This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application Ser. No. 62/764,084, filed 2018 Jul. 18 by the present inventor, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
This application relates to a closure article for liquid containers such as bottles, jugs and tanks and relates to a modified means of serving liquid through the closure without the removal of the closure. The present embodiment also relates to fingertip touch operations for both service and closure means.
The following is a tabulation of some prior art that presently appears relevant:
Liquids originally were carried around in pales and served hand to hand with cups or goblets. These pales were then discarded to the side, allowing for bugs and aerial germs to subside and eventually make people sick. This problem was partially improved upon when containers such as bottles and jugs were created to reduce vulnerability to disease, yet the decision was still made that these containers needed to be closed off while not in use. This was done most in part with corks until caps and lids were created. They were designed with a means to grab into the flange in the opening of containers when pressed over the top.
This, however, made the reuse of the containers and the liquids therein difficult. An early ramification was made to be the improvement in bottle stoppers. A device which was designed for a stronger, longer hold as bottles stood idle. The artwork was however dated, and its main drawback was that it required the user to exert extra force to open and close. The flip-top closure improvement later came along. A device that held itself in a sealed state, yet, had many moving parts. The crown cork and the screw cap came along and changed how bottles were closed.
In a social setting, screw caps are the robust solution, but are often lost or defiled. Screw caps with tamper proof rings were the improvement, having a means for the cap to stay connected to the mouth of a bottle, but are a nuisance to drinking as the cap scratches the nose and/or mouth. The crown cork was the most implemented closure with glass bottles but required the user to find a bottle opener or otherwise use the inside of their garment to pry open the bottle. A crown cork with a peel top was later created, but its drawback was that it was time consuming in manufacturing for the products assigned to it.
As simple as they were, there was still a demand to serve liquids through container closures. In Korea, a lid with a pull-out spout was created. However, this mechanism was reduced to cans and perhaps jars. No ramifications were made for bottles. All artwork described thus far involves the user's hands and fingers to operate in directly over the mouth of bottles, providing no sanitary value. Society has moved towards the need to “grab and go” as well as the tolerance for sharing with the intolerance for germs.
Once a closure is removed, the contents of the container remain vulnerable to foreign objects until disposal. Cups are provided when drinks are meant to be distributed among many users, however, in time-constricted events, users share drinking contents either through mouth-to-mouth or a technique where the head is tilted backward, and the contents are poured carefully over the mouth where accuracy is an issue.
While these closures did serve their primary goal, none of them provide precise pouring as with the accupour* embodiment. This refers to the displaced spout within the cap which is hydro-dynamically designed to shoot a stream of liquid with a minimal amount of tilt. Within the same regards, the present device embodiments will not be subject to misplacement nor contamination or any event that will leave the inner contents vulnerable to foreign objects. The prior-art has a higher bypass rate of germs and critters as the user has to consciously close the container manually. The present device embodiments include a memory recoil which is the primary function in most aspects. These embodiments also include a lever in which provide the “grab and go” operation.
The embodiment is predetermined to the lifetime of a bottle article. There is no need to for the user to source an additional party to obtain the present embodiment. It erects and retracts a spout for face level accuracy in pouring liquids. Pouring at a distance from the face allows for sharing in events where drinking receptacles aren't provided. While in motion, the device embodiment relieves the forethought of opening a canister with both hands. While idle, the auto-retraction of the spout closure visually and physically provides a means of sanitation. In an industrial scope, the device reduces labor in clean-up, packaging and storage.
The erecting spout cap shown in
Operating this closure embodiment provides a “grab-and-go” action. As the user places their hand around the neck of the bottle product, the index finger presses the lever 7. Said lever draws the sliding seal 8 forward. With the thin strips 13 attached to the strip channels 14 and the upper register of the sliding spout 2, the strips erect the spout through the opening of the seal sheath (top) 10 for the duration of the user's grip. Upon the release of the user's finger, the memory recoil tongue 16 engages the lever 7 thus, retracts the service embodiment and seals the closure article.
The embodiments of the present device (a) are of comprehensive use by persons of any age, (b) provide a single-handed operation over the cognitive two-handed twist or pull motion, (c) has sanitary value for the containment of liquids both ingestible and industrial, (d) when used for beverages, can serve the user away from the opening of the mouth without tilting the head backward, making the sharing of beverages robust, (e) keeps the user's hands completely beneath the mouth of the bottle during operation, (f) provide economic value as the device requires no exclusive retail market share, and (g) provide implied value on a commercial level as the following variations are considered.
For products that do not require reclose, the memory recoil tongue 16 can be omitted in manufacturing and neck grips (not shown) can be added to the lever 7 for clamping, keeping the embodiment of the spout 2 erect until disposal of the entire product. As a tamper-proof measure, the top of the device can have a slight perforation between the sliding seal 8 and the seal sheath (top) 10. In aspects where the present closure embodiment is made of cork or wood, the memory recoil tongue 16 can be a concave sheet of metal and added after the manufacturing of the closure embodiment. In instances where the device is made of metal, the bottom of the seal sheath 9 can be omitted during manufacturing. Although there are specificities mentioning assembly through adhesion, the device can be assembled by push-pegs and holes and/or lock lugs and twist slots, for example, on the polar sides in the seal sheath (bottom). Instead of a touch lever mode, the device can be all slides. Depending on the bottle product, the size of the device will vary as well as the embodiment of the spout and recoil. In modes when the present serving embodiment is not used for beverages, the accutip* 3 can be omitted and have the inner tunnel centered through the sliding spout 2 in manufacturing. In various cases, the color and form of the present device can be determined by the manufacturer based on brand identity, universal safety measures, and product innovation.
Hereby, with all elements considered in the present embodiment, an array of variations and modifications will now become apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the scope should be determined not by the embodiments illustrated, but by the appended claims and their legal equivalents.
Accupour—Hydrodynamic design to serve with acute precision.
Accutip—The acute stem opening to a spout.
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