The present application and the resultant patent relate generally to a dispensing carton for sheet products and more particularly relate to a bottom dispensing carton with support tabs formed in one or more sidewalls.
Sheet products, such as wipers, napkins, facial tissues, towels, and the like, may be packed, distributed, and dispensed in a carton-type dispenser. The carton-type dispenser generally has a dispensing opening on one end through which the individual sheets may be removed sequentially by the user. The sheets may be overlapped and/or interfolded such that pulling a leading sheet through the opening results in a subsequent sheet being pulled partially through the opening via friction or perforation tabs and ready for use.
The dispensing opening of the carton may be oriented at the top, the sides, and/or the bottom of the carton. One issue in bottom dispensing, however, is the downward force of the weight of the stack of sheets therein. Specifically, the weight of the stack may exceed machine direction tensile strength of the bottom sheet. The bottom sheet thus may fail via tearing or tabbing when the user attempts to remove the bottom sheet from the carton.
There is thus a desire for an improved carton-type dispenser. Preferably, such a carton-type dispenser may be versatile in dispensing sheet products in any orientation. Specifically, the carton-type dispenser may provide bottom dispensing without allowing the bottom sheets to tear, tab, or otherwise fail when being removed therefrom.
The present application and the resultant patent thus provide a dispensing carton for a number of sheet products therein. The dispensing carton may include a first wall, a dispensing aperture positioned in the first wall, a perpendicular second wall, and one or more support tabs positioned in the perpendicular second wall. The support tabs may be folded within the perpendicular second wall to support the number of sheet products therein.
The present application and the resultant patent further provide a method of dispensing a stack of sheet products from a dispensing carton. The method may include the steps of opening a dispensing aperture on the dispensing carton, deploying one or more support tabs within a sidewall of the dispensing carton, positioning the dispensing carton with the dispensing aperture on a bottom of the dispensing carton, supporting a portion of the stack of sheet products with the one or more support tabs so positioned, and dispensing a leading sheet of the stack of sheet products through the dispensing aperture.
The present application and the resultant patent further provide for a blank for use in erecting a dispensing carton. The blank may include a bottom panel, a dispensing aperture positioned in the bottom panel, a side panel, and one or more support tabs positioned in the side panel. The one or more support tabs may include a half moon like shape.
These and other features and improvements of the present application and the resultant patent will become apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art upon review of the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the several drawings and the appended claims.
As used herein, the term “sheet products” includes natural and/or synthetic cloth or paper sheets. Sheet products may include both woven and non-woven articles. Examples of sheet products include, but are not limited to, wipers, napkins, tissues, towels, and other types of fibrous, film, polymer, or filamentary products and the like. Such sheet products generally are thin in comparison to their length and breadth. The sheet products may exhibit a relatively flat planar configuration and may be flexible to permit folding, rolling, stacking, and the like. The sheet products may be releasably attached to each other. Suitable releasable attachment means include, but are not limited to, friction, cohesion, or other forces that releasably attach adjacent articles. Perforations upon the sheets may provide such releasable detachment. The sheets also may be interfolded such that releasable attachment may result from friction or cohesion between adjacent sheets. The scope of the present application is not limited by the nature of the sheet products.
Referring now to the drawings, in which like numerals refer to like elements throughout the several views,
The carton dispenser 100 may have a dispensing wall 110. The dispensing wall 110 may include a dispensing aperture 120 formed therein. As will be described in more detail below, the dispensing aperture 120 may be formed in the dispensing wall 110 via a number of fold lines, tear lines, and the like. The dispensing aperture 120 may have any desired size, shape, or configuration. In this example, the dispensing wall 110 may be a bottom wall 130 although any wall may be used herein. The dispenser 100 also may include a top wall 140 opposite the bottom wall 130 and a number of perpendicular sidewalls 150 therebetween. The terms “bottom,” “top,” and “side” are for purposes of relative orientation only and not as an absolute position. Any wall may be used as the bottom, the top, or any of the sides as positioned by the user. One or more of the sidewalls 150 also may have a dispensing slot 160 formed therein. The dispensing slot 160 may merge with the dispensing aperture 120 of the bottom wall 130. The dispensing slot 160 also may be formed via a number of fold lines, tear lines, and the like. The dispensing slot 160 may have any desired size, shape, or configuration.
The carton dispenser 100 also may have a number of support tabs 170 formed therein. The support tabs 170 may be formed in any one or more of the sidewalls 150. The support tabs 170 may be formed by a number of fold lines, tear lines, and the like. Any number of support tabs 170 may be used herein in any orientation. The support tabs 170 may have a largely half moon like shape 180 although any desired size, shape, or configuration may be used herein. The half moon like shape 180 of the support tabs 170 may rotate about the sidewall 150 via a tab fold line 190. As is shown in
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The blank 300 may have a number of panels and flaps separated by a number of the fold lines. Specifically, the blank 300 may have a bottom panel 310, a top panel 320, a pair of side panels 330, and a number of side flaps 340 that correspond to the bottom wall 130, the top wall 140, and the side walls 150. The respective panels and flaps may be connected by a number of fold lines 350. The dispensing aperture 120 and the dispensing slot 160 may be formed by a number of tear lines 360.
In this example, one of the side panels 330 has a pair of support tabs 170 formed therein. Specifically, a pair of vertical tabs 240 are formed via the vertical fold lines 250 and a number of tear lines 360. Specifically, one right flap 260 and one left flap 270 are shown. Other configurations and other types of support tabs 170 may be used herein.
In use, the dispensing carton 100 may manufactured and erected in a conventional manner. The sheets 10 may be loaded within the dispensing carton 100 in a stack 20 and the dispensing carton 100 may be distributed as desired. The end user may decide to position the dispensing carton 100 in any orientation. If the end user elects to dispense via the top of the dispensing carton 100, the end user simply removes the dispensing aperture 120 such that the end user may dispense the sheets 10 therein in a conventional fashion.
If the end user elects a bottom dispense, however, the end user may deploy one or more of the support tabs 170. The end user presses along the half moon like shape 180, the triangular shape 195, or any other suitable shape of one or more of the support tabs 170 such that each support tab 170 rotates inward along the fold line 190. If the horizontal tabs 200 are used, one or more of the horizontal tabs 200 may be inserted between a pair of the sheets 10 in the stack 20. The horizontal tabs 200 thus serve to support the sheets 10 in the stack 20 above the horizontal tab 200 so as to lessen the force on a bottom leading sheet 30 and the other sheets 10 in the stack 20 beneath the horizontal tab 200. Similarly, if the vertical tabs 240 are used, the vertical tabs 240 serve to compress and support the sheets 10 therein. This compression also serves to support the sheets 10 in the stack 20 above the vertical tabs 240 so as to lessen the force on the leading sheet 30 and the sheets 10 below the vertical tab 240 in the stack 20.
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The dispensing carton 100 thus may be used in any orientation. The support tabs 170 need only be employed in the case of a bottom dispense. The support tabs 170 remain intact along the sidewall 150 during shipping and dispensing to ensure the quality of the sheet material 10 therein while not adding unnecessary components or weight therein. The support tabs 170 thus remain intact unless deployed by the end user. The support tabs 170 prevent tearing, tabbing, or other types of failure of the sheets 10 in a bottom dispense.
It should be apparent that the foregoing relates only to certain embodiments of the present application and the resultant patent. Numerous changes and modifications may be made herein by one of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the general spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the following claims and the equivalents thereof.
The present application claims priority to provisional application Ser. No. 61/532,184, entitled “BOTTOM DISPENSING CARTON”, filed on Sep. 8, 2011. Provisional application Ser. No. 61/532,184 is incorporated herein by reference in full.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61532184 | Sep 2011 | US |