1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to containers generally useful for storage and transportation or goods, especially those loadable and unloadable into ISO (International Organization for Standardization) intermodal containers and flatracks and vehicles such as trucks and cargo bays of planes.
2. Description of Related Art
Containers, especially storage containers, generally take the form of large boxes comprising a base, opposing side walls, opposing end (front and rear) walls, and a cover. These components generally define a container compartment useful for storage and/or transportation of goods. Shipping containers sometimes also are provided with forklift-engageable pallets at their-bases for facilitating loading and unloading of the containers onto vehicles, such as trucks and airplanes.
Containers, such as used for shipping and/or storing, have been used in various industries and settings for the shipment of goods. However, after a container has reached its destination and been unloaded, the empty container often must be returned to its origin or to another destination where the container may be needed for further good storage and transport. The large size and bulk of empty containers can make this return trip expensive and inconvenient. To overcome this problem, a number of containers have been proposed that are convertible from their erect position to a collapsed position that substantially reduces or eliminates the empty compartment space of the container, thereby occupying less space than in the erect position. The reduced size makes transport and storage of the empty containers more economic.
Conventional collapsible containers often have one or more drawbacks. For example, conventional collapsible containers often require extraneous tools and hardware (e.g., screws, adhesive strips, bands) for erect the container. Such tools and hardware are prone to misplacement and damage and sometimes lack reusability. Conventional collapsible containers also often lack components for stable and safe stacking over prolonged storage and transport.
Oftentimes, erect containers are stored or transported under conditions that complicate accessibility to the container compartment and any goods contained therein. For example, containers typically comprise a top cover (or lid) that is removable to permit top access to and loading and unloading of the container compartment. In situations in which erect “modular” containers are stacked one upon another, higher stacked containers may physically block and prevent opening of the lids of lower containers. Access to desired goods in the compartment of the lower containers requires the laborious task of unstacking the higher stacked containers from the desired lower container. Similarly, in other situations in which an erect container is placed into a tight confinement space that prevents opening of the container top, access through the container top may require that the entire container be removed from the confinement space.
Accordingly, it is an object of the invention to provide a container capable of front panel access without requiring removal or upward movement of the container lid, such that other containers or goods located on top of the container lid need not be removed to gain access to the container compartment.
Another object of the invention to provide a collapsible container capable of front and optionally rear panel access without requiring removal or upward movement of the container lid, such that other containers or goods located on top of the collapsible container lid need not be removed to gain access to the collapsible container compartment.
Another object of the container is to provide a collapsible container that is capable of top, front, rear, or a combination there of to facilitate loading or unloading depending on the equipment being used, i.e. forklift trucks.
Another object of the invention is to provide a collapsible container that does not require any extraneous hardware to erect a container.
Another object of the invention is to provide a container that does not require the use of banding in order to hold the container together.
Another object of the invention is to provide a container that does not require banding in order to lock or hold together like containers, erected or collapsed.
Another object of the invention is to provide a rigid weather resistant collapsible container capable of holding and supporting large loads.
Another object of the invention is to provide a collapsible container that works efficiently with various manners of intermodal transport.
Another object of the invention is to provide a means for the complete inspection of goods in confined spaces, such as required for air transportation of hazardous material.
In accordance with the purposes of the invention as embodied and broadly described in this document, a first aspect of the invention provides a container having a container compartment. The container comprises a support base, first and second side structures respectively comprising first and second side panels respectively having first and second front guide tracks facing one another, a rear panel engaged with the first and second side structures, a front panel comprising a front panel upper edge and first and second front track followers received (optionally releasably) in the first and second front guide tracks, respectively, and a top cover engageable with at least one of the side and rear panels. The top cover optionally is movable between a closed state, in which the cover is positioned over the side panel upper edges and rear and front panel upper edges when the container is in the erect position, and an open state, in which the container compartment is accessible from above. The front panel is pivotal outwardly away from the container compartment about the front track followers, while the front track followers are engaged in the respective front guide tracks and while the top cover is in the closed state, from a substantially vertical orientation to an angled orientation in which the front panel upper edge is exposed from under the closed top cover. From the angled orientation, the front track followers are slidable along the respective front guide tracks, while the cover is in the closed state, to permit front access to the container compartment.
In accordance with the purposes of the invention as embodied and broadly described in this document, a second aspect of the invention provides a collapsible container movable between an erect position and a collapsed position. The container comprises a support base, spaced-apart first and second side structures comprising first and second side panels, respectively, rear and front panels, and a top cover. The first and second side panels each are movable between the erect position, in which the first and second side panels are substantially parallel to one another and substantially orthogonal to the support base, and the collapsed position, in which the first and second side panels are stowed on the support base. The first and second side structures comprise respective front guide tracks facing one another. The rear panel is movable between the erect position, in which the rear panel extends between and is engageable with the first and second side structures, and the collapsed position, in which the rear panel is stowable on the support base. The front panel comprises front track followers releasably received in the front guide tracks of the first and second side structures, respectively. The front panel is movable between the erect position, in which the front panel extends between and is engageable with the first and second side structures, and the collapsed position, in which the front panel is stowable on the support base. The top cover is engageable with at least one of the front, rear, and side panels and is movable between a closed state, in which the cover is positioned over the side panel upper edges and rear and front panel upper edges while the container is in the erect position, and an open state, in which the container compartment is accessible from above. The front panel is pivotal outwardly away from the container compartment about the front track followers, while the front track followers are engaged in the respective front guide tracks, from a substantially vertical orientation to an angled orientation in which the front panel upper edge is exposed from under the cover. From the angled orientation, the front track followers are slidable along and out of engagement with the respective front guide tracks, while the cover is in the closed state, to permit detachment of the front panel for providing front access to the container compartment.
Other aspects of the invention provide methods for attaining front access to a container, and methods for making and using the containers described herein.
The accompanying drawings are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification. The drawings, together with the general description given above and the detailed description of the preferred embodiments and methods given below, serve to explain the principles of the invention. In such drawings:
Reference will now be made in detail to the presently preferred embodiments and methods of the invention as illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which like reference characters designate like or corresponding parts throughout the drawings. It should be noted, however, that the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details, representative devices and methods, and illustrative examples shown and described in this section in connection with the preferred embodiments and methods. The invention according to its various aspects is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the attached claims read in view of this specification, and appropriate equivalents.
It is to be noted that, as used in the specification and the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise.
The terms “left,” “right,” “front,” “rear,” “horizontal,” “vertical,” and the like are used herein to assist in and facilitate the description of the invention and its principles and advantages. For the purposes of the detailed description, the reference for each of these terms is the arrangement and orientation of the container as it is depicted in
Referring now more particularly to the various figures, there is shown a collapsible container generally designated by reference numeral 100.
The collapsible container comprises a support base. As illustrated, the support base 102 comprises an inner (upward facing) surface or floor 102a (
The collapsible container further comprises first and second side structures comprising first and second side panels, respectively. As illustrated, the first (left, as viewed facing the front of the container 100) side structure 110 comprises first skirt 112 and a first side panel 114. The first skirt 112 is integral with the base support 102, and projects upwardly from a side edge of the base support 102. The first skirt 112 comprises opposing flange portions 112a and 112b. The first side panel 114 is shown in the erect position supported on the first skirt 112 in
The second side structure 120 (
The first and second side structures comprise respective front guide tracks facing one another. An example of such a front guide track is best shown in
The collapsible container further comprises a front panel and a rear panel movable between the erect position, in which the front and rear panels are substantially vertical and extend between and are engageable with the first and second side structures, and the collapsed position, in which the front and rear panels are stowable on the support base. In the illustrated embodiment, the front panel 130 comprises a front panel upper edge 130a, a first (left) front panel side edge 130b, and a second (right) front panel side edge 130c. Handholds 138 are provided as recesses in the front surface of the front panel 130 for lifting and rotating the front panel 130. In the erect position shown in
As best shown in
The container further comprises a top cover or lid, which is designated in the illustrated embodiment by reference numeral 150. The top cover 150 is preferably in the form of a panel. In their erect positions, the top cover 150, base 102, side structures 110 and 120, and front and rear panels 130 and 140 collectively define a container compartment. When the container 100 is erect, the top cover 150 is movable between closed and open states. The closed state is illustrated in
The container further comprises a plurality of mechanisms for latching front, rear, side, and top panels to one another. The front panel 130 is associated with a first latching mechanism 160 for selectively engaging the front panel 130 with the first side panel 114, a second latching mechanism 162 for selectively engaging the front panel 130 with the second side panel 124, and a third latching mechanism 164 for selectively engaging the front panel 130 with the top cover 150. The rear panel 140 is similarly associated with a fourth latching mechanism (not shown, but symmetrical to the first latching mechanism 160) for selectively engaging the rear panel 140 with the first side panel 114, a fifth latching mechanism 165 for selectively engaging the rear panel 140 with the second side panel 124, and a sixth latching mechanism 166 for selectively engaging the rear panel 140 with the top cover 150.
The first side panel 114 is further associated with a seventh latching mechanism 168 and an eighth latching mechanism 170 for selectively engaging the first side panel upper edge 114a with the top cover 150. The bottom of the first side panel 114 is associated with a ninth latching mechanism 172 and a tenth latching mechanism 174 for selectively engaging and locking the first side panel 114 in an erect state with the first skirt 112.
Similarly, the second side panel 124 is associated with eleventh and twelfth latching mechanisms 176 and 178 (
Operation of the latching mechanisms will now be described with reference to
Referring to
The latching mechanisms illustrated in
An embodiment of a method for moving the collapsible container 100 between the erect and collapsed positions will now be explained in detail. Referring to
From the angled state described above, the front panel 130 is movable upward along a substantially vertical path as the first and second front track followers 132 and 134 slide in unison upward along the substantially vertical channel portions of the guide tracks. When the track followers 132 and 134 reach the top of the substantially vertical channel portions of the guide tracks, the front panel 130 is movable outwardly away from the container compartment, i.e., forwardly. The first and second front track followers 132 and 134 are slidable in unison through the substantially horizontal channel portions of the guide tracks to detach the front panel 130 from the remainder of the container 100. Detachment of the front panel 130 from the remainder of the erect container 100 permits unobstructed front access to the container compartment. Significantly, the front panel 130 of this embodiment is detachable without requiring that the top cover 150 be removed or partially opened. (The above-described capability does not preclude the operator from optionally removing the top cover 150 or separating the top cover 150 from contact with the front panel upper edge 130a prior to detachment of the front panel 130.)
The embodiment depicted in the figures show the collapsible container 100 comprising a front panel 130 capable of detachment for providing a front access opening. Other embodiments comprise two or more detachable panels. For example, in a preferred yet optional embodiment of the invention, the rear panel 140 is pivotally movable and detachable in substantially the same manner described above with regard to the front panel 130. An embodiment for detaching the rear panel 140 comprises unlatching the fourth latching mechanism from the first side panel 114, the fifth latching mechanism 165 from the second side panel 124, and the sixth latching mechanism 166 from the top cover 150. The rear panel 140 is then pivotal outwardly away from the container compartment about the rear track followers, while the rear track followers are engaged in the respective rear guide tracks, from a substantially vertical orientation to an angled orientation in which the rear panel upper edge 140a is exposed from under the cover 150. From the angled orientation, the rear panel 140 is slidable upwardly and outwardly, optionally while the cover 150 is in the closed state, to slide the rear track followers along and out of engagement with the respective rear guide tracks and to permit removal of the rear panel 140 for providing unobstructed rear access to the container compartment.
Detachment of the top cover 150 to provide top access to the container compartment comprises unlatching the third, sixth, seventh, eighth, eleventh, and twelfth latching mechanisms (164, 166, 168, 170, 176, 178). The top cover 150 may then be detached and removed, as shown in
Referring now more particularly to
According to an embodiment of the invention, in the interest of stowability the front and rear panels 130 and 140 are seated or otherwise stowed on the inner surface 102a of the support base 102, below the collapsed side panels 114 and 124. Preferably, each of the first and second skirts 112 and 122 has a height equal to or greater than the combined thickness of the front panel 130 and the rear panel 140. This allows the front and rear panels 130 and 140 to be stowed below the collapsed side panels 114 and 124. Also preferably, the respective pivot joint heights of the side panels 114 and 124 are offset vertically from one another to allow the front and rear panels 130 and 140 to lay substantially horizontally on the support base 102.
Turning to
According to an optional embodiment, the containers are stackable upon one another in both the erect and collapsed positions.
The second container 200 comprises a support base 202 having slots 203 and 205. The locking members 194 and 195 are received in the slots 203 and 205, respectively, when the second container 200 is seated on top of the first container 100. By rotating the drive 192 counterclockwise (or by rotating the drive 193 clockwise), the locking members 194 and 195 simultaneously slide towards one another riding along threads 190 and 191, respectively, until the locking members 194 and 195 are received in slots 203 and 205, respectively. The containers 100 and 200 are thereby locked to one another. The locking engagement is reversible, i.e., by rotating the drive 192 clockwise (or by rotating the drive 193 counterclockwise).
The container may be made of a wide variety of materials, including wood, plastics, composites, metals and metal alloys. One currently contemplated material comprises extruded aluminum. Latch-receiving recesses and the like may be formed in the panels using conventional techniques, including machining and molding, and will largely depend upon the material from which the container is made.
One of the benefits of embodiments of the invention is that the front panel is removable to provide front access to the container compartment without requiring that the top cover be removed or partially opened. Another benefit of embodiments of the invention is that the latches for removing the front panel (and the rear panel) are accessible from below the top cover, i.e., at the end or side panels. Yet another benefit of embodiments of the invention is that a common tool, e.g., hex wrench, may be used to lock and unlock the latches.
The container may be used for shipping, storage, or a combination of shipping and storage. For example, a business or person needing to ship or store goods may arrange the container in an erect position, and load and unload goods into the container compartment through the top and/or front access opening(s). When the container is full or otherwise loaded with goods to be shipped, the container may be latched and placed onto a suitable transport vehicle (e.g., a truck or plane) and transported to its destination. Alternatively, if the container is no longer needed by the business or is to be returned to the business after shipment to its intended destination, the container may be collapsed for storage and shipment.
The container of this invention is suitable for different uses and may be used in various industries and with various transport vehicles. For example, the container may be especially useful for the shipment of explosives and weaponry for military uses. The container may also be useful in good shipping and storage applications for personal, military, commercial, and business needs.
Additional advantages and modifications will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details, representative devices and methods, and illustrative examples shown and described. Accordingly, departures may be made from such details without departing from the spirit or scope of the general inventive concept as defined by the appended claims and their equivalents.
The present application is a Continuation Application of prior U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/826,791 filed on Apr. 9, 2004, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,156,249.
The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States of America for governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties thereon or therefore.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10826791 | Apr 2004 | US |
Child | 11645256 | US |