Pallet container

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6202844
  • Patent Number
    6,202,844
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, March 16, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, March 20, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
A cage for receiving a plastic container in the overall arrangement of a pallet-type container, having a shallow tray (3) as base of the cage, the tray being arranged on a pallet or forming the top part of a pallet, and a grid casing as wall of the cage, the grid casing being connected to the border (28) of the tray (3), is constructed such that, on its bottom border, the grid casing has a web (19) which is supported on the pallet or, if the tray (3) forms the top part of the pallet (5), on a bottom part (11, 15) [sic] of the pallet and on which the tray (3) is supported by means of its border (28), and the border (28) of the tray (3), the web (19) and the pallet, or the bottom part (4) of the pallet, are connected to one another in a positively locking manner (31, 33; 35, 36).
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The invention relates to a cage for receiving a plastic container in the overall arrangement of a pallet-type container for storing and/or for transporting substances, having a shallow tray as base of the cage, the tray being arranged on a pallet or forming the top part of a pallet, and a grid casing as wall of the cage, the grid casing being connected to the border of the tray.




2. Description of the Related Art




A pallet-type container with such a cage is known from DE 41 08 399 C1. In the case of this cage, the border of the tray is angled horizontally and then vertically upwards again and is thus configured as a seat for the grid casing; the grid casing is welded or screwed to said tray. Feet are fastened on the tray in the region of the tray arch which adjoins the horizontal bent-away section towards the inside.




As is outlined in the patent of addition DE 42 06 945 C1, swashing vibrations caused by liquid substances and vibrations transmitted by the transporting vehicle put this pallet-type container at risk, and this in turn adversely affects transporting safety. The solution to this problem proposed by DE 42 06 945 C1 is that, rather than the border of the tray being bent away outwards and upwards, said border is drawn downwards and then angled away outwards again; furthermore, a double base with hollow chambers is provided. The grid casing is accommodated at the bent-away section. The feet support the tray on the bent-away section.




All of this requires a high degree of production outlay. It also renders a fixed connection between the tray and the grid cage more difficult; in fact, this connection only comprises a few screws.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The object of the invention is to provide a further, expedient design of a pallet-type container. The design is to allow maximum strength along with minimal production outlay.




This object is achieved according to the invention by a cage of the type described in the introduction, in the case of which, on its bottom border, the grid casing has a web which is supported on the pallet or, if the tray forms the top part of the pallet, on a bottom part of the pallet, and on which the tray is supported by means of its border, and the border of the tray, the web and the pallet, or the bottom part of the pallet, are connected to one another in a positively locking manner.




The web preferably comprises an essential U-shaped profile, which surrounds the bottom ends of the grid bars. This configuration makes it possible to achieve high strength. The grid-bar ends may be welded to the two legs of the U-shaped profile. The weld points are only subjected to shear loading, and are thus loaded to a lesser extent than in the case of the abovementioned prior-art arrangement subjected to tensile loading. Even pinning of the grid bars to the two legs throughout would be possible in a comparatively simple manner, i.e. a positively locking mechanical connection which is at virtually no risk of rupturing.




The tray preferably has cutouts on the border for the through-passage of the grid bars and, between the grid bars, is supported on the web. In the case of the U-shaped profile, this thus allows support on both the legs of the profile. In principle, however, and depending on circumstances, support could also be restricted to the inner U-leg. The webs could also be of a different design and be seated on the grid bars on one side such that the border is located beside the grid bars.




A particularly advantageous development of the invention consists in the fact that the web comprises a profile which is flanged with the border of the tray. The flanging over the length of the border is considerably stronger than individual weld points. Moreover, it requires less production equipment. In addition, it allows a plastic tray to be connected to a metal grid casing. However, a combination of flanging and welding is also possible.




To give further details, the outer leg of the U-shaped profile preferably has an outwardly directed angled section on which the border of the tray is located, and the flanging is carried out after the angled section and above it. The border of the tray preferably has an upended section which is flanged together with the border of the profile and is enclosed by the border of the profile in a positively locking manner, said profile border preferably also being upended to begin with. These configurations are favourable in terms of both strength and production.




Otherwise, the parts are preferably connected by means of screws which engage through the border of the tray and through the web, or past the latter, into the pallet or the bottom part of the pallet. This produces a tensile connection throughout all the parts. With a sufficient number of screws, this connection could possibly replace the flanging.




However, other connecting means would likewise be possible, also other screwed connections, for example into the web from beneath.




The screws are expediently combined with spacers which span the distance between the border of the tray and the pallet, or the bottom part of the pallet, in order to support the tensile force of the screws and thus to permit a fixed screw connection without bending the web and/or the border of the tray. The spacers are preferably sleeves which enclose the screws. They may also be in the form of bored blocks.




In a particularly advantageous configuration of the invention, the sleeves pass through the border of the tray and bear on the border by means of a flange formed on them.




The flange then acts as a washer, and the sleeve can be inserted from the outside together with the screw.




The tray preferably has downwardly directed stamped formations which extend, at least approximately, into the plane of the bottom border of the web. As a result, a forklift truck can reliably grip beneath, and transport, the pallet-type container, if the tray forms the top part of the pallet; the pallet-type container rests directly on the fork by means of the webs and the stamped formations. When positioning the cage on a wooden pallet or a plastic pallet similar to this, the tray is supported on the top boards of the pallet by the stamped formations. If the top part of the pallet is formed by the tray itself, then the bottom part of the pallet has a crossmember which supports the tray from beneath.




It is proposed as being particularly advantageous in combination with the web provided according to the invention that the grid casing comprises intersecting vertical and horizontal grid bars, and the horizontal grid bars comprise an open profile which has two outwardly bent-away borders located in the same plane, and the vertical grid bars likewise comprise such a profile or comprise a closed profile which has at least one planar profile wall, and the horizontal grid bars are assembled with the vertical grid bars with the bent-away borders butting against one another, or with the bent-away borders of the horizontal profile bars butting against said planar profile wall of the vertical profile bars, and are welded to one another at the abutment surfaces and/or joined to one another by stamping and/or punching. The web can also be fastened well on the planar bent-away borders or abutment surfaces of the vertical profile bars. This applies, in particular, to the form of the U-shaped profile, of which the two legs can then have planar surfaces of contact with the grid bars and can be welded here appropriately well.




After the two bent-away borders, the open profile of the horizontal profile bars at least should merge into two parallel wall sections and, with a slight bend, these should be adjoined by a trapezoidal residual cross-section.




The pallet-type containers can move apart from one another at the trapezoidal residual cross-section if, in the event of being accidentally set down adjacent to one another, their grid casings become entangled.




If it is desired to increase the strength or to reduce the possibilities of accidents, the bent-away borders can be folded over at the border edges. The profile is thus stiffened and the border edges are rounded, a larger radius being produced at the same time.




For the top border of the grid casing, it is proposed that the grid-bar ends are pressed flat and surrounded by a profile which butts against the grid-bar ends by means of two parallel borders and, likewise on both sides, is welded to said grid-bar ends and/or joined to them by stamping and/or punching. This produces a strong top border for the cage, on which a further, identical pallet-type container can be positioned. Moreover, in order to increase the stability, in the vicinity of their top ends, various mutually opposite vertical grid bars are to have transverse bores in which crossmembers which are laid over the plastic container and engage on the relevant grid bars, by way of forked ends having corresponding bores, are pinned to these grid bars. Apart from strengthening the cage, the crossmembers serve to retain the plastic container in the cage in a positively locking manner and to prevent any possible arching of the top of the plastic container under pressure. A further configuration of the subject matter of the invention provides, as base of the case, a rectangular tray, of which the base surface, which is enclosed by an arched border region, is designed approximately in the form of a shallow saddleback roof or tent roof, of which the border slopes downwards slightly to both sides from the centre of one shorter rectangle side, and then along the two longer rectangle sides, and then opens into a channel which runs on the other short rectangle side and deepens towards the centre of this rectangle side. It is here that the outlet of the plastic container is located.




The base configured in this manner is supported against the border of the tray, said tray border being subjected to tensile loading in the process. This static concept is more favourable than the known solutions with reversed force flux. The tray may thus be dimensioned to be more lightweight; greater stability is achieved with the same dimensions.




The proposed design of the tray and the proposed grid casing comprising a bent, open profile, which may possibly be closed on the vertical grid bars, said profile likewise having a weight-reducing effect, provides an overall design for the cage and pallet-type container assembled according to the invention which has a particularly favourable stability to weight ratio.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING




An exemplary embodiment of the invention is shown in the drawings, in which:





FIG. 1

shows an isometric illustration of a pallet-type container,





FIG. 2

shows the pallet-type container in a side view from the front right according to

FIG. 1

, partly in central section,





FIG. 3

shows a section through a cage of the pallet-type container along line IIIā€”III in

FIG. 2

,





FIG. 4

shows an isometric illustration of a base framework as the bottom part of the pallet,





FIG. 5

shows a base of the pallet-type container, the base, as top part of the pallet, belonging to the base framework, in the same isometric illustration,





FIG. 6

shows a view of a grid for forming a grid casing of the pallet-type container,





FIG. 7

shows a detail designated by VII in

FIG. 6

, on an enlarged scale,





FIG. 8

shows the detail in

FIGS. 6 and 7

as viewed from the left,





FIG. 9

shows a detail designated by IX in

FIG. 6

, on an enlarged scale and as viewed from the right in

FIG. 6

,





FIG. 10

shows a detail designated by X in

FIG. 6

, on an enlarged scale and viewed from the left in

FIG. 6

,





FIG. 11

shows a detail designated by XI in

FIG. 3

on an enlarged scale and in section, the section being located behind the plane of the drawing of

FIG. 3

,





FIG. 12

shows, in mirror-inversion, a modification of

FIG. 9

,





FIG. 13

shows a modification of

FIG. 10

,

FIG. 14

shows a modification of

FIG. 8

,





FIG. 15

shows a detail designated by XV in

FIG. 1

, on an enlarged scale,





FIG. 16

shows a modification of

FIG. 5

, and





FIG. 17

shows a detail designated by XVII in

FIG. 11

after the step of flanging has been carried out.











DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




The pallet-type container


1


comprises a cage


2


, of which the base, which is configured as a shallow tray


3


, is supplemented by a base framework


4


to form a pallet


5


, and also comprises a plastic container


6


which is received by the cage. The plastic container


6


is produced, by blow-moulding, in cuboidal form with rounded edges and corners. To match the base of the plastic container,


6


, the tray


3


has an arched border region


7


. Level with the plastic container


6


, the grid casing


8


of the cage


2


is adapted to the periphery of said container.




On a rectangular frame


9


made of round steel bars, the base framework


4


has four corner feet


10


and three feet


11


on the centres of one shorter rectangle side and of the two longer rectangle sides. The latter two feet


11


are spanned by a crossmember


12


. The feet and the crossmember are sheet-metal pressed parts. Those feet


11


on which the crossmember


12


is located are shorter, by the thickness of the sheet metal of the crossmember, than the other feet


11


and


12


. The crossmember


12


has upwardly angled side walls


15


which are in shallow-gable form and are bent away outwards again at the top border. In correspondence with the crossmember


12


tapering towards the centre, the side walls


15


are inflected slightly. The shallow gable form of the crossmember


12


is matched to the cross-sectional shape of the base


3


, which the crossmember supports from beneath, and this cross-sectional shape will be described at a later stage in the text. Formed on the corner feet


10


are positioning surfaces


13


, which project obliquely towards both sides, and thus, at the same time, lateral protrusions


14


. The feet


11


have corresponding positioning surfaces


13


and protrusions


14


on one side. Through-passages


16


for self-tapping screw threads for fastening the grid casing


8


and the tray


3


are made on the top sides of the corner feet


10


, feet


11


and crossmember


12


.




The grid casing


8


has been produced from the grid shown in

FIG. 6

by being bent at the four side edges of the cage


2


and closed at the centre of one narrower side surface.




The grid is made up of vertical grid bars


17


, horizontal grid bars


18


, a U-shaped profile, which forms a web


19


and surrounds the bottom ends of the vertical grid bars


17


, as well as a profile


20


which surrounds the top ends of the vertical grid bars


17


. The grid bars


17


and


18


comprise a hat profile which, on a cross-sectionally square profile section


21


, has two outwardly bent-away borders


22


. At the points of intersection, the grid bars butt against one another by means of the bent-away borders


22


and are spot welded, projection welded or resistance welded on the contact surfaces, as is indicated in

FIG. 7

at


23


.

FIG. 14

shows the modification where the profile section


21


is replaced by a section made up of a rectangular cross-sectional part


24


and a trapezoidal cross-sectional part


25


.




The cross-section of the web


19


is illustrated in FIG.


9


. In the U-shaped profile of the web


19


, the hat profile of the grid bars


17


, which reach as far as the base of the profile, butts against the two legs, to be precise the bent-away borders


22


butting against the outer leg and the end surface


26


of the profile section


21


butting against the other leg. Welding is possible on all three contact surfaces. It is carried out at least on the two bent-away borders


22


. The outer profile leg is bent outwards at right angles, this producing a horizontal bearing surface


30


and a vertical flange border


31


. Level with the section which has been bent at right angles, the inner profile leg is folded over and thus forms a stiffened rest


32


. Further details will be given of these functions.




At the top border of the grid, the hat profile of the grid bars


17


is pressed flat at


27


. The profile


20


which is placed in position here grips the pressed-flat section on both sides and is welded thereto on both sides. The grid with its favourable strength to weight ratio, straightforward and controlled welding and the possibility of all-round galvanization could also be used, with or without surrounding profiles, for purposes other than the pallet-type container described, and possibly also in an arrangement in which those grid bars which run in one direction are not aligned vertically and those grid bars which run in the other direction are not aligned horizontally; furthermore, connection of the grid bars to the abutment surfaces could be executed differently, e.g. by a combination of welding and joining.




The arched border region


7


of the tray


3


is adjoined by a border


28


which is angled into the horizontal and, at the end, the tray has a narrow upended section


33


. The upended section


33


, however, would not be necessary. In the manner illustrated in

FIG. 11

, the tray


3


is laid, by means of the border


28


, on the rest


32


and the bearing surface


30


of the web


19


, the grid bars


17


being located in cutouts


29


in the border


28


which are adapted to them. In the production of the cage, the tray


3


is introduced, from above, into the grid casing


8


which, at this stage, has been shaped but has still not been welded closed and is therefore still loose. Once the tray is located on the web


19


, the grid casing is closed by its horizontal-bar ends, which overlap one another, being welded and/or joined by stamping and/or punching. In this state, the flange border


31


of the web


19


and the upended section


33


on the border


28


of the tray


3


are flanged to one another, as shown in FIG.


17


. Welding is also possible, e.g. of 6 to 7 mm in width and at distances of from 20 to 30 mm from centre to centre. Spot welding, projection welding or seam welding are envisaged in particular. The now finished cage


2


is mounted on the base framework


4


. The final state of this mounting operation is shown in

FIG. 11

, with the exception of the left-hand circled detail, which illustrates the abovementioned earlier state of the mounting operation and, in the end state, should be replaced by one of the two circled details on the right.




The cage


2


is located with the web


19


on the feet


10


and


11


. Via each foot


10


or


11


, a sleeve


36


, through which a screw


35


passes, is inserted into the web


19


through a bore


34


in the border


28


of the tray


3


. The sleeve


36


is located on the border


28


of the tray


3


by means of a flange


37


and on the base of the U-shaped profile, which forms the web


19


, by means of its bottom end. The screw has its fillister head


38


seated in the top end of the sleeve


36


and itself engages through a bore in the base of the U-shaped profile and into the through-passage


16


made in the foot, at which location it has tapped itself a thread. At the two feet


11


which bear the crossmember


12


, the web


19


is located on the sheet metal of the crossmember


12


which, over the through-passage


16


of the foot


11


, has a clearance


39


of somewhat larger cross-section, the screw


35


passing through said clearance


39


.




The length of the sleeve


36


is dimensioned such that the flange


37


presses on the border


28


of the tray


3


and the bottom end of the sleeve


36


presses on the base of the web


19


.




At the centre of one shorter rectangle side, the tray


3


has an indent


40


. In this case, however, the border


28


is spanned by a support


41


which is curved out downwards and takes the place of a foot


11


in the pallet


5


. Above the indent


40


, the plastic container


6


also has a recess


42


. Located in the resulting space is a discharge stub


43


, which only appears in

FIG. 2

, with a discharge valve


45


which can be actuated by a handle


44


. The discharge stub


43


is fitted on a protuberance


46


of the plastic container


6


, this protuberance, at the border of the indent


40


, projecting downwards into the latter.




The base surface of the tray


3


within the arched border region


7


is essentially designed in the form of a shallow saddleback roof with a ridge


47


extending between the centres of the shorter rectangle sides. However, the ridge


47


and the roof surfaces also have a slight inflection to form a tent roof, this producing a shallow roof tip


48


and two further inflection lines


49


which extend therefrom. Accordingly, the ridge


47


slopes very slightly downwards to both sides from the roof tip


48


and the two further inflection lines


49


slope downwards to a noticeable degree. The roof border slopes downwards slightly to both sides from the end point


50


of the ridge on one shorter rectangle side, and then along the two longer rectangle sides, in order finally to open into a channel


51


which runs on the other short rectangle side and becomes deeper towards the indent


40


. The channel


51


is interrupted at the indent


40


. It only follows that with part of its cross-section, although this includes part


52


of the channel base. The protuberance


46


of the plastic container


6


which is located here extends on both sides up to the channel


51


and into the latter.




Starting from a certain preshaped formation, the base of the plastic container adapts itself more or less permanently, under the pressure of the liquid stored in it, to the shallow roof form of the tray base. The container can thus be completely emptied in the direction depicted by the arrows in FIG.


5


.




In the four roof sections divided up by the ridge


47


and the further inflection lines


49


, the tray


3


is provided with four downwardly directed stamped formations


53


, of which the undersides, together with the underside of the web


19


, are located in a common horizontal plane. A forklift truck can thus pick up the pallet-type container without tilting it. The depressions on the top side of the stamped formations


53


can be compensated by filling elements.




The pallet-type container can be set down on the top profile


20


of the grid casing of an identical pallet-type container by way of the protrusions


14


on the feet


10


and


11


. The oblique positioning surfaces


13


located above the protrusions


14


have the task of ensuring that, when identical pallet-type containers are set down adjacent to one another, the distance which is necessary in relation to the horizontal grid bars


18


is obtained. Two crossmembers


54


engage on mutually opposite vertical grid bars


17


by means of forked ends


55


and are connected thereto by bolts


56


which are inserted through aligned transverse bores in the fork legs and the grid bars


17


. The hat profile or also a closed rectangle profile of the vertical grid bars


17


permits this method of fitting the crossmembers, which is straightforward and favourable in terms of force. On either side of the filling opening


57


, the crossmembers run in a flux shallow hollow on the top side of the plastic container


6


. They are gripped centrally by container-top webs


59


projecting out on the two borders of the hollow


58


.




All the constituent parts of the cage


2


and of the base framework


4


preferably consist of galvanized sheet steel.




In the base according to

FIG. 16

, maintaining the basic configuration of the shallow saddleback roof described, cross-sectionally rectangular upwardly directed ribs


60


and


61


, which strengthen the design, are stamped on the ridge


47


and the further inflection lines


49


. With the exception of the points behind the indent


40


, further such ribs


62


are provided transversely at the ends of the ribs


60


. The ribs


61


and


62


run beyond the ridge


47


. The ribs


62


are shorter than the rib


61


, which extends into the vicinity of the arched border region


7


. Provided instead of each of the stamped formations


53


are in each case four smaller stamped formations


63


which are of round cross-section and of which the undersides, together with the underside of the web


19


, are located in a common horizontal plane. Moreover, the indent


40


is formed somewhat differently. The channel


51


is fully interrupted; in this case, it terminates with two surfaces


65


which are inclined towards one another and towards the arched, oblique wall


64


of the indent


40


and into which said channel merges beforehand. The configuration of the tray


3


according to

FIG. 5

or

FIG. 16

within the border


28


is particularly advantageous within the context of the cage


2


described; the tray


3


remains shallow and the vertical extent of the web


19


need not be undesirably large. In principle, however, this configuration may also be used in other overall designs of the cage. Furthermore, the tray may be the base of a sheet-metal container for receiving a plastic container.



Claims
  • 1. A cage for receiving a plastic container in an overall arrangement of a pallet-type container for storing and for transporting substances, the cage comprising a shallow tray as a base of the cage mounted on a pallet or forming an upper portion of the pallet, and a grid casing forming a wall of the cage, the grid casing being comprised of a plurality of grid bars having bottom ends, the grid casing having at a bottom border thereof a web mounted at the bottom ends of the grid bars and directly supported by the pallet or, if the tray forms the upper portion of the pallet, by a lower portion of the pallet, and fastened to the pallet or the lower portion of the pallet by screwing, the tray having a tray border configured to rest on the web, wherein the web is comprised of a profile having a flanging border and the tray border and the flanging border of the profile are connected by flanging in a positively locking manner.
  • 2. The cage according to claim 1, wherein the web is comprised of an essentially U-shaped profile which surrounds the bottom ends of the grid bars.
  • 3. The cage according to claim 1, wherein the tray has cutouts at the tray border for receiving the grid bars, wherein the tray border rests on the web between the grid bars.
  • 4. The cage according to claim 1, wherein the U-shaped profile has an outer leg provided with an outwardly directed angled section, wherein the tray border rests on the angled section, and wherein the flanged connection is effected following the angled section and thereabove.
  • 5. The cage according to claim 4, wherein the tray border has an upended section flanged together with an also upended border of the profile constituting the flanging border, and wherein the tray border is surrounded in a positively locking manner by the flanging border.
  • 6. The cage according to claim 1, comprising screws extending through the tray border and one of through the web and past the web, and into the pallet.
  • 7. The cage according to claim 6, comprising sleeve-shaped spacers enclosing the screws for bridging a distance between the tray border and the pallet or, if the tray forms the upper portion of the pallet, the lower portion.
  • 8. The cage according to claim 7, wherein the sleeve-shaped spacers extend through the tray border, wherein each spacer has a flange formed thereon, and wherein the flanges of the spacers rest on the tray border.
  • 9. The cage according to claim 1, wherein the lower portion of the pallet comprises pallet feet located at corners and centers of sides of the pallet, wherein the pallet feet have pressed-in through-passages for receiving self-tapping screw threads.
  • 10. The cage according to claim 9, wherein the pallet feet have protrusions combined with obliquely projecting positioning surfaces, such that the pallet-type container is adapted to be placed with the protrusions on an identical pallet-type container.
  • 11. The cage according to claim 9, wherein the lower portion of the pallet has a crossmember for supporting the tray.
  • 12. The cage according to claim 1, wherein the tray has downwardly directed stamped formations extending at least approximately into a plane of a bottom border of the web.
  • 13. The cage according to claim 1, wherein the grid casing is comprised of intersecting vertical and horizontal grid bars, wherein the horizontal grid bars are each formed by an open profile having two outwardly bent-away borders located in a plane, and the vertical grid bars are each formed by an open profile with two outwardly bent-away borders and a closed profile having at least one planar profile wall, wherein the horizontal grid bars are connected to the vertical grid bars with the bent-away borders abutting against one another, wherein the bent-away borders of the horizontal profile bars are abutting against the planar profile wall of the vertical profile bars, and wherein the connection is effected one of by welding and joining by stamping or punching.
  • 14. The cage according to claim 13, wherein each open profile has adjacent the two bent-away borders two parallel wall sections and adjacent the wall sections with a slight bent a trapezoidal residual cross-section of the profile.
  • 15. The cage according to claim 14, wherein each bent-away border is folded over at a border edge.
  • 16. The cage according to claim 13, wherein the profiles of the grid bars are composed of bent galvanized sheet steel.
  • 17. The cage according to claim 2, wherein the bottom ends of the grid bars are welded to both sides of the U-shaped profile.
  • 18. The cage according to claim 1, wherein top ends of the grid bars are pressed flat and surrounded by a profile resting against the grid bar ends with two parallel borders and connected at both sides by one of welding and joining by stamping or punching.
  • 19. The cage according to claim 13, wherein the vertical grid bars have adjacent top ends thereof transverse bores, further comprising crossmembers having forked ends provided with bores, and wherein the transverse bores are connected by pins to the bores of the crossmembers.
  • 20. The cage according to claim 1, wherein the tray is rectangular and has a base surface enclosed by an arched border region, wherein the tray has approximately a shape of a shallow saddleback roof or tent roof, wherein a border of the roof slopes downwardly slightly towards both sides from a center of one shorter rectangle side and then along both longer rectangle sides and then opening into a channel running on the other short rectangle side and becoming deeper towards the center of the short rectangle side.
  • 21. The cage according to claim 20, wherein the base surface is essentially a shallow saddleback roof with a ridge extending between the center of the shorter rectangle sides, and wherein the ridge and the roof surfaces have a comparatively slight inclination to form a tent roof.
  • 22. The cage according to claim 20, wherein at least one upwardly stamped rib extends along the ridge of the saddleback roof.
  • 23. The cage according to claim 21, wherein an upwardly stamped rib extends on each inflection line of the tent roof, wherein the inflection lines extend perpendicularly of the ridge.
  • 24. The cage according to claim 22, comprising additional upwardly stamped ribs extending parallel to the upwardly stamped rib.
  • 25. The cage according to claim 20, wherein an indent is provided at a center of the other short rectangle side, wherein the channel is interrupted at the indent and terminates with two surfaces which are inclined towards one another and towards the center of the base, wherein the channel initially extends towards the surfaces.
  • 26. The cage according to claim 20, wherein the tray has downwardly directed stamped formations with undersides located in a common horizontal plane.
Priority Claims (2)
Number Date Country Kind
196 38 199 Sep 1996 DE
197 23 806 Jun 1997 DE
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind 102e Date 371c Date
PCT/EP97/05023 WO 00 3/16/1999 3/16/1999
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO98/12124 3/26/1998 WO A
US Referenced Citations (4)
Number Name Date Kind
4909387 Schutz Mar 1990
5358137 Shuert et al. Oct 1994
5405006 Burgdorf et al. Apr 1995
5501334 Przytulla et al. Mar 1996
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number Date Country
0239709 Oct 1987 EP
0509228 Oct 1992 EP
9619397 Jun 1996 WO