This invention relates generally to blow molded wide-mouth polyethylene terephythalate (PET) plastic containers, and more particularly to such containers having a threaded neck.
Wide mouth PET bottles having threaded necks typically have neck finishes larger than 48 mm in diameter, and the majority of those bottles are produced on single stage injection mold equipment. This equipment is well suited for low volume applications primarily because the slower injection process is the determining factor in cycle time. For high volume applications two-stage PET equipment has been developed to make preforms having the desired finished threaded neck configuration in a separate injection molding machine and then reheating and blowing the preforms in another blowing machine. However, in this arrangement the blowing machine can out-produce the injection machine and preform inventories must be carefully monitored to keep an adequate supply for the blowing machine. This imbalance is compounded when two-stage equipment is used in wide mouth applications. This is primarily due to the size of the preform/neck finish and the physical size of the injection mold.
To overcome those problems in producing wide mouth threaded neck bottles in large volumes for particular use in cold fill applications, we decided to try to use narrow neck preforms to blow the neck finish using the process generally illustrated in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,496,064, 4,894,268 and 6,228,317. In such a process a standard narrow neck preform is blow molded to form an intermediate article which includes a lower portion in the configuration of the desired bottle with threaded neck and an upper accommodation or dome portion. The dome portion is subsequently removed to provide the finished bottle. However, because of the strain hardening characteristics of PET, it was difficult to get the smaller diameter preform material to blow out and form acceptable, useable neck finish threads on cold fillable containers for a viscous product such as mayonnaise.
Accordingly, the wide mouth PET container and its method of manufacture described below were developed to overcome the those problems.
The primary object of this invention is to provide a blow-molded wide mouth PET container having an acceptable, useable threaded neck finish.
Another object of the invention is to provide the above container wherein the wall thickness of the threads lies within the range of 0.032-0.038 inches.
Another object of the invention is to provide the above container wherein the thickness of the wall portion of the preform from which the threaded neck is formed lies within the range of 0.1555-0.1790.
Another object of the invention is to provide the above container wherein the ratio of the thickness of the wall portion of the preform from which the threaded neck is formed to the wall thickness of the threaded neck is approximately 4.711.
Another object of the invention is to provide the above container wherein the profile or shape of the threads is such that the threads will aggressively mate with the corresponding threads on a cap to provide acceptable closure seal performance.
A further object of the invention is to provide a novel method of blow molding the above wide mouth container by first providing a narrow neck preform having a predetermined wall thickness in a region from which the threaded neck is to be formed, blowing the preform to form an intermediate article which includes a lower portion in the configuration of the desired bottle with threaded neck and an upper accommodation or dome portion which is subsequently removed to provide the finished bottle.
Other objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent from reading the following detailed description of the invention, with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein like numerals indicate like elements.
Referring to the drawings, a PET blow molded wide mouth cylindrical container 10 constructed according to the invention is illustrated in
In conventional fashion, bottle 10 is produced as the lower part of an intermediate article 20 (
Blow air at a temperature of about 31° F. from a dryer and a pressure within the range of 10-30 Bar is blown into the top open end of preform 22 to stretch or extend the side walls and bottom of the preform radially outwardly and axially downwardly against the interior molding surface of assembly 24 as shown in
Intermediate article 20 also includes an upper dome portion 26 with axially spaced upper and lower flanges 28 and 30 that form therebetween a belt engaging groove 32. Dome 26 is attached to the upper edge of neck 13 along an annular recess 33 at which it is subsequently severed from neck 12 to produce bottle 10 of
As mentioned above, because of the strain hardening characteristics of PET, it was difficult to successfully get a smaller diameter preform to blow out and form useable threads on neck 12. It was determined that the plastic thickness in the neck and thread and the shape profile of the thread itself is critical to get the threads to form properly on a container for a cold fillable product. With this in mind the preform 22 (
It was found that the wall thickness W1 of the neck and thread has to be 0.035 inches±0.003, preferably on the low side in order to blow acceptable thread definition and neck and thread dimensions. Wall thicknesses greater than or less than this amount tended not to produce a well defined thread profile. This is attributed to either too thick a wall having excessive shrinkage of too thin a wall having the material not to blow completely against the mold surface.
As shown in
It was also determined that the shape profile of the thread is equally important in making a container with a “robust and aggressive” enough thread for the corresponding cap thread to mate with. Threads that are too rounded in shape do not allow the cap torques to reach high enough values and give appropriate downward force to achieve acceptable closure seal performance. Critical to proper thread form is the relationship between the thread root and crest heights as well as the top and bottom angles of the thread.
As shown in
The pitch P for thread 14 is about 0.250 inches. The top or crest 15 of the thread is flattened to be parallel to the toot 16 formed by the outer surface of neck 13. The top of thread 14 extends outwardly and downwardly from the outer surface of neck 13 at an angle A1 of about 150° while the bottom of thread 14 extends outwardly and upwardly from neck 13 at an angle A2 of about 100°. The depth of the thread from root 16 to crest 15 is 0.0575. This particular configuration provides a very robust, and secure thread to which a cap having mating thread structure may reliably bind and seal.
From the above description, it is apparent that the invention overcomes the production problems and limitations associated with prior injection molding processes of wide mouth containers. It also enables wide-mouth containers with threaded necks to be successfully produced from small diameter preforms by the stretch blow-molding process, the resulting containers having thinner, lighter neck finishes with a robust thread design that works with a standard industry cap.
The invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The present embodiments are therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be embraced therein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050048235 A1 | Mar 2005 | US |