BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is related to a container for transporting articles. More specifically, the present invention is related to an expandable container that can be used to transport articles.
Containers in general are greatly appreciated for their ability to house articles and making transportation of articles manageable. On a daily basis, people use containers in one form or another. The utility value of a container is greatly increased if its holding capacity is expandable so that it is both convenient to use for transporting a small number of articles as well as a large number of articles. Toward the goal of increasing the utility value of containers, there are a number of inventions disclosing how to add to the holding capacity of a container.
U.S. Pat. No. 5086917 issued to Dziersk discloses a utility caddy for use with or without a bucket. As shown in FIG. 6 of Dziersk, essentially, whenever a number of articles exceed the holding capacity of a bucket 50, a caddy 10 can be added thereto the bucket to house any excess number of articles. A shortcoming of this Dziersk invention is that both the bucket 50 and caddy 10 are made of a structured material thus they always occupy a same amount of space regardless whether both are being used. On occasions only a small quantity of articles are being transported, a user still needs to carry these large containers. On the other hand, should the user either only carries the bucket 50 or the caddy 10 and not both, the user may find insufficient amount of container space if the number of articles turn out to require the holding capacity of both the bucket 50 and the caddy 10.
U.S. Design Patent No. D410329 issued to Wyatt discloses a combined rucksack and net bag. This container overcomes the shortcoming of Dziersk in that the expanded portion is a net that is collapsible when not needed and expandable when needed. Therefore, the net only occupies minimum amount of storage space when not in used. However, a shortcoming of this container is that while the net is useful to carry items much smaller than the main container, its juxtaposition relative to the rucksack while discretely increase the overall holding capacity of the rucksack, it is unable to either integrally or synergistically increase the holding capacity of the rucksack. For example, if an article is so large that it is unable to be fitted into the rucksack, the net is incapable to increase the overall capacity of the rucksack to hold this article.
U.S. Design Patent No. D429886 issued to Avent discloses a foldable carrying case with a separable net bag. Avent shares the same shortcoming as Wyatt in that the net bag and the three separate folders can only discretely increase the holding capacity of the net bag, but they cannot either integrally or synergistically increase the holding capacity of the net bag so as to enable one single large article to be fitted into the net bag and the folders.
U.S. Design Patent No. D421178 issued to Dandini discloses a carryall-beach blanket combination. FIG. 3 of this invention discloses a large net having a number of pockets to increase the holding capacity of articles. Again, while the pockets are useful to carry separate and small articles, they are unable to increase the holding capacity of the largest net so as to carry one single large article.
U.S. Pat. No. 5944213 issued to Alicea discloses a deformable retaining net. In this invention, a deformable retaining net 10 is added to a container 22. However, the deformable retaining net 10 is not able to increase the holding capacity of the container 22. It merely helps to retain any articles already housed in the container 22 so as not to fall out of the container 22. In essence, the deformable retaining net 10 has not increase the holding capacity of the container 22.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
To overcome the above-mentioned shortcomings of the prior art inventions, the present invention discloses a net-container when used in conjunction with a structured-container can increase the overall holding capacity as an expandable container so as to hold either a single large article or a large pile of articles that the structure-container by itself cannot hold.
It is apparent that by combining the structured-container with the net-container would synergistically increase the holding capacity of the structured-container and the net-container when they are both being used separately.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
FIG. 1 shows a view of the net-container of the present invention where the top and bottom closable openings are fully open.
FIG. 2 shows a view of the net-container of the present invention where the top closable opening is mostly closed and the bottom closable opening is mostly open.
FIG. 3 shows a perspective view of the present invention where the net-container is coupled to the structured-container.
FIG. 4 shows a close-up view of how the net-container is coupled to the structured-container via a restrainer and a fastener.
FIG. 5 shows a perspective view of a round-opening structured-container.
FIG. 6 shows a perspective view of a round-opening structured-container loaded with articles.
FIG. 7 shows a perspective view of the expandable container of the present invention loaded with articles.
FIG. 8 shows a top view of a pattern of a net-material used to make the net-container.
FIG. 9 shows top view of a pattern emerging two pieces of net materials into one piece of net material to make the net-container.
FIG. 10 shows a diagrammatic view of a fastener and how multiple parts associated thereof are integrally related to each other.
Figure 11 shows a rectangular opening structured-container that the net-container may be coupled thereon to form an expandable container of the present invention.
FIG. 12 shows an irregular shaped opening that the structured-container may be coupled thereon to form an expandable container of the present invention.
DETAIL DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIGS. 1 and 2, by way of an example, illustrate a net-container of the present invention from two different perspectives. FIG. 1 shows a plan view of the net-container 100 having both top and bottom restrainers 102 and 104 stretched open to enable the largest opening to the net-container 100.
FIG. 2, in attempt to give a another view of the characteristics of the net-container 100, shows that the top restrainer 102 is tighten to provide a very small opening to the net-container 100 on one end while the bottom restrainer 104 is relaxed to provide a largest opening to the net-container 100 on another end. It should be noted that the net-container 100 by itself is a capable container with a utilizable holding capacity when one or more articles are fitted into the net and both restrainers 102 and 104 are tightened. FIG. 3 shows by way of an example an expandable container 300 of the present invention in that the net-container 100 is securely attached to a structured-container 302 by having the bottom restrainer 104 being fitted over a rim opening of the structured-container 302 before tightening the bottom restrainer 104. A detail illustration of the junction where the net-container 100 is affixed to the structured-container 302 is shown by way of an example in FIG. 4.
As clearly shown in FIG. 5, the structured-container 302 has two main portions; namely, a rim portion 502 on top of a housing portion 504. The rim portion 502 is designed to serve the functions of overall structural support. It is also designed to serve as a handle so as to allow a user to carry and transport the structured-container 302 by holding onto the rim portion handles 506 and 508. The rim portion 502 has a perimeter larger than the largest opening of the housing portion 504. As such, when one end of the net-container 100 is encompassingly fitted over the rim-portion 502, the bottom restrainer 104 is tighten and a fastening holder 402 maintains the slackness or tightness of the bottom restrainer 104.
It is visually apparent that the perimeter of the rim-portion 502 is larger than the perimeter of restrainer 104 after it has been tightened. Therefore, the net-container 100 and the structured-container 302 are securely affixed to each other. By so affixing the net-container 100 onto the structured-container 302, the overall holding capacity of the resulting expandable container 300 is substantially and synergistically increased to house either a single large article or a single pile of articles which the structured-container 302 alone cannot fully house.
To visually illustrate the difference in holding capacity of the structured-container 302 and the expandable container 300 of the present invention, FIGS. 6 and 7 are added. As apparently shown, the holding capacity of a pile of articles in the expandable container 300 is more than double the holding capacity of the structured-container 302 alone. Despite of the more than double in holding capacity of the expandable container 300, the expandable container 300 is still stable and is self-standing. What increases the holding capacity being a lightweight and easily managed shrinkable net-container 100, it can be carried with the structured-container 302 at all times without really adding any burden to a user. However, when a user comes to realize a number of articles to be transported exceeds the holding capacity of the structured-container 302 alone, the net-container 100 is readily available to be added to synergistically increase the overall holding capacity to accommodate the articles.
FIG. 8 shows how the net-container 100 is patterned and manufactured. The process starts from preparing a net material 802 in a rectangular shape. On top and bottom of the rectangular net material 802 are tap regions E1 and E2. The tap regions E1 and E2 are respectively folded along fold lines Ft and Fb to form two layers of net material to be affixed together to form top and bottom channels. Two hole openings are then created on the surface of each of the top and bottom channels as an entry hole and an exit hole. Top and bottom restrainers 102 and 104 are then respectively fitted into these channels through the entry and exit holes.
On both ends of the net material are overlapping regions O. Since there are many devoids in any net material, overlapping regions O are needed to provide sufficient amount of material for affixation. The overlapping regions O is created by folding overlap portions 0 from both ends along fold-lines FL and FR. This folding of the overlapping regions O would make the folded ends to have double the amount of materials than what otherwise is only a single layer of net material. Both folded ends totaling four layers are then brought together in an overlapping fashion and are affixed together. The end result is that the net material is formed into a cylindrical shape if both end openings are fully open.
As FIG. 8 shows how a net container is made from a single piece of net material, the net container can also be made from more than one piece of net material. FIG. 9 shows an example of making a net container by combining two pieces of net materials. On each piece of net material, there is an overlapping region O1. By overlapping two regions O1 and affix them together, they are successfully combined into one single piece of net material. Similar method can be used to combine even more pieces of net materials. As other aspects of making a net container is the same as that discussed with FIG. 8 above, they are not being redundantly described herein.
As an example of the dimensions of the present invention, the perimeter of the round edge of the structured container is 54 inches. The widest opening of the net-container is 55 inches. The height of the structured-container is 12 inches, and the height of the net container is 22 inches.
When a user needs to maintain either the top or bottom restrainers 102 or 104 to a desired loop size, fasteners devices 402 are used. A diagram view of a fastener 402 is shown in FIG. 10. The fastener has a main body 1004 with a pair of body holes 1008 partially housing a slidable plate 1002 with another pair of plate holes 1006. An internal spring 1010 inside the main body 1004 biases downward against the slidable plate 1002 so as to push the slidable plate 1002 away from the main body 1004. When put into use, a user would push the slidable plate 1002 toward the main body 1004 against the biasing force of the spring 1010 until the pair of holes 1008 and 1006 becomes concentric. The user then inserts a leading end of a restrainer into one pair of concentric holes and a trailing end of the restrainer into another pair of concentric holes. By no longer pushing the slidable plate 1002 toward the main body 1004, the spring 1010 would resort to its biasing force to push the slidable plate 1002 away from the main body 1004. As the restrainer being caught in the pair of one time concentric holes, the tightness and slickness of the restrainer can be controlled thus a size of an opening of a net-container can be controlled.
Since the net-container 100 is highly adaptable to different shapes, it can be used for structured-containers with different opening shapes. Besides a round-opening of the structured container 302, the net-container 100 can also be used, for example, on a rectangular-opening structured-container as shown in FIG. 11 and an irregular opening shaped structured-container as shown in FIG. 12.
From the foregoing detailed description, it will be evident that there are a number of changes, adaptations and modifications of the present invention that come within the province of those persons having ordinary skill in the art to which the aforementioned invention pertains. However, it is intended that all such variations not departing from the spirit of the invention be considered as within the scope thereof as limited solely by the appended claims.