1. Technical Field
The present claimed subject matter relates to a lid fastener or harness, which when used in combination with a drinking container and lid prevents spillage of hot and cold fluids.
2. Description of the Related Art
The present claimed subject matter relates to a lid fastener or harness, which when used in combination with a drinking container and lid prevents spillage of hot and cold fluids.
Drinking containers with lids have been in use for a very long time. The drinking container and lid combination provides various functions including the retention of fluids in the drinking containers.
A common manner for commercial enterprises to serve hot or cold fluid to customers is with a disposable drinking container, which often has a disposable lid covering the container in which the fluid is being served. This is often done in fast food restaurants and coffee shops, which serve beverages over the counter, where the beverage may be taken off the premises. Drinking containers with lids are also used where establishments have drive-through windows where the car is driven to a service window, and the beverage is served through the window. One purpose of the combination of a lid and drinking container is to prevent the contents of the drinking container from spilling. When the drinking container is being handled or passed from one person to another, or is placed in a cup holder in a car, or is placed in a static position on a flat surface, movement of the drinking container can cause the drinking container to tip over or drop causing the lid to come off resulting in significant spillage.
Such container and lid combinations have numerous drawbacks in that the use of a lid which caps such containers is not alone effective in preventing the fluid from spilling and being entirely or almost entirely dispensed from the container during use, particularly if the container tips over, drops or is otherwise upset. There is a need in the market place for a mechanism to anchor a lid to a drinking container to prevent the lid from coming off when the drinking container is tipped over or dropped or otherwise moved.
A search of the patent literature has revealed a number of patents relating to configurations of closed containers that reduce spillage or prevent objects from entering the container.
Various types of structures or containers have been disclosed. These include: U.S. Pat. No. 5,358,175, which is a container formed of a foldable sheet material that requires assembly, interconnection of flaps and a tongue-slot combination. U.S. Pat. No. 4,850,528 shows a self-locking, self-closing container using a spring-action pleated top. U.S. Pat. No. 5,676,306 shows a container having a sealing top formed by a series of crease lines folding inwardly and forming a series of rectangles, each having a diagonal corner portion to form a closure panel. U.S. Pat. No. 4,135,512 shows a container having an integral flat lid hinged to a cylindrical wall. The lid extends in a downward slope and locks in a closed position between two ridges formed in opposite sides of the wall. The lid contains a plurality of openings therein so that fluid contained in the container can pass through the closed lid along with medication held on top of the lid. U.S. Pat. No. 5,102,002 shows a reusable lid for a cup with a round flat cover plate that covers the top of the cup to prevent objects from entering. The plate is held in place by a torsion rod that is connected to the lid and side of the cup.
It is an object of the present claimed subject matter to keep a drinking container lid anchored or strapped to a drinking container even when tipped, knocked over or dropped. Another object of the present claimed subject matter is to reduce or eliminate spillage of fluids from disposable or non-disposable drinking containers. A further object of the present claimed subject matter is to reduce or eliminate spillage from disposable or non-disposable drinking containers to prevent burns caused by hot drinks. It is another object of the present claimed subject matter to reduce or eliminate spillage from disposable or non-disposable drinking containers to prevent floors from becoming dangerously slippery. Yet another object of the present claimed subject matter is to reduce or eliminate spillage from disposable or non-disposable drinking containers to prevent staining of clothing, carpeting or upholstery. A further object of the present claimed subject matter is to reduce or eliminate spillage from disposable or non-disposable drinking containers to prevent damage to computers, laptops or other electrical devices.
These and other objects are achieved by the elastic strap or measured inelastic strap or straps, which is connected to a drinking container or belt, band or cylindrical sleeve wrapped around the drinking container, that slips over the lid placing tension on the lid to ensure that it stays securely fastened to the drinking container, thus reducing or completely eliminating spillage of hot or cold fluid.
In certain embodiments the inner side of the belt and/or strap may be coated with wax or other impermeable material to prevent slippage and to reduce or prevent permeation by condensation when used with cold beverages. The coating of the inner side of the belt and/or strap also aides the consumer in slipping the belt up the body of a drinking container and sliding the strap across the lid of the drinking container.
In an alternative embodiment, the strap is connected to the belt by a closed fold at one end and an open fold that forms a loop around the belt at the other and is constructed of paper or cardboard. The loop formed by the open fold end allows the strap to be slid along the belt when securing the strap over the lid of a beverage container. Such an embodiment may be constructed and assembled of two die-cut cardboard pieces or by one piece of cardboard cut into an “L” or “T” shape which can be adhered to itself in assembly. A similar embodiment connects the strap to the belt by open loops at both ends and is constructed and assembled by two die-cut cardboard or paper pieces.
Additionally, one end of the strap may be manufactured to be unattached to the belt and equipped with a peel-n-stick or consumer activated adhesive and adhered to the strap after being pulled over the beverage container lid in operation of the invention by the consumer. In this embodiment, the connected end of the strap may be adhered to the belt in a closed fold or an open fold that forms a loop around the belt. In a similar embodiment, the invention is constructed of one piece of “L” or “T” shaped cardboard and both the strap and belt remain unconnected and equipped with a peel-n-stick or consumer activated adhesive and are self-adhered by the consumer in operation of the invention.
The peel-n-stick embodiment may also be constructed to provide the user with the ease of operation of the moving loop embodiment by attaching an additional strip of cardboard to the outside of the belt at two glue points to create a slot. The strap then may be slid through the slot and adhered to itself by a peel-n-stick or consumer activated adhesive forming a loop around the strip. The loop may then be moved along the strip allowing the strap to be slid over the lid by the consumer in operation of the invention.
The present claimed subject matter could be valuable to the individual consumer who wants to prevent harmful damage to their person or their property. The present claimed subject matter could also be valuable to commercial enterprises that want to protect the consumer and avoid liability for burns and slips and falls that are caused by their products.
As the Inventors have herein recognized, the prior art has numerous drawbacks. Particularly, the prior art requires complete replacement of cup and lid combinations commonly used in the marketplace whereas the present claimed subject matter does not. To overcome problems existing in the prior art disposable, containers, a simpler and more cost effective mechanism was sought to keep the contents of drinking containers from dispensing from the container at an undesired time.
None of the above patents achieve what the claimed subject matter claimed herein achieves, preventing the lid of a drinking container from coming off by anchoring a separable lid to the drinking container, thus eliminating or reducing spillage of the contents of the drinking container.
A better understanding of the claimed subject matter can be obtained when the following detailed description of the disclosed embodiments is considered in conjunction with the following Drawings, in which:
A lid fastener in accordance with the preferred embodiment of the present claimed subject matter is shown in
In operation of the claimed subject matter, the user slides the elastic strap 4 over the lid 2 by pulling it out from the adhesive points 5 and over the lid 2. Tension between the elastic strap 4 and the sleeve 3 anchors the lid 2 to the beverage container 1.
A lid fastener in accordance with the preferred embodiment of the present claimed subject matter is shown in
A lid fastener in accordance with an alternative embodiment of the present claimed subject matter is shown in
A close-up view of the open fold 10 of
A close-up view of the closed fold 12 of
While the claimed subject matter has been shown and described with reference to particular embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the foregoing and other changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the claimed subject matter, including but not limited to additional, less or modified elements.
The present application is a continuation in part of a Non-Provisional Application entitled “Drinking Container Lid Fastener” application Ser. No. 12/437,289, filed on May 7, 2009 which claims the benefit of the filing date of a Provisional Application entitled, “An elastic drink lid fastener that prevents the spillage of hot and cold fluids” Ser. No. 61/051,301, filed May 7, 2008, assigned to the assignee of the present application, and herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61051301 | May 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12437287 | May 2009 | US |
Child | 12620860 | US |