Field of the Invention
This application relates to package displays. More particularly, this application relates molded pushing devices for package displays.
Description of Related Art
In the area of product displays there are hundreds of displays for holding small commercial packages on shelves in retail locations. Such displays are common for small commercial packages where the product and package combination itself are not sufficiently sized for individual stacking and organizing on a shelf. Small retail products such as craft items, seed packages, small packaged food items/spice packets etc. . . . are often arranged in a plastic tray, such as an open top walled thermoformed tray that holds the packages for retail sale.
However, as users take out the first few items from such trays, the products become disheveled and unorganized making them unappealing and, in some cases, less accessible or inaccessible from the front of the shelf. To address this, in the prior art many trays and contraptions have been devised that have an arm that biases the product packages forwards so that as a first item is removed the remainder are pushed forward for better arrangement and access for the next customer. These more advanced displays tend to be more complex and expensive to make.
For example, some current pusher display arrangements are made from injection molded rigid plastics that require high cost tooling to be produced, long lead times to manufacture, and are otherwise not designed to be recycled or to be environmentally friendly. These items were designed to be used in a permanent display format where the display would be replenished during its multi-year life cycle. Currently, some displays that only intended for temporary use are using such pusher trays even with their high cost per unit, inefficiencies in handling and storage, and potential breakage due to the brittleness of the material.
The object of the present invention is to provide a low cost flat pusher assembly made from thermoformed plastic that is easily made and shipped and can be inserted into all manners of correspondingly sized walled tray assemblies.
The present pusher arrangement is manufactured using the vacuum forming method. This allows for the use of thin gauge sheets of plastic to form a hollow three dimensional parts from recycled plastics such as PET (Polyethylene terephthalate). The use of the vacuum forming process gives the diversity to develop the present pusher tray arrangement with minimal tooling costs, very little size restraints and the ability to be recycled in current municipal systems. This wide diversity allows for a much broader use of pusher trays in general.
To this end the present arrangement provides a package display pusher assembly having a vacuum thermoformed tray, a vacuum thermoformed pusher arm, constructed independently of the vacuum thermoformed tray and a spring. The spring is coupled to the vacuum thermoformed tray at one end and the vacuum thermoformed pusher arm at it other end, configured to bias the pusher arm towards a point where the spring is coupled to the vacuum thermoformed tray.
The present invention can be best understood through the following description and accompanying drawings, wherein:
As illustrated in
As shown in
In another embodiment,
All of the above described embodiments offer a product package pusher assembly 40/140 that can be durably constructed from vacuum thermoformed constituent parts (tray 10/110 and pusher arm 20/120). As noted above, the benefit of vacuum forming the components is that unlike rigid injection molded parts, when assembled the injection molded parts must be engineered to allow clearance tolerances when assembling. The vacuum formed parts can be designed with interference due to the part's ability to flex and deform to temporarily accommodate mechanical interference.
Such an innovative design for pusher assemblies can impact the retail market by integrating a pusher assembly (40/140) with the shipping carton and allows the product to go directly to the store shelves without manually restocking every package. Once one end of the carton is opened the entire carton of product can be placed onto the shelf and automatically dispensed as customers remove the lead product. Pusher assembly 40/140 then can advances the next product into the forward position that was just vacated.
In this manner ordinary walled product package displays can be easily provided with an insertable biased pusher arm (part 20/120 of assembly 40/140) that allow products to be inserted on top of tray insert 10/110 between either the front of tray 10/110 (i.e. possibly tray wall 18/118) or a front of a product carton such as shown in
It is noted that both thermoformed pieces of pusher arm 20/120 and tray 10/110 can be stamped and thermoformed from a single sheet of plastic making the device inexpensive to manufacture. Moreover, the designs for both base 10/110 and pusher arm 20/120 are stackable for easy and inexpensive shipping and only require a basic rubber band for completion.
While only certain features of the invention have been illustrated and described herein, many modifications, substitutions, changes or equivalents will now occur to those skilled in the art. It is therefore, to be understood that this application is intended to cover all such modifications and changes that fall within the true spirit of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/213,350, filed on Sep. 2, 2015, the entirety of which is incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62213350 | Sep 2015 | US |