The present invention relates to a packet of cigarettes with a pull-up flap for extracting some of the cigarettes from the packet.
In the following description, reference is made, for the sake of simplicity and purely by way of a non-limiting example, to a rigid, hinged-lid packet of cigarettes.
A rigid, hinged-lid packet of cigarettes normally comprises an inner package containing a group of cigarettes; and a rigid outer container housing the inner package. The inner package is initially closed, and has a pull-off top portion, which is removed when the packet is unsealed, to enable removal of the cigarettes from the inner package.
The inner package and outer container often exert lateral compression on the group of cigarettes inside the inner package. And, when the packet is full, this lateral compression may make it difficult to extract the first cigarette from the group, due to friction between the first and surrounding cigarettes. One solution proposed to extract the first cigarette more easily is to fit at least one cigarette in the group with a pull-up strip, one end of which projects from the top wall of the group, and is gripped to pull the cigarette up.
The inner end, opposite the grip end, of known pull-up strips, however, must be glued to a wall of the inner package, which poses a serious drawback: the inner packages of packets of cigarettes are never glued, on account of glue on or close to the cigarettes releasing volatile substances, which are absorbed by the cigarettes and alter the aroma and/or taste of the tobacco.
Patent application WO9849072A1 discloses a method of packaging and package for a bundle of cigarettes; a flow seal package includes a resealable cigarette access which may be opened to permit withdrawal of the cigarette and then a suitable tab resealed on the barrier material to reseal the access opening.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a packet of cigarettes with a pull-up flap, designed to eliminate the above drawbacks, and which is cheap and easy to produce.
According to the present invention, there is provided a packet of cigarettes with a pull-up flap, as claimed in the accompanying Claims.
A number of non-limiting embodiments of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
In a different embodiment not shown, inner package is sealed, and pull-off cover portion 6 initially closing extraction opening 5 is replaced with an open-close sealing flap movable between a closed position closing extraction opening 5, and an open position opening extraction opening 5.
Outer container 2 has an open top end 7; and a cup-shaped lid 8 hinged to outer container 2 along a hinge 9 to rotate, with respect to outer container 2, between an open position (
When lid 8 is in the closed position, outer container 2 is in the form of a rectangular parallelepiped having a top wall 10 and an opposite, parallel bottom wall 11; two opposite, parallel major lateral walls 12 and 13; and two opposite, parallel minor lateral walls 14. More specifically, one major lateral wall 12 defines a front wall 12 of outer container 2, and the other major lateral wall 13 defines a rear wall 13 of outer container 2; four longitudinal edges 15 are defined between minor lateral walls 14 and front and rear walls 12, 13; and eight transverse edges 16 are defined between top and bottom walls 10, 11 and front, rear, and minor lateral walls 12, 13, 14.
In the
Packet 1 also comprises a rigid collar 17 (i.e. made of rigid cardboard), which is folded into a U and fixed (glued) to the inside of outer container 2, and projects partly from open top end 7 to engage a corresponding inner surface of lid 8 when this is closed. In a preferred embodiment, collar 17 has two projections 18, which project laterally to interferentially engage the lateral walls of lid 8 to hold lid 8 in the closed position. Collar 17 comprises a front wall 19 positioned contacting front wall 12 of outer container 2; and two lateral walls 20 located on opposite sides of front wall 19 and positioned substantially contacting minor lateral walls 14 of outer container 2.
As shown in
As shown more clearly in
When packet 1 of cigarettes is sealed and therefore inner package 3 unopened, extraction opening 5 of inner package 3 is closed by pull-off cover portion 6, which presses grip end 23 of pull-up flap 21 against the front wall of group 4 of cigarettes. When packet 1 of cigarettes in unsealed and cover portion 6 removed, grip end 23 of pull-up flap 21 springs back slightly off the front wall of group 4 of cigarettes for easy grip by the user (as shown in
It is important to note that, pull-up flap 21 being as wide as the whole front row of cigarettes 22 in group 4, the lateral edges of pull-up flap 21 are positioned contacting the lateral walls of inner package 3, which thus act as ‘guides’ to prevent pull-up flap 21 from rotating with respect to packet 1 (i.e. with respect to outer container 2, inner package 3, and group 4) and so tilting laterally as it slides up or down (thus seriously compressing and permanently damaging cigarettes 22).
When the user pulls up grip end 23 of pull-up flap 21 to extract the front row of cigarettes 22, the U shape of pull-up flap 21 prevents it from sliding with respect to, as opposed to raising, the front row of cigarettes 22 (i.e. prevents the pull-up flap 21 from sliding empty out of group 4, without raising the front row of cigarettes). That is, if pull-up flap 21 were to slide with respect to the front row of cigarettes 22 (i.e. to slide out of group 4) when the user pulls on grip end 23, the vertical rear wall 28 of pull-up flap 21 would have to deform to slide under group 4. But, because of the size and stiffness of vertical rear wall 28, deforming it would require more force than that needed to lift pull-up flap 21 together with the front row of cigarettes 22. Any initial slide of pull-up flap 21 with respect to the front row of cigarettes 22 is therefore counteracted as soon as vertical rear wall 28 reaches the point at which it has to deform to slide under group 4, and because of the greater force required for it to do so.
As shown in
To optimize performance, the number, size and shape of stabilizing projections 31 in the
As shown in
In actual use, when grip end 23 of pull-up flap 21 is pulled up, the lateral wall 33a connected directly to grip end 23 is raised vertically with it, while the other lateral wall 33b remains substantially unmoved. Bottom wall 27 thus tilts—by being raised at one end and remaining substantially stationary at the other—to raise the front row of cigarettes 22 differentially (gradually higher towards grip end 23, and lower away from grip end 23) as shown clearly in
In all the embodiments shown in the drawings, bottom wall 27 of pull-up flap 21 is the same size as bottom end 24 of the front row of cigarettes 22, and so raises the whole of and only the front row of cigarettes when grip end 23 is pulled up. In an alternative embodiment not shown, bottom wall 27 of pull-up flap 21 is larger than bottom end 24 of the front row of cigarettes 22, and so, when grip end 23 is pulled up, raises other cigarettes, in addition to those in the front row (e.g. raises the whole front row and the whole intermediate row of cigarettes 22, or the whole front row and part of the intermediate row of cigarettes 22). In another embodiment not shown, bottom wall 27 of pull-up flap 21 is smaller than bottom wall 24 of the front row of cigarettes 22, and so, when grip end 23 is pulled up, only raises part of the front row (e.g. the five middle cigarettes 22 in the front row; or the three middle cigarettes 22 in the front row, and the three middle cigarettes 22 in the intermediate row; or the two middle cigarettes 22 in the front row, the two middle cigarettes 22 in the intermediate row, and the two middle cigarettes in the rear row of cigarettes 22).
Packet 1 of cigarettes described has numerous advantages.
In particular, it comprises a pull-up flap 21 with a grip end 23 projecting from extraction opening 5 of inner package 3, and which is pulled by the user, when packet 1 is unsealed, to raise the front row of cigarettes 22 quickly and easily.
Having no glue, pull-up flap 21 can be applied on standard packing machines, and involves no risk of contaminating the cigarette tobacco.
Finally, packet 1 of cigarettes described can easily be produced on a standard packing machine (with only a few minor alterations), as opposed to a high-cost dedicated machine (specially designed for packets of this type).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BO2011A000140 | Mar 2011 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2012/051382 | 3/22/2012 | WO | 00 | 11/15/2013 |