Enclosed cartons with dispensing features have been used in the past. Many such cartons include article dispensers defined by lines of disruption such as tear lines, cuts, score lines, and fold lines. A dispenser may be removable from, or hingedly attached to, a carton to create an opening from which articles can be removed from the carton. In many instances, after the user opens the dispenser, some of the articles, especially those disposed in a lower row or rows, may be difficult to remove from the carton.
According to a first embodiment of the invention, a carton comprises a bottom panel, a first side panel, a second side panel, a top panel, an end panel, an exiting end panel, and a dispenser pattern comprising breachable lines of disruption in the carton and defining a dispenser section. The dispenser section is defined in the top panel, at least one side panel, and the exiting end panel. When the dispenser section is opened, the resultant dispenser opening in the carton allows articles accommodated in the carton to be removed through the opened carton.
According to one aspect of the first embodiment, the dispenser section extends in the top panel a distance of at least fifty percent of a length of the top panel. The resultant dispenser opening allows articles to be easily accessed and removed from the carton.
According to another aspect of the first embodiment, the dispenser section extends in the side panel a distance of at least thirty percent of a length of the top panel. The resultant dispenser opening allows articles to be easily accessed and removed from the open side of the carton.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, a handle may be formed in the end panel of the carton.
Other aspects, features, and details of the present invention can be more completely understood by reference to the following detailed description of exemplary embodiments taken in conjunction with the drawings and from the appended claims.
According to common practice, the various features of the drawings discussed below are not necessarily drawn to scale. Dimensions of various features and elements in the drawings may be expanded or reduced to more clearly illustrate the embodiments of the invention.
The present invention generally relates to dispensers and handles for cartons. The present invention can be used, for example, in cartons that contain articles or other products such as, for example, food and beverages. The articles can also include beverage containers such as, for example, cans, bottles, PET containers, or other containers such as those used in packaging foodstuffs. For the purposes of illustration and not for the purpose of limiting the scope of the present invention, the following detailed description describes generally cylindrical beverage containers as disposed within the carton embodiments. In this specification, the relative terms “bottom,” “side,” and “top” may indicate orientations determined in relation to fully erected cartons.
The first side panel 10 is foldably connected to a first side end flap 12 and a first side exiting end flap 14. The top panel 20 is foldably connected to a top end flap 22 and a top exiting end flap 24. The second side panel 30 is foldably connected to a second side end flap 32 and a second side exiting end flap 34. The bottom panel 40 is foldably connected to a bottom end flap 42 and a bottom exiting end flap 44. The end flaps 12, 22, 32, 42 may extend along a first marginal area of the blank 8, and may be foldably connected along a first longitudinally extending fold line 62. The exiting end flaps 14, 24, 34, 44 may extend along a second or bottom marginal area of the blank 8, and may be foldably connected along a second longitudinally extending fold line 64. The longitudinal fold lines 62, 64 may be straight or substantially straight fold lines, or may be offset at one or more locations to account for, for example, blank thickness. When the carton 150 is erected, the end flaps 12, 22, 32, 42 close one end of the carton 150, and the exiting end flaps 14, 24, 34, 44 close a front or exiting end of the carton 150.
According to one aspect of the first embodiment, the blank 8 includes a dispenser pattern 70 comprised of breachable lines of disruption that define a dispenser 180 in the erected carton 150 (illustrated in
The tear lines 74, 76, 78, 82, 84, 92, 94, 96 of the dispenser pattern 70 can be breachable lines of disruption formed from continuous or substantially continuous tear lines formed by, for example, scores, creases, cuts, gaps, cut/creases, perforations, offset cuts, and overlapping and/or sequential combinations thereof. If cuts are used to form the tear lines 74, 76, 78, 82, 84, 92, 94, 96, the cuts may be, for example, interrupted by breachable nicks. The cut 98 may be a continuous cut, a cut interrupted by breachable nicks, or another form of breachable line of disruption, such as a score. The access feature 86 may have a generally circular perimeter defined by a continuous cut, which defines a cutout section of the top panel 20. Alternatively, the perimeter of the access feature 86 can be a cut interrupted by nicks, or a tear line, such that a removable knockout section is formed in the top panel 20.
According to another aspect of the present invention, the carton blank 8 includes an end handle pattern 100 comprised of breachable lines of disruption in the side end flaps 12, 32. The end handle pattern 100 defines a handle 140 in the erected carton 150 (illustrated in
The dimensions of the blank 8 may be selected to accommodate characteristic dimensions of articles to be accommodated within the carton 150. For example, the top panel 20 can have a width W1 that generally corresponds to or slightly exceeds a height of containers C (illustrated in
An exemplary method of erection of the carton 150 is discussed below with reference to
Referring to
The exiting end of the generally tubular form may be closed, for example, by folding the exiting end flaps 24 and 44 inwardly across the open exiting end, followed by folding the exiting end flap 14, then folding the exiting end flap 34 inwardly. The interior side of the exiting end flap 14 can be adhered to the exiting end flaps 24, 44, and the interior side of the exiting end flap 34 can be adhered to one or more of the exiting end flaps 14, 24, 44. The opposite or handle end of the generally tubular form may be closed, for example, by folding the end flaps 22 and 42 across the open back end, followed by the end flap 12, then the end flap 32, and gluing one or more of the end flaps 12, 22, 32, 42 together. Substantially cylindrical containers C or other articles, for example, may be loaded into the tubular sleeve in a conventional manner at any time before one or both ends of the carton are closed by the end flaps 12, 22, 32, 42, 14, 24, 34, 44.
The dispenser pattern 70 illustrated in
The dispenser section 182 can include portions of the exiting end panel 160, the top panel 20, and the side panel 30. In the exemplary embodiment, the corner at the junction of the panels 160, 20 and the second side panel 30 is included in the dispenser section 182, while the corner at the junction of the panels 160, 20 and the first side panel 10 is not included in the dispenser section 182. The dispenser section 182 extends a distance D1 from the exiting end panel 160 through the top panel 20.
Referring to
The handle 140 is formed from the overlapping first handle pattern 102 (
An exemplary method of opening of the carton dispenser 180 is discussed below with reference to
Still referring to
Referring to
The distance D2 of the dispenser opening 184 in the second side panel 30 can be, for example, at least 30% of the length L1. In another embodiment, the distance D2 can be at least 50% of the length L1. As shown in
Still referring to
The height Hs of the side retainer section 188 can be selected to retain one or more containers C from inadvertently falling out of the side of the dispenser opening 184. In one embodiment, for a 2×6×1 carton, the height Hs of the side retainer section 186 is between 20-90% of the characteristic diameter DC of the containers C. In another embodiment, for a 2×6×1 carton, the height Hs is between 50-80% of the characteristic diameter DC.
According to the above embodiment, the handle 140 is oriented in the end panel 170 so that insertion of a hand into the handle 140 is facilitated by the orientation of the containers C. As shown in
A parallelepipedal carton 150 as illustrated in
In this specification the term “V-shaped” indicates a profile defined by two lines that need not be perfectly straight. Further, the lines forming the V shape need not actually meet at the vertex of the “V.”
In the above embodiments, the exemplary carton is described as accommodating twelve 12-ounce cylindrical beverage containers C in a 2×6×1 configuration. Other arrangements of containers, packages, articles, and other items, however, can be accommodated within a carton constructed according to the principles of the present invention. For example, a carton constructed according to the principles of the present invention would also function satisfactorily if the carton were sized and shaped to hold articles in other configurations, such as 4×3×1, 3×6×1, 2×4×1, 2×5×1, 2×8×1, 4×6×1, etc., and multi-tier variations of the aforementioned configurations. The dimensions of the exemplary blank may also be altered, for example, to accommodate various container forms. For example, 16-ounce petaloid bottles may be accommodated within cartons constructed according to the principles of the present invention.
In accordance with the exemplary embodiments, the blank may be constructed of paperboard. The blank can also be constructed of other materials, such as cardboard, hard paper, solid unbleached sulfate (SUS) board, or any other material having properties suitable for enabling the carton to function as described above. The blank can also be laminated to one or more sheet-like materials at selected panels or panel sections.
The interior and/or exterior sides of the blank can be coated with a clay coating. The clay coating may then be printed over with product, advertising, price coding, and other information or images. The blank may then be coated with a varnish to protect any information printed on the blank. The blank may also be coated with, for example, a moisture barrier layer, on either or both sides of the blank.
For purposes of the description presented herein, the term “line of disruption” can be used to generally refer to cut lines, tear lines, crease lines, score lines, and fold lines (or overlapping and/or sequential combinations of at least one cut line, crease line, score line, tear line, or fold line). A “breachable line of disruption” is a line of disruption that is intended to be breached during ordinary use of the carton. An example of a breachable line of disruption is a tear line.
In accordance with the above-described embodiments of the present invention, a fold line can be any substantially linear, although not necessarily straight, line of disruption or other form of weakening that facilitates folding therealong. More specifically, but not for the purpose of narrowing the scope of the present invention, fold lines include: score lines; cuts that extend partially into a material along the desired line of weakness, and/or a series of cuts that extend partially into and/or completely through the material along the desired line of weakness; and various overlapping and/or sequential combinations of these features.
In the present specification, a “panel” or “flap” need not be flat or otherwise planar. A “panel” or “flap” can, for example, comprise a plurality of interconnected generally flat or planar blank sections.
The above embodiment may be described as having one or more panels adhered together by glue during erection of the carton embodiment. The term “glue” is intended to encompass all manner of adhesives commonly used to secure carton panels in place.
It will be understood by those skilled in the art that while the present invention has been discussed above with reference to exemplary embodiments, various additions, modifications and changes can be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/816,039, filed Jun. 23, 2006, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60816039 | Jun 2006 | US |