This invention relates to a compartmented tray for portion control cups for holding condiments such as salad dressing.
Prior inventors have proposed numerous compartmented trays for various products. For restaurant use, a tray for holding a number of cups containing condiments should be disposable and inexpensive to make, yet strong. In particular, the tray should be designed so that, when fully loaded, it can be grasped and lifted at only one end without bending substantially, buckling or breaking In addition, the tray should be nestable and should achieve high packing density.
An object of the invention is provide a molded plastic tray for holding containers, for example portion control cups of salad dressing.
These and other objects are attained by a compartmented tray as described below.
In the description and claims below, several dimensions are given in proportion to one another, as the invention may be scaled up or down considerably for different intended applications. Describing the structure by its proportions best defines the invention, whatever its overall size.
In the accompanying drawings,
A compartmented tray 10 embodying the invention is molded from a polymeric plastic material.
The material presently preferred is polyethylene terephthalate (PET), because it is acceptable for food use, and is inexpensive, strong, stiff, attractive, and is a thermoplastic which can be molded in conventional injection molding machines.
Other materials might be used to make the tray, however.
The tray material is preferably of substantially uniform thickness. The thickness of the material is chosen to provide adequate strength for a particular intended use, considering that the tray must have sufficient flexural strength such that, when fully loaded, it is lifted at opposite ends, or by only one end, it does not buckle or deform substantially. Suitable thicknesses will usually be within the range of 0.020 to 0.030 inches.
As one can see in
The receptacles are interconnected by a planar top wall 18 which extends outward from said side walls and is bounded by a continuous peripheral rim 20. The overall height of the tray, and thus the depth of the receptacles, is identified by dimension “H” (
All the receptacles are interconnected by troughs 22, 24. Each trough has a rounded bottom 26 (preferably semicylindrical) extending along a horizontal axis “T” and planar side walls 28 which diverge slightly at an angle in the range of 1° to 3°. Preferably, the trough axis intersects the vertical axis “V” of each receptacle through which the trough passes.
The horizontal axis of each trough lies a distance h1 (see
Each receptacle bottom has an inside diameter D and the semicylindrical portion of each trough has an inside diameter d. The preferred ratio d/D is in the range of 0.4 to 0.6.
The dimensions and proportions for a presently most preferred tray are shown in the table below:
Referring again to
The rim of the tray, best seen in
Since the invention is subject to modifications and variations, it is intended that the foregoing description and the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as only illustrative of the invention defined by the following claims.