The present invention relates to plastic bags suitable for use by a consumer for packaging produce, including, for example, vegetables and fruit, and in particular the invention relates to an improved produce bag dispensing system.
Produce bags are typically dispensed from rolls positioned in the produce area of a supermarket. Consumers remove the produce bags from the rolls to package produce items they have selected, protecting the produce from dirt and retaining the produce together in the cart. The material of the produce bag is light enough to allow the produce to be weighed in the produce bag at checkout.
Typically, plastic bags for produce are smaller than other plastic bags and made of lighter material. The produce bags are manufactured from an extruded tube of plastic, such as polyethylene, that is heat-sealed and perforated at spaced intervals along the length of the tube. The tube is then rolled into a cardboard form that is suspended on an axle near the produce. Each bag is individually unrolled from the roll, then removed from the other bags of the roll by tearing the bag away along the perforations.
Such a dispensing system is not always satisfactory. A consumer who is holding produce, may need to put the produce down to have both hands free to separate the bag at the perforation, one hand being used to stabilize the roll and the other hand to pull on the bag to be removed. Attempts to separate the produce bags using one hand by a rapid jerk will often fail to fully separate the perforation causing an unrolling of the roll onto the floor, wasting or dirtying of the produce bags.
The present invention provides an improved dispensing system for produce bags in which the bags are separated from each other during manufacturing, then rolled in overlapping configuration to ensure that the removal of one bag from a container holding the rolls, pulls the next bag partway out of the container, ensuring that the consumer removes only a single bag at a time while allowing the consumer to remove produce bags with a single hand. By using the interleaving technique for smaller produce bags, bag waste is reduced, removal of the bags is made more convenient, and the bags are retained in sanitary condition inside a container before use.
Specifically, the present invention provides a produce bag dispensing system providing a roll of plastic produce bags, each bag having substantially less than 500 square inches of plastic material and the plastic material being substantially less than 15 micron thickness. In the roll, the bags are severed from each other with an end of each bag interleaved with the end of at least one adjacent bag. A container sized to hold the roll provides a constricted opening through which the bags may be dispensed, with edges of the opening dragging on the bags as dispensed. Friction between overlapped portions of each bag is controlled to draw a subsequent bag in the roll partway through the constricted opening upon extraction of a previous bag through the opening by a user and to ensure that the previous bag separates from the subsequent bag before the subsequent bag is fully extracted through the constricted opening.
Thus, it is one object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide a system of individually dispensing lightweight produce bags.
Each bag may be folded and the region of overlap may interlock the folds of previous bags with the folds of a subsequent bag.
Thus, it is an object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide a way of increasing frictional contact between lightweight produce bags as may assist individual dispensing.
The fold of one bag may fully envelop the fold of another bag, and the fold of a previous bag may fully cover the fold of a subsequent bag.
It is thus another object of at least one embodiment of the invention to shield the later bag from contact with the restricted opening upon initial removal of a prior bag.
The fold may be a longitudinal V-fold.
It is thus another object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide an interlocking fold that may be simply integrated into automatic bag-making equipment.
The roll may provide that an open end of each bag precede a closed end of the bag through the opening.
Thus it is another object of at least one embodiment of the invention to make it easier for the consumer to open the bag, especially in a one-handed situation.
The container may be a cardboard box. The constricted opening may be cut in the container.
Thus it is another object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide a disposable container that may also serve to hold and protect during both shipping and use.
The opening may include a slot cut in a flexible plastic material.
It is thus another object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide a method of controlling the drag enforced by the constricted opening independent of the material of the container.
The container may have a window.
It is another object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide a way for a store employee to determine when the roll needs replacing.
The container window may be covered by transparent material.
It is thus another object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide a window that nevertheless protects the bags from being soiled.
The system may include a stand retaining the container against movement with removal of the bags.
It is another object of at least one embodiment of the invention to provide a system for supporting container in a convenient location for one-handed use.
These particular objects and advantages may apply to only some embodiments falling within the claims and thus do not define the scope of the invention.
Referring now to
The container 14 is preferably a disposable box constructed of corrugated cardboard or the like. An upper surface of the container 14 includes a window opening 16 covered by a transparent poly film 18 allowing light to enter and exit the container 14 and visual inspection of a contained roll 20 contained therein. A front surface of the container 14 above the wire of the stand 12 displays a promotional message 22 and provides an opening 24 through which bags 26 may be dispensed.
During normal use, a portion of a preceding bag 26a will extend from the opening 24 so that it may be grasped by the consumer and the remainder of the preceding bag 26a pulled through the opening 24 for use by the consumer. This action draws a succeeding bag 26b (not shown) part way out of the container 14, this succeeding bag 26b then becoming a preceding bag 26a with respect to another succeeding bag 26b still in the container 14. It will be understood from this description that as each preceding bag 26a is removed, a succeeding bag 26b will be partially exposed through the opening 24 in a sequential fashion to be gripped by the user.
Referring now to
Accordingly, in one embodiment of the invention, the preceding bag 26a and succeeding bag 26b, each may have a longitudinal V-fold along a fold line 28 extending from an open end 30 of the bags 26 to a closed end 32 of the bags 26 along the bag's midline. The subsequent bag 26b may be inserted in an overlap region 33 into the closed end of the preceding bag 26a so that the V-fold of bag 26b is fully enclosed by the V-fold of bag 26a. In this way, the contact between the bags 26a and 26b is enhanced and bag 26a shields bag 26b in part from the effects of being drawn through the opening 24.
Referring now to
Referring now to
It is specifically intended that the present invention not be limited to the embodiments and illustrations contained herein, but include modified forms of those embodiments including portions of the embodiments and combinations of elements of different embodiments as come within the scope of the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional application 60/467,308 filed May 2, 2003 hereby incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040217122 A1 | Nov 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60467308 | May 2003 | US |