The present invention relates to a container. More specifically, the container may be locked and unlocked by the depression of a button against a resilient foam.
Many items contained in a person's household may pose dangers due to accidental encounters with those items by persons or animals not intended to have access to such items. The owners of these items often wish to secure the items in a manner whereby unauthorized or unintended users cannot access them. One way to limit access to such persons or animals is to make it difficult for one to accidently or unintentionally open containers containing items that may pose a risk, often accomplished by the use of a type of locking mechanism. Therefore, there exist containers that require specific manipulation to retrieve the contents within the container. Types of these containers include medicine bottles that require a cap to be depressed and rotated to a certain degree, as well as food containers that may feature certain latches or locks.
These containers can often be overcomplicated and difficult for even an ordinary person to quickly access the contents within the container. Further, the manufacturing costs of the containers may be quite high due to the complexity of the locking mechanism and material used for the container. The current state of the art further lacks a simple configuration for a small lockable container in the shape of a box or rectangular prism.
Therefore, there is a need in the art for a container that is easily opened by an adult, but resistant to accidental or unintentional opening by a child or pet. There is a further need in the art for a configuration of a lockable rectangular prism that is cheap to manufacture and simple to use.
It is among the objects of this disclosure to overcome the limitations and defects of the heretofore-known devices by providing inventive features to achieve a lockable container that can be easily manipulated between a closed and opened position. The disclosure provides a lockable container comprising a tray element and a sleeve element. In a locked position, the tray element is completely housed within a pocket of the sleeve element. In an unlocked position, the tray element may exit the pocket through an entrance, defined by an entrance rim. The dimensions of the pocket of the sleeve element are significantly similar to that of the tray element. The tray element may have at least one wall and a base that define an open area within. At least one wall further contains a hole therethrough. A sidewall of the sleeve element that corresponds to the wall of the tray element when the tray element is housed within the sleeve element also contains a hole therethrough. The location of the hole of the sleeve element is aligned with the hole of the tray element when the tray element is in the locked position.
The container further comprises a foam insert and a button. The foam insert may be situated in the open area of the tray element and proximate the hole of the tray element. The button is located between the foam insert and the tray element and extends distally through the hole of the tray element. In the locked position, the button also extends distally through the hole of the sleeve element, whereby the tray element is secured in the pocket of the sleeve element because of the contact between the button and the edges of the hole of the sleeve element.
The button and foam insert are designed so that the button may be depressed against the foam insert. When the button is depressed to a distance lower than that of the sidewall of the sleeve element, the tray element is no longer locked to the sleeve element. The sleeve element may further comprise an opening at the end opposite of the entrance to the pocket, allowing a user of the container to push the tray element out through the entrance once the button has been depressed and the tray has been unlocked.
The sleeve element may further contain a stopping mechanism adapted for obstructing the complete removal of the tray element from the pocket of the sleeve element. In one embodiment, the sleeve element may further comprise a tab located at an edge of the entrance rim and folded inwardly into the pocket. The tab is located on the edge of the entrance rim corresponding with the wall of the tray element where the button is located. Thereby, when the tray element is sliding out of the pocket of the sleeve element, the button will contact the tab prior to the complete removal of the tray element. The tab will hinder the passage of the button unless an excess amount of force is used to cause the tab to fold in on itself.
In one embodiment, multiple buttons are employed in the manner above and manipulated simultaneously to unlock the tray element. In another embodiment, multiple holes may be featured at different locations and different sidewalls of the sleeve element so that the tray element may be inserted into the pocket in any possible orientation and the button will still engage at least one hole.
Implementations of the invention provide a container adapted to secure an object within using a locking mechanism that may be quickly manipulated from a locked position to an unlocked position and vice versa.
The lockable container 100 of the present disclosure is shown in the is accompanying drawings. As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
The sleeve element 140 is further comprised of a hole 146 through at least one sidewall 142. The position of the hole 146 of the sleeve element 140 corresponds with the position of the hole 126 of the tray element 120, when the tray element 120 is housed within the sleeve element 140. Further, the size and shape of the hole 146 of the sleeve element 140 also corresponds to the size and shape of the hole 126 of the tray element 120. Thus, when the tray element 120 is fully housed within the sleeve element 140, the hole 126 of the tray element 120 and the hole 146 of the sleeve element 140 are substantially aligned so that an opening exists from the open area of the tray element 120 to outside the sleeve element 140.
In one embodiment of the disclosure the sleeve element 140 may also be comprised of an opening on one or more sidewalls 142. The opening may be defined by an opening edge 148. The opening is adapted for assisting a user of the container to either push or pull the tray element 120 out of the pocket of the sleeve element 140. In one embodiment, as demonstrated in
As shown in
The container 100 is further comprised of a button 180. The button 180 is disposed between the foam insert 160 and the wall 122 of the tray element 120. Referring to
In one embodiment, the button 180 and button base 182 may be held in place via compression by the wall 122 of the tray element 120 and the foam insert 160. In another embodiment, the button may be adhesively attached to a side of the foam insert 160. In yet another embodiment, the button 180 and the foam element 160 are manufactured as a unitary piece, with the button 180 extending distally from an outer face of the foam element 160.
When the container 100 is in a locked position, as shown in
The tray element 120 may be partially removed from the sleeve element 140, by the depression of the button 180 upon the foam element 160. When the button 180 is depressed inwardly to a position whereby the button 180 does not extend substantially into the hole 146 of the sleeve element 140, the tray element 120 may partially pulled or pushed out of the sleeve element 140. A distal end of the button 180 may be tapered, whereby if the tapered end of the button 180 engages the edge of the hole 146 of the sleeve element, the force of the tapered end of the button 180 upon the edge of the hole 146 will cause the button to move beneath the edge and out of the hole 146, allowing for release of the tray element 120.
As the tray element 120 is removed from the pocket of the sleeve element 140, the button 180 slides against an inner face of the sidewall 142 of the sleeve element 140. In one embodiment, the tray element 120 may be completely removed from the sleeve element 140 once the button 180 passes out of the entrance to the pocket of the sleeve element 140. To reinsert the tray element 120 into the sleeve element 140, the button 180 must be depressed such that the tray element 120 and the outwardly extending button 180 may fit within the pocket of the sleeve element 140. Once the tray element is fully returned to a closed position, whereby the hole 126 of the tray element 120 align with the hole 146 of the sleeve element 140, the resilient nature of the foam insert 160 will push the button 180 once again through the hole 146 of the sleeve element 140. In one embodiment of the disclosure, the location of the button 180 and the location of the opening of the sleeve element are coordinated in a manner that a user may depress the button 180 and simultaneously push out the tray element 120 with a single hand.
In another embodiment of the container 100, a stopping mechanism is located on an inner face of the sidewall 142 of the sleeve element 140. The stopping mechanism is adapted to engage the button 180, thereby hindering complete removal of the tray element 120 from the pocket of the sleeve element 140. As shown in
In another embodiment of the disclosure, the sleeve element 140 comprise a secondary hole (not shown), similar in size and shape to hole 146, on the same face of the sidewall 142 where the hole 146 of the sleeve element 140 is located. The secondary hole may be located more proximal to the entrance rim 144 than the hole 146, towards the end of the sleeve element 140 comprising the entrance to the pocket and in line with a path the button 180 travels along the inner face of the sidewall 142. The secondary hole is shaped and placed so that the button 180 will expand into the secondary hole upon reaching its location. This would effectively lock the tray element 120 in the open position, until the button is again depressed and the tray element 120 is either pulled further out from the sleeve element, or pushed further into the sleeve element 140 and optionally returned to the closed position.
In one embodiment of the disclosure, the sleeve element 140 may be manufactured a single flat piece and subsequently folded and glued to create the structure of the sleeve element 140. In this embodiment, the sleeve element 140 may feature inwardly folded tabs on each edge of the entrance rim 144. All tabs may be glued down to the inner face of the sidewalls 142 of the sleeve element 140. However, the tab on the edge corresponding to the sidewall 142 featuring the hole 146 may be left unglued, whereby the unglued tab will act as the stopping mechanism hindering complete removal of the tray element 120 from the pocket of the sleeve element 140.
This disclosure should not be limited to the use of one button 180 for the locking and unlocking of the container 100. The container 100 may comprise two or more buttons 180 located between the foam insert 160 and the tray element 120 and extend distally through two or more holes 126 of the tray element 120 and two or more holes 146 of the sleeve element. Thereby, a user must simultaneously depress the two or more buttons 180 in order to partially remove the tray element 120, in accordance with the disclosure above. The two or more buttons 180 may be located laterally to one another, above and below one another, or on opposite or adjacent faces. Further, it is within the object of this disclosure that while the container may only feature one button 180, the sleeve element 140 feature multiple holes on differing locations and faces of the sidewalls 142, wherein the tray element 120 may enter the pocket of the sleeve element 140 in differing orientations and the button 180 will engage at least one hole 146.
Any reference in this specification to “one embodiment,” “an embodiment,” an “example embodiment,” etc., means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the implementation is included in at least one embodiment of the invention. The appearances of such phrases in various places in the specification are not necessarily referring to the same embodiment. In addition, any elements or limitations of any invention or embodiment thereof disclosed herein can be combined with any and/or all other elements or limitations (individually or in any combination) or any invention or embodiment thereof disclosed herein, and all such combinations are contemplated with the scope of the invention without limitation thereto.
It should be understood that the examples and embodiments described herein are for illustrative purposes only and that various modifications or changes in light thereof will be suggested to persons skilled in the art and are to be included within the spirit and purview of this application.