The present invention is in the field of molded plastic cup lids with a drink-through feature opened by a fold back tab.
Plastic molded disposable cup lids with a drink-through feature are widely used in combination with disposable cups in retail sales of coffee, tea, cocoa and other drinks. Many such lids have an integral fold-back tab which allows a user to leave the lid completely closed until ready to consume the product contents. The user then breaks the fold-back tab free and folds it back to a locked position wherein a raised feature on the tab fits into a recess on the opposite side of the lid. Examples of such lids are found in the patents to Lombardi U.S. Pat. No. 3,977,559; DeParales U.S. Pat. No. 4,738,373 and Roberts et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,090,584.
Most of such lids have fold-back tabs in which the distance from the periphery of the lid to the hinge is more than half of the lid radius and, in some cases, nearly a full radius. This requires the lock-back recess to be placed on the opposite side of the lid center such that the tab must extend, when folded, nearly all the way across the lid. It takes two hands to release, fold-back, and lock such a tab. This is particularly true of the Roberts et. al. and DeParales lids in which the tab extends through the rim of the lid.
To eliminate the inconvenience of such lids, some manufacturers have gone to lid designs having a pre-formed, small hole which is always open or to a flap which hinges downwardly into the cup interior when pressed by the upper lip of the user.
The present invention is a method of providing access to the contents of a disposable drink cup with a plastic lid having a fold-back, lock-back drink-through tab which securely seals the drink-through opening until ready for use. The lid is such as to be easily operated with one hand. In general, the method includes providing a filled container with a lid having a normally closed, partially cut-through tab which is near, but does not extend through, the peripheral skirt of the lid, and which folds back around a hinge which is no more than about one-half of the lid radius from the periphery such that the total folding movement of the tab is very short. A raised catch is formed on the tab near the peripheral edge which is higher than the lid rim so as to be easily engaged on one outside surface by an adult thumb or other finger so as to break the tab free and fold it back. In the preferred method, one hand is used to free the tab and feed it back into a locking recess formed in the lid deck immediately adjacent the hinge to receive the raised thumb catch therein. When so operated, the folded tab lies entirely on the near side of the lid center after it is folded back.
One or more horizontal ridges are preferably formed on the upper, outside surface of the thumb catch so as to enable the thumb to more readily engage the protrusion and push the tab up and back. This ridge may also used to releaseably lock the thumb catch into the lock-back recess when in the fully open, folded back position by frictionally engaging a second, complemental ridge on the far wall of the recess.
The method described above may be carried out with a variety of lid types, including plug-fit lids and outside fit lids.
Referring to
The tab 12, hinge 28 and locking recess 22 are situated in the deck 26. The tab 12 is formed by die cut lines 29 and 30 which are discontinuous so as to hold the tab 12 closed but easily fractured to allow the tab to be broken free under slight pressure. The hinge 28 lies about one third of a radius from the periphery of the lid 10 and is immediately between the tab 12 and locking recess 22. The fold-over radius, or “throw”length, of the tab 12 is extremely short, i.e., on a lid of approximately 3½ inches in diameter, the hinge is about ⅝ inch from the near peripheral edge. These dimensions are intended to reflect proportions rather than size limitations.
The hinge 28 is preformed in the lid deck 26 in a shallow “U”-shape. The upstanding thumb catch 14 is of generally rectangular shape and is created in the thermoforming operation along with the other details. The thumb catch 14 is tall enough, i.e., about ¼ inch, to allow an ordinary user to readily engage its radially outermost surface with the thumb of the same hand that is holding the cup 34. The thumb catch 14 has a horizontal ridge 36 formed along the top edge of the outer surface to allow the user to “flick” the thumb catch 14 upwardly to break the tab 12 free from the lid deck 26 and fold it back in one easy motion. The recess 22 is shaped such that it will completely receive the thumb catch 14 and hold it below the lid deck 26, with only a small amount of the tab material resting above the lid deck.
As mentioned, a small horizontal ridge 36 is preformed in the upper outside surface of the thumb catch 14. A second small horizontal ridge 38 is preformed in the upper portion of the central wall of the recess 22. Both ridges 36 and 38 are sized and located such that they will frictionally engage each other when the thumb catch 14 is in the fully folded position 42 to releaseably lock the thumb catch 14 in the folded-back position 42.
Referring now to
The lid 44 of
Operation of the
Lid 214 has a flared peripheral skirt 216 a flat circular inner deck 215 and an annular raised outer deck 218 approximately half of which ramps upwardly on the side in which a tab 220 is partially cut to form a drink through opening 226. The tab 220 is essentially rectangular and is formed by discontinuous die cuts 222 on the outer and side edges but left intact with the inner deck 215 along a hinge 228. An elevated thumb catch 224 is formed on the tab 220 to enable the user to break the tab 220 free and fold it back toward the center of the lid until the thumb catch 224 fits into a recess 230 formed in the deck 215. Locking ridges 226 and 232 are formed in the catch 224 and recess 230, respectively, to lock the catch into the recess. As was the case with the embodiments of
The drink-through opening 226 is essentially formed in the highest portion of the annular outer deck 218 and does not extend through the lid rim. In a standard lid with a 1¾ inch radius, the hinge lies just under ⅝ inch inboard and the tab 224, when folded back, lies no more than about 1⅛″ inboard from the lid rim.
This application is a divisional of U.S. Ser. No. 09/952,144 filed Sep. 14, 2001.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030089726 A1 | May 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09952144 | Sep 2001 | US |
Child | 10278300 | US |