1. Field
This invention involves improvements in packaging for handling and transporting relatively lightweight and flexible products such as extruded plastic or fiberglass molding strips, deck planks, or the like which, when in substantial lengths of, e.g., 8 ft. or more, may tend to droop or bend excessively particularly when stacked on pallets and lifted by fork lift trucks or the like. Such flexing makes it very difficult to stack the products in such a manner as to protect them from damage or to stack them to a height which affords cost efficient storage or transport thereof.
2. Prior Art
Heretofore such products have been packaged in large wood framed structures or crates of, e.g., 2×4 lumber including 3 or 4 long runners on the bottom and offtimes with no product confining sides. Such crates are heavy, expensive, time consuming to assemble by screws, nails or bolts, difficult to load the product items thereinto, difficult to dispose of after use, difficult to take apart where reuse or recycling of the lumber is attempted, and difficult to handle, store or ship in stacked units. Moreover, such crates do not provide structure which can protect specialty items from abrasive or impact damage which can occur during loading or unloading of the items into bundles for shipment, storage or on the job use.
The present packaging invention on the other hand does not have such disadvantages and provides support and damage protection for such products substantially throughout their lengths and allows rapid and unhindered high stacking of the products without fear of damage thereto or dislocation thereof from the stack during lifting, storage and transport.
The present package unit of product and packaging structure utilizes the stacking of product in layers and wherein the packaging structure comprises at least one divider of fairly rigid sheet material such as corrugated paper board, or plastic sheet, either solid or open or closed cellular composition, interposed between each said product layer, wherein each divider is provided at each of its side edges with at least two tabs projecting generally laterally outwardly therefrom, each said tab having an aperture formed therethrough normal to the general plane of the divider, wherein the apertures of superimposed dividers are vertically aligned, wherein posts are inserted frictionally thru the aligned apertures, and wherein the stack of layered product and dividers is laterally banded to further strengthen the stack and maintain the integrity thereof.
It is noted that structures defined herein by the various terms such as “horizontally”, vertically”, “general plane” and the like are to be construed with reference to their postures and orientations depicted on the drawings relative to adjacent structures.
In certain preferred embodiments:
(a) each said sheet is formed with two tabs adjacent each end thereof, and adjacent ones of said dividers are overlapped at their adjacent ends such that the apertures in the adjacent tabs of the overlapped dividers are aligned and receive the same posts;
(b) the stack of layered product and dividers is laterally banded whereby a top and/or bottom sheet are sufficiently deformed at their side edges within the area of said aligned apertures to frictionally, strongly bind the posts against the divider edges defining said aligned apertures;
(c) said product comprises long flexible items whereby said dividers provide significant longitudinal support thereto, wherein the unit is positioned on one or more fork lift pallets wherein the edges of the pallets lie inside of the side edges of the dividers, wherein the posts extend vertically above the top most divider, and the tine cavities of the pallets are oriented either laterally or longitudinally of the unit; and
(d) one or more of the units are in vertically stacked arrangement wherein the dividers of an overlying unit are longitudinally staggered with respect to the dividers of an underlying unit such that the posts of the stacked units do not interfere with each other.
The invention will be further understood from the following description and drawings wherein the figures are not drawn to scale or in actual dimensioned proportions, and wherein:
Referring to the drawings and with particular reference to the claims hereof, the present package unit is generally designated 10 and comprises a bundle of product 12 and a packaging structure generally designated 14 wherein the product is substantially vertically stacked in layers and wherein the upper 13 and lower 15 surfaces of each layer are substantially planar, wherein said packaging structure comprises a divider 20, preferably of rigid corrugated paper board interposed between each said product layer and having opposing side edges 22, 24 and end edges 26,28 wherein each divider is provided at each side edge with at least two tabs 30 projecting laterally outwardly therefrom, each said tab having an aperture 32 formed therethrough, wherein the apertures of stacked dividers are vertically aligned, wherein posts 34 are inserted frictionally thru the aligned apertures, and wherein the stack of layered product and dividers is laterally banded as shown for example at 36.
Dividers 20 are cut to any dimension needed for a particular product and typically range from about 28 in. to 10 ft or more in length, from about 2½ to about 4 ft. in width, and are provided with any desired number of tabs 30 as required for a particular load weight. The smaller lengths are more desirable from the standpoint of ease of handling and cost of shipping the dividers to the end user.
The thickness of the corrugated board or plastic sheet or the like, and its strength and weight may, of course, be varied according to the package requirements. A two ply (two corrugated layers) corrugated board showing a density of about 3-4 ounces/ft2 makes a sturdy package of great utility for the present invention.
The posts 34 can be of any lightweight but strong material, preferably of laminated fiberglass cloth, cardboard or the like adhesively bonded into a strong laminate as shown in FIG. 6. These posts preferably are cut to a length of, e.g., about 30 in. to accommodate a stack of product which is of a handleable weight. A typical post would weigh from about 10 to about 20 ounces. It is preferred that the posts extend a sufficient distance above the topmost sheet to allow an operator to pull the posts out of the aligned row of apertures after the bands 36, should they be employed, have been released.
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This invention has been described in detail with particular reference to preferred embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications will be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1760309 | Marrits | May 1930 | A |
3253707 | Gooding | May 1966 | A |
3422564 | Izumi | Jan 1969 | A |
3734281 | Armstrong | May 1973 | A |
5161703 | Patton | Nov 1992 | A |
5344014 | Toral et al. | Sep 1994 | A |
5636753 | Wilkinson et al. | Jun 1997 | A |
6119861 | Schneider | Sep 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040188306 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |