This invention relates to packaging and is concerned particularly with packaging for use in protecting bottles against shock daring storage and transit.
Various packaging methods have been used for protecting bottles together with their contents, during storage and transit. These methods, in addition to being generally labour-intensive, commonly involve a substantial outlay in cost and material-resources on packaging items in the form, for example, of cardboard cases and specially-designed items of foam or other forms of plastics, or corrugated cardboard, to fit within them. Much packaging of this nature cannot be re-used or re-cycled and goes to waste.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a form of packaging for bottles which can be re-used and can be adopted for secondary use when no longer required specifically as a packaging item.
According to the present invention there is provided packaging for a bottle wherein a thermoformed sheet is foldable circumferentially round the bottle with the bottle nesting conformably within recesses in sections of the sheet spaced from one another circumferentially of the bottle for protecting the bottle against shock, and wherein the sheet is adapted to lay flat with the recesses open upwardly to receive individual bottles conformably side by side.
The packaging of the invention can be readily re-used for its original purpose, but has a secondary use when laid flat, in the storage of bottles. More especially, where wine bottles are involved, the packaging can be readily adopted for use in the provision of a wine rack.
An example of thermoformed packaging according to the present invention, will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
In the latter respect, and referring to
The inside surface T of each wall 11 to 14 between its respective pair of flanges 16 to 19, is contoured in depth and width with a recess 21 that is configured in the moulding of sheet S to conform to the external contour of the bottle 1. Each recess 21 incorporates cavities 22 and 23 of oval and quasi-oval configuration respectively, which are set orthogonally to one another with the cavity 22 smaller in both axes than the cavity 23, and which are both of a tiered or stepped form having cross-sectional dimensions that decrease with depth. The cavities 22 and 23 by virtue of their thermoforming, give rise on the bottom or outside surfaces B of the walls 11 to 14 to respective projections or buffers 24 and 25 that have cylindrically-concave bottom-faces 26 extending lengthwise of the respective walls 11 to 14. The buffers 24 and 25 act principally in the cushioning of the walls 11 to 14 of the case 2 and the bottle 1 contained by it, against external shock imposed on the surfaces B via the outer, secondary packaging carton 3. (The carton 3 may be replaced by a mailing bag or other external packaging, but the buffers 24 and 25, which may be of different heights to one another and of different shapes, serve the same shock-protection purpose.)
Additional cushioning of the bottle 1 against shock is provided by transverse ridges 27 to 29 moulded to project upwardly from the inside surfaces T into each recess 21 in locations corresponding to those of the neck 6, shoulders 5 and base of the body 4 of the bottle 1. The ridges 27 to 29 give added resilience or springing within the walls 11 to 14 of the case 2.
A four-stage sequence of packaging the bottle 1 within the case 2 will now be described with reference to
Referring to
As illustrated in
Folding the wall 14 over the bottle 1 as illustrated in
The case 2 containing the bottle 1 when locked closed, is inserted lengthwise into the carton 3 (or other external packaging). The bottle 1 in this is protected against external shock by the cushioning buffers 24 and 25 projecting from the outside surfaces B of all four walls 11 to 14 where they are in contact with the inside of the carton 3. It is also protected by the cushioning of the ridge-within-groove interlocking of the flanges 16 to 19 of the walls 11 to 14, and by the springing of the ridges 27 to 29 between the case 2 and the bottle 1. The bellows-like resilience of the flanges 16 to 13 at each end of the bottle 1 function to cushion the bottle 1 longitudinally.
The sheet S when folded round the bottle 1 in the form of the case 2 serves to afford protection to the bottle 1 during transportation and storage, and can be readily re-used for such a service. However, when its service in this respect is no longer required, or re-use is not a practical possibility, it can be usefully and economically used to afford an efficient and continued degree of shock protection in the prevision of a form of wine rack for laying up the bottle 1 together with other, corresponding bottles of wine. In this regard, the sheet S when opened out on its hinges 15 with the walls 11 to 14 laid flat on a horizontal surface, can be used to support four bottles laid horizontally side by side for storage.
A further four bottles 47 may now be stored on the moulding 44 in a similar way to the bottles 41 on the moulding 43, and indeed as illustrated in
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1220789.0 | Nov 2012 | GB | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/EP2013/074210 | 11/19/2013 | WO | 00 |