This application is the National Phase of International Application PCT/IB2013/051741 filed Mar. 5, 2013 which designated the U.S. and that International Application was published under PCT Article 21(2) in English.
This application claims priority to Italian Patent Application No. BO2012A000113 filed Mar. 7, 2012, which application is incorporated by reference herein.
This invention relates to a packet for tobacco products with facilitated extraction of the tobacco products.
Hereinafter in this description, reference is made to tobacco products consisting of cigarettes, without thereby restricting the scope of the invention.
Several types of cigarette packets present on the market, or not yet on the market but described and illustrated in patent documents, have an outer container which houses an inner container which accommodates a group of cigarettes.
In many cases, the inner container is initially closed and has an upper portion which can be torn off and removed the first time the packet is opened in order to take out the cigarettes inside it.
Often, the inner container applies a certain amount of lateral compression on the group of cigarettes inside it. When the cigarette packet is new, that is to say, when the group of cigarettes it contains is whole, the lateral compression applied to the group of cigarettes may be relatively high and may make it quite difficult to take out the first cigarette from the group of cigarettes owing to the friction between the first cigarette itself and the cigarettes around it.
One solution which has been proposed to make it easier to take out the first cigarette, and if necessary also other cigarettes, from the group, is to couple to at least one cigarette in the group a pull-out tape with one end which protrudes from the top wall of the group of cigarettes and which is designed to be gripped and pulled in order to lift out the cigarette.
These prior art pull-out tapes, however, usually require the inner end of them, opposite the end to be gripped, to be glued to one wall of the inner container. This constitutes a major disadvantage since the inner wrappings of cigarette packets have always been left free of glue because glue in contact with or close to the cigarettes may give off volatile substances which are absorbed by the cigarettes and cause an unwanted alteration of the flavour and/or taste of the cigarette tobacco.
This invention has for an aim to provide a packet for tobacco products which overcomes the above mentioned disadvantages and which is at once easy and inexpensive to make.
The invention accordingly provides a packet for tobacco products as described in the appended claims.
The invention is described below with reference to the accompanying drawings, which illustrate a non-limiting embodiment of it, and in which:
The numeral 1 in
The cigarette packet 1 comprises a group 2 of cigarettes 3 (see also
In the description which follows, the term “vertical” (and similar terms) will be used, for explanatory purposes, to describe the position adopted by the packet 1 when the cigarettes inside it, for easier extraction, are positioned with their axes vertical and the zone where the cigarettes 3 themselves are extracted from the packet 1 is located at the top of the packet 1. Similarly, the terms “upper” and “lower” (and like terms, such as “top” and “bottom”) will be used to designate the corresponding portions of the packet 1 when it is in the vertical position.
The group 2 of cigarettes 3 is contained in a hard inner container 5 which is housed in such a way that it can slide within a hard outer container 6, made of cardboard or the like, vertically in both directions with a straight vertical movement between a retracted position (illustrated in
The inner container 5 (
As illustrated, in particular in
In a zone substantially half way along the edge where the side walls 15 and 18 of the outer container 6 meet, there is an opening comprising a slot 19 made in the blank 20 which makes up the outer container 6 itself and through which a smoker can touch a front zone 21 of the inner container 5. The shape and size of the slot 19 are such as to allow the smoker to apply, through the slot 19 itself, a pushing action on the front zone 21 of the inner container 5 in such a way as to move it vertically in both directions, making it slide within the outer container 6 between the aforementioned retracted and raised positions. It should be noted that in variant embodiments, not illustrated, of the packet 1, the slot 19 might be made in only one of the larger side walls 15 (preferably the front one), or one of the smaller side walls 18.
In order to facilitate the manual pushing action applied by the smoker on the front zone 21 of the inner container 5, the exposed surface of the front zone 21 may be provided with knurling or other roughening feature.
The upper wall 14 of the outer container 6 has an opening 22 which is substantially square in shape, vertically aligned with the zone 12 for extracting the cigarettes 3 and therefore placed substantially over a lateral end portion of the inner container 5 on the right-hand side in
The containers 5 and 6 of the cigarette packet 1 are obtained from corresponding blanks 23 and 20, respectively, illustrated in
With reference to
The panel 8″, located at the bottom in
The panel 7′ constituting the bottom wall 7, is provided, on the part of it on the left in
The line of weakness 26 extends towards the right of the panel 7′ to a distance from that end which is just a little longer than the diameter of a cigarette 3. The portion of the panel 7′ between the right-hand end of the panel 7′ itself and the line of weakness 26 will hereinafter be referred to as “supporting portion”, denoted by the reference numeral 26′.
With reference to
The panel 15 has a pair of side flaps 17′ and 18′, left and right, respectively, in
The transversal dimension of the flaps 31 in the direction of the transversal lines of weakness 29 is smaller than the transversal dimension of the panels 15′ and 16′, and the flaps 31 are positioned relative to the respective panels 15′ and 16′ in such a way that they are clear of respective lateral portions of the panels 15′ and 16′ situated on the right in
The side flap 18′ connected to the edge of the panel 15′ situated on the right in
The zone of connection between the panel 16′ and the side flap 18″ situated on the right in
It should be noted that in variant embodiments of the invention not illustrated, the slot 33 might be situated at any position on the panel 16′, and it might be of any shape and size, in any case different from the shape and size of the slot 33 shown in
In the blanks 20 and 23 shown in
The inner container 5 is assembled by folding the panels 8′ squarely relative to the panel 7′, towards each other, about the transversal lines of weakness 25 which join them to the panel 7′ itself. The side flaps 9′ and 10′ are then folded squarely about the longitudinal lines of weakness 24 which join them to the panel 8′, in such a way that they cover the space between the two panels 8′, and the side flaps 9″ and 10″ are in turn folded squarely over the respective side flaps 9′ and 10′ which, have already been folded. The glue on the blank 23, as specified above, keeps the inner container 5 in the shape thus obtained.
The outer container 6 is assembled in a similar way to the inner container 5, since the panels 15′ and 16′ are folded squarely about the transversal lines of weakness 29 which join them to the panel 13′, the side flaps 17″ and 18″ are folded squarely about the longitudinal lines of weakness 28, which join them to the panel 16′, in such a way that they cover the space between the two panels 16′, the flaps 30 are folded squarely about the transversal lines of weakness 29, which join them to the respective flaps 17′ and 18′, and are placed over the panel 13′, and the side flaps 17′ and 18′ are folded squarely over the respective side flaps 17″ and 18″ which have already been folded. These operations are performed by shaping the outer container 6 around the inner container 5 already erected and housing inside it a row 4 of cigarettes When the outer container 6 has been completed, the flaps 31 are folded squarely over each other in such a way as to close the outer container 6. The glue on the blank 20, as specified above, keeps the outer container 6 in the shape thus obtained.
It should be noted that on the face of it which is on the outside of the inner container 5, the portion of the panel 7′ of the inner container 5 enclosed within the line of weakness 26 is provided with glue which, after the containers 5 and 6 have been assembled, causes it to adhere to the panel 13′ of the outer container 6.
As a result, the blank 23 is easy to handle while the inner container 5 is being made, since its bottom panel 7′ connects the panels 8′ to each other for as long as the line of weakness 26 remains intact, thus giving the blank 23 good shape stability and sufficient rigidity. Once the packet 1 has been completed, the first time the inner container 5 is made to slide upwards within the outer container 6, as mentioned above and as will be explained in more detail below, the line of weakness 26 is torn, the inner container 5 comes completely free of the outer container 6 and the walls 8 of the inner container 5 remain connected to each other only by the zone of the panel T outside of the line of weakness 26. From this moment on, the inner container 5 is open at the bottom except only the zone of the panel 7′ outside the line of weakness 26, that is to say, except the supporting portion 26′ of the wall 7.
In other words, according to the above, the bottom wall of the inner container 5 is defined by a bottom wall 7 in which a tearable line of weakness 26 is made which delimits an area of the selfsame bottom wall 7. A portion of the bottom wall 7 outside that area defines the supporting portion 26′ and the area is connected by adhesive to the bottom wall 13 of the outer container 6.
In use, when a cigarette 3 does not need to be taken out, the inner container 5 must occupy its lowermost retracted position where its bottom wall 7 is in contact with the bottom wall 13 of the outer container 6. Under these conditions, and if the packet 1 is positioned with the row 4 of cigarettes 3 lying in a substantially vertical plane and with the axes of the cigarettes 3 horizontal, the cigarettes 3 inside the inner container 5 are capable of sliding translationally towards the wall 10 of the inner container 5 perpendicularly to their axes. As a result of this sliding, the cigarette 3 closest to the wall 10 of the inner container 5 moves above the zone of the wall adjacent to the wall 10 itself, that is to say, above the supporting portion 26′.
To take a cigarette 3 out of the packet 1, all the smoker has to do is press a finger on the front zone 21 of the inner container 5 through the slot 19 of the outer container 6 in such a way as to urge the inner container 5 upwards from the retracted position to the raised position and to cause an upper portion of the cigarette 3 resting on the supporting portion 26′ of the wall 7 to protrude through the opening 22 of the top wall 14 of the outer container 6.
As specified above, since the bottom of the inner container 5 is open except for the supporting portion 26′ of the wall 7, the other cigarettes 3 in the row 4 remain in the lowered position in contact with the bottom wall 13 of the outer container 6.
Once the cigarette 3 protruding partly from the packet 1 has been taken out, the inner container 5 must be returned to the initial retracted position by pressing a finger on the front zone 21 in order to allow another cigarette 3 to move onto the supporting portion 26′ of the wall 7, as described above.
It should be noted that in a variant embodiment of the invention not illustrated, the supporting portion 26′ and the extraction zone 12 might be of a size, measured along the longitudinal direction of extension of the panel 7′, substantially equal to a multiple of the diameter of a cigarette 3. In this case, the upward movement of the inner container 5 would cause the upper portions of two or more cigarettes 3 to come out through the zone 12. After taking out one of these cigarettes 3, the smoker would re-lower the inner container 5, thereby causing the remaining, partly protruding cigarettes 3 to return into the outer container 6.
In a further variant embodiment not illustrated, the cigarettes 3 inside the inner container 5 might also be arranged in two or more rows side by side, instead of in a single row 4. In this case, too, the supporting portion 26′ might have two or more cigarettes 3 on it, side by side, the upward movement of the inner container 5 would cause the upper portions of two or more cigarettes 3 to come out through the zone 12 and after taking cut one of these cigarettes 3, the smoker would re-lower the inner container 5, thereby causing the remaining, partly protruding cigarettes 3 to return into the outer container 6.
In a yet further embodiment, the above mentioned knurling on the wall 8 of the inner container 5 might be accompanied by or substituted for graphic signs S (shown only in
The graphic signs S are preferably defined by an arrow A (
The arrows A and B are visible alternately through the slot 19 of the outer container 6. More specifically, when the inner container 5 is at the lowered position inside the outer container 6 (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
BO2012A0113 | Mar 2012 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2013/051741 | 3/5/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2013/132430 | 9/12/2013 | WO | A |
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Entry |
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International Search Report and Written Opinion dated Jun. 12, 2013 from counterpart application No. PCT/IB2013/051741. |
International Search Report and Written Opinion dated Jun. 12, 2013 from counterpart App No. PCT/IB2013/051708. |
Office Action issued by the State Intellectual Property Office of the People's Republic of China dated Nov. 2, 2015 for counterpart Chinese application No. 201380012543.9. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150216228 A1 | Aug 2015 | US |