This application is a U.S. National Phase application under 35 U.S.C. §371 of International Application No. PCT/EP2012/058910, filed on May 14, 2012 and which claims benefit to German Patent Application No. 20 2011 050 360.7, filed on Jun. 6, 2011. The International Application was published in German on Dec. 13, 2012 as WO 2012/168036 A1 under PCT Article 21(2).
The present invention relates to a cigarette paper pack.
Cigarette paper packs that receive cigarette papers (in other words: rolling papers) for rolling cigarettes have previously been described. DE 102009025882 A1 describes, for example, a cigarette paper pack of this type. The prior art provides single packs that contain one stack of often fifty or a hundred individual papers and dual packs containing two stacks of often fifty individual papers in each stack, wherein the stacks are disposed next to each other.
Known cigarette paper packs have the disadvantage that a comfortable removal of rolling papers is not always ensured, particularly when only a few rolling papers remain in the pack. If the cigarette paper pack is intended to hold particularly thin rolling papers, those papers no longer accommodate the full volume of the pack. Rolling papers can thus fall out of the pack even when the pack is still quite full.
An aspect of the present invention is to provide a cigarette paper pack without the aforementioned disadvantages.
In an embodiment, the present invention provides a cigarette paper pack which includes a removal opening and a spring element comprising at least one spring. The spring element is configured to feed cigarette rolling papers in a direction of the removal opening.
The present invention is described in greater detail below on the basis of embodiments and of the drawings in which:
The cigarette paper pack according to the present invention provides for a spring element with at least one spring that has the effect of feeding the cigarette papers in the direction of a removal opening.
It is in this way possible to remove the rolling papers with the same ease throughout, from the very beginning of use, when package is still full, until the very end, when only few rolling papers are left in the cigarette paper pack. The risk that the top cigarette paper slips completely into the package and can only be retrieved with difficulty, for example, is thus reduced.
The spring can be conceivably designed in such a manner that it pushes the cigarette papers against the rim of the removal opening even when only few rolling papers are left in the pack.
It can be sufficient for the spring to be designed such that, although it pushes the rolling papers not against the rim when only few papers are left inside the pack, it advances the rolling papers closer to a point toward the removal opening than where they would be without the spring.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the spring element can, for example, be configured in one piece. A plurality of spring elements is conceivable. Exactly one spring element can, for example, be provided.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the rolling papers can, for example, be folded in the center and stacked in the manner as is known in the art. This means that the stack has a cross-section that corresponds to approximately one half of the area of one rolling paper. Because the rolling papers are stacked into each other, removing one rolling paper will automatically cause a longitudinal side of the rolling paper that is stacked there below to be guided through the removal opening so that it can also be easily removed at a later time. The removal opening can, for example, be smaller than one half of a cigarette rolling paper, as is the case with the known cigarette paper packs, such that the rim or the frame of the removal opening prevents the rolling papers from falling out of the cigarette paper pack.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the at least one spring can, for example, comprise a bending spring, for example, a leaf spring. It has been found that a spring of this kind is particularly cost-effective to produce.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the at least one spring can, for example, comprise paper. The spring can, for example, be formed of paper. Paper in the context of the present invention also includes cardboard. The spring can also comprise other materials, such as, for example, metal or plastic, or it can be formed therefrom. Paper has, however, been found to be well suited.
In an embodiment, the spring element comprises a plurality of springs that can, for example, be spaced in relation to each other.
Aside from the spring element, the cigarette paper pack can, for example, be formed of a paper pack cut that can, for example, be made of paper. A cut is defined as a flat, two-dimensional construct of a certain, chosen contour.
The cigarette paper pack can, for example, comprise a rear adhesive edge that is formed of the paper pack cut and that can, for example, be adjacent to a back wall so as to fix the wall in place.
The length of the cigarette paper pack corresponds approximately to the length of the cigarette papers.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the cigarette paper pack is a single pack. This means that, in the filled state, only a single stack of cigarette papers is available.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the width of the spring can, for example, be smaller than the length of the cigarette papers. It has been found that, despite the minimal stiffness of the cigarette papers, it is not necessary for the spring to be effective across the entire length of the cigarette papers. By providing a spring that is narrower than the length of the rolling paper and that, therefore, does not extend over the total length of the cigarette paper pack, the conditions for producing a particularly easily fabricated cigarette paper pack have been created.
In an embodiment as a single pack, the rear adhesive edge can, for example, include a cut-out that the spring is able to pass through during production. The production process has thus been simplified. The cut-out can, for example, be open on one side.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the cigarette paper pack can, for example, be a dual pack with two rolling paper chambers that are disposed adjacent relative to each other and that each contain one stack of cigarette rolling papers when the pack is full.
The spring element can, for example, comprise an element that fulfills further functions. These functions can be spring-fastening functions. In an embodiment, these further functions can, for example, be alternate or additional functions with regard to spring-fastening functions which do not serve for fastening the spring. It has been found that combining a plurality of functions in the spring element results in a further reduction of the production complexity.
In an embodiment of the present invention as a dual pack, the spring element can comprise an element that constitutes a divider. The spring element is in fact a spring-divider element in that case. It has been found that the spring element is able to assume the function of a divider, whereby a separate dividing means that prevents the two stacks from slipping into each other is omitted.
In an embodiment of the present invention, two springs can, for example, be provided inside one chamber in an embodiment of a dual pack, while exactly one spring can, for example, be provided in the other chamber. The spring that is individually provided in one chamber can, for example, have a width that is smaller than the length of the cigarette papers. The two springs that are provided in exactly one chamber can, for example, be spaced relative to each other by the width of the other spring. These widths are, even when added together, still smaller than the length of the cigarette papers. It has been found that, with minimal production complexity, it is possible to create a particularly functional cigarette paper pack in this way and that, despite the minimal stiffness of the cigarette papers, it is not necessary to cause the spring to be in effect across the entire length of the cigarette papers acting upon the same.
In a dual pack embodiment, the rear adhesive edge of the pack can, for example, include an opening. The spring element can, for example, pass through the opening by way of a spring. The fixation of the spring element is thereby improved, especially during the production of the cigarette paper pack, thereby simplifying the fabrication process.
The cigarette paper pack can, for example, comprise, in a manner known from the prior art, a floor tab and side adhesive edges. In an embodiment of the dual pack, the spring element can, for example, be disposed between the rear adhesive edge and/or the side adhesive edges and the floor tab. In other words, parts of the spring element are disposed between the rear adhesive edge and the floor tab and the other parts of the spring element are disposed between the side adhesive edges and the floor tab.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the spring-divider element can, for example, be formed from a spring-divider cut. The spring-divider cut can, for example, be formed from paper, and the spring-divider element can, for example, be formed from paper by folding the paper. The spring-divider element can, for example, be formed from the spring-divider cut, exclusively by folding. The spring-divider cut can, for example, have a rectangular contour. The spring-divider can, for example, be formed from the spring-divider cut in the following manner: an edge-side central area of the spring-divider cut can, for example, be angled in excess of 90° in one direction to form a first spring. The area that is adjacent to this area can, for example, be angled by approximately 90° in the same direction to obtain a first spring base. Two edge-side areas that are adjacent relative to the central edge-side area on both sides are angled in excess of 90° in the other direction to, for example, form two further fields. The areas that are respectively adjacent to these areas can, for example, be angled relative to the further spring bases by approximately 90° in the other direction. An area that is located opposite the edge-side areas forming the area adjacent relative to the divider can, for example, be angled by approximately 90° to form a divider base. The information as to degrees relates to the areas in the spring-divider cut in the non-angled starting state of the areas. The spring-divider cut includes cut-ins that allow for implementing the angling step. The area that forms the divider base can, for example, be divided in two parts, for example, by a cut-out. It has been found that the spring-divider element that is fabricated in this manner can be produced with functionality and ease.
The present invention further relates to a spring element and a spring-divider cut, each taken separately, of a cigarette paper stack of the previously described type.
The present invention will be described in further detail below based on the drawings.
The cigarette rolling papers were omitted in all drawings to improve the clarity of the drawings.
The spring 3 causes the rolling papers, presently not shown, to be fed in the direction of the removal opening 7. The cigarette rolling papers are thus always nicely fixed inside the cigarette paper pack, and they can be comfortably removed for the duration of the total usable time period of the cigarette paper pack. The situation that the topmost cigarette rolling paper completely slips into the rolling paper chamber 11 and is then only difficult to retrieve is thus for the most part precluded. The springs 3, 103, 203, 104, 204, 105, 205 of all shown embodiments serve this purpose.
The spring width B is considerably smaller in the single pack than the pack length A. It is smaller than 9/10 of the pack length A. It can be approximately one half of the pack length A.
As shown, for example in
The spring-divider cut, from which the spring element 102, 202 is formed, is cut off a paper strip. It is subsequently grooved, scored and punched.
The spring element 102, 202 comprises a central spring 103, 203, two outer springs 104, 204, 105, 205, a first spring base 114, 214 for the central spring 103, 203, a further spring base 115, 215 for the outer spring 104, 204, a further spring base 116, 216 for the other outer spring 105, 205, a divider 112, 212 and a divider base 117, 217.
Aside from the spring element 102, 202, the cigarette paper pack 100, 200 is made from a pack cut that is depicted in
The spring width B′, B″ of the central spring 103, 203 is considerably smaller in the embodiments of the dual pack than the pack length A′, A″. It is somewhat smaller than half the pack length A′, A″. The spring widths C, C′, D, D′ of the outer springs 104, 204, 105, 205 are each approximately one half of the spring width B′, B″ of the central spring 103, 203.
Using the example of the first embodiment of the dual pack,
The spring element 202 of the second embodiment of the dual pack has great similarity with the spring element 102 of the first embodiment of the dual pack. One difference is the fact that the divider base 217, as shown in
As depicted, in particular, in
The production of the dual pack is achieved as follows: the paper strip serves for creating a spring-divider cut (grooving, scoring, punching, cutting). The spring-divider cut is glued into the top tab I by the angled divider base 117, 217. The stacks of cigarette rolling papers are then placed to the left and to the right of this spring-divider cut into the cut pack. The spring-divider cut is then shaped in such a manner so as to create the spring divider element 120, 220. After closing the floor tab III, a so-called two-chamber dual pack with integrated paper spring has been obtained.
In all shown embodiments, the spring widths B, B′, B″, C, C′, D, D′ of the springs are, as mentioned previously, considerably smaller than the length of the pack A, A′, A″.
All cigarette paper packs 1, 100, 200 include a control opening in the back wall VIII by which it is possible to check how many cigarette rolling papers are still present inside the pack.
In all embodiments, the lid tab V forms a reclosable lid that is connected to the rest of the pack and can be pivoted by one edge about a hinge axis. The lid covers up the removal opening or removal openings, respectively, when the pack is in the state with the lid folded closed.
The present invention is not limited to embodiments described herein; reference should be had to the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2011 050 360 U | Jun 2011 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2012/058910 | 5/14/2012 | WO | 00 | 12/4/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2012/168036 | 12/13/2012 | WO | A |
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