The present disclosure relates a food tray for enclosing food and for providing a surface to eat food upon, and more particularly, towards a food tray for use when a person is seated in a vehicle or other situation in which a table surface is not available.
There are various food trays and enclosures that are provided for convenience such as when ordering food from a drive-through service. For example, the food products may be individually wrapped and placed into a paper bag for delivery from the restaurant to the consumer. in other instances, the food products may be packaged in a Styrofoam®, paper, corrugated board, or other tray that is configured for being delivered in a closed box and then opened when ready for consumption.
These trays are generally not convenient for a person consuming food products white in transit in a vehicle. For example, the Styrofoam® trays sit on a person's lap and during movement of the vehicle, such as, for example, during cornering, acceleration, or braking, the tray may move around. This represents a situation that is not safe if the driver is distracted by sliding of the tray, and is also messy when food is spilled within the vehicle. As it relates to driving, it has been shown that distracted driving contributes to many traffic incidents.
Accordingly, a method, good, or product that is configured to address these disadvantages is needed.
This Summary is provided to introduce in a simplified form concepts that are further described in the following detailed descriptions. This summary is not intended to identify key features or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it to be construed as limiting the scope of the claimed subject matter.
According to at least one embodiment, a food tray includes: first container defining an interior receptacle space, the first container having an interior surface for supporting a food item and an opposite concave exterior surface for engaging a first thigh of a seated person; a second container defining an interior receptacle space, the second container having an interior surface for supporting another food item and an opposite concave exterior bottom surface for engaging a second thigh of the seated person; and a hinge connecting the first container to the second container and having at least an open configuration and a closed configuration in which the food tray defines a closed container.
In at least one example, in the open configuration, the interior surface of the first container and the interior surface of the second container face generally in the same direction.
In at least one example, in the closed configuration, the interior surface of the first container and the interior surface of the second container face each other.
In at least one example, a bridge connects the first container to the second container, the bridge including the hinge and spacing the first container from the second container in the open configuration.
In at least one example, the bridge spaces the first container from the second container in the open configuration by a distance between the first and second thigh of the seated person.
In at least one example, the bridge comprises a generally planar panel that defines at least one opening for receiving food or beverage item.
In at least one example, the tray, the first container, and the second container have the same length.
In at least one example, each of the first container and second container has a respective uniformly thick base that defines the interior surface thereof as convex and opposite the concave exterior surface thereof such that the interior surface and exterior surface have corresponding curvatures.
In at least one example, a radius of curvature of each interior surface differs from a radius of curvature of the corresponding opposite exterior surface by a uniform thickness of the uniformly thick base.
In at least one example, opposing lateral edges of the first and second containers have mutually engaging locking features that maintain the tray in the closed configuration upon engagement.
In at least one example, a tab extends from a lateral edge of the first container to be received and retained in a slot formed through a lateral edge of the second container.
In at least one example, the food tray includes at least one of polystyrene, paper, corrugated paper, and plastic.
In at least one example, the food tray is constructed from a single contiguous panel of consistent material.
In at least one example, the hinge comprises at least one of a fold, crease, crimp, perforation, thinning, scoring, and living hinge.
In at least one example, the first container has a uniformly thick base that defines the interior surface thereof as convex and opposite the concave exterior surface thereof such that the interior surface and exterior surface have corresponding curvatures.
In at least one example, a radius of curvature of the interior surface of the first container differs from a radius of curvature of the corresponding opposite exterior surface by a uniform thickness of the uniformly thick base,
In at least one example, at least one of the first container and second container has a non-uniformly thick base that defines the interior surface thereof as having at least a planar portion opposite the concave exterior surface thereof.
In at least one example, the non-uniformly thick base has at least one central portion and at least one lateral margin that is thicker than the central portion.
The previous summary and the following detailed descriptions are to be read in view of the drawings, which illustrate particular exemplary embodiments and features as briefly described below. The summary and detailed descriptions, however, are not limited to only those embodiments and features explicitly illustrated.
These descriptions are presented with sufficient details to provide an understanding of one or more particular embodiments of broader inventive subject matters. These descriptions expound upon and exemplify particular features of those particular embodiments without limiting the inventive subject matters to the explicitly described embodiments and features. Considerations in view of these descriptions will likely give rise to additional and similar embodiments and features without departing from the scope of the inventive subject matters.
Any dimensions expressed or implied in the drawings and these descriptions are provided for exemplary purposes. Thus, not all embodiments within the scope of the drawings and these descriptions are made according to such exemplary dimensions. The drawings are not made necessarily to scale. Thus, not all embodiments within the scope of the drawings and these descriptions are made according to the apparent scale of the drawings with regard to relative dimensions in the drawings. However, for each drawing, at least one embodiment is made according to the apparent relative scale of the drawing.
A food tray 10 in one or more embodiments is illustrated throughout the drawings. In at least one embodiment, the food tray 10 is constructed from a single contiguous panel of consistent material. The food tray 10 may be made of any appropriately selected material, including polystyrene (for example Styrofoam®), paper, corrugated paper, plastic, and the like. The food tray 10 may be used in storing, transporting, and serving any of a variety of foods, particularly in situations where a consumer is likely to be sitting without a nearby surface on which to place a plate, tray or other serving article.
The tray 10 includes at least two serving containers, described here as left-side and right-side containers 20 and 30 with reference to placement of the tray 10 upon the lap of a seated dining person. It is to be understood that the dining person may otherwise orient the tray such that distinctions of the containers as left-side and right-side are nominal and tentative according to the preference of the user.
The food tray 10 includes a bridge 40 by which the left-side and right-side containers 20 and 30 are connected. The bridge 40 has at least one hinge-line 42, for example as defined by a fold, crease, crimp, perforation, thinning, scoring, living hinge, or other hinging connection. For the purpose of description, and with reference for example to intuitive terms for a seated dining person (see
The food tray 10 can assume at least two major configurations according to the disposition of the bridge 40. The bridge 40 is shown in
In the closed configuration of the tray 10, an interior space 16 (
As shown in
As shown in
In
Concave and convex in these descriptions refer to having inward and outward arched or bulging curvatures as viewed along at least one perspective, for example as viewed along the longitudinally-extending hinge line 42 in the perspectives of
In the open configuration (
Advantageously, the bridge 40 has a lateral width that spaces the left-side container 20 from the right-side container 30 to accommodate the upper thighs of a seated person in the channel-shaped thigh-engaging surfaces 27 and 37. When food items are placed in the interior-side receptacle spaces of the left-side container 20 and right-side container 30, for example as shown in
The curvature of each base 26 and 36 may be formed to provide a respective thigh-engaging surface 27 and 37 that is slightly larger than an average human upper thigh, thereby creating some space for movement of the legs or for compensating for persons with larger legs. In one or more embodiments, the thigh engaging surfaces may include a pressure sensitive adhesive that helps to adhere the tray 10 to the person's lap, but does not leave an adhesive residue The surfaces may further include any grip improving material or characteristic, such as a pressure sensitive grip mat and the like.
In the illustrated embodiment, the bridge 40 is formed as a generally planar panel that defines at least one opening 44 (
Downwardly extending tabs (
In
As illustrated, the interior-side 22 receptacle space of the left-side container 20 extends the full length 12 of the tray 10 to accommodate any items a user prefers over a leg when the tray 10 is placed in a lap in the open configuration. Similarly, the interior-side 32 receptacle space of the right-side contain 30 extends the full length 12 as well.
In other embodiment, either or both of the interior-side 22 and 32 receptacle spaces may extend only a portion of the length 12 of the tray 10. In yet other embodiments, multiple left and right-side containers are attached to opposing lateral sides of the bridge 40.
Although the bridge 40 is illustrated as a generally planar panel, the bridge 40 in some embodiments may have an accordion style structure and be extendable from one lateral width to another in order to accommodate people of varying sizes. In this manner, to fit the tray 10 to a larger person, one would pull on opposing lateral ends of the tray 10 to widen the accordion portion to make the tray have an increased width. Additionally, the accordion style structure would allow for the respective leg-engaging portions to not be perfectly parallel in the instance of the user twisting or moving while seated.
Particular embodiments and features have been described with reference to the drawings. It is to be understood that these descriptions are not limited to any single embodiment or any particular set of features, and that similar embodiments and features may arise or modifications and additions may be made without departing from the scope of these descriptions and the spirit of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of priority of U.S. provisional patent application No. 61/9345,731, titled “FOOD TRAY HAVING IMPROVED LAP PLACEMENT CHARACTERISTICS,” filed on Feb. 1, 2014, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61934731 | Feb 2014 | US |