Flowable material dispensing boxes, also known as intermediate bulk containers (IBCs) or “hopper bins” are well known. An example of such a box is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,845,799 entitled, “Dispensing Gate for Knock Down Bulk Box,” issued Dec. 8, 1998, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference. Another similar dispensing box for flowable material is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,010,022, issued Jan. 4, 2000, and entitled “Dispensing Box for Flowable Material,” the contents of which are also incorporated herein by reference.
Prior art dispensing boxes provide safe and secure containers for both granular materials such as corn, soybeans, gravel and the like. They also provide safe and secure handling for liquids.
It is well known that the prior art flowable material dispensing boxes have shapes that are substantially the same as a rectangular parallelepiped or they are cuboid. They can thus be abutted each other and stacked on top of each other for shipping purposes, maximizing the use of limited space in a shipping container such as truck, rail car or ship.
A problem with prior art flowable material boxes is the large enclosed volume of such containers is not always used or required by a shipper. Stated another way, when an integral multiple number of single flowable material boxes provides either two much or too little volume for a particular amount of material to transport, some volume in at least one container will be unnecessary and thus wasted. An apparatus and method for incrementally increasing the volume of a prior art flowable material container or dispensing box would be an improvement over the prior art.
As used herein, the word “concave” refers to a surface or structure that is hollowed or channeled inwardly. “Concave” also includes shapes that resemble the cross section of a common rain gutter or a flat-bottom trench.
“Convex” refers to a surface or structure shaped to extend outwardly and as used herein. As used herein, “convex” includes shapes that are essentially a mirror image or an inverse of a shape that is considered herein to be concave. An electrical square wave is thus an example of a shape that is considered to herein be convex.
The words “complement” and “complementary” refer to structures or surfaces, the shapes of which are inverses or mirror images of each other. A foot and shoe are considered herein to be complements of each other. A mortise and tenon are complements of each other.
A “shackle” is the hinged, sliding or swiveling loop-shaped member of a padlock. The heel of the shackle remains always in the padlock body. The “toe” of a shackle comes out when unlocked.
The word “mate” means to join or fit together.
Referring now to
The base portion 102 has a bottom 104 and an open top 106. The base portion 102 also has inclined interior walls (not visible) that direct flowable contents of the dispensing box to an opening in the bottom of the base portion, (opening not shown in
In
The ring portion 108 is so named because its inside dimensions (not shown) are selected to permit the ring portion 108 to be slid over the base portion 102 when the ring portion 108 is flipped over or inverted from its orientation shown in
As mentioned above, the large size of the base portion 102 and the ring portion 108 are often not necessary for a particular shipment of flowable material. Unused space in a flowable material dispensing box wastes space in a shipping container and needlessly increases shipping costs. Similarly, when the volume of a single dispensing box 100 is inadequate to send a particular quantity of material to be shipped but that particular quantity is less than what could could be shipped in two dispensing boxes 100, the unused capacity of a second dispensing box is unnecessary.
As known in the art, prior art flowable material dispensing ring portions 108 have bottom edges that are essentially complementary, i.e., they are “complements” of the top edges of the base portions 102. The top and bottom edges of the ring are of different rectangular sizes such that prior art ring sections cannot be stacked on each other as can the extension collar 200 described and claimed herein.
The bottom edges of those ring portions 108 are provided with lock mechanisms that engage mortises formed in the top edges of the base portion 102. The lock mechanisms in the ring portions 108 and mortises in the base portion 102 are thus vertically aligned with each other such the mortise in the top edge of a base portion will be located directly above a lock mechanism in the bottom edge of the ring portion 108. The vertically aligned mortises and locks of a prior art flowable material dispensing box allow the portions to be stacked on top of each other and locked together.
Each of the walls 202, 204, 206 and 208 have opposing ends 212 and 214. The space between those ends defines a nominal length. In the preferred embodiment as shown in
The adjacent pairs of the wall ends, identified by reference numerals 212 and 214, are considered herein to be “coupled” or connected to each other by corners 210. The walls and corners are preferably a molded plastic with the walls and corners actually being a continuous or unitary structure. For description and claim construction purposes, however, the corners 210, are considered herein to be quarter-circle segments and not part of the walls per se because their shape, when viewed from above, is a quarter circle. Each corner thus subtends an angle of about 90 degrees. Each corner 210 is curved, i.e., it has radius of curvature to reduce stress concentrations that would result by having the walls connected by sharp corners. The particular radius of curvature used with a particular dispensing box is a design choice.
Still referring to
Most importantly, the extension collar 200 has opposing “ends” identified by reference numerals 220 and 222 which are open. Stated another way, the extension collar 200 has an open “top” identified by reference numeral 220 and an open “bottom” identified by reference numeral 222. Material can pass freely through the extension collar 200.
The height, H, and lengths, L1 and L2, define a volume enclosed by the walls 202, 204, 206 and 208 and the ends 220 and 222. Inasmuch as the extension collar 200 is configured to fit onto prior art flowable material dispensing boxes, the sidewall lengths, L1 and L2 are essentially standardized. The height, H, of the walls thus determines the volume that the extension collar 200 can hold when it is attached to a dispensing box for flowable material. Changing the height, H, of the walls of the collar 200 thus changes the volume of material that can be added into a prior art flowable material dispensing box by the addition of one or more extension collars 200 to the flowable material dispensing box. The height dimension is predetermined, i.e., determined beforehand, to achieve a desired enclosed volume of the extension collar 200.
The bottom portion 226 of the collar 200 has a cross-sectional shape reminiscent of an inverted Arabic letter “U,” albeit with a substantially flat or planar “top” edge, or, the Greek letter omega, with a substantially flat or planar “top” edge. The “inverted U” cross-sectional shape is considered herein to be “substantially concave” because it extends inwardly much like the shape inside of an inverted rain gutter or an inverted, flat-bottom trough.
The top edge portion 224 is considered herein to be a complement of the bottom portion because the cross sectional shape of the top portion 224 fits inside of and conforms to the shape of the substantially concave bottom portion 226. The top portion 224 is thus considered to be convex or “substantially convex.”
The bottom portion 226 has a substantially flat or planar “top” surface identified by reference numeral 228. That top surface 228 of the bottom portion 226 is planar or at least substantially planar. It is also parallel or substantially parallel to a substantially planar top surface 230 of the convex top edge portion 224.
The top edge portion 224 and the bottom edge portion 226 are sized and shaped such that the top edge portion 224 fits inside the second or bottom edge portion 226 with a clearance fit, thus allowing the extension collar 200 to be added onto and removed from a flowable material dispensing box without tools or special equipment. The two planar surfaces 228 and 230 are parallel and face each other when the top edge portion 224 is inserted inside the bottom edge portion as happens when the extension collar 200 is placed on top of a base portion of a prior art flowable material dispensing box, such as the one shown in
The bottom edge portion 226 is provided with pockets 240, which are sized and shaped to enclose rotatable latches or locks, which have pad lock-like “shackles” 242. The shackles 242 can be rotated between an extended position, shown in
In the extended position, the shackle 242 is above the flat surface 228. The shackle is located below the flat surface 228 when in its retracted position. When the shackle is rotated from the retracted to the extended position, it can engage a mortise 245 in top edge of a prior art flowable material dispensing box.
The portion of the shackle 242 shown in the figures is considered herein to be the “toe” portion. In
Whether the toe portion of the shackle 242 is “above” or “below” the top surface 228 depends on the perspective from which the surface is viewed. Regardless, when the toe portion is extended out of the pocket 240 and thus “away” from the surface 228, the shackle can extend into and engage a mortise 245 in the substantially planar top surface 230 of the top edge portion 224 of the sidewalls of a prior art flowable material dispensing box.
The mortises 245, which are shown in both
In order for the extension collar 200 to fit onto and lock to a flowable material dispensing box, or perhaps another extension collar 200, the mortise 245 on the top edge 230 is located directly above the pocket 240 enclosing a latch and shackle 242. Stated another way, the mortises and shackles are located at the same place between opposing ends of the sidewalls. The shackle on a bottom edge of the extension collar is thus located to engage a mortise 245 at the same place on the top edge of the base of a flowable material dispensing box.
In the embodiment shown in
In as much as the top edge of the extension collar 200 is configured to mate with the bottom edge of a prior art flowable material dispensing box, the top edge 216 of the extension collar 200 is also capable of receiving a mating cover, such as the ones shown in the prior art references incorporated herein by reference.
In the preferred embodiment of the extension collar 200, the lengths, L1 and L2, are unequal. The cross-sectional shape of such an extension collar is thus rectangular. In alternate embodiments, the lengths of the walls, L1 and L2 are the same such that the cross-section shape of the extension collar 200 is square.
Finally, a method 500 of adding enclosed and secured volume to a flowable material dispensing box is shown in
The first step 502 can also include of course an additional step, not shown in
In an optional second step 506, one or more additional extension collars are placed onto the first extension collar that was put in place at step 502. An additional extension ring can be placed on top of the “first” extension collar. As with step 502, step 506 can include corresponding locking steps for each additional extension collar.
In a third step 508, the one or more extension collar(s) and the ring and base portions are latched together, unless of course they were latched together as part of steps 502 and 506. Stated another way, if steps 502 and 506 are modified to include latching the extension collars, step 508 would of course be unnecessary.
In a fourth step 510, the flowable material dispensing box and the extension collar(s) are loaded with a desired volume of material.
In the last step 512, the extended dispensing box is covered.
For claim construction purposes, the term “affixing” should be construed to include both the single action of placing an extension collar onto an dispensing box as well as the combined action of placing and latching an extension collar to a dispensing box.
While an extension collar 200 for a flowable material dispensing box will typically enclose a volume less than that of a prior art flowable material dispensing box, those skilled in the art should recognize that the enclosed volume of the extension collar 200 could also be greater than the volume enclosed by a prior art flowable material dispensing box simply by changing the height, H, of the extension collar walls.
For purposes of compatibility, the bottom edge of the extension collar 200 is of course sized, shaped and arranged or “configured” to receive and engage a cover that fits the top and bottom of a prior art ring portion 108 of a flowable material dispensing box 100.
The foregoing description is for purposes of illustration only. The true scope of the invention is set forth in the following claims.