1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is directed to an improved container closure, and, in particular, a lever cap.
2. Description of the Related Art
Although the term “bottle” is often used in this patent and in the prior U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/579,050, any container is intended, and may include, without limitation, bottles, jars, canisters, pill and medicine bottles, jugs, cans, drums, and all other containers of various shapes, sizes, and capacities on which the present invention may be used, provided such container's opening can be produced, fashioned, or retro-fitted to received the lever cap; use of the word “container” or any other vessel mentioned above shall be deemed to incorporate all such terms. Furthermore, the present invention may also be referred to herein by the use of different terms, including, “closure”, “container closure”, “cap”, “lever cap”, “covering”, or “lid”.
Container closures, such as the early bottle crown caps, typically consisted of a circular piece of die stamped steel or other suitable metal that was crimped over the top lip or bead of a bottle. This device provided a secure and reliable closure, but required a tool to remove it. Typically, the cap was removed with an opener that would engage a portion of the lower edge of the bottle cap, and with sufficient force, outwardly deform a portion of the metal crimps causing the cap to be lifted upward and removed. This movement had the effect of distorting the original crimping structure at the bottom edge of the cap, and often permanently creased the top of the cap into a shape that prevented it from being effectively reused.
Removing a crown cap from a bottle also required two hands, one to hold the bottle and the other to manipulate the opener. In certain circumstances such as commercial applications, the bottle opener was often permanently affixed to a wall or the dispensing machine, thereby permitting the use of only one hand, but still, such a tool was needed. Over the years numerous patents were filed on various bottle opening tools. One common feature of nearly all of these bottle cap removers was the similarity in which they operated. Whether they employed a single handle with a hooked edge for engaging the bottom of the bottle cap, or a more elaborate structure, each bottle cap remover was a separate device that was brought in contact with the cap to pry the cap off in an outward and upward direction. Once the cap was removed, it was usually deformed and unsuitable for reuse and had to be discarded.
A more recent improvement to the crown cap was the twist off bottle cap, which is commonly used for soda bottles and other containers that require a secure seal to prevent the container's pressurized contents from escaping. This cap has an interior threaded structure compatible with the bottle's exterior threaded structure near the bottle's opening. The twist off cap is designed to be reusable and provides a tight seal to secure the contents within the container. Although it does not require a separate tool to remove it, in practice, it is often quite difficult to initially release, because it is tightly affixed to the bottle, requires two hands, and necessitates a strong twisting motion of the wrists and arms to both remove and securely replace it. A significant amount of grip-strength is also required to hold the cap while twisting it with sufficient torque to overcome the tight seal and break the connecting tabs that attach the cap to the separable tamper-evident safety ring that remains on the bottle after the cap is removed. This retained ring, which until the bottle is opened is attached to the removable cap, acts as a visible tamper-evident safety seal. These caps typically exhibit vertical ridges or other raised textures on their exterior to improve grip contact and minimize hand slippage, but they are usually shallow and often inadequate. The force required to initially twist the cap is sometimes so great that a separate tool is often employed to increase the user's mechanical advantage, overcome the friction and tension of the cap's tight seal on the bottle, break the safety tabs connecting the retained ring to the cap, and then remove the cap from the bottle.
Although both of these closures mentioned above have the ability to securely seal a particulate, fluid, or pressurized gas within the container, both are often difficult to remove and, except for rare circumstances, require two strong hands. Other closure technologies have been developed in recent years, such as flip-tops, pull-tops, toggle, and twist-spout caps, but none have the strength and sealable ability to hold a pressurized beverage contents, such as sparkling water, soda, or beer, securely within the container. Most of these closures are fine for water and other non-pressurized liquids, but for this reason pressurized beverages continue to be sold only with crown or twist caps. Although jars have often used large twist off tops and press-fit lids requiring a tool to remove, both of these closures are variations of those discussed above.
The market is ready for a simple, easy open closure that requires no tools, can be operated with one hand, and is capable of securely holding both pressurized and non-pressurized contents. Consumers, especially the increasing elderly population, young children, and others with compromised abilities, would readily embrace this technology, and see it as an improvement in customer-focused, ergonomic packaging design.
The present invention is directed to, in the first aspect, an improved container closure comprising: an improved internal cap closure mechanism consisting of strategically positioned locking lugs, which are designed to work in communication with a container's locking lip to securely attach such closure over the container's orifice.
In another aspect, the present invention is directed to an improved container closure comprising: an improved handle and fulcrum that is positioned to optimize function and mechanical advantage, wherein the handle over the fulcrum acts as a lever when squeezed against the sidewall of the container near the container's distal orifice to provide sufficient stretch and lift to remove the closure from the container.
In yet another aspect, the present invention is directed to an improved closure and container system comprising: a retro-fit sleeve that would enable the lever cap to be used with twist off bottles and other containers that currently can not communicate with the lever cap's inner locking mechanism, where the sleeve is fashioned to have an inner configuration capable of interfacing with such twist off bottles and other containers, and an exterior that is fitted to receive the lever cap, which would allow a wide variety of containers with dissimilar closure systems to be retro-fitted to use the lever cap.
In yet another aspect, the present invention is directed to an improved container closure comprising: a tamper-evident safety feature to indicate if the lever cap has been previously removed, and would deform and/or discolor the first time the handle is depressed against the sidewall of the container.
In yet another aspect, the present invention is directed to an improved closure and container system comprising: a specialized vertical sloping sidewall on the container near the container's distal orifice to improve the closure's stretch and vertical lift during operation.
In yet another aspect, the present invention is directed to an improved closure and container system comprising: a specialized child safety design and mechanism that provides a lever retention locking bar and locking thumb gate, which requires one function to lock the lever for safety and two functions to unlock and position it for normal operation.
In yet another aspect, the present invention is directed to an improved closure and container system comprising: certain ergonomic, aesthetic, and customizable features that improve its function, such as molded or insertable gaskets, and enhance consumer appeal, such as a unique finger ring design for holding and manipulating the handle and cap.
The closure may comprise one or more of the following features: (i) an improved interface on the interior surface of the closure that consists of strategically positioned locking lugs, instead of a full locking ring, to securely affix the closure onto a container, (ii) a repositioned lever handle and fulcrum to optimize function and mechanical advantage, (iii) a retro-fit sleeve for an incompatible container, which on the inner surface is fashioned to interface with twist necks bottles, or other closure designs and mechanisms incompatible with the interior fitting of the lever cap, and which on the exterior is fashioned to receive the interior fitting of the lever cap, (iv) a tamper-evident safety indicator, (v) a specialized vertical sloping sidewall at the container's distal end near the opening to improve the closure's vertical lift during operation, (vi) a child safety design and mechanism that requires two functions to unlock the lever and position it for normal operation, and (vii) certain ergonomic, aesthetic, and customizable features that improve its function and consumer appeal.
The features of the invention believed to be novel and the elements characteristic of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. The FIGS. are for illustration purposes only and are not drawn to scale. The invention itself, however, both as to organization and method of operation, may best be understood by reference to the description of the preferred embodiment(s) that follows taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in that:
a is a schematic side view of the cap with the tamper evident safety feature and the container with a non-linear sidewall for improved leverage;
a is a schematic top/side view of an alternative cap with customized ergonomic and aesthetic features; and
In describing the preferred embodiment of the present invention, reference will be made to
Locking Lugs and Handle Placement
The lever cap of the present invention is an improved device over prior designs in performance, ease of operation, and cost. The primary mechanical improvement of this closure over the prior case and all prior art involves using carefully positioned locking lugs on the inside of the closure, thereby eliminating the need for an entire bead to engage the container's lip, and the placement of the lever handle in relation to the locking lugs. As illustrated in
Although the locking lugs could be of any number, size, shape, and location around the locking ring area on the underside of the cap, the first preferred design, depicted in
Operationally, the removal action is quite simple, and these improvements disclosed herein provide a simplified opening method. To remove the cap, only the locking lugs need to be separated from the container's lip. The user would hold the container in one hand and place either the thumb, the middle area of the hand between the thumb and the forefinger, or the pointer and/or middle finger against the lower part of the handle. Gripping the container firmly, the user would then apply a squeezing force against the handle in the direction of the container. As this force is applied, such force would be deflected, in part, off the sidewall of the container and transferred to the container's closure, thereby forcing at least a portion of the closure to stretch beyond the leading edge of locking lug 6. As the force continues, and because of the handle's shape and its angle to the container's sidewall, it would be expressed in an upward direction, thereby causing the cap to disengage from the lip of the container at locking lugs 4 & 5 to result in the complete release of the closure's hold on the container. Once the closure's hold is released, the cap would be easily removed from the container. The closure is reusable and can be replaced over the container's opening to sealable secure the container's contents for storage or transport.
In this first preferred embodiment, as shown in
In a second and more preferred embodiment, depicted in
The cap and appended handle could be formed from any appropriate material, including, without limitation, metal, plastic, fiberglass, or any suitable material or composite of materials by any suitable process, including stamping, molding, injection molding, thermoforming, or other appropriate process. A preferred material for manufacture would be plastic, and the most preferred choice from the polymer group would be a high-density polyethylene or variation, composite, or derivative thereof. Since the cap is intended to be reused numerous times, the selection of material offering optimum strength, stretch, sealability, and aesthetics would be important to its commercial success. Since some of the cap's intended uses would cause it to come in contact with food, beverages, medicine, and perhaps other products designed for human consumption, such materials for these applications may need to be compliant with the requirements of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and could also include various additives, chemistries, and other means for antimicrobial protection for the benefit of the user, as well as for the integrity of the cap. Ideally, the cap with appended handle would be injection molded in one piece, but other suitable manufacturing methods could be employed by those skilled in the art, including, without limitation, the manufacture of the cap portion and handle portion separately, with subsequent assembly by adhesive, ultrasonic, heat staking, or other suitable method known to those skilled in the art. Additionally, the handle 7 can have upper and lower portions that are at an angle with respect to each other with the fulcrum portion 22 disposed between the upper and lower portions.
The method of use, as shown in exploded
Retro-Fit Sleeve
The lever cap can only be effectively used on a compatible container. In the event such cap is desired to be used on a container with an incompatible closing mechanism, a retro-fit sleeve or adapter may be used as an acceptable interface to preserve the use of the incompatible container and yet obtain the features and convenience of the lever cap.
Retro-fit sleeve 12 is shown in
Preferably, retro-fit sleeve 12 would be manufactured in the same way and from the same materials as described above for the lever cap, but, as determined by one skilled in the art, it may be fashioned in host of different ways and from different materials as may be dictated by each application.
Tamper-Evident Safety Indicator
If the lever cap is to gain commercial acceptance for substances intended for human consumption or other specialized use where a consumer would want to know if the container had been previously opened, then an integrated tamper-evident safety feature, which would serve as an indicator that the cap had been previously removed, or the seal broken, may be a required or, at least, desired safety feature. Certainly, a cap could be shrink-wrapped for safety, as is common with pharmaceutical products, or a foil-like seal could be affixed across the container's opening under the cap, as is common with food products, but an integrated feature on the cap itself may have commercial benefit. A tamper-evident safety indicator depicted as 23 on
Sloping Sidewall
One of the principal mechanical improvements to the lever cap is its companion interface on the container at the point of the fulcrum's communication with the container's sidewall. As shown in
This sloping sidewall feature is a preferred embodiment to the cap's smooth, easy, and reliable removal on a regular basis. The principal requirement in removing any cap from a container is to attain vertical lift during the removal process. Applying a force horizontally, such as the force on the lever handle toward the container's sidewall, has to be translated into a vertical direction to remove the cap. Although workable with purely vertical sidewalls, there is a certain amount of inefficiency in this arrangement. However, if the container's sidewall could have a vertical sloping inclination off true center, such as that depicted in
As shown in
The fulcrum, which is the point of communication between the container sidewall and the cap's handle, is important and subject to change in each application. The factors necessary to its successful use, a part of which is maximizing the handle's force efficiency, would be its size, shape, configuration at the point of contact with the container's sidewall, the contour of the container's sidewall, and its coefficient of friction resulting from its design and the materials used in its composition. All of these factors need to be taken into account by one skilled in the art to design the optimal match between the handle's fulcrum and the container's sidewall to achieve a point of interface which minimizes the attendant friction and maximizes the strength of the handle and the efficiency of the amount of force required to remove each cap in each application. General guidance would include a shape and point of contact at the bottom of the fulcrum to be as small, smooth, and strong as practicable to reduce the friction between the fulcrum and the container sidewall during operation and the selection of polymeric or other suitable materials that balance strength, rigidity, and the optimal coefficient of friction to achieve a strong, slippery surface at the interface between the fulcrum and the sidewall. Certainly, coatings, treatments, and finishing techniques could be employed by one skilled in the art during manufacture to maximize these factors and all such materials, shapes, contours, designs, configurations, and embodiments are contemplated herein.
Operationally, the cap's removal from a sloping sidewall container is very similar to its removal from a vertical sidewall container. Referring to
Many other embodiments will be apparent to one skilled in the art, and all of them are contemplated herein without departing from the spirit of the present invention.
Safety Locking Bar
In pharmaceutical and other applications where it would be important to restrict access to the contents of the container for certain segments of the population, such as children and those with certain disabilities, an impediment to easily opening the container will be a required or at least highly desired safety feature. One design that would work with the lever cap is disclosed in
Operationally, cap 1 would be placed on container 9 with vertical sidewall 11, as shown in
In addition, to prevent handle 7 from being easily rotated out from under safety locking bar 28, thumb gate 29, as shown on
To remove handle 7 out from under safety locking bar 28 to position the lever cap for normal use at any other point around the container, a second operation would be required, in that thumb gate 29 would have to be depressed in toward the container at or around tab 30, while the cap is rotated until the handle passes over the thumb gate and is out from under safety locking bar 28. Thumb gate 29 would be affixed to container 9 or container 26 as an integral part of such container's construction or fastened onto such container after its initial manufacture. Thumb gate 29 would be affixed to sleeve 12 as an integral part of such sleeve's construction or fastened onto such sleeve after its initial manufacture.
In a more preferred embodiment, also shown in
Ideally, in a preferred embodiment, the safety locking bar, thumb gate, and rib would be integral to the container or sleeve and molded as part of such container or sleeve's manufacture, respectively. Consistent with the manufacture of the cap and retro-fit sleeve, the safety locking bar, thumb gate, and rib could be formed from any appropriate material, including, without limitation, metal, plastic, fiberglass, or any suitable material or composite of materials by any suitable process, including stamping, molding, injection molding, thermoforming, or other appropriate process. A preferred material for manufacture would be plastic, and the most preferred choice from the polymer group would be a high-density polyethylene or variation, composite, or derivative thereof. Since in the preferred embodiment, the safety locking bar, thumb gate, and rib would be integral to the container or sleeve and molded as part of such container or sleeve's manufacture and some of such container/sleeve's intended uses might cause it to come in contact with food, beverages, medicine, and perhaps other products designed for human consumption, such materials for these applications may need to be compliant with the requirements of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and could also include various additives, chemistries, and other means for antimicrobial protection for the benefit of the user, as well as for the integrity of the container, sleeve, safety locking bar, thumb gate, and rib.
Ergonomic and Aesthetics Features
One other aspect of the lever cap that will contribute to its use, acceptance, and commercial success is its ability to be customized to meet consumer preferences. For instance, as disclosed in
Customizable for Different Applications
Another feature that adds to the lever cap's appeal is its ability to be customized for various applications. For instance, as disclosed in
The cap is customizable and scalable for different applications and its flexibility will add to its appeal and its acceptance.
While the present invention has been particularly described, in conjunction with a specific preferred embodiment, it is evident that many alternatives, modifications, and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the foregoing description. It is therefore contemplated that the appended claims will embrace any such alternative, modifications, and variations as falling within the true scope and spirit of the present invention.
This application claims priority from U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/579,050, filed on May 26, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,860,397 which was based on U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/136,332, filed on May 26, 1999.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050189313 A1 | Sep 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60136332 | May 1999 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09579050 | May 2000 | US |
Child | 11049821 | US |