None.
None.
Food sauce dispensing cartridges are used throughout the food service industry for dispensing a measured quantity of sauce on a food item. As an example, in fast service restaurants, a large volume of food items must be prepared for customers in a relatively short around of time. Meeting this demand presents a significant challenge; consistent food quality can only be achieved by dispensing the correct amount of sauce, but the fast pace of preparing food items leaves little time to carefully measure dispensed amounts. The use of handheld dispensing guns with food sauce dispensing cartridges has enabled consistent and fast dispensing of sauce amounts to allow greater quantities of food items to be prepared within a narrow timeframe. The exact quantity of sauce dispensed by the cartridge is controlled by valves formed in the dispensing end of the cartridge and the degree of motion of the dispensing gun acting on a plug in the cartridge being advanced towards the dispensing end. Each time a trigger of the dispensing gun is pulled, the gun advances the plug a consistent distance.
Typically, food sauce dispensing cartridges are fabricated from paper stock with opposing ends folded together in a continuous loop sidewall such that the ends overlap one another and are adhered together to form the cartridge in a cylindrical shape. This overlap creates a sideseam that runs the length of the container. Additionally, the outer and interior surfaces of the cartridge are typically coated with a thermoplastic liner. The plug is most often formed of a thermoplastic or other similar plastic.
While advancements have been made in the design and manufacture of end caps containing the values disposed at the dispensing end of the dispensing cartridges, problems remain with methods of sealing the plug with the cartridge to prevent leaks at the plug. Although plugs are often bonded with the interior surface of the dispensing cartridge before use with a dispensing gun, the bond must release enough to allow the gun to advance the plug through the cartridge while at the same time maintaining a seal such that food sauce within the cartridge may not pass by the peripheral edge of the plug and escape out of the containment region. One common method of bonding the plug is to heat the flanged perimeter edge of the plug (e.g., with hot air) such that the plastic melts and bonds with the thermoplastic liner of the cartridge. This method, however, does not provide a leak proof seal for typical dispensing cartridges. This is because the internal sideseam of the cartridge causes the interior diameter thereof to vary as much as the sidewall thickness of the container from a point where the sidewall overlap occurs to a point adjacent to the sideseam. The plug on the other hand has a consistent diameter around the peripheral edge, and the melting of the flanged edge is not sufficient to fill a gap created between the peripheral edge and the cartridge sidewall at a point immediately adjacent to the sideseam. Thus, as the dispensing gun advances the plug, food sauce escapes the cartridge not only at the intended dispending end, but also by bypassing the periphery of the plug along the sideseam towards the opposing end. Also, the gap may present an additional path for contaminants to enter the containment region of the cartridge.
In light of the aforementioned problems, the present invention provides an improved method of sealing a plug with a food sauce-dispensing container whereby leakage in the plunging region is eliminated. A plug with a body and a peripheral skirt is first positioned within a plunging end of a dispensing container such that the circumferential edge of the plug on the peripheral skirt is aligned generally in a plane perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the container. The plug is generally sized with a diameter about the same as the average diameter of the dispensing container so that it may be frictionally fit therein, leaving a gap between the circumferential edge of the plug and the container sidewall adjacent to the container sideseam. Subsequently, a layer or bead of hot melt adhesive is applied to the circumferential edge of the plug to bond the plug with the dispensing container sidewall. The adhesive also flows into the gap between the plug and the container to prevent food sauce disposed in a containment region between the plug and an end disk at the dispensing end of the container from escaping around the periphery of the plug. The bonding or sealing of the plug may take place before the end disk is connected to the dispensing container, or preferably, is done at the last step of dispensing container construction after end disk connection is complete.
With the method of dispensing container construction taught by the present invention, less food sauce product is wasted and there is less risk of food contamination because the open channel or gap to the containment region around the plug is eliminated. In use, as the user pulls the trigger on the dispensing gun to advance the plug, the pressure within the containment region between the plug and the end disk will increase. Because the plug is bonded to the container sidewall using the hot melt adhesive which fills the gap created at the sideseam, the plug seal can withstand the pressure increase without failing so that the food sauce is only dispensed properly out of the valves in the end disk.
In the accompanying drawings which form a part of the specification and are to be read in conjunction therewith and in which like references numerals are used to indicated like parts in the various views:
A disposable food sauce cartridge dispenser 10 of the type utilizing the method of the present invention to seal a plug 12 therewith is shown in
The plug 12 and cartridge body 14 are similar to those used in typical food sauce cartridge dispensers that are known in the art; however, the plug 12 has modifications that distinguish the plug from typical designs, as will be more fully explained herein. The configuration of the plug is best seen in
The cartridge body 14 is preferably formed of paper stock with opposing ends 36 folded together in a continuous loop sidewall 38 such that the ends overlap one another and are adhered together (e.g., with adhesives) to form the cartridge body 14 in a cylindrical shape presenting an interior surface 40 and an exterior surface 42. The interior surface 40, and optionally the exterior surface 42, is typically coated with a thermoplastic liner. The section of the sidewall 38 where the ends 36 overlap is referred to as the overlap region 43. This overlap also forms an interior sideseam 44 and an exterior sideseam 46 that extend longitudinally along the sidewall parallel to a central longitudinal axis of the cartridge body 14.
The plug 12 has a body 48 that is generally disk-shaped with certain raised and depressed regions so that the plunger 30 of the dispensing gun 26 will better interface with the plug 12 and provide smooth dispensing operation. A peripheral skirt 50 extends generally perpendicularly from the body 48 and terminates at a smooth perimeter or circumferential edge 52. The skirt 50, or some portion therealong (e.g., circumferential edge 52), preferably has a diameter that is approximately the same as the average interior diameter of the cartridge body 14 so that the plug 12 may be loosely frictionally fit within the body prior to the plug being bonded with the interior surface 40. However, the plug diameter may be smaller or greater than the cartridge body 14 average interior diameter so long as there is not excessive friction between the plug 12 and the cartridge body interior surface 40 that would impede the desired operation of the dispensing gun 26. Plugs known in the art typically have an outer edge that tapers to a fine flange extending away from the body of the plug and having a much reduced thickness as compared to the thickness of the peripheral skirt. However, the smooth circumferential edge 52 of the plug 12 in the present invention presents a broader surface to which an adhesive 54 may be applied to bond the plug 12 with the cartridge body interior surface 40, as best seen in
As can be seen in
Thus, to assemble the cartridge dispenser 10, the first step is to position the plug 12 within the cartridge body 14 such that the circumferential edge 52 of the plug is aligned generally in a plane perpendicular or transverse to the central longitudinal axis of the body (i.e., perpendicular to the sidewall 38) and concentric with the interior surface 40, as seen in
An alternative method of cartridge dispenser 10 assembly involves reversing the steps of plug 12 insertion and adhesive 54 application. Thus, the adhesive 54 (e.g., a food grade hot melt adhesive) may first be applied to the circumferential edge 52 of the plug 12, and then the plug 12 is quickly placed within the cartridge body 14 near the dispensing end 18 of the dispenser 10. The plug 12 should be aligned generally in a plane transverse to the central longitudinal axis of the cartridge body 14 and concentric with the interior surface 40, as seen in
Since certain changes may be made in the above invention without departing from the scope hereof, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawing be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense. It is also to be understood that the following claims are to cover certain generic and specific features described herein.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2106577 | Sherbondy | Jan 1938 | A |
3884396 | Gordon et al. | May 1975 | A |
4135347 | Lowdermilk | Jan 1979 | A |
4432473 | MacEwen | Feb 1984 | A |
4493860 | Callahan | Jan 1985 | A |
4830231 | Smith | May 1989 | A |
6361485 | Robertson | Mar 2002 | B1 |
6371335 | MacEwen | Apr 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050072809 A1 | Apr 2005 | US |