The present invention concerns a plastic bottle provided with a tamperproof device after its opening.
When a bottle, for instance of mineral water or other drink, is left unsealed and unattended, for instance in a working or leisure environment, and taken again after a certain time, the only way to find out if it was used by someone other than the user, is to compare the level of liquid contained in the bottle with the level present when it was first left. It should be understood that the problem is not only to detect if someone drank your water, perhaps laying the lips on the neck of the bottle, but also to verify that the cap has not been unscrewed, e.g. to pour inside some extraneous substances, and then re-screwed.
Presently, in the Applicant's opinion, in order not to incur in the risks above listed, it is necessary that everyone always carries the bottle with him/her.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,893,475 discloses a tamperproof container having a main body with an opening and a closure. One or more tamperproof indicators have leg portions engageable within respective of apertures around the peripheral ledge of the closure. Rotation of the closure will result in the legs engaging with a respective abutment provided on the main body of the container, with consequent breaking thereof. This shows an attempt to remove the closure. However, since the leg portions simply abut against the abutment of the main body of the container, it is probable on the one hand that the leg portions are not severed and, therefore, an evidence of the violation attempt does not remain. On the other hand, if the leg portions were sheared, all the tamperproof indicator would be expelled from the closure, and then the evidence of violation would fail.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,989,739 and 4,512,484 describe safety containers with screw caps provided with locking means to prevent their opening by children. They both describe a cap with a non-fracturing through pin which is difficult to remove from the children.
FR 1,562,178 describes a device similar to that of U.S. Pat. No. 5,893,475, but the tamperproof indicator is difficult to replace.
The closest prior art is considered U.S. Pat. No. 5,893,475, and the present invention aims to overcome the drawbacks above cited.
The main purpose of the present invention is to permit to check that a sealed bottle, opened for its first use, and later re-closed by the user, has not been subsequently opened by other persons to drink or to corrupt its content.
Strictly connected to this is the purpose of verifying as a clear evidence that a device, functioning as a bolt, has been severed and is still on the bottle.
Another purpose of the invention is to allow several times the re-closure of the bottle in use, guaranteeing each time that it has not been re-opened by others to drink or to corrupt its content.
In order to reach the purpose above mentioned, the present invention supplies a bottle with a screw cap equipped, alone or in combination with the bottle itself, with a device functioning as bolt, as defined in the claim 1 here attached and in the claims depending from it. Since, in evidencing the tampering, the device functioning as bolt breaks and thence is no more re-usable, advantageously, several devices can be contemplated in compliance with the invention on the same screw cap.
Further features and advantages of the invention will result more evident by the description of embodiments of a plastic bottle equipped with a tamperproof device after its opening, illustrated, as an indicative and not limiting example, in the drawings here attached, where:
Initially, reference is made to
According to the invention, rigidly connected to the cap 2 is at least one tamperproof device. Such a tamperproof device is housed in a convex band 7, joined to the skirt 6 to which it is tangentially linked. The convex band 7 has at the centre, in its concave part pointing towards the skirt 6, a cylindrical configuration that acts as a slide for a pin 8 manually sliding along a direction y1 parallel to the central symmetry axis y of the cap 2 and, thence, of the bottle. One understands that the pin 8 behaves as a sliding bolt, since the traditional retaining ring above mentioned is made, in accordance with the invention, in the shape of ring nut 9 provided with a plurality of holes 10. The holes 10, that can be blind, as shown in
Tamperproof devices of the kind being described can be applied on the cap 6 in the number desired. The convex band 7 is applied to the cap 6 according to the jointing lines 11 by ultrasound sticking, for instance, fusion, or any other known method. The convex band 7 has a cutout 12 for the manual sliding of the pin 8 during use, by an elongated projection 13 in the shape of a button to be activated, for example, with the thumb finger. The elongated projection 13 can be knurled externally to facilitate grip. The stroke downwards of the pin 8, defined by the vertical extension of the cutout 12 is determined by the ring nut 9. The lower end of the cutout 12 which acts as a stop for the elongated projection 13 of the pin 8 is indicated as 14.
In addition, the convex band 7 can have a retaining ring 15 in the form of an O-ring interacting with an enlarged tract 16 of the pin 8 to retain the pin during the assembly of the convex band 7 to the skirt 6 of the cap, as well as in a resting position, i.e. before activating the pin after the assembly of the tamperproof device.
The pin 8 has a weakened tract 17 along its length and an arrow-tip or umbrella shaped end 18. The weakened tract 17 can be obtained by a simple cross-section reduction, preferably constant, as compared to the rest of the pin 8. As seen later on, the weakened tract 17 allows a preset breakage of the pin 8.
Preferably, each hole 10 of the ring nut 9 is provided with an inlet 19 that is tapered downwards and intended to receive and retain the arrow-tip end 18 of the pin 8. In order to facilitate the insertion and retention of the arrow-tip end 18, the inlet 19 presents carvings 20 as shown in
During use, after the first opening of the bottle, by unscrewing the cap 2 and separating the same from the ring nut 9, the user can drink directly from the bottle or pour its content into a glass. If the user shall go away and leave the bottle carefree, once the bottle is reclosed, the user can move the pin 8 in its slide inside the convex band 7 by operating with the thumb on the elongated projection 13 until inserting the arrow-tip end 18 of the pin 8 in a hole 10 of the ring nut 9. The tapered inlet 19 of the hole 10 prevents the pin 8 from sliding upwards, blocking by such manner the unscrewing of the cap 2 from the bottle neck 1. If a person different from the user wants to unscrew the cap anyway in order to open the bottle, he/she would break the pin 8 in its weakened tract 17 located between the skirt 6 of the cap 2 and the ring nut 9, as shown in
Subsequently, the user becomes aware that the tampering occurred and, having evidence of it, the user would decide what to do with the bottle and its content.
If the user wants to keep using it, another tamperproof device, provided on the cap 2, can be employed in the same way as above described.
Now reference is made to
In accordance with the second embodiment of the invention, through holes 102 are made in the circumferential projection 101 of the bottle neck 1.
One of the through holes 102 is intended to receive and hold the arrow-tip end 18 of the pin 8. When the pin 8 is inserted in the through hole 102, the upward sliding of the pin 8 is made impossible. Therefore, the cap 2 cannot be unscrewed unless through the breakage of the weakened tract 17 of the pin 8.
It should be understood that the present invention can find application also in other screw-capped food containers, like plastic or paper jars.
It should be evident that both the pin 8 and its slide and seat 7 can be made in a manner different from the one represented. The scope of protection of the invention is the one in the claims here attached.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102017000126807 | Nov 2017 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2018/058733 | 11/7/2018 | WO | 00 |