The present invention relates to a compact cap and a cap and container assembly with an opening block, after opening.
Caps can generally be provided for closing containers of liquids, which are arranged on the mouthpiece of the container and normally have a tamper-proof ring, to which a protective cover is attached. These caps are snap-arranged on the mouth of the container and create the required seal due to the presence of a complementary projection and recess formed respectively on the mouthpiece of the container and inside a protective cover or cap.
Typically, the cap cover can be rotated upon opening and closing around a hinge arrangement formed between the tamper-proof ring and the cover that prevents the cover from being dispersed in the environment, once removed.
These caps have an extremely small encumbrance and are generally used in containers of milk, water, soft drinks, etc., which at the most have internal pressures of one bar. They are not suitable however for carbonated water at a pressure of two-three bars or other pressurized liquids.
These known caps, when removed upon opening by forcing the snap-engagement and by breaking their frangible bridges, tend to return to the closed or semi-closed position, so hindering the user who would like to drink directly from the mouthpiece. When broken, the frangible bridges naturally reveal the first opening and therefore also exert an anti-tampering action on the internal contents of the container.
The above-mentioned closed hinge arrangement between the cap or protective cover and the mouthpiece of the container limits the access space to the mouth of the container to a minimum, should anyone need or wish to drink. A small hinge arrangement is generally provided, in fact, between the cover and the tamper-proof ring, simply with an extension of material or a continuity of material between the cover and the ring.
Furthermore, this hinge arrangement creates a return elasticity between the cover and the ring, which greatly hinders access by a user who wishes to drink. The cover can even come into contact with the user's mouth or chin or face in general, when forced from its natural conformation. All of this creates a significant obstacle to the use of a container provided with this type of cap.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,474,491 B1 relates to a cap according to the prior art.
The general objective of the present invention is to provide a compact cap and a cap and container assembly with an opening block of the protective cover or cap, once opened, which overcomes the drawbacks of the prior art.
A further objective of the present invention is to provide a cap for a container capable of solving the above-mentioned drawbacks of the prior art in an extremely simple, economical and particularly functional way.
Another objective of the present invention is to provide a cap for a container, which enables its opening and provides for easy access to the mouthpiece of the container, and with which the cover is kept stably open.
Yet another objective of the present invention is to provide a cap for a container which can be produced by molding plastic material.
The above objectives are achieved by a cap for a container as described hereinafter.
The structural and functional characteristics of the present invention and its advantages with respect to the known art will become even more evident from the following description, referring to the attached schematic drawings, which show an embodiment example of the invention.
In the drawings:
The figures, which are exemplary and non-limiting, show an embodiment of a compact cap and a cap and container assembly with an opening block produced according to the present invention.
Indications such as “vertical” and “horizontal”, “upper” and “lower” (in the absence of other indications) should be read with reference to the assembly (or operating) conditions and as referring to the normal terminology used in current language, wherein “vertical” indicates a direction substantially parallel to that of the force of gravity vector “g” and a horizontal direction indicates a direction perpendicular to the same.
This type of cap, indicated as a whole with 11, essentially comprises a base ring 12 for preventing its separation from a mouthpiece 13 of a container, and a cap or protective cover 14 for opening and closing the mouthpiece 13 of the container.
This type of cap 11 can be produced in a single piece by plastic molding.
The cap 14, essentially having the form of an inverted cup, provides a flat upper closing wall 15 and a shaped side wall 16, of the cylindrical type. The side wall 16 defines, near the upper wall 15, an annular area 17 protruding inwardly for engaging with an upper end edge 18 of the mouth 13 of the container, which protrudes outwardly.
It can also be noted that a collar or annular element 31 extends from the flat upper wall 15 inside the cover 14 towards the inside of the cap, said collar or annular element having a smaller diameter than the cover, coaxial to the same and configured to engage in an internal wall 32 of the mouthpiece 13 of the container. This arrangement favors and forms an effective seal for the liquid contained in the container.
A series of frangible bridges 19 connects a lower edge 20 of the cover 14 with an upper edge 21 of the base ring 12. Said base ring 12, having a substantially cylindrical shape, includes an internal rib 22 projecting inwardly for engagement beneath a perimetric rib 25 projecting outwardly from a side surface 23 of the mouthpiece 13 of the container.
The cap 11, in a slot or annular notch 24 that separates the cover 14 and the base ring 12, partly occupied by the frangible bridges 19, provides for a hinge arrangement 26, which causes the parts to be integral with each other.
This hinge arrangement 26 comprises a pair of flat spaced foldable strips or bridges 27 which connect the cover 14 and the base ring 12 and a pair of columns 28 interposed between the two strips 27. According to the present invention, an extension 29 enlarged outwardly is positioned right in the center, which is an integral part of an annular collar 30 formed at the lower end of the shaped side wall 16 of the cover 14.
Each column 28 provides, in the upper part, an appendage 33 protruding outwardly in a radial direction of the cap that is positioned and engaged, with the cover in an open position, with the lower edge of the cover 14.
These appendages 33 of the columns 28 are pushed into this engagement position when the extension 29, entering into engagement with the mouthpiece 13 when the cover 14 is rotated from a closed position to an open position, causes their stable positioning over the lower edge 20 of the cover 14 and consequently a stable positioning of the cover in an open position.
Thanks to the presence of this extension 29, the cover 14 can therefore remain stably rotated in an open position (
The particular shaping of the extension 29 is such as to create a cam effect which, when the cover 14 is rotated for opening, increases its engagement with a portion of the mouthpiece 13, collaborating in this stable open positioning of the cover.
It can thus be understood how a cap according to the present invention solves the problems associated with the cited known art.
It can also be understood that the presence of the extension 29 favors the stable positioning of the snap-blocking appendages of the cover in an open position.
In this way, a stable opening position is created so that the cover 14 does not disturb a user who wishes to have access to the contents of the container, for example by bringing the mouthpiece 13 of the container or bottle to his mouth.
In the closed position, however, a sealed and safe position is created between the parts, which serves to reveal, as in all caps of this type, that the contents of the container are those filled by the original packager of the same.
It has thus been seen and understood how a compact cap and a cap and container assembly with an opening block, once opened, according to the present invention, while allowing its ample opening, also allows easy access to the mouthpiece of the container on which it is positioned.
Furthermore, the cap has an extremely small encumbrance which makes it suitable for specific applications where spaces are limited.
In addition, the constraint between the base or tamper-proof ring and the cover creates a cap in which, once the cover has been removed from the mouthpiece of the container, the cover is not separated from the attachment ring to the container.
It should also be considered that this type of cap is extremely simple and convenient to produce as it can be made by molding plastic in a single piece.
It should also be noted that a cap thus produced, for example in containers of fresh milk or non-carbonated drinks, reduces its weight, i.e., that of the container or mouthpiece. The product therefore uses smaller quantities of plastic and has a lighter weight, without any dispersion in the environment as the cap remains attached to the container or bottle.
Also in this second example, a cap 11 essentially comprises a base ring 12, for preventing its separation from a mouthpiece 13 of a container, and a cap or protective cover 14 for opening and closing the mouthpiece 13 of the container. The cap 11 can be produced in a single piece by the molding of plastic material.
Furthermore, as already seen, a series of frangible bridges 19 is provided which connects the lower edge 20 of the cover 14 with the upper edge 21 of the base ring 12.
In addition to all the features indicated above, it should be noted that in the cap, the protective cover 14 and the base ring 12 are further connected to each other by a security rod 34.
Said security rod 34 is stably connected and pivoted at a lower end 35 to the base ring 12. Further frangible bridges 36 connect this security rod 34 to both the base ring 12 and to the protective cap or cover 14, and they break when opened for the first time, guaranteeing the integrity and originality of the cap.
This is a further new and original arrangement in the cap that irreversibly reveals whether it has been subjected to a first opening. In this case, the security rod 34 remains as shown in
The objective mentioned in the preamble of the description has thus been achieved.
The protection scope of the present invention is defined by the enclosed claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102020000010690 | May 2020 | IT | national |
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4505401 | Berglund | Mar 1985 | A |
5088612 | Storar | Feb 1992 | A |
6474491 | Benoit-Gonin | Nov 2002 | B1 |
20020096532 | Berge | Jul 2002 | A1 |
20110114593 | Ishii | May 2011 | A1 |
20160016706 | Rognard | Jan 2016 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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202019106993 | Mar 2020 | DE |
1232089 | Jul 2019 | ES |
2019110853 | Jun 2019 | WO |
2019113681 | Jun 2019 | WO |
Entry |
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Appendage—Definition by Merriam-Webster Dictionary, retrieved from URL https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/appendage (Year: 2022). |
Italian Search Report of priority application IT 102020000010690, dated Feb. 16, 2021—Relevant portions are in English. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20210354883 A1 | Nov 2021 | US |