Egg containers commonly include a base with a plurality of egg-receiving recesses and a cover that closes the recesses. Eggs are usually washed in warm water prior to placement in the recesses and closing of the cover. It is desirable to provide good ventilation for the container to allow the remaining water and any further moisture to evaporate and thereby prolong the life of the eggs. It is also important to provide good support and confinement for the eggs, to prevent the eggs from breaking even if the container is tilted. In some cases, the number of eggs that can be held in a container is increased without greatly increasing the size of the container, by providing a tray with additional egg-receiving recesses and by increasing the height of the base. Such container is likely to be less rugged than one without a tray because of the increased height and weight, so the design should provide additional support and stiffener means for such container. It would be desirable if all of these features were provided in a low cost container formed of sheet plastic such as transparent polyethylene of 0.02 inch thickness which is deformed as by heating and using a vacuum to deform the sheet in the shape of a mold. Such construction would provide durable, protective, attractive and low cost containers for eggs and other rounded pieces of food.
In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, application provides a low cost and attractive egg container that is formed of transparent sheet plastic that has been deformed, wherein the container provides good ventilation, good protection against egg breakage, and a stiffened and strong structure in a case where a tray is used to hold extra eggs. The container includes chimneys where large volumes of air can flow into and out of the container. The chimneys are formed in sides of the cover, between each of a plurality of cover latch parts that are also spaced along each side of the container. The chimneys are formed by outwardly-deformed locations that have open lower ends lying beyond and below the cover rim.
Each egg-receiving recess in the base has ribs inclined from the vertical to engage an egg and allow air circulation between the ribs. The bottom of the recess forms a bottom wall with a concave upper surface on which a small egg rests. The recess walls form a plurality of leg parts that surround the recess bottom wall and that extend downward to hold the recess bottom wall slightly above a surface that the container lies on, to protect the egg. The inside of the leg parts forms a circulation zone where air passing between the ribs can circulate. The ribs preferably lie on an imaginary ellipsoid, which is the shape of a typical egg.
For increased capacity with only a modest increase in container size, a tray is included that has a plurality of tray egg-receiving recesses and a base of increased height. To counter the reduced rigidity that would arise from this, columns are formed in the base, in the tray, and in the cover to support them on one another.
The novel features of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. The invention will be best understood from the following description when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The container is assembled (usually, after eggs have been placed in some or all of the recesses) by placing the tray 16 on the base 12, with an interrupted peripheral tray edge region 24 (
Eggs are usually washed in warm water before they are placed in the container. It is necessary to provide for considerable ventilation to allow all moisture to escape and to thereafter allow the circulation of air around the eggs. Such circulation lengthens the shelf life of the eggs. The presence of ribs 62 in each recess, with rib inner edges 63 that lie closest to the recess vertical axis 65 and that can support the lower half of the eggs, enables air circulation around each egg. The ribs extend along a lower portion of an ellipsoidal surface similar to that of an egg, to provide good support. The base has recess walls that form a bottom wall 66 that supports an egg that is not supported by the ribs. The bottom wall preferably has a concave upper surface of about the same spherical curvature as the bottom of the egg for larger area contact. The recess includes an air circulation region 64 that enables the circulation of air and that forms foot portions 68 that extend slightly below the lower surface of the recess bottom wall 66. The foot portions 68 allow the bottom wall to deflect slightly downward, if necessary, to avoid egg breakage when the container is laid hard on a flat surface.
The cover 14 forms a number of ventilation chimneys 70 that assure the circulation of air from outside the container through the container.
The chimneys 70 open at downward-outward inclines (they could open directly downward), so if food such as orange juice is spilled on the container, such spilled food will not flow through a chimney into the container and soil the eggs. The fact that the chimney opening lies closer to the top of the container than the bottom, results in warm air more easily finding its way into the chimney. It is also possible to place ventilation holes such as those indicated at 122 and 124 in the cover side and top walls.
The cover top wall 58 (
It is possible to construct an egg container without the tray, and it is possible to provide for two or more trays. In many markets the most popular egg containers hold 24 eggs. The container is formed solely of thin plastic sheet material for low cost construction and preferably to allow potential customers to see the eggs.
Thus the container securely holds and protects eggs despite tilting, holds the cover securely closed, securely holds a tray in place while strengthening the container-with-tray, and assures good ventilation of the eggs. The egg-receiving recesses in the base have ridges that allow air to circulate to the bottom of the egg, provide foot portions that support the container slightly above bottom walls of the recesses, and provide ventilation regions in the foot portions. The container-with-tray is strengthened by providing the base with upwardly-extending columns that support the tray, providing the cover with downwardly-projecting shafts that are supported on the tray, and by providing the tray with upwardly-extending posts that support the top of the cover and downwardly-extending posts that lie on the base columns. Although the container is designed to hold eggs, it can hold other pieces of food of largely spherical shapes.
Although particular embodiments of the invention have been described and illustrated herein, it is recognized that modifications and variations may readily occur to those skilled in the art, and consequently, it is intended that the claims be interpreted to cover such modifications and equivalents.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070256954 A1 | Nov 2007 | US |