This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from the corresponding Japanese Patent Application No. 2017-067027 filed on Mar. 30, 2017, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosure relates to a crating arrangement in which, for example, a heavy product such as an electronic apparatus or the like is crated.
Conventionally, wooden crates have been used as crating arrangements in which a large and heavy product is crated to be carried. However, although the wooden crates excel in durability, the wooden crates are not only heavy and expensive for disposal but also pose a problem from the perspective of resource saving. Boards are fixed with nails, and this requires a significant amount of time for crating and uncrating and poses the danger of an operator getting hurt with nails or wood splinters.
As a solution, crating arrangements made of cardboard which are inexpensive for disposal and which cause less pollution and less environmental burden are widely used. For example, a cardboard case with a pallet is known in which a collapsible slope for placing a product with casters is swingably coupled to an end part of the top surface of the pallet. With the cardboard case with a pallet, it is unnecessary to place the cardboard case having a product packed therein again on another pallet; this makes it easy to pack and carry products and the like, particularly large ones.
A cardboard case as mentioned above is closed with adhesive tape or the like, and thus, after the cardboard case is opened once, its appearance deteriorates due to creases or breakage; this inconveniently makes it impossible to use the cardboard case repeatedly. When the cardboard cases are stacked and carried, to improve stacking efficiency by efficient use of space, so-called tiered stacking is performed by stacking the cardboard cases on top of each other. However, the cardboard cases have a lower strength than that of wooden crates, and thus the top boards may sag when the cardboard cases are carried or kept in storage; this inconveniently makes it impossible to stably place products.
As a solution, goods stocking devices have been proposed which allows efficient storage and transport of goods and which can be used repeatedly. For example, a goods stocking device (transport rack) is known which includes a goods placement member on which goods are placed, a plurality of pillars that can be fitted to the goods placement member, and a coupling member that couples the pillars together, and a method of collapsing pillars is also known.
According to one aspect of the present disclosure, a crating arrangement includes a pallet, a sleeve, a top board, and a plurality of fastening belts. The pallet has a rectangular shape in a plan view, and includes a bottom board, a support board arranged opposite the bottom board across a predetermined distance, and a plurality of beams fixed to the support board and the bottom board. The sleeve is made of a cardboard sheet in the shape of a cornered column, and is placed over the pallet to wrap a side surface of a crated object placed on the support board. The top board has a rectangular shape, and is placed on a top end part of the sleeve. With the fastening belts, the pallet and the crated object are fastened together and the pallet, the sleeve, and the top board are fastened together.
Further features and advantages of the present disclosure will become apparent from the description of embodiments given below.
Hereinafter, an embodiment of the present disclosure will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
With the crating arrangement 100, the crated object 5, which is a product such as an image forming apparatus having been packed in a cardboard case or the like, is crated so that the crated object 5 can be carried on a forklift, a pallet jack, or the like. The crating arrangement 100 includes the pallet 1, a sleeve 2, the top board 3, first fastening belts 4a and 4b, and second fastening belts 4c and 4d.
The pallet 1 is made of wood, and includes three bottom boards 10a to 10c, three leg beams 11a to 11c, three horizontal beams 13a to 13c, a pair of flat boards 15a and 15b, and the support board 17. The bottom boards 10a to 10c make contact with the placement surface. The leg beams 11a to 11c are fixed perpendicularly to the top surfaces of the three bottom boards 10a to 10c. The horizontal beams 13a to 13c are fixed perpendicularly to the leg beams 11a to 11c. The flat boards 15a and 15b are fixed to opposite end parts of the leg beams 11a to 11c so as to bridge them, and underlap the horizontal beams 13a and 13c. The support board 17 is fixed to the top surfaces of the horizontal beams 13a to 13c. The support board 17 has the same rectangular shape as that formed by connecting the outer circumferential edges of the horizontal beams 13a to 13c. In a side surface of the pallet 1, there are formed arm insertion holes 19 surrounded by the bottom boards 10a to 10c, the leg beams 11a to 11c, and the horizontal beams 13a to 13c.
The sleeve 2 is formed of a cardboard sheet in the shape of a cornered column, and is placed over the pallet 1 to wrap the side surface of the crated object 5. The length of the inner circumference of the sleeve 2 (indicated by the dotted line L in
The top board 3 is made of wood, and is placed on a top end part 2b (see
Now, a description will be given of a crating method using the crating arrangement 100. First, as shown in
Next, as shown in
Next, as shown in
Here, as shown in
When the crating arrangement 100 in which the crated object 5 has been crated is carried, the arms of a forklift or a pallet jack are inserted into the arm insertion holes 19 formed in the pallet 1 to lift up and carry the crating arrangement 100. With such a crating arrangement 100, it is unnecessary to pack a product, as the crated object 5, in a cardboard case or the like and then place it on the pallet 1; this makes it easy to crate and carry products and the like, particularly large ones.
With the bottom end part 2a of the sleeve 2 supported on the pallet 1 and with the top board 3 arranged on the top end part 2b of the sleeve 2, the sleeve 2 is held between the pallet 1 and the top board 3. The sleeve 2 has its cardboard sheet grain direction aligned parallel to its up-down direction, and has a high compressive strength in the up-down direction. Thus, even when another crating arrangement 100 is stacked on top of the top board 3, there is no danger of the sleeve 2 squashing. As the sleeve 2, a cardboard sheet having a higher compressive strength in a multilayer structure may be used. It is also possible to use a plurality of the sleeves 2 overlapping each other in a nested structure to increase the compressive strength.
When the crating arrangement 100 is opened, the second fastening belts 4c and 4d are cut to release the fixing among the pallet 1, the sleeve 2, and the top board 3. Then, the top board 3 and the sleeve 2 are removed, and then the first fastening belts 4a and 4b are cut to release the fixing between the pallet 1 and the crated object 5. Thus, it is possible to open the crating arrangement 100 simply by cutting the fastening belts 4a to 4d with scissors or a knife; this eliminates the need to pull out nails and remove boards as with conventional wooden frame crating, and helps significantly reduce the time required for opening. There is no longer a danger of an operator getting hurt with nails or wood splinters.
The pallet 1, the sleeve 2, and the top board 3 are fixed together only with the fastening belts 4a to 4d without adhesive tape or nails; this makes it easy to separate the pallet 1 and the top board 3. Thus, even after the crating arrangement 100 has been opened once, its appearance does not deteriorate due to creases or brakeage, and thus the crating arrangement 100 can be used repeatedly. It is also easy to separate, for disposal, the pallet 1 and the top board 3, which are made of wood, and the sleeve 2, which is made of paper; this improves recyclability.
According to the second structure example, in addition to the bottom end parts 2a at two sides (two sides in the left-right direction in
According to the third structure example, in addition to the bottom end parts 2a at two sides (two sides in the left-right direction in
The embodiments described above are in no way meant to limit the present disclosure, which thus allows for many modifications and variations within the spirit of the present disclosure. For example, although in the above-described embodiment, a pallet 1 and a top board 3 which are made of wood are used, instead, a pallet 1 and a top board 3 which are made of metal or synthetic resin may be used. When the pallet 1 and the top board 3 are molded from metal or resin, for example, the pallet 1 may be formed integrally with the flat boards 15a to 15c and the stepped portions 20, and the top board 3 may be formed integrally with the engagement pieces 3a.
The present disclosure is applicable to crating arrangements in which a large and heavy product is crated. Based on the present disclosure, it is possible to provide a crating arrangement that can reliably protect a crated object and that achieves easy crating and uncrating with use of a small amount of wood.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2017-067027 | Mar 2017 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3756498 | Anderson | Sep 1973 | A |
4383609 | Lochmiller | May 1983 | A |
4426015 | Preston | Jan 1984 | A |
4938350 | Grigsby | Jul 1990 | A |
4955474 | Mattingly | Sep 1990 | A |
5036979 | Selz | Aug 1991 | A |
5069338 | Grigsby | Dec 1991 | A |
5323911 | Johnston | Jun 1994 | A |
5938037 | Essary | Aug 1999 | A |
6019226 | Zajdlik | Feb 2000 | A |
6581769 | Nist | Jun 2003 | B2 |
8061521 | Lowry | Nov 2011 | B1 |
8256615 | Goda | Sep 2012 | B2 |
20010051079 | Arai | Dec 2001 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2001-171666 | Jun 2001 | JP |
2006-341896 | Dec 2006 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20180282018 A1 | Oct 2018 | US |