This application is related to and claims the benefit of priority from European Patent Application 05 300 085.7, filed on Feb. 2, 2005, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a shipping box for a cable drum enabling the cable to be unwound in full or in part while the drum is inside the box. The invention also provides a method of shipping and fully or partially unwinding a cable wound on a drum.
For transport purposes, cable drums are usually placed inside respective enclosures so as to protect them against possible impacts and bad weather. In conventional manner, such drums have an axial opening (sometimes referred to as the “eye” of the drum) in which it is possible to receive a shaft. On reaching a site of use, the drum is extracted from its enclosure and a shaft is placed in the axial opening of the drum. The drum is then placed on a support which holds the shaft so as to keep it substantially horizontal. The cable can then be unwound by causing the drum to turn about the shaft.
In order to avoid extracting the drum from the transport enclosure when it is desired to unwind the cable, an improvement has consisted in incorporating a drum support within the enclosure and in placing a shaft in the eye of the drum, with the support holding the shaft so as to enable the drum to be rotated about the shaft. However, the weight of the drum and the cable is then supported by the shaft and by the support, and it can happen that the support (often made of plastics material) is broken while the drum is being transported, due to the mechanical forces exerted on the support, e.g. because of jolting while the drum is being transported.
An object of the present invention is to solve this technical problem by proposing a transport box and a method that eliminates at least in part the risk of the drum support breaking or being destroyed, while still enabling the cable to be unwound in part or in full in a manner that is simple and inexpensive.
More precisely, the present invention provides a shipping box for a cable drum, the box comprising a chest for surrounding said drum and a device for unwinding the cable wound on the drum, which drum is provided with an axial opening having a shaft passing therethrough. Said device includes two supports, each provided with a bearing, the supports being secured to two opposite internal side walls of said chest, and said box can take up two positions: a transport position in which the shaft of the drum is not supported by the bearings; and a cable-unwinding position in which the shaft of the drum is supported by the bearings, thus allowing the drum to rotate about said shaft.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the chest does not have a bottom, and the cable-unwinding position is obtained, starting from the transport position, by tilting the shipping box, e.g. by turning said shipping box upside-down.
Advantageously, the chest can be in the form of a square or rectangular parallelepiped, and the supports may be secured to the two opposite parallel inside walls or they may merely be pressed against said walls.
In an embodiment, the bearings are substantially in the form of two-pronged forks, the two ends of the drum shaft being placed firstly facing the open portions of the forks when the shipping box is in the transport position, and secondly pressing against the bottoms of the forks when the shipping box is in the cable-unwinding position.
The bearing supports may advantageously be made of folded card so as to form firstly the bearings and secondly the side reinforcements of the internal side walls of the box.
The shipping box preferably includes a shipping floor on which said drum rests when the box is in the transport position, said floor possibly being a transport pallet, for example. The chest is advantageously secured to the floor.
The invention also provides a method of shipping and unwinding a cable wound on a drum provided with a central opening and held on a shipping floor, the drum and the floor being placed inside a box constituted by a chest and a cable-unwinder device. The method comprises the following steps:
placing a shaft in said opening, the two ends of said shaft projecting a little outside said opening;
securing two supports inside said chest, each support being provided with a bearing;
bringing said box over said drum and lowering it so as to surround said drum and said shipping floor and so as to position the two ends of said shaft facing said bearings during transport of said drum in said box; and
in order to unwind the cable in full or in part, tilting said box until said two ends of said shaft are supported by said bearings and said drum is separated from said floor.
The drum is advantageously strapped to the floor while the drum is being transported.
The box is preferably turned upside-down so as to enable the cable to be unwound in full or in part.
Other advantages and characteristics of the invention appear from the following description of embodiments given as non-limiting examples and described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
a and 1b are perspective views of an embodiment of the invention respectively in its transport position and in its cable-unwinding position;
a and 2b are diagrams showing the method of shipping a box containing a drum, respectively in the transport position and in the cable-unwinding position; and
a, 3b, and 3c show an embodiment of the drum support made by folding card.
a is a perspective view of a shipping box 10 in accordance with the invention ready for shipping, and containing a cable drum 12. The drum 12 is placed on a floor 14 made of wood and provided with legs. Two cross-members 16 and 18 prevent the drum from rolling. The floor and the cross-members advantageously constitute a pallet of the kind commonly used in industry, suitable for being lifted and transported easily using a forklift truck. Fastener means (not shown) such as a strap serve to hold the drum securely on the floor 14.
The shipping box 10 comprises a chest 20 which may be made of wood, for example, or more simply out of card that is rigid and sufficiently thick (e.g. 7 millimeters (mm) thick for a chest that is in the form of a rectangular parallelepiped having a height of 76 centimeters (cm) and sides of 65 cm and 45 cm, suitable for containing a drum having a diameter of 60 cm and a width of 38.5 cm). The chest, which completely surrounds the drum 12 and the floor 14, advantageously forms a square or rectangular parallelepiped. It has four plane sides 22, 24, 26, and 28 that are parallel in pairs (22 & 24 and 26 & 28), and a lid 30. The chest 20 preferably does not have a bottom and can therefore be placed over the drum 12 and then lowered vertically so as to cover the drum 12 and the floor 14. It is also possible to envisage the chest having a bottom that is detachable using a precut line of weakness.
The bottom portion of the chest 20 is then secured to the floor 14, e.g. by staples. The bottom of the chest is cut out in such a manner as to enable the fork of a forklift truck to pass under the floor 14. The chest 20 also includes a window 32 allowing the cable to pass through when the shipping box 10 is in its cable-unwinding position (
Before covering the drum 12 with the chest 20, a shaft 34 is inserted in the central opening 36 in the drum. The opening 36 coincides with the longitudinal axis of the cylinder 38 on which the cable is wound; it is sometimes refereed to as the “eye” of the drum by the person skilled in the art. The shaft 34 projects a little beyond the flanks of the drum.
The shipping box 10 also comprises a cable-unwinding device that is secured to or associated with the chest 20. In
It can be seen that in the transport position of the shipping box, the weight of the drum and the cable is supported in full by the floor 14 and no force acts through the shaft 34 and the bearings 44, so there is no risk of them being damaged while the drum is being transported.
In order to unwind the cable from the drum 12, the shipping box is turned upside-down, with the floor 14 then being at the top of the box while the lid 30 is on the ground. In this unwinding position, it is easy to access the inside of the shipping box since it does not have a bottom. Alternatively, the bottom (now on top) could easily be removed by providing a precut line of weakness in the box. The strap which holds the drum 12 to the floor 14 is undone so as to release the drum. The drum then moves down under its own weight until the two ends of the shaft 34 are positioned on the bearings 44. The end of the cable 48 is passed through the window 32. The cable can then be unwound by turning the drum 12 about the shaft 34.
a and 2b are diagrams showing respectively the transport position and the cable-unwinding position. In
a to 3c show another embodiment of the supports for the shaft 34 of the drum 12. Relatively thick card (e.g. about 0.7 cm thick) has the shape shown in
The first operation shown in
The shaft of the drum does not rest on the bearings 44 or 46 while the drum is being transported, so the risk of those bearings being damaged are practically excluded. This makes it possible to make the drum shaft supports in a manner that is lighter than that which is possible for conventional supports and also makes it possible to avoid the drum being unwound in untimely manner. The cost of the cable-unwinding device is low compared with that of a conventional unwinder. For example, it suffices to add two folded card shaft supports in order to convert a standard shipping box into a unwinder combined with a conventional box. The floor on which the drum rests can be a standard pallet. In addition, such supports can be made of small quantities of card, and it is no longer necessary to manufacture injection molds or other dedicated tooling in order to make shaft supports, e.g. out of plastics material.
Variant embodiments can be envisaged without going beyond the ambit of the present invention. By way of example, in the embodiments described, the chest 20 is a square or rectangular parallelepiped. Other shapes might possibly be suitable. In addition, in the embodiments described, the supports 40 and 42 or 68 are vertical. Nevertheless, it is possible to devise other suitable positions: for example the supports 40 and 42 could be horizontal in the transport position (
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