurality of spaced apart can seating areas distributed over the top surface for seating a plurality of cans in spaced apart relationship to one another;
- upstanding sidewall means extending upwardly from the floor top surface around the periphery of the floor for confining and stabilizing the cans supported on the floor; and
- a plurality of upwardly projecting spacer members distributed over the floor top surface in locations spaced between the can seating areas to extend between cans supported on the tray and maintain the cans in spaced relationship to one another and to prevent displacement of the cans across the tray floor when the tray is tilted, said spacer members projecting upwardly only a short distance relative to the height of the cans so as to engage a bottom end portion of the cans to prevent the cans from sliding across the tray floor when the tray is only partially full of cans and is tilted at an angle, said spacer members including members adjacent corners of the floor that are higher than the remaining spacer members distributed over the floor of the tray, to increase the stability of a stack of trays superposed on ton of one another.
- 8. A beverage can tray for holding a quantity of cans of beverage, said tray comprising:
- a tray floor having a top surface, a bottom surface and a periphery, and a plurality of spaced apart can seating areas distributed over the top surface for seating a plurality of cans in spaced apart relationship to one another;
- upstanding sidewall means extending upwardly from the floor top surface around the periphery of the floor for confining and stabilizing the cans supported on the floor, said sidewall means comprising a plurality of upright, spaced apart pillars extending from the periphery of the tray floor at their lower ends to an upper end spaced above the tray floor, and a band-like tray top rail supported on the upper ends of the pillars, said top rail extending substantially continuously around the periphery of the tray and having a top edge and a bottom edge and a substantially smooth, flat, vertically oriented outer surface; and
- at least one notch formed in the bottom edge of said top rail at its vertically oriented outer surface, and extending upwardly into the rail, for engagement with a tool on automated equipment to lift the tray away from a stack of trays.
- 9. A tray for holding a plurality of containers for storage and shipment, comprising:
- a tray floor having a top surface and a bottom surface and a plurality of spaced apart container seating areas distributed over the top surface for seating a plurality of containers in spaced apart relationship to one another;
- upstanding sidewall means extending upwardly from the floor top surface around the periphery of the floor for confining and stabilizing the container supported on the floor, said sidewall means comprising a plurality of upright, spaced apart pillars extending from the periphery of the tray floor at their lower ends to an upper end spaced above the tray floor, and a band-like tray top rail supported on the upper ends of the pillars, said top rail extending substantially continuously around the periphery of the tray and having a top edge and a bottom edge and a substantially smooth, flat, vertically oriented outer surface; and
- denesting means extending between the top rail and the tray floor in the space between the pillars to prevent snagging or catching of the trays during denesting of empty trays.
- 10. A tray as claimed in claim 9, wherein:
- said denesting means comprises an elongate strap extending between the heel protector means and the tray top rail, said strap serving to deflect and guide the tray top rail of one tray past the heel protector means of another tray when the trays are empty and are being denested.
- 11. A tray as claimed in claim 10, wherein:
- upstanding heel protector means extends between said pillars at the lower ends thereof, extending above the tray floor in the spaces defined between the pillars, to shield lower end portions of containers placed in the tray from contact with objects outside the tray.
- 12. A tray as claimed in claim 10, wherein:
- the strap defines, at its juncture with the top rail and the heel protector means, a smooth uninterrupted continuation of the top rail inner surface and the heel protector outer surface.
- 13. A tray as claimed in claim 9, wherein:
- at least one notch is formed in the bottom edge of said top rail at its vertically oriented outer surface for engagement with a tool on automated equipment to lift the tray away from a stack of trays.
- 14. A beverage can tray for holding a quantity of cans of beverage, said tray comprising:
- a tray floor having a top surface, a bottom surface and a periphery, and a plurality of spaced apart can seating means distributed over the top surface for seating a plurality of cans in spaced apart relationship to one another;
- upstanding sidewall means extending upwardly from the floor top surface around the periphery of the floor for confining and stabilizing the cans supported on the floor, said sidewall means being of open construction with openings therein through which the sides of cans supported in the tray are exposed around the periphery of the tray;
- multi-level redoubt means projecting downwardly from the underside of the tray floor a predetermined depth for cooperation with the top rims in cans supported in a sub-adjacent tray when a plurality of trays containing cans of beverage are stacked on top of one another, to impede free sliding movement of one tray over the tops of cans in a sub-adjacent tray so that the trays can be stacked together in stable relationship, but at the same time enabling said one tray to be moved laterally with respect to the sub-adjacent tray, when desired, to remove said one tray from the stack of trays, said redoubt means including an elongate redoubt of tapered depth that spans the top rim of a can; and
- heel protector means extending across said openings in the sidewall to protect the heels of cans supported in the tray from damage due to contact with means outside the tray, said heel protector means comprising relatively narrow upstanding bands extending across said openings above said floor.
- 15. A beverage can tray for holding a quantity of cans of beverage, said tray comprising:
- a tray floor having a top surface, a bottom surface and a periphery, and a plurality of spaced apart can seating means distributed over the top surface for seating a plurality of cans in spaced apart relationship to one another, said can seating means comprising circular rings having an annular upper can seating surface, and some of said circular can seating rings being disposed at the periphery of the tray floor;
- upstanding sidewall means extending upwardly from the floor top surface around the periphery of the floor for confining and stabilizing the cans supported on the floor, said sidewall means comprising a plurality of upright, spaced apart pillars extending upwardly from their lower ends at the periphery of the tray floor to an upper end spaced above the tray floor, defining openings between said spaced apart pillars through which the sides of cans supported in the tray are exposed around the periphery of the tray;
- heel protector means extending across said openings to protect the heels of cans supported in the tray from damage due to contact with means outside the tray, said heel protector means comprising relatively narrow upstanding bands extending across said openings above said floor, said bands joined to and extending between the lower ends of the pillars and being arcuately shaped and substantially concentric with the circular can seating areas in radially spaced relationship therefrom;
- a band-like tray top rail supported on the upper ends of the pillars, said top rail extending substantially continuously around the periphery of the tray and having a substantially smooth, flat, uninterrupted, vertical outer surface; and
- multi-level redoubt means projecting downwardly from the underside of the tray floor a predetermined depth for cooperation with the top rims in cans supported in a sub-adjacent tray when a plurality of trays containing cans of beverage are stacked on top of one another, to impede free sliding movement of one tray over the tops of cans in a sub-adjacent tray so that the trays can be stacked together in stable relationship, but at the same time enabling said one tray to be moved laterally with respect to the sub-adjacent tray, when desired, to remove said one tray from the stack of trays, said redoubt means including an elongate redoubt of tapered depth that spans the top rim of a can.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 08/889,267, filed Jul. 8, 1997, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,785,170, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/590,146, filed Jan. 23, 1996, and now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (47)
Foreign Referenced Citations (5)
Number |
Date |
Country |
1474782 |
Mar 1967 |
FRX |
1152038 |
May 1969 |
GBX |
1197058 |
Jan 1970 |
GBX |
1330778 |
Sep 1973 |
GBX |
2032886 |
May 1980 |
GBX |
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
590146 |
Jan 1996 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
889267 |
Jul 1997 |
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