This invention relates to portable containers for diverse products such as food, paint, cleaning solutions, and construction materials and more particularly to providing a container that is designed to prevent a child from drowning in the event the child should happen to fall into the container when it is partially filled with water or other liquid.
Bucket-like containers, notably those commonly referred to as “five gallon plastic pails” are used to various consumer products such as foods, paint, cleaning substances, and construction materials (note: as used herein the terms “bucket” and “pail” are synonymous). Five gallon plastic pails are open-head containers with a rated capacity of about 4.5 to about 5.5 gallons and are generally about 14 to about 15 inches high and between about 10.25 to about 11.25 inches in diameter. They have nearly straight sides and usually are manufactured of high density polyethylene. When emptied of their original contents, such plastic containers are often reused as pails by consumers. It has been determined that a five gallon pail with some liquid in it is a potential drowning hazard if left unattended where it can be reached by a curious toddler A toddlers as young as 8-months may be strong enough to pull him or her self up far enough to lean over the pail. Because toddlers are top heavy. As a consequence, when a toddler leans over to peer into a pail, there is a tendency for the child to topple head first. Because of its shape, size and sturdiness, a conventional flat bottom five gallon plastic pail containing some liquid may not tip over when a toddler falls into it. Should that occur, the toddler may be unable to extricate itself, with the result that he or she drowns in the liquid in the pail. It has been determined that such drownings can occur with only a few inches of liquid in the bottom of the pail. The United States Consumer Safety Product Commission has determined from reports of deaths and non-fatal incidents associated with 5 gallon buckets that the ages of victims ranges from 7 months to 24 months, with a median age of 11 months. The height and weight of the reported victims averaged about 28 inches and 22 pounds respectively. The average height of the liquid in the buckets was about 6 inches.
In view of such drowning incidents, efforts have been made to provide protection against drowning. Three such efforts are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,183,179, 5,513,770 and 6,024,244. In U.S. Pat. No. 5,183,179, the container is formed with a child drowning protection guard in the shape of a tapered tube that is integral with the bottom wall of the container and extends upwardly from the bottom wall. The projection has a height and a diameter such as to prevent the child from drowning in liquid in the container. In U.S. Pat. No. 5,513,770, the drowning protection feature is in the form of an insert which can be screwed into a pail and is operable to prevent a child's head from entering the pail while allowing conventional household implements to be inserted into and withdrawn from the pail. In U.S. Pat. No. 6,024,244, the protection against drowning is achieved by a weighted convex safety attachment for the bottom of a container. All of the foregoing attempts, while laudable, suffer from limitations. In the case of U.S. Pat. No. 5,513,179, the projection in the container complicates the manufacture of the container and limits the size of implements that can be inserted into the container to the side of the projection. In the case of U.S. Pat. No. 5,513,770, the addition of an insert adds to the cost. Also, that feature suffers from the limitation that the user may forget to apply the drowning protection insert, with the result that a child may still peer into the container and run the risk of drowning as described above. The weighted convex safety attachment for the bottom of a container disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,024,244 suffers from the fact that it introduces an increased cost since it is a separate component that is added to a standard flat bottom container. Also although it introduces more weight to lower the center of gravity, it does so by an increase in the overall height. Also the convex base of the safety attachment has a flat center portion that rests on a floor or other supporting surface for the container and has a small diameter, with the combination of that small diameter and the convex shape insuring that the container is unstable when left unattended. Accordingly when the container is in normal use, e.g., when it is standing alone, a removable stabilizing collar, sized and shaped to-fit around both the lower side of the container and the convex safety attachment, is utilized to provide stability and prevent the container from tipping. The stabilizing collar adds to the cost and also complicates warehousing and shipping since the presence of the stabilizing collars hampers the stacking of filled containers one upon the other and the storing and/or shipping of empty containers in nested relation, i.e., one empty container inside of another.
The object of the invention is to provide an open-head, nestable container of circular cross-sectional configuration that is shaped so that (a) it will stand upright on a flat support such as a floor, shelf or shipping pallet and (b) in the event that the container contains some water or other liquid and a toddler leans forward into the container, e.g., in an attempt to retrieve a toy that has fallen into the container, the weight of the child on the container will cause the container to tip over, thereby spilling the contents and preventing the child from drowning in the container.
Another object is to provide a container design with child drowning protection that can be made in different sizes without requiring different size covers.
The foregoing objects are achieved by providing a container with a bottom wall that is contoured in a manner that provides positional stability for the container when it is empty or partially or fully filled, yet makes it easy for the container to tip over when a toddler leans over and reaches into the container. Containers embodying the invention may be provided with covers that facilitate stacking covered containers one on top of the other. Additionally, the containers are formed with an inclined sidewall, whereby to permit the open empty containers to be nested one inside the other. Other features of the invention are described or rendered apparent by the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention which is to be considered together with the accompanying drawings.
Referring to
Still referring to
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the maximum inner diameter of the container at its top end is approximately 11.8 inches, its overall height is approximately 14.2 inches measured from the low point of the convex section 20 to its top end, side wall 4 has a draft angle of about 4.5 degrees, the minimum inside diameter of the side wall (i.e., where the side wall meets the convex section 12) is approximately 10.4 inches, the radius of curvature of convex section 20 in cross-section is approximately 2.5 inches, and recess section 22 has a diameter of about 3 inches and is recessed about 0.300 inch. With that design, the convex section 20 joins the side wall about 2.4 inches above the lowermost point of convex section 20, and a virtual projection of the outer surface of the side wall has a diameter of approximately 10.3 inches at the level of the lowermost point of the convex section 20. At the lip 6 the outside diameter of the container is approximately 12.0 inches and the thickness of the side wall is approximately 0.092 inch. The tiltability of the container when upright is a function of the effective diameter of the container measured at the low point of convex section 20, and in the preferred embodiment that effective diameter is approximately 5 inches. A bucket having the foregoing dimensions holds approximately 5 gallons of water and is identified herein as a “five gallon” container.
It has been determined that the amount of horizontal force required to tip a bucket incorporating the present invention varies with the amount of water in the container. Measurements were conducted with a “five gallon” container having the dimensions described above with different amounts of water to determine the amount of horizontal force required to tip the bucket. The results of those tests are set forth in table I:
A conventional five gallon plastic container having a substantially flat bottom, e.g., a container an inner diameter of 11.8 inches at its top end, an inner diameter of 10.1 inches at its bottom end, a wall thickness of about 0.090 inch, and a height of about 14.1 inches, cannot not achieve comparable results for the reason that application of a horizontal force merely causes the container to slide horizontally on its flat bottom. In this connection it is to be noted that such flat bottom containers have a tendency to slide toward a toddler as the toddler grips it and tries to pull himself or herself up on it, causing a forward momentum of the toddler and increasing the likelihood that the toddler will fall into the container without it tipping over.
It is to be noted that the U.S. child safety laws with regard to pails contemplates a toddler of 22 months of age being able to stand up and access a pail filled with water, and a toddler of that age would weight approximately 26 lbs. Accordingly, the amount of force resulting from a toddler leaning into a container of the type described would be much greater than the 10 lbs. noted in Table I. Consequently if a child in the age of 22 months should stand up next to a pail made according to the present invention and then attempt to reach into or bend over into the pail, the pail would tip before the toddler could be put in danger of drowning in the contents of the container.
Turning now to
By way of observation, in the preferred embodiment of the invention the container has a height that is approximately 1.4 times the diameter of the virtual straight line projection of the side wall down at the level of the lowermost point of the annular convex bottom wall section 20, and the portion of that annular protuberance that makes a circular line contact with a flat supporting surface has a diameter that is approximately 0.6 times the diameter of that virtual projection of the side wall at the level of the lowermost point of the convex annular protuberance. That ratio is offered as a guideline rather than a restriction with respect to practicing the invention.
An interesting aspect of the invention is that the capacity of the container described above may be changed without requiring a different size cover or altering the shape or dimensions of the bottom end of the container, i.e., the portion of the container below the bottom end of side wall 4 as represented by line 21. More specifically, the container describe above can be modified to provide a capacity ranging from about 3.5 to about 6.5 gallons, without changing the diameter at the upper end of the container or the dimensions or contour of the convex projecting section 20 and/or recessed center section 22, by (1) altering the height of the side wall 4 and (2) making an appropriate change in the draft angle of side wall 4. It is contemplated that such change in capacity may involve providing side wall 4 with a single draft angle or a draft angle that changes from top to bottom, e.g., a first draft angle commencing where side wall 4 joins convex section 20 and extending for a limited distance along the length of side wall, and a second draft angle extending for the remainder of the length of the side wall. It is to be noted that, regardless of whether side wall 4 has a single or plural draft angle, modifying the container to provide a capacity of 3.5 or 6.5 gallons, for example, can be accomplished according to the invention without changing the diameter of the bottom end of side wall 4, i.e., the diameter at the level of line 21. Hence the specific mold design for the bottom of a 5 gallon container embodying the invention may be used unaltered for other containers of different total holding capacity.
A primary advantage of the invention is that it provides drowning protection for a child. Additionally, it offers the advantage that existing container designs may be modified to incorporate a contoured bottom wall as herein described, and that such containers embodying the invention would be no more expensive to manufacture than that of a conventional flat-bottomed container of comparable size and of like purpose. Furthermore the containers may be filled and the covers attached thereon using conventional filling and capping machinery. Still another advantage is that although the invention as been described and illustrated in connection with so-called 5 gallon pails, it may be embodied in containers of other sizes and also containers that lack ears as shown as 12 for accommodating bails or handles and hence are not designed to serve as pails or buckets. For example, the containers may be formed with a pair of diametrically opposed projecting portions that can serve as grips or handles for lifting the container. Accordingly the particular dimensions and curvature values set forth above may be changed for containers of smaller or greater dimensions. It also is contemplated that the invention may be practiced with containers having straight rather than tapered side walls.
Other possible modifications and advantages will be obvious to persons skilled in the art.
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2412325 | Devine et al. | Dec 1946 | A |
2614727 | Robinson | Oct 1952 | A |
2978142 | Novick | Apr 1961 | A |
3362575 | Fotos | Jan 1968 | A |
4648522 | Wise | Mar 1987 | A |
5183179 | Morris, Sr. | Feb 1993 | A |
5513770 | Seeley et al. | May 1996 | A |
6024244 | Hicks | Feb 2000 | A |
6047847 | Scott | Apr 2000 | A |
6257441 | Maley | Jul 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040256275 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |