The present application and the resulting patent relate generally to a box or a carton and more particularly relate to a corrugated paperboard carton with one or more strength enhancing features such as vertical fold lines for improved overall compression strength.
Corrugated boxes and cartons are in wide use to pack, ship, store, and/or display many different types of products. Specifically, these boxes and cartons should securely retain and protect the products therein during shipping and storage while providing easy access to the products for later display and/or removal. Moreover, existing supply chain requirements also should be met so as to ensure efficient production, transport, and use of the box or carton across one or more industries or across one or more geographies.
One popular style of a box or a carton is known as a regular slotted carton. Regular slotted cartons and the like are in common use for packaging and shipping any number of different types of products. Generally described, a regular slotted carton has four rectangular sidewall panels. The top and bottom ends are usually formed from pairs of sidewall panel flaps. These sidewall panel flaps generally meet in the middle with no overlap. Such a regular slotted carton is usually made from a single rectangular blank with little material waste for cost effective and efficient manufacture. Regular slotted cartons typically may be used for products that require relatively high top to bottom stacking strength such as for plastic bottles and the like. Although known regular slotted cartons typically have considerable stacking strength, further strength improvements would be helpful and would provide additional versatility in use.
There is thus a desire for an improved carton design. Preferably such a carton design may provide the versatility of known carton designs, such as a regular slotted carton, with reinforced strength for superior stacking and shipping with the use of a reduced amount of corrugated material.
The present application and the resultant patent provide a reinforced carton. The reinforced carton may include a number of first panels, a number of adjoining second panels, and with the first panels including one or more strength enhancing features. The one or more strength enhancing features may include a vertical fold line extending across the first panels.
The present application and the resultant patent further provide a reinforced corrugated carton. The reinforced corrugated carton may include a pair of first panels, a pair of adjoining second panels, and with the pair of first panels including one or more strength enhancing features. The one or more strength enhancing features may include a combination of scores and perforations extending vertically across the pair of first panels.
The present application and the resultant patent further may provide a reinforced corrugated carton. The reinforced corrugated carton may include a pair of first panels, a pair of adjoining second panels, and with the pair of first panels including a number of strength enhancing features. The strength enhancing features may include a combination of scores and perforations extending vertically across the pair of first panels and a number of slots positioned about the pair of first panels and/or the pair of adjoining second panels.
These and other features and improvements of the present application and the resultant patent will become apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art upon review of the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the several drawings and the appended claims.
Referring now to the drawings, in which like numerals refer to like elements throughout the several views,
The carton 100 may be made out of a corrugated paperboard stock 120 and the like. The corrugated paperboard stock 120 may be recyclable. The corrugated paperboard stock 120 may have a single wall construction and may be coated or uncoated. In this example, the coated paperboard stock 120 may be a “B-Flute” type corrugated board with about forty-seven (47) flutes per linear foot and a vertical orientation. Other types of corrugated paperboard stock 120 such as double wall constructions and the like also may be used. Other suitable types of substrates also may be used herein. The carton 100 may have any suitable overall size. The size of the carton 100 may be standard according to the intended industry, intended geography, or other type of use parameter. Any suitable type of graphics, messaging, and other types of indicia may be printed or otherwise applied to the carton 100.
The carton 100 may have a first sidewall panel 130 and opposed second sidewall panel 140. The carton 100 also may include a top wall 150 and an opposed bottom wall 160. The top wall 150 may be formed from a first sidewall panel top flap 170 extending from the first sidewall panel 130 and a second sidewall panel top flap 180 extending from the second sidewall panel 140. The bottom wall 160 may be formed from a first sidewall panel bottom flap 190 extending from the first sidewall panel 130 and a second sidewall panel bottom flap 200 extending from the second sidewall panel 140. The top flaps 170, 180 and/or the bottom flaps 190, 200 may or may not be in contact with each other. For example, a gap 210 may extend between the flaps 170, 180 and/or the flaps 190, 200 when in a closed orientation as is shown in
The carton 100 may include a first end wall panel 220 and an opposed second end wall panel 230. The end wall panels 220, 230 may be positioned between the first sidewall panel 130, the second sidewall panel 140, the top wall 150, and the bottom wall 160 so as to form the substantially rectangular carton 100. Other types of suitable shapes may be used herein. The first end wall panel 220 may have a first end wall panel top flap 240 and a first end wall panel bottom flap 250. The second end wall panel 230 may have a second end wall panel top flap 260 and a second end wall panel bottom flap 270. The end wall panel top flaps 240, 260 may be positioned within the sidewall panel top flaps 170, 180 and attached thereto to form the top wall 150. The end wall panel bottom flaps 250, 270 may be positioned within the sidewall panel bottom flaps 190, 200 and attached thereto to form the bottom wall 160. Although the end wall panels 220, 230 are shown as being of lesser length than the sidewall panels 130, 140, the end wall panels 220, 230 may be of equal or greater length. Other sizes, shapes, and configurations may be used herein.
It will be understood that the fold lines may be formed by crushing or scoring the corrugated paperboard stock 120 along the line to be folded so as to facilitate bending and forming of the various panels and flaps herein. Unless otherwise noted, the term “fold line’ may be used interchangeably with the terms “tear lines”, “score lines”, “perforated lines”, and the like. Other suitable types of construction techniques also may be used herein. The blank 300 may be of any suitable size. The various flaps described herein and the like may be attached to one another by a conventional adhesive as well as by stapling and other suitable types of attachment methods.
To assemble the blank 300 into the carton 100, the sidewall panels 130, 140 and the end wall panels 220, 230 may be folded about the corner fold lines 320. The glue panel 310 may be folded and glued or otherwise attached to the second end wall panel 230. The end wall panel flaps 240, 250, 260, 270 may be folded along the end wall panel flap fold lines 340. The side wall panel flaps 170, 180, 190, 200 may be folded along the sidewall panel flap fold lines 330 and glued or otherwise attached to the end wall panel flaps 240, 250, 260, 270. The carton 100 is now secure and ready for shipment or other use. Other and additional method steps may be used herein in any order.
The carton 100 also may include a number of strength enhancing features 400. For example, the carton 100 may have a number of vertical fold lines 410 extending along the vertical length of the sidewall panels 130, 140. (By the term “vertical fold line” we mean substantially parallel to the flute orientation.) The vertical fold lines 410 may be positioned about the middle of the sidewall panels 130, 140 or elsewhere. Although one vertical fold line 410 is shown on each of the sidewall panels 130, 140, multiple vertical fold lines 410 may be used. One or more vertical fold lines 410 also may be positioned about the end wall panels 220, 230 or elsewhere.
The vertical fold lines 410 also may take the form of a score line, a line of perforations, and/or a line of scores and perforations. Different types of vertical fold lines, score lines, lines of perforations, lines of combinations of scores and perforations, and the like may be used herein. Each of these different lines may result in differing strength enhancements. The vertical fold lines 410 may be continuous or intermittent. Different types of vertical fold lines 410 may be used on the same carton 100. Other shapes, sizes, and configurations may be used herein.
The vertical fold lines 410 may aid in overall top to bottom compression strength. Specifically, the vertical fold lines 410 may strengthen the sidewall panels 130, 140 by subdividing the panels so as to reduce panel buckling while under load. The vertical fold lines 410 may increase the compression strength of the carton 100 by making the sidewall panels 130, 140 (or other panels) more resistant to deformation or buckling. Specifically, the vertical fold lines 410 may provide for controlled buckling/deformation in a specified direction. The vertical fold lines 410 may allow the sidewall panels 130, 140 to bend in an opposite direction to the natural direction that the panels 130, 140 tend to bulge during top to bottom compression. The type, number, and configuration of the vertical fold lines 410 may vary with the size, shape, and configuration of the carton 100 and based upon other types of parameters. Other components and other configurations also may be used herein.
Previous cartons may have used either non-vertical fold lines and/or incomplete fold lines so as promote failure or bulging in a predetermined manner, so as to prevent pallet overhang and the like. The vertical fold lines 410 described herein increase overall top to bottom compression strength so as to prevent or limit failure or bulging.
The improvement in compression strength may be shown via the use of a conventional box compression tester. The box compression tester generally includes a pair of parallel platens. The box compression tester may exert a dynamic load on the cartons placed therebetween and may track force versus deflection and the like. Other methods of applying a load and measuring compression strength and the like also may be used herein. Repeated testing of the cartons 100 with the vertical fold lines 410 described herein showed an increase in compression strength of about twenty percent (20%) or more as compared to cartons without such strength enhancing features. Specifically, a carton 100 made with a B-flute paperboard stock 120 (E32B 33MW-U37B-U60 with a total basis weight of 97 lbs/msf) was used in this example. Of interest is that the compression strength increased as the vertical fold lines 401 approached the center of the sidewall panel 130, 140. Moreover, overall compression strength was improved without the use of additional material and the associated costs.
The carton 100 also may have other types of strength enhancing features 400. For example, the carton 100 may have a number of the slots 420 formed between the sidewall panels 130, 140 and the sidewall flaps 170, 180, 190, 200 and between the end wall panels 220, 230 and the end wall flaps 240, 250, 260, 270. The number of the slots 420, the offset of the slots 420 (if any), the spacing of the slots 420, and the length of the slots 420 may depend on the overall size of the carton 100 and other parameters. The slots 420 also may assist in load bearing by laterally distributing the load therein. Other suitable sizes, shapes, and configurations also may be used herein.
Although the strength enhancing features 400 have been described herein in the context of a regular slotted carton 110, the strength enhancing features 400 may be applicable to almost any type of carton and the like so as to provide improved compression strength and stackability. Other types of strength enhancing features 400, and combinations thereof, may be used herein.
It should be apparent that the foregoing relates only to certain embodiments of the present application and the resultant patent. Numerous changes and modifications may be made herein by one of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the general spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the following claims and the equivalents thereof.
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