This invention relates generally to capsules for containers, and more particularly to capsules for housing items with beverage containers, such as wine bottles, champagne bottles, beer bottles, liquor bottles, soda bottles, and the like.
The present invention is directed to a capsule for a bottle, which may include a substantially tubular, conformable skirt and a chamber for housing an item. The skirt may include at least one vent hole through the skirt to permit gas to pass through the skirt. The chamber may be positioned at least partially inside and releasably secured to at least a portion of the skirt. The chamber may also comprise at least one standoff extending from the housing for mounting the chamber on a top of the bottle, wherein the at least one standoff may include at least one rim guide for centering the chamber on the bottle, and at least one bottle mount for connecting the chamber to the top of the bottle. The chamber may further comprise at least one vent aperture, which may be aligned with at least one vent hole in the skirt.
The capsule of the present invention may form a secondary closure on the bottle. The skirt may include an aperture for displaying the item through at least a top wall of the chamber. A portion of the chamber may protrude through the aperture in the skirt for displaying the item through a top wall of the chamber and also through at least one side wall of the chamber. The skirt may be formed from a thin sheet comprising one of a metal, a thermoplastic, wood pulp, or wax. The capsule may further include indicia on an inner surface of the capsule, such as on an inner surface of the skirt or under a disk that may cover the aperture.
The chamber may further comprise a housing having a cavity, an opening in the housing to permit the insertion and removal of the item into and from the cavity, and a cover releasably covering the opening to releasably secure the item inside the chamber. The skirt may include a tear strip, which may be circumferentially positioned on an inner surface of the skirt and axially below the at least one vent hole. An end of the tear strip may be exteriorly accessible to permit actuation of the tear strip. Actuation of the tear strip may release the chamber from the bottle and permit access to the cover and also to a primary closure of the bottle.
The chamber may be capable of bearing a compressive force longitudinally transmitted through the at least one standoff when the capsule is mounted on the bottle. The bottle may be one of a wine bottle, a champagne bottle, a liquor bottle, or a soda bottle.
In another embodiment, a capsule may form a secondary closure on a bottle, comprising a skirt having at least one vent hole therethrough, and a chamber positioned at least partially inside and releasably secured to at least a portion of the skirt. The chamber may comprise an item, which may be removably insertable into and from a cavity in the chamber through an opening in the chamber. The chamber may also comprise a cover removably secured to the chamber and covering the opening for releasably securing the item in the cavity, and a tear strip positioned on the skirt. An end of the tear strip may be exteriorly accessible for gripping and actuating the tear strip. Actuation of the tear strip may release the chamber from the bottle and may permit access to the cover and also to a primary closure of the bottle. The chamber may also comprise at least one vent cavity, which may be aligned with at least one vent hole.
The item may be visible through at least one wall of the chamber. The chamber may comprise a plan form that is one of a circle or a polygon. A top wall of the chamber may include a raised surface or a recessed surface. A top wall of the chamber may alternatively, or additionally, include a lens for magnifying the item.
The skirt may conformably attached to the chamber and the skirt may be transparent. The capsule may also include indicia on an inner surface of the capsule, such as on an inner surface of the skirt.
In another embodiment, the invention may comprise a system for housing an item with a bottle. The system may comprise a closure having a chamber for housing the item where the closure may be positioned in a mouth of the bottle and a cap releasably positioned on the closure and over the chamber for releasably retaining the item. The cap may include a first aperture along an outer edge of the cap to assist in removing the cap from the closure for accessing the item. The system may also comprise a skirt positioned over the closure and the cap and secured to at least a portion of the bottle.
The skirt may include a second aperture that may expose at least a portion of the cap. The cap may be transparent for displaying the item. The skirt may further comprise a second aperture exposing at least a portion of the first aperture to permit communication of gas through the first and second apertures, and a tear strip positioned on the skirt. An end of the tear strip may be exteriorly accessible for gripping and actuating the tear strip. Actuation of the tear strip may separate at least a portion of the skirt to permit access to the cap. The capsule may include indicia on an inner surface of the capsule.
Another embodiment of the present invention may comprise a punt capsule for a bottle punt. The punt capsule may comprise an inner capsule including a cavity adapted to be received by the bottle punt and a chamber positioned in the cavity for housing an item. The chamber may comprise a cover forming a bottom of the chamber wherein the cover may be releasably secured to the chamber to releasably secure the item inside the chamber. The punt capsule may further comprise an outer capsule connected to the inner capsule and enclosing the chamber in the cavity. The outer capsule may include a tear strip wherein an end of the tear strip may be exteriorly accessible for gripping and actuating the tear strip. Actuation of the tear strip may at least partially separate a portion of the outer capsule from the inner capsule to release the chamber from the punt capsule.
The inner capsule may nest in the outer capsule. The punt capsule may be inserted over and shrink-fit to a bottom of a bottle. The chamber of the punt capsule may nest in the cavity.
In another embodiment, a closure for a bottle comprises a head portion comprising a chamber for housing an item, where the chamber comprises an opening formed in a top of the head portion to provide access to the item. The head portion in this embodiment is configured to abut a rim of the bottle. The closure also comprises a stub portion extending from a bottom of the head portion, where the stub portion is resilient and forms a releasable interference fit with an inside surface of the bottle. In this way, the stub may be capable of multiple insertions into and extractions from a bottle by simply gripping the closure, rotating the closure to exceed the static friction between the stub and the bottle wall, and either inserting or extracting the stub into or from the bottle. The closure further comprises a cap releasably connectable to the head portion and over the opening for releasably retaining the item. The cap includes a protrusion extending from a bottom of the cap for engaging the opening.
The head portion may include a grip positioned on a periphery of the head portion, where the grip comprises at least one of a plurality of longitudinally oriented protrusions and a plurality of longitudinally oriented depressions. The head portion may include an approximately flat, annular surface on the bottom of the head portion for abutting the rim of the bottle and for controlling a depth of insertion of the closure in the bottle. The head portion may be integrally formed with the stub portion to form the closure.
The cap may be transparent to provide visual access to the item in the chamber. The cap may comprise a lip extending peripherally and outwardly beyond the protrusion to approximately a transition between the top and a side wall of the head portion, where a bottom edge of the lip may be accessible to pry the cap from the head portion. The cap may include a convex top surface to form a lens. The protrusion extending from the cap may comprise a bell-shaped profile having a base larger than a neck. The neck of the protrusion may engage the opening in the head portion to releasably secure the cap to the head portion. The opening in the head portion may include a lip for engaging the neck of the bell-shaped protrusion, where the lip may comprise a clearance with the neck and an interference with the base. The lip of may be resilient and cooperate with the base and the neck of the protrusion extending from the cap.
In one embodiment of the closure, at least one of the head portion and the stub portion may comprise a thermochromic property.
A better understanding of the objects, advantages, features, properties and relationships of the invention will be obtained from the following detailed description and accompanying drawings which set forth illustrative embodiments that are indicative of the various ways in which the principles of the invention may be employed.
For a better understanding of the invention, reference may be had to preferred embodiments shown in the following drawings in which:
While this invention is susceptible of embodiments in many different forms, there is shown in the drawings and will herein be described in detail, a preferred embodiment of the invention with the understanding that the present disclosure should be considered as an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the broad aspects of the invention to the embodiments illustrated herein.
Turning now to the figures, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements, there is illustrated in
Skirt 11 of capsule 10 may be made from a variety of suitable materials, such as, for example, metal, including aluminum or tin, a thermoplastic, such as polystyrene, polyethylene, polypropylene or ABS, wood pulp, wax, or any other material that may be formed into and function as a capsule. Skirt 11 may be fabricated to substantially conform to at least a portion of chamber 20 and to bottle 66, such as neck 70, and may include wall 15 forming aperture 16 for the retainable housing and optional display of the contents of chamber 20. For example, as shown in
To permit the optional visual access to item 46 while housed in chamber 20, aperture 16 of skirt 11 may reveal chamber 20 and its contents. Chamber 20 may include housing 22, which may include top surface 24. If visibility of item 46 while housed in chamber 20 is desired, at least top surface 24 of housing 22 may be transparent or semi-transparent and may be left exposed to and visible through aperture 16 in skirt 11 to permit display of item 46. Housing 22 of chamber 20 may instead be opaque to obscure display of item 46. Alternatively, skirt 11 of capsule 10 may, in addition to or in place of chamber 20, include a transparent, semi-transparent, or opaque disk or other cover that spans aperture 16 to display, obscure, or prevent display of item 46. Skirt 11 of capsule 10 may optionally not include aperture 16 and instead may completely cover chamber 20. However, a completely covered chamber 20 may still be visible depending on the chosen transparency of skirt 11.
It is understood by one of ordinary skill in the art that housing 22 of chamber 20 may be made in any shape. For example, as shown in
As shown in
Capsule 10 may optionally include tear strip 12 affixed to inside surface 18 of skirt 11 (see
Tear strip 12 may be oriented substantially circumferentially on inside surface 18 at a position below the at least one vent hole 14, as shown in
As shown in
As best shown in
As shown in
As shown in
A method for using capsule 10 shown in
If a user wishes to access item 46 from within chamber 20 when capsule 10 is fully installed on bottle 66, the user must first tear or score skirt 11 to release chamber 20 from capsule 10 and bottle 66. To tear skirt 11, a user may grip loose end 13 of tear strip 12, which may extend exteriorly through, for example, either a longitudinal seam in skirt 11 or through an opening in skirt 11, and pull tear strip 12 to rupture skirt 11 along the periphery of skirt 11 until chamber 20 is released. In so doing, a torn edge of skirt 11 may be formed approximately at or below bottle top 68. Alternatively, to release chamber 20 in cases when tear strip 12 is not present on capsule 10, a sharp knife or other tool known to one of ordinary skill can be used to tear, cut, score or otherwise cleave skirt 11 along the periphery of skirt 11. However, using such additional tool may be more expensive to acquire and cumbersome to deploy as compared to using the features disclosed in the present invention. Alternatively, skirt 11 may instead be configured to be removed by hand by, for example, simply pulling or peeling skirt 11 off of bottle 66.
Once chamber 20 is released from capsule 10 on bottle 66, the contents of chamber 20 may be accessed by gripping loose end 43 of peel strip 42 (see
Capsule 80 in
Chamber 20 may be released from capsule 80 in the same manner as described above for the embodiment of
Like the embodiment of
As shown in
It should be understood that the method for using capsule 80, and for displaying and removing item 46 from chamber 20 is generally the same as described above for the embodiment of
Yet another embodiment of the present invention is shown in
As shown in
To secure item 46 inside chamber 110, cap 112 may be inserted into and over chamber 110. To accomplish this, cap 112 may include outer wall 116, which may form an interference fit with inner wall 111 of chamber 110 upon insertion of outer wall 116 of cap 112 inside chamber 110. An adhesive may also be used, if desired, anywhere cap 112 adjoins primary closure 108 to seal item 46 from atmospheric dirt and contamination. To secure cap 112 to chamber 110, skirt 101 of capsule 100 may include wall 106. Skirt 101 may include aperture 104, which may be smaller in size than cap 112.
To permit the optional visual access to item 46 while housed in chamber 110, aperture 104 of skirt 101 may reveal chamber 110 and its contents through optional cap 112. Skirt 101 of capsule 100 may also include a transparent, semi-transparent, or opaque disk or other cover that spans aperture 104 to display, obscure, or prevent display of item 46 and to secure item 46 in chamber 110 if cap 112 is not present. Skirt 101 of capsule 100 may optionally not include aperture 104 and instead may completely cover chamber 110. However, a completely covered chamber 110 may still be visible depending on the chosen transparency of skirt 101.
To gain access to cap 112 and item 46, skirt 101 of capsule 100 may include tear strip 102 affixed or secured to inner surface 105 of skirt 101. Tear strip 102, and loose end 103 usable for gripping and actuating tear strip 102, may provide a convenient method for partially or completely separating top portion 118 of skirt 101 from skirt 101 to access cap 112 and to permit access to both the contents of chamber 110 (i.e., item 46) as well as to primary closure 108 of bottle 66. Alternatively, if tear strip 102 is not included with capsule 100, top portion 118 may be separated from capsule 100 using any conventional tool for such purpose. However, using such additional tool may be more expensive to acquire and cumbersome to deploy as compared to using the features disclosed in the present invention. Alternatively, skirt 101 may instead be configured to be removed by hand by, for example, simply pulling or peeling skirt 101 off of bottle 66.
Like the embodiment of
As shown in
To gain access to item 46 housed in chamber 110, cap 112 may also include aperture 114 positioned along a portion of the outer edge of cap 112. To remove cap 112 from primary closure 108, an object, such as a fingernail or even a screw driver, may be inserted into aperture 114 to pry cap 112 off of primary closure 108 using lever action.
Skirt 101 of this embodiment may have properties and features similar to skirt 11 described above, except that skirt 101 may not necessarily include any vent holes along its periphery, such as vent holes 14 shown on
In
In yet another embodiment of the present invention shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Inner capsule 152, shown in
As shown in
Skirt 182 may differ from skirt 154 in that skirt 182 may also include tear strip 185 affixed circumferentially along inner surface 183 of skirt 182. Tear strip 185 may be a separate piece that is affixed to inner surface 183 of skirt 182 or tear strip 185 may be integrally formed with skirt 185. If tear strip 185 is a separate piece, tear strip 185 may be made from a different material than skirt 185.
Similarly to bottom 158, as shown in
Outer capsule 180, shown in
Chamber 200 may house item 204 for optional display in the punt cavity of bottle 66 and may comprise a self-contained package for installation into punt capsule 150. Chamber 200 may be made from any transparent, semi-transparent, or opaque material, such as for example, a metal, a thermo-plastic, or glass. In addition, chamber 200 may include surface 202 and peel strip 206. Surface 202 may optionally conform to the profile of cavity 160, which, as described above, may optionally conform to the profile of the punt cavity of bottle 66. Peel strip 206 may form a closure for chamber 200, and may include an adhesive so as to adhere peel strip 206 to surface 202 of chamber 200. Peel strip 206 may comprise any form of closure or cover sufficient to enclose and retain item 204. Peel strip 206 or other closure for chamber 200 may be fabricated from the same material as surface 202 and may, for example, be attached to chamber 200 using conventional methods, such as by hinging, to create an opening for insertion and removal of item 204. Chamber 200 may also be pre-assembled with item 204 and with peel strip 206 or other closure for ease of manufacture of punt capsule 150. It should be understood that chamber 200 may comprise any number of geometries, configurations, and features so long as item 204 may be housed in releasable storage in the punt cavity of bottle 66.
Punt capsule 150 may be formed by first inserting chamber 200 in cavity 160 of bottom 158 of inner capsule 152. Depending on the shape of chamber 200 and cavity 160 of bottom 158, surface 202 of chamber 200 may nest with cavity 160. Once chamber 200 is inserted in cavity 160, inner capsule 152 may be joined with outer capsule 180 using the techniques described above, such as by shrinking outer capsule 180 to inner capsule 152 using heat or by compressing outer capsule 180 against inner capsule 152 under pressure to fasten the parts together. An adhesive may also be used, if desired, to more securely attach outer capsule 180 to inner capsule 152.
Installation of punt capsule 150 onto bottle 66 may occur by inserting punt capsule 150 over the bottom of bottle 66 and over bottle wall 76, as shown in
To release and access item 204 from within chamber 200 when punt capsule 150 is fully installed on bottle 66, the user must first tear outer capsule 180 to sever and release the portion of outer capsule 180 below tear strip 185. To tear outer capsule 180, a user may grip loose end 193 of tear strip 185, which may extend exteriorly through, for example, either longitudinal seam 186 in skirt 182 or through an opening in skirt 182, and pull tear strip 185 to rupture skirt 182 along the periphery of skirt 182 until the portion of outer capsule 180 below tear strip 185 is severed and chamber 200 is released.
Once chamber 200 has been released from punt capsule 150 on bottle 66, the contents of chamber 200 may be accessed by, for example, gripping peel tab 208 of peel strip 206 (see
Indicia similar to that shown and described for the previously described embodiments may be positioned on outer surfaces of inner capsule 152, such as in cavity 160 or on bottom 158, on or in chamber 200, on inside surfaces of outer capsule 180, such as on skirt 182 or on base 188, or separately included in cavity 160 or between inner capsule 152 and outer capsule 180. In this way, hidden messages may be provided to and read by, for example, consumers of bottle 66 after the portion of outer capsule 180 below tear strip 185 is severed and chamber 200 is released from punt capsule 150.
It should be understood that the teachings of the present invention would also apply to any punt cavity shape and to any cross sectional shape of bottle 66 or of chamber 200. It should also be understood that punt capsule 150 may comprise fewer parts to accomplish the same function as disclosed herein if punt capsule 150 is fabricated using alternative methods, such as by injection molding.
Another embodiment of the present invention is shown in
As best shown in
Head 311 may further include chamber 312 for housing item 46. Chamber 312 may be formed completely within head 311, and may be disposed at or above top surface 68 of bottle 66. Alternatively, chamber 312 may extend partially into stub 318, and therefore extend below top surface 68, to form a larger cavity in primary closure 310. Chamber 312 and inner wall 313 may cooperate to form lip 317 of head 311. Lip 317 may comprise a relatively thin yet sturdy and resilient ring of material extending inwardly, the thickness of which is determined by the size and/or volume of chamber 312 relative to the size and/or volume of head 311.
Primary closure 310 may be made of any number and combination of materials and formed using any number or combination of techniques. For example, primary closure 310 may be made from cork, plastic, wood, metal, glass, or any combination of these. To form a reliable and reusable seal against bottle 66, primary closure 310 is preferably made from a resilient material. In one embodiment, primary closure 310 may comprise a synthetic material to reduce porosity of primary closure 310. Head 311 and stub 318 may be integrally formed to form primary closure 310 as a single piece, such as through a thermoplastic molding process, including a blow molding process, or a milling process using a single billet of material. Alternatively, head 311 and stub 318 may each be separately formed and brought together at a later stage in the manufacturing process. In this way, head 311 and stub 318 may each be made of different materials and/or use different manufacturing techniques to produce primary closure 310. If head 311 and stub 318 are separately formed, head 311 and stub 318 may be joined together using, for example, an adhesive or an insert molding process, to form primary closure 310. In one embodiment, chamber 312 is integrally formed with primary closure 310. In another embodiment, chamber 312 is formed by drilling and/or milling primary closure 310.
Primary closure 310 may also be made, at least in part, using one or more thermochromic materials that change color when exposed to specific temperatures. Primary closure 310 having thermochromic properties may be valuable to consumers of wine and other products as an indicator of product quality by indicating current or previous exposure to temperatures above or below a predetermined threshold or outside a given range. For example, primary closure 310 may be configured to include a thermochromic property where at least a portion of primary closure 310 turns black (or some other predetermined color) if primary closure 310 is ever exposed to a predetermined undesirable temperature during storage or transit after installation onto bottle 66.
As best shown in
The underside of cap 322 inside protrusion 324 may be hollow, as shown in
Cap 322 may be made from any number of materials and formed using any number of techniques. For example, cap 322 may be made from cork, plastic, wood, metal, or glass. Cap 322 may be as a single piece, such as through a thermoplastic molding process, including a blow molding process, or by a milling process using a single billet of material. In one embodiment, cap 322 is configured to be transparent to permit visual access to item 46 in chamber 312. In another embodiment, cap 322 is configured to be semi-transparent to partially hide item 46 from view. In yet another embodiment, cap 322 is configured to be opaque to completely hide item 46 from view.
As shown in
To secure item 46 inside chamber 312, cap 322 may be inserted onto head 311 and over opening 320 of chamber 312. While inserting cap 322 onto head 311, protrusion 324 of cap 322 may cause inner wall 313 and lip 317 to resiliently deform. When inserted, protrusion 324 of cap 322 may form an interference fit with inner wall 313. In another embodiment, when inserting cap 322, protrusion 330 of cap 322 may initially resiliently deform inner wall 313 and lip 317, but when fully inserted, neck 332 of protrusion 330 may form a slight clearance or a slight interference fit with inner wall 313 and lip 317. An adhesive may also be used, if desired, anywhere cap 322 adjoins primary closure 310 to seal item 46 from atmospheric dirt and contamination.
To further secure cap 322 to chamber 312, skirt 301 may be installed over cap 322 and primary closure 310 to cause wall 306 to at least partially cover cap 322. Skirt 301 may include aperture 304, which may be smaller in size than cap 322. Skirt 301 may be secured to and substantially conform to at least a portion of primary closure 310 and to bottle 66, over the entirety of bottle 66 or over any portion of bottle 66, such as neck 70. Skirt 301 may be shrink-fit by shrinking skirt 301 using heat or by compressing skirt 301 under pressure to conform to bottle 66, to primary closure 310 and/or cap 322, or to all three components. An adhesive may also be used, if desired, to more securely attach skirt 301 to these components. Skirt 301 may be transparent, semi-transparent, or opaque.
To permit the optional visual access to item 46 while housed in chamber 312, aperture 304 of skirt 301 may reveal chamber 312 and its contents through optional cap 322. Skirt 301 of capsule 300 may also include a transparent, semi-transparent, or opaque disk or other cover that spans aperture 304 to display, obscure, or prevent display of item 46 and to secure item 46 in chamber 312 if cap 322 is not present. Skirt 301 of capsule 300 may optionally not include aperture 304 and instead may completely cover chamber 312. However, a completely covered chamber 312 may still be visible depending on the chosen transparency of skirt 301.
To gain access to cap 322 and item 46, skirt 301 of capsule 300 may include tear strip 302 affixed or secured to inner surface 305 of skirt 301. Tear strip 302, and loose end 303 usable for gripping and actuating tear strip 302, may provide a convenient method for partially or completely separating top portion 308 of skirt 301 from skirt 301 to access cap 322 and to permit access to both the contents of chamber 312 (i.e., item 46) as well as to primary closure 310 of bottle 66. Alternatively, if tear strip 302 is not included with capsule 300, top portion 308 may be separated from capsule 300 using any conventional tool for such purpose. However, using such additional tool may be more expensive to acquire and cumbersome to deploy as compared to using the features disclosed in the present invention. Alternatively, skirt 301 may instead be configured to be removed by hand by, for example, simply pulling or peeling skirt 301 off of bottle 66.
Tear strip 302 shown in
Similar to what is shown in
To gain access to item 46 housed in chamber 312, cap 322 may be removed from primary closure 310 using an object, such as a fingernail or even a screw driver inserted under lip 326 of cap 322, to pry cap 322 off of primary closure 310 using lever action.
While specific embodiments of the invention have been described in detail, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that various modifications and alternatives to those details could be developed in light of the overall teachings of the disclosure. Accordingly, the particular invention disclosed is meant to be illustrative only and not limiting as to the scope of the invention which is to be given the full breadth of the appended claims and any equivalents thereof.
This patent application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/779,922 filed on Jul. 19, 2007, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11779922 | Jul 2007 | US |
Child | 12342990 | US |