The present invention pertains to a method for manufacturing a box, as well as a box construction.
Rigid boxes consisting of sheet-lined cardboard are used as high-quality sales and gift packages and also referred to as fine cardboard boxes or luxury cardboard boxes. Typical examples are slip-top boxes with two cases that are closed on five sides and therefore open on one side. One individual case is also used as a book slipcase. There also exist hinged cover boxes, in which the case that is closed on five sides is connected to a multi-element cover construction.
The manufacture of such boxes is elaborate, not very flexible and relatively expensive due to the partially double material usage.
During the manufacture, relatively complicated cardboard blanks and cover material blanks are initially punched out with individually fabricated punching tools. The four sidewalls of the cardboard blank that are still connected to the bottom by means of parting lines that are not punched through are then positioned upright in a box covering machine with a punch that is individually adapted to the case format and presses the bottom into an uprighting shaft such that the sidewalls can be fixed by means of paper strips glued over the corners or beads of glue injected into the joints. The thusly formed cardboard case is then placed onto the cover material blank that is provided with glue over its entire surface and the cardboard case and the cover material blank are jointly pressed into a press-on shaft, wherein two opposing lateral surfaces of the cover material are initially pressed on and folded around the case edges and the two other lateral surfaces are subsequently pressed on. After the upper section of the double punch has been lifted out of the case, the upwardly protruding cover material is folded inward and placed against the inner side of the cardboard case and pressed on by the punch that now once again moves downward.
The multi-element cover construction for a hinged cover box is composed of several cardboards that are arranged parallel and jointly lined over their entire surface and with turn-ins on all sides. It features a bottom, onto which the covered case subsequently is glued manually. The actual cover is connected to the bottom by means of an additional sidewall and usually lined with another cover material. The hinged cover box according to the state of the art therefore features a double bottom and at least one double sidewall.
A cardboard lining and turn-in machine such as, e.g., a casemaker, is required for the manufacture of the multi-element cover constructions. In addition to a punching machine, a special box coating machine is required for the manufacture of the case. The assembly of the case and the cover construction then still takes place manually.
The conversion to a different box format requires a significant effort. It is not only necessary to prepare the punching tools for the cardboard and the cover material, but also the punches and additional press-on means that are individually adapted to the format. During the set-up phase of the box coating machine, corrections of the punches are frequently required such that the conversion and set-up may drag on for several hours. An economical manufacture of boxes therefore can only be realized for larger batches.
The present invention is directed to a method for manufacturing a box that also makes it possible to economically and flexibly manufacture high-quality boxes in smaller batches. A related aim is to provide a box construction, in which the material usage is minimized, wherein this box construction can be manufactured in a purely mechanical fashion by utilizing few machines.
According to a method embodiment, the box is created on the basis of a multi-element lined box part, to which two separate and likewise lined sidewalls are glued. The multi-element box part comprises the bottom, as well as two of the four sidewalls. The two other sidewalls are glued on by means of straps flush with or slightly set back to the edges of the multi-element box part, wherein the multi-element box part is quasi folded around the third and fourth sidewalls. This results in a rigid box that in its simplest form defines an upwardly open case.
Simple cardboard and cover material blanks that can be produced with conventional circular cardboard shears and blank cutting machines are processed in this method. Only the corners of the cover blanks still need to be removed. The multi-element box part, as well as the separate third and fourth sidewalls, may be manufactured with a conventional cardboard lining and turn-in machine such as, e.g., a casemaker. During the joining of the multi-element box part to the third and fourth sidewalls, the straps of the third and the fourth sidewalls merely need to be provided with glue and folded by 90° onto the inner sides of the multi-element box part and pressed on.
A machine intended for this purpose can have a much simpler design than known box coating machines and can also be converted to different formats in a simpler fashion. The previous elaborate uprighting of a box is quasi replaced with simply folding the multi-element box part. It is also no longer necessary to fix the case by means of paper strips that are glued over the edges or beads of glue injected into the joints. Furthermore, no cover materials need to be pressed on the case and elaborately folded and turned in such that individually adapted punches are no longer required.
In boxes with wide bottoms between the first and second sidewalls, in particular, the stability of the box can be increased in that an edge of the third and fourth sidewalls that respectively faces the bottom is glued to the bottom at least in certain points. The gluing can be easily realized in that an edge of the cover material protrudes on the edge of the third and fourth sidewalls that faces the bottom in the form of a third strap that is glued onto the inner side of the bottom in the form of an orthogonally folded strap.
The processing of one-piece cardboards simplifies the handling of the cardboards at the cardboard lining and turn-in machine. In addition, only one rather than the otherwise required three or more cardboards need to be cut to size. The grooved folding lines in the one-piece cardboards produce sharp and completely filled out edges between the bottom and the first and second sidewalls that cannot be manufactured in box coating machines during the folding of the multi-element box part.
Hinged cover boxes can be easily realized with additional cardboards arranged in the multi-element box part. The hinged cover box does not feature double bottoms and sidewalls. Depending on the arrangement of the additionally provided cardboards, various hinged cover box constructions from a simple one-piece cover to altar covers and multi-part covers that overlap an opposing sidewall can be manufactured. A closure can be easily integrated into the hinged cover boxes by inserting magnets into recesses of the cardboards of mutually overlapping covers or the cover and the sidewall, respectively. At least the inner side of the single-element or multi-element and, if applicable, multi-piece cover is preferably lined with a cover material.
The joining of the multi-element box part to the third and fourth sidewalls can be easily realized in that the third and fourth sidewalls are initially glued on the inner side of the first sidewall with their first straps, and in that the second sidewall of the multi-element box part is subsequently folded and glued onto the second straps. Due to these measures, the inner side of the first sidewall is freely accessible for positioning the third and fourth sidewalls and for pressing on the first straps. If the bottom of the multi-element box part is already folded orthogonal to the first sidewall before the third and fourth sidewalls are glued onto the inner side of the first sidewall, the third and fourth sidewalls can be aligned relative to the bottom that extends orthogonal to the first sidewall prior to the joining process.
Recessed grips or similar openings in the outer edges of the sidewalls can be realized with contours other than a straight line in the outer edges of the first and/or second sidewall. Since the first and second sidewalls form parts of the multi-element box part, thusly curved edges can already be turned in and pressed on in the cardboard lining and turn-in machine.
Aspects of the present invention are elucidated in the following description with reference to the attached drawing, in which
The book slipcase 17 in
The hinged cover box 21 according to
The hinged cover box 31 according to
The hinged cover box 41 according to
The hinged cover box 51 according to
The above-described embodiments of the inventive box merely represent a small selection of possible box constructions. Other rigid boxes such as standing slipcases, slip-top boxes (with two cases realized in accordance with the inventive construction principle), etc., may also be constructed in accordance with the inventive construction principle—multi-element box part 1 and separate sidewalls 13, 14 glued thereto.
An embodiment of the inventive method for manufacturing such boxes is illustrated in the form of a block diagram in
The required cardboards 7, (7′, 7″, 7′″), 8, and cover cardboard 9 are cut out of large-format cardboard sheets 66. The cardboards are cut to size 61 by means of circular cardboard shears. Several passes 61.1 to 61.3 are required for producing the different cardboards 7, (7′, 7″, 7′″), 8, 9 of a box 21. The required cover blanks 2, 3 are cut with blank cutting machines. The cover material may be supplied in the form of rolls 67 or sheets. It may consist of simple paper, printed paper, sheet-lined paper, film, fabric, leather, etc. The blank cutting process 62 is followed by the corner removal 63, in which unneeded cover material is removed in the region of the subsequent turn-ins 2a, 3a. On the cover blank 2 for the multi-element box part 1, the corners 2b are removed straight while the corners 3b of the cover blank 3 for the third and fourth sidewalls 13 and 14 is removed in a notched fashion. Two passes 62.1, 62.2 and 63.1, 63.2 are respectively required because two different cover blanks 2, 3 are needed.
The correspondingly cut individual parts of the multi-element box part 1, as well as the third and fourth sidewalls 13, 14, are then joined in separate passes 64.1, 64.2 by means of a cardboard lining and turn-in machine such as, e.g., a casemaker. The cardboard lining process 64 includes turning in the protruding cover blank edges, wherein at least two opposing edges of the cover material 3 in the form of first and second straps 4.1, 4.2 are not turned in on the third and fourth sidewalls 13, 14.
The cardboard lining process 64 may be followed by finishing steps such as embossing or attaching closures, etc. For example, magnets 19.1, 19.2 may be inserted into corresponding recesses of the cardboards. At least the inner side of the subsequent cover 22 may be lined with a cover material 20 in an additional lining process.
According to
At the end of the manufacturing method, joining 65 of the hinged cover box 21 is carried out as described below with reference to
Prior to gluing on the first straps 4.1, the bottom 10 of the multi-element box part 1 may already be folded orthogonal to the first sidewall 11 such that the third and fourth sidewalls 13, 14 can be aligned relative to the bottom 10.
The third and fourth sidewalls 13, 14 may be joined flush with or slightly set back to the outer edges of the first and second sidewalls 11, 12. In boxes with a relatively wide bottom 10 (large distance between the first and second sidewalls 11, 12), the stability can be improved by respectively gluing an edge of the third and fourth sidewalls 13, 14 that faces the bottom 10 to the bottom 10 in one or several additional gluing points 75. Alternatively, a third strap 4.3 that is not turned in can be glued to the inner side of the bottom 10 on the corresponding edge of the third and fourth sidewalls 13, 14.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2011 108 355 7 | Jul 2011 | DE | national |