The present invention relates to a box formed from a single piece of punched and crease-lined cardboard or the like, of the type having at least one closure panel of high resistance to opening in which there is provided at least one window into which there hookingly penetrates a profiled tooth projecting from at least one flap which lies below and in contact with the panel when this is closed in order to increase its resistance to opening, these teeth causing a portion of the panel to break when opened for the first time, hence acting as a security seal.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,890,789 and the corresponding EP-B-0318750, U.S. Pat. No. 5,207,374 and the corresponding EP-B-0519389, and DE-A-3826231 describe boxes having at least one closure panel of high resistance to opening: this panel has a flap which can be folded and inserted into the box to the side of a lateral edge of one or more tabs projecting from respective main panels of the box and folded into the box interior below the main panel (such a structure is traditional for all boxes of this type). In the panel flap there is provided at least one cut which, when the flap is folded about the panel, forms a window in the flap and a corresponding appendix which projects from the panel, with which this appendix remains coplanar.
When the box is closed, and the panel flap is inserted into the box, into the windows formed therein there penetrate hook or dovetail shaped teeth which project from the side edges of the tabs situated below the closed panel. These teeth project beyond the outer surface of the flap and are positioned below the respective appendices projecting from the panel. When the panel is pulled to open it, it drags and raises the profiled teeth projecting from the tabs so that they securely hook onto the flap of the panel, to considerably increase its resistance to opening. The structure and characteristics of boxes of this type are well known and are described in the aforestated patents, hence no further comment is necessary.
EP-B-0709293 describes a box similar to the aforedescribed, but differs therefrom in that between the closure panel and the flap projecting from it there is a preferential tearing line (usually a succession of small cuts or knurlings) which cause a portion of the flap to tear or the entire flap to separate from the panel, when the box is opened the first time. The profiled teeth which project from the box tabs and which hook into the windows provided in the flap retain the flap with a force greater than that required to cause partial or total separation of the flap when the panel is raised to open the box. The problem which arises is that, after the box has been opened, according to the teachings of EP-B-0709293, the panel can no longer be closed and retained in its closed position (if the entire flap projecting from it has been torn away), or can be retained only at its end (if only a portion of the flap has been torn off on first opening the box). The main object of the present invention is therefore to improve the boxes of known type described in EP-B-0709293 by making it possible to effectively and repeatedly close the box after the box has been opened the first time and the flap projecting from its closure panel and acting as the security seal has been totally or partly torn off.
Another object is to provide a box of low cost, and of simple production, assembly and use.
These and further objects are attained by a box formed from a single piece of punched and crease-lined cardboard or the like, comprising
Preferably, the length of the closure panel in correspondence with the appendix projecting from it is at least equal to the distance between the opposing transverse folding lines which separate the closure panel and respectively the supplementary tab from the respective main panels, said supplementary tab being glued to the surface of the main panel onto which it is folded.
The invention also relates to the punched and crease-lined one-piece sheets of cardboard or similar flexible material for forming a box such as the aforesaid.
The structure and characteristics of the box will be more apparent from the ensuing description of two embodiments thereof given by way of non-limiting example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIGS. from 1 to 4 represent a punched and crease-lined cardboard sheet shown laid flat and in its successive stages of folding to form a box;
Reference will be firstly made to FIGS. from 1 to 4 which show a punched and crease-lined cardboard sheet comprising four consecutive main panels 1-4 and a flap 5 projecting from the panel 1, they being separated from each other by parallel longitudinal folding lines 6-9. Two closure panels 10 project from the two opposing ends of the panel 3, whereas tabs 11 project from the ends of the panels 2 and 4. The closure panels 10 and the tabs 11 are separated from the respective main panels by transverse folding lines 12 perpendicular to the longitudinal folding lines 6-9.
From each closure panel 10 there projects a lip 13 which is separated from the panel itself by a folding line parallel to the lines 12 and consisting of a succession of knurlings or of successions of small cuts 14 interrupted by continuous cuts which define two projecting appendices 15 within each tab 13. When the knurlings 14 are torn through, the lips 13 separate from the closure panels 10, from the free ends of which the appendices 15 project.
From one side of the tabs 11 there project hook-shaped teeth 16 which are inserted into the closed box (as explained hereinafter) to hook into the windows left free in the lips 13 by the appendices 15, when the box is closed.
Again, as can be seen from
It will now be assumed that the flat cardboard sheet of
After applying glue 20 to the free edges of the supplementary tabs 17, these tabs are folded onto the panel 1, so that they adhere to them (FIG. 2). The cardboard sheet is then folded about the folding line 7, applying glue 21 to the outer surface of the flap 5 (FIG. 3), after which the panel 4 is folded about the folding line 9, superposing its free edge onto the flap 5 and making it adhere to it (FIG. 4).
At this point the box preparation by the box manufacturer is complete and the box is ready to be used by the firm which is to insert and keep the articles to be contained in the box.
Using well known high speed machines, pressure is inserted between the folding lines 7 and 9 and the tabs 11 and lips 13 are folded to open the box out from its flattened state of
The hook-shaped teeth 16 securely hook onto the sides of the windows in the lips, contributing to the resistance of the panels 10 to opening, as can be seen from
All the aforedescribed characteristics (excluding the presence of the supplementary tabs 17 with relative apertures 19) is well known and described and illustrated on the prior patents cited in the introduction to this description.
From the figures, and in particular
When the box is opened for the first time, the teeth 16 cause the lip 13 to separate, but the closure panel 10 can still be repeatedly and easily returned to its closed position by slightly rotating this panel inside the box, while the appendices 15 bend the main panel 1 slightly outwards, until these appendices become positioned within the apertures 19, as shown schematically in an accentuated manner in FIG. 8. Under these conditions the panel 10 is securely retained by the free edges of the apertures 19, especially by virtue of the fact that the bending resistance of the box walls is strongly increased by the presence (in its interior) of the supplementary tab 17 and also the fact that this tab is glued onto the main wall on which it is superposed.
It is apparent that the width of each closure panel 10 in correspondence with the appendix 15 can be equal to the distance between the folding line 12 of the panel 10 and the opposing inner surface of the panel 1. In that case, when the panel 10 is reclosed after being opened for the first time with consequent tearing and removal of the tab 13, the appendices 15 become positioned within the apertures 19 of the supplementary tabs 17, without causing the main panel 1 to flex outwards. The retention of the appendix 15 (and of the closure panel) would in any event be effective because in correspondence with the apertures 19, the thickness of the panel 1 is doubled by the presence of the bent supplementary tab 17 in its interior, so greatly increasing the resistance to bending in an outward direction (which would cause the appendix 15 to disengage from the respective aperture 19).
It is also apparent that the boxes can be different from those shown in FIGS. from 1 to 8. For example, the described closure panel and supplementary tab can be provided at only one end of the box; a single appendix can be provided (instead of two as described up to now), so that the box can be such as is obtainable from the cardboard sheet of which a portion is shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2002A0369 | Feb 2002 | IT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1989659 | Adsit et al. | Feb 1935 | A |
2116652 | Adler | May 1938 | A |
3578154 | Martelli | May 1971 | A |
4163492 | Rella | Aug 1979 | A |
4752028 | Ogura | Jun 1988 | A |
4890789 | Lo Duca | Jan 1990 | A |
4917288 | Heitele et al. | Apr 1990 | A |
5207374 | Lo Duca | May 1993 | A |
6296176 | Frenois et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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3826231 | Feb 1990 | DE |
0 709 293 | May 1996 | EP |
1 133 776 | Nov 1968 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040108369 A1 | Jun 2004 | US |