This application is a national stage filing (35 U.S.C. 371) of PCT/GB2005/0045 07, filed on Nov. 23, 2005, which claims priority to and benefit from Great Britain Patent Application No. 0426825.6, filed on Dec. 7, 2004, currently pending.
The present invention relates to a packet, blanks for making the packet and to a method of making the packet. Embodiments of the invention relate to packets for elongate cylindrical objects, for example smoking articles, but the invention is not limited to such packets or such objects.
German Utility Model 2802897 and its corresponding Australian document 766603 discloses a cigarette packet having an outer shell comprising a rectangular bottom wall from which upstand two side walls, a front wall and a rectangular top wall integral with the front wall and connected to the side walls. The outer shell forms a cavity which receives an inner shell. The inner shell has two side walls, and front and rear walls. The inner shell houses cigarettes the lower ends of which are supported by the bottom wall of the outer shell. The rear wall of the inner shell is integral with and hinged to the outer shell at an edge of the bottom wall of the outer shell. A connector connects the top of the front wall of the inner shell to the top of inner side of the front wall of the outer shell. The connector allows the inner shell to move from a first, closed, position in which it is received within the cavity and a second, open, position in which the inner shell projects from the cavity. In the first position the cigarettes are inaccessible. In the second position, the cigarettes are accessible. An aperture in the front wall of the outer shell allows a user to engage the front wall of the inner shell with their finger to push the inner shell from the first position to the second position. The packet is formed from one blank.
British Patent GB 2 254314 (Gero) discloses a packet having an inner shell and an outer shell hinged to the outer shell along one edge of a bottom wall of the outer shell. A snap lock member connects the top of the front wall of the inner shell to the top of inner side of the front wall of the outer shell. The snap lock member allows the inner shell to move from a first, closed, position in which it is received within the cavity and a second, open, position in which the inner shell projects from the cavity. In the first position the cigarettes are inaccessible. In the second position, the cigarettes are accessible. The snap lock member co-operates with the inner shell to provide a snap lock action in which the inner shell is firmly seated in the first and second positions but, when pushed, springs between those positions. In one example, the inner and outer shells are formed from one integral blank and the snap lock member is formed from a separate blank.
It is desired to provide a packet having inner and outer shells in which the inner shell moves with an improved spring action between closed and open positions and which allows improved access to the contents of the packet compared to the prior proposals discussed above.
According to one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a packet comprising:
an outer shell and an inner shell connected by a spring member;
the outer shell defining a cavity for receiving the inner shell and comprising a bottom wall having four sides, a front wall and two side walls upstanding from respective edges of the bottom wall;
the inner shell comprising a front wall, a rear wall and two side walls, the rear wall being connected to the bottom wall of the outer shell;
the spring member being hinged relative to the front wall of the inner shell by a first hinge at a lower portion of the front of the inner shell and being hingedly connected by a second hinge at an upper edge of the member to a position on the inner surface of the front wall of the outer shell spaced from the top of the outer shell;
the inner shell being hingedly connected to the outer shell by a third hinge at the said bottom wall;
the sum of a) the spacing of the first hinge from the second hinge and b) the spacing of the first hinge from the third hinge being greater than the spacing of the second hinge from the third hinge,
whereby the inner shell springs between a first open position out of the outer shell in which contents of the inner shell are accessible and a closed position within the outer shell in which the said contents are inaccessible.
A connecting spring connecting the lower part of the front of the inner shell to a relative upper part of the front wall of the outer shell allows for greater access to the contents than a corresponding spring of the same length connecting the upper parts of the inner and outer shells. The spring action is also improved compared especially to the prior proposal of Gero described above.
In an embodiment of the invention, the first hinge is, in the closed position of the packet, spaced from the third hinge by a distance which is small compared to the distance of the third hinge from the top of the pack. The spacing of the first hinge from the third hinge may be small compared to the spacing of the second hinge from the third hinge. The first hinge may be at a lower portion of the front wall of the inner shell. The front wall may be separate from the hinge.
In an embodiment of the packet is formed of two blanks. In the embodiment the spring member and the front wall of the inner shell are formed from one blank, and the other walls of the outer shell and of the inner shell are formed from another blank. However, embodiments may comprise one, two or three blanks as discussed hereinafter.
In an embodiment, the front wall of the outer shell has an aperture positioned so a user can engage the front wall of the inner shell with the user's finger to move the inner shell from its closed position to its open position and wherein the upper edge of the spring member is intermediate the aperture and the bottom wall. That allows the packet to be opened with one hand.
Another embodiment comprises recesses in the respective side walls of the outer shell to allow the user to grasp the side walls of the inner shell to move it out of the outer shell. Alternatively, a recess may be provided in the top wall of the outer shell. The length of the spring member may be such that in the open position the inner shell is at an angle in the range of about 5 to about 180 degrees to the outer shell. The length of the spring member may be such that in the open position the inner shell is at an angle in the range 40 to 90 degrees, or 20 to 40 degrees to the outer shell. Opening the packet to such angles allows convenient access to the contents. The angle of opening is dependent partly on the number of rows of contents in the packet. A packet having two rows of contents may open to a greater angle than a packet with three rows of contents, for the same length of spring member.
In preferred embodiments of the packet, the outer shell has a top wall which fits snugly to the top of the inner shell in the closed position of the packet. The top of the inner shell may be defined by a top wall. The spring member is arranged to lift the outer shell over the inner shell when moved by the spring member from its open position to its closed position to enable the said top wall of the outer shell to fit over the top of the inner shell. To allow the outer shell to be lifted over the inner shell by the spring member, the side walls of the inner shell are slightly shorter than the rear wall of the inner shell by a small amount X to provide a rear wall portion of length X adjacent to the third hinge. X is of a length such that, in use, the spring member moves the outer shell bottom wall towards the side walls of the inner shell, closing the gap therebetween. Thus the outer shell top wall moves over the top of the side walls of the inner shell and over the contents (which may be a bundle of cigarettes for example) without fouling against the same.
The gap provided by length X between the bottom wall of the outer shell and the side walls of the inner shell allows the bottom wall or the rear wall of the inner shell to distort adjacent the third hinge, thus preventing tearing of the bottom or rear walls. The spring member creates stress in the packet. The magnitude of the stress may be such as to distort the packet. Thus one embodiment comprises reinforcement of the said lower portion of the front wall of the inner shell at the said first hinge. Alternatively the packet may be constructed of material (e.g. cardboard) sufficiently strong to withstand the stress without reinforcement.
The third hinge may be at the edge of the bottom wall from which the front and sidewalls do not upstand. Alternatively, the third hinge may be parallel to, but intermediate, the edge of the bottom wall from which the front wall upstands and the edge opposite thereto. For example the third hinge may be along the centre of the bottom wall.
Positioning the third hinge at the said edge of the bottom wall provides better spring action than positioning the third hinge along the centre of the bottom wall. Also the packet is considered to be visually more attractive.
Positioning the hinge along the centre of the bottom wall allows the outer shell to clear the inner shell without taking other measures as described above.
In a further embodiment of the invention the said first hinge is between the said spring member and a further member hingedly connected at a fourth hinge to the front wall of the inner shell.
The invention also provides blanks corresponding to the packets described herein and claimed in the claims. The invention also provides methods of making the packets the packets described herein and claimed in the claims
The invention also provides a packet according to the invention containing smoking articles, for example cigarettes, cigarillos or cigars.
For a better understanding of the present invention, and to show how the same may be carried into effect, reference will now be made by way of example to the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring to
In the following description and in the claims, the packet is described using the following terms: top, bottom, front, rear, side, right, left, upper and lower. Those terms refer to the packet in the orientation shown in
The packet comprises an outer shell O and an inner shell I. The outer shell defines a cavity which contains the inner shell when the packet is closed. Cigarettes are contained in the inner shell. The inner and outer shells are connected by a spring member 12 so arranged that the inner shell is stably held in its closed position within the outer shell and is held stably in its open position out of the outer shell but, when moved, springs between the open and closed positions under the spring action of the member 12.
The outer shell comprises a front wall 1 having an aperture 2, left and right side walls 3L and 3R, a bottom wall 4B and a top wall 4T. The side and front wall upstand from respective ones of three of the edges of the bottom wall. The fourth edge is connected to the inner shell.
The inner shell comprises a front wall 11, left and right side walls 8L and 8R, a top wall 9 and a rear wall 7. The rear wall of inner shell is hinged to the outer shell at a hinge H3 along the fourth edge of the bottom wall 4B of the outer shell.
The spring member 12 is hingedly connected to the inner surface of the front wall 1 of the outer shell at a hinge H2. Hinge H2 is just below the aperture 2. The spring member 12 is hingedly connected to the lower part of the front wall 11 of the inner shell at a hinge H1 above hinge H3.
Referring to
As shown in
In its closed position the inner shell is contained within the outer shell with its front wall 11 abutting the front wall 1 of the outer shell and covering the aperture 2. The aperture 2 allows a user to grip the side walls 3L and 3R of the outer shell with for example their thumb and second finger and to push the front wall 11 of the inner shell with their first (index) finger to cause the inner shell to spring open as described above. Thus the packet can be opened with one hand.
In this example, three rows of cigarettes are contained in a bundle wrapped in protective wrapping as well known in the art. In this example, the bundle is contained in the inner shell supported at the bottom by the bottom wall of the outer shell. Access to the cigarettes is, in the open position of the inner shell, via an opening B defined by the front wall 11, the top wall 9 and the side walls 8 of the inner shell. The opening faces generally inwards towards the outer shell O, so that the bundle is protected by the inner and outer shells in the closed position thereof. In this example the inner shell opens to an angle, relative to the outer shell, in the range 20° to 40°, preferably 25° to 35°, for example about 30° to enable the user access to the cigarettes. However other examples can open in the range from about 5 to 180 degrees.
In the example shown, the top wall 9 of the inner shell I fits snugly under the top wall of the outer shell in its closed position, the spacing of the top wall 9 of the inner shell from the bottom wall 4B of the outer shell being nearly equal to the spacing of the top wall 4T of the outer shell from the bottom wall 4B. Furthermore, the spacing of top wall 9 from bottom wall 4B is nearly equal to the height of the bundle of cigarettes so that the bundle is held firmly with no slack within the packet. As a result, the leading edge of the top wall of the outer shell in theory would not clear the top of a frill bundle of cigarettes contained in the inner shell as the inner shell moves from its open position to its closed position as illustrated in
The packet of
The blank B1 also comprises the rear wall 7 and the side walls 8R and 8L and the top wall 9 of the inner shell I. The side walls 8R and 8L and the top wall 9 of the inner shell are integral with the rear wall 7 via fold lines. The rear wall 7 is integral with the bottom wall 4B of the outer shell via a fold line. The side walls 8R and 8L are integral with tabs 10a and 10b via fold lines.
The blank B2 comprises the front wall 11 of the inner shell, integral with the spring member 12 via hinge H1. The spring member is integral with, and hinged at hinge H2 to, a flap 13. Flaps 14R and 14L are integral with side edges of the front wall 11. Flaps 14R and 14L are the same length or shorter than the corresponding portions of flaps 8R and 8L; to allow a zone X of distortion of the rear wall adjacent hinge H3; and to allow the spring 12 to lift the outer shell O over the top wall of the inner shell I, the flaps 14R and 14L should not exceed the length of flaps 8R and 8L, more specifically should not overlap the edges of flaps 8R and 8L adjacent bottom wall 4B.
In a preferred example, the blank B2 is cut during assembly of the packet from a reel of cardboard. It is preferable that one end of the blank matches the other end so successive blanks can be cut from the reel with no waste.
Blank B1 may be provided precut before assembly begins.
One example of a process of making the packet of
A bundle of cigarettes is made including its protective wrapping; step S1. Also, blank B2 is cut from a reel; step S2. The right and left flaps 14R and 14L of the blank B2 are folded through 90°; step S3 and
The blank B1 is supplied from a stack of such precut blanks. The hinge line H3 is placed adjacent to the bottom edges of the flaps 14L and 14R of the blank B2 with the wall 1 and its attached flaps and tabs extending beyond the bottom edges of the flaps 14R and L as shown in
Next in step S7, the tabs 10a and 10b are folded through 90° and the top wall 9 of the inner shell is folded through 90° onto the tabs to form the top wall of the inner shell. The flap 9 is glued to tabs 10 at this stage.
Next the front wall 1 of the outer shell and its attached flaps 3L, 3R, 4T, 4B and its tabs 5a, 5b, 6a and 6b are folded about hinge line H3 through 90°; step S8 and
In step S11, the top wall 4T of the outer shell and its tabs 5a and 5b are folded through 90° about fold line F7 to position the top wall correctly. See
Referring to
Glue is applied to the flaps and tabs at appropriate stages of the process, as well known in the art. For example glue may be applied to at least some parts of the blanks at the start of the process. Glue may be applied to some parts during the process.
In the first example the inner shell I is hinged to the outer shell O by means of the bottom edge of its rear wall hinged to the edge of the bottom wall 4B of the outer shell. This second example differs from the first example in that the outer shell is hinged to the inner shell at a hinge H3′ parallel to the front wall 1 of the outer shell and the rear wall 7 of the inner shells and which is on the bottom wall 4B intermediate the edges thereof.
Referring to
Blank B2′ shown in
The third example is shown in
The third example differs from the first and second examples primarily in that the spring member 12 is long enough to allow the inner shell to open to more than 40°, in this example to just less than 90° relative to the outer shell. The front wall 1 of the outer shell has no aperture 2: instead the side walls 3L and 3R have recesses Rr and R1 to allow the user to grip the side walls 8R and 8L of the inner shell to open the packet. Alternatively, a recess may be provided in the top wall 4T.
The example of
The reinforcement is provided, as best shown in
As shown in
As shown in
In another version of the third example, as shown in
Such a flap 13′ extending away from the top wall may be used in the first and second examples.
Blanks of the Third Example
The third example of the packet comprises two blanks: B1″ (
Referring to
Referring to
In blank B2″ the front wall 11 is integral with the member 132, being joined to it via fold line F5. The member 132 is integral with the spring member 12 being joined to it via hinge H1. The member 12 is integral with a flap 13 being joined to it via hinge H2. The front wall 11 has side flaps 14R and 14L. The flaps are integral with additional flaps 18a and b which are joined to the flaps 14R and L at the ends thereof adjacent to, and parallel to, the fold line F5. Flaps 18a and b are separated from the members 12 and 132 by cuts. The fold lines between the flaps 14R and L and the wall 11 are preferably weakened by for example perforations. The fold line F5 between the member 132 and the wall 11 is preferably weakened by for example perforations. The hinges H1 and H2 are preferably weakened by for example perforations.
The blank B2″ is preferably cut from a reel like blank B2. The flaps 18a and b are useful for positioning the blank B2″ relative to a bundle of cigarettes and positioning the bundle and blank relative to the blank B1″ during assembly of a packet of cigarettes.
Modifications and Variants
The fifth example is identical to the first example except the blank B1 is replaced by two blanks, B11 and B12.
Blank B12 has a flap 41B which, in use, is glued to flap 4B of blank B11 to form an assembled blank corresponding to that of
The blanks of
Providing a total of three blanks in this way allows the outer shell O and the inner shell I to be formed separately.
Indicia and Graphics
Indicia and/or graphics may be provided on any of the outside walls of the inner and outer shells. In addition or alternatively, indicia and/or graphics may be provided on the inner front wall 11 of the inner shell I and/or on any inner the surface of the packet visible when the packet is opened, for example on the spring member 12 and/or on the inner face of the front wall 1 of the outer shell O.
Contents
Packets in accordance with the invention may contain smoking articles, for example cigarettes, cigars and cigarillos. Packets in accordance with the invention may be used to contain objects other than smoking articles. The packets may be used for other generally elongate cylindrical objects for example pencils and crayons. The packets may be used to store other objects which are not generally elongate and/or cylindrical.
Shape of Edges
The packets described by way of example all have rectangular edges. That is not essential to the invention: the packets may have edges at least between the side walls and the front and rear walls which are rounded, bevelled, or elliptical, or other edge shapes including those known in the art.
Modified Blank
The blank B2 of
Support of Contents
As described above, the bundle of cigarettes is supported by the bottom wall of the outer shell. However, in an alternative arrangement the flaps on the side walls of the inner shell may be turned inwardly to support the bundle. Furthermore, the bundle may be glued in place in the inner shell so that movements of the outer shell (particularly the bottom thereof) does not mean that the bundle also moves.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
0426825.6 | Dec 2004 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB2005/004507 | 11/23/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/6/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/061563 | 6/15/2006 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2929542 | O'Gorman | Mar 1960 | A |
2944555 | Peel et al. | Jul 1960 | A |
3272321 | Tamarin | Sep 1966 | A |
3749234 | Gero | Jul 1973 | A |
3877573 | Scott et al. | Apr 1975 | A |
4588081 | Newsome et al. | May 1986 | A |
5014906 | Gero | May 1991 | A |
5174492 | Gero | Dec 1992 | A |
5330056 | de la Rocha | Jul 1994 | A |
7455177 | Serafini et al. | Nov 2008 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
7921550 | Dec 1979 | DE |
20107274 | Sep 2001 | DE |
2254314 | Oct 1992 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080087712 A1 | Apr 2008 | US |