The present invention relates to a fluid reservoir having a threaded neck defining an opening via which the fluid can be extracted, e.g. by means of a pump. The neck has an external thread serving to co-operate with a ring provided internally with a thread having the same pitch as the thread on the neck and serving, for example, to fix a pump to the neck.
This type of threaded neck is in wide use in numerous fields, e.g. cosmetics, perfumes, or even pharmaceuticals.
It is also known that dispensers using such reservoirs can be equipped with anti-unscrewing systems for preventing any unscrewing, be it intentional or accidental. For this purpose, in the prior art, locking means are used in the form of one or more projections situated locally at the external thread of the neck so as to co-operate with the internal thread of the ring.
Document U.S. Pat. No. 3,888,376 describes a safety system for a cap to be screwed onto a threaded bottle neck. The thread of the neck of the bottle is provided with a setback at its bottom edge.
To form the setback, the thread is thicker over the majority of its length, and then becomes suddenly finer at its screwed-home end. The resulting setback defines a transverse abutment wall.
In addition, the internal thread of the safety cap is provided symmetrically with an opposite setback at its top end, defining an opposite abutment wall. The opposite setback of the cap is situated in the vicinity of the start of the thread which, once engaged fully onto the threaded neck of the bottle, reaches the level of the setback of the thread of the neck. By continuing to tighten the cap, the abutment wall of the cap is caused reach the level of the abutment wall of the neck, so that the two walls go past each other.
The cap further includes a spring-forming flexible material received at its end wall, and it is thus possible to unscrew the cap by pressing on it so as to compress the flexible material, and thus to offset the abutment walls vertically. It is then possible to unscrew the cap.
With that safety system, it is possible to unscrew the cap: indeed, the object of that system is to make unscrewing possible while preventing children from unscrewing the cap. It should be noted that the cap must also be specially adapted to the neck of the bottle.
In another document, namely Document U.S. Pat. No. 3,405,831, a bottle neck thread is provided with flexible protuberances or spikes which project radially outwards from the thread. Those protuberances are deformed or twisted by the roots of the thread in the cap to be screwed on. The protuberances can also be in the form of a vertical rib that crosses over thread of the neck of the bottle. The ridge of the rib projects sharply outwards relative to the thread. That system too is a safety system adapted to making unscrewing possible.
Another type of projection, which may be referred to as a “grain of rice” or a “flea” is in the form of a substantially symmetrical droplet placed without the thread of the neck on the path of the internal thread of the cap. Unlike the systems in the two above-mentioned documents, that system is an anti-unscrewing system in that it is theoretically impossible to unscrew the cap. However, when the reservoir is made of glass, and because of their almost perfect symmetry, such grains of rice or fleas are formed in each of the mold half-shells serving to make the reservoir. More precisely, those grains of rice are situated at 90° relative to the join plane defined by the two half-shells.
It has been observed that with that type of locking means (grains of rice), the force necessary for screwing the cap on is absorbed in part by the locking means instead of participating in the tension in the thread. In addition, it is still possible to unscrew by applying sufficient force.
An object of the present invention is to overcome that drawback of the prior art by defining locking means for a threaded neck that make it possible for screwing-on to be easy and substantially identical to screwing onto a conventional neck that is not provided with locking means while also preventing unscrewing effectively. In other words, the locking means should act in one direction only, i.e. in the unscrewing direction, and they should be as inoperative as possible in the tightening direction.
To this end, the present invention makes provision for said projection placed under the thread to comprise a ramp on which the internal thread engages during tightening, and a locking edge at the end of the ramp defining therebeyond a locking wall against which the internal thread abuts in the event of unscrewing. Thus, the projection is totally asymmetrical with a gentle slope that operates in the tightening direction, and a locking edge and wall that operate in the loosening direction. With such a configuration, a ring can be screwed onto the neck easily, and unscrewing is made more difficult because the torque is considerably improved.
In an embodiment, the ramp slopes gently downwards while extending, at its locking edge, to the crest of the external thread. Advantageously, the locking wall extends radially perpendicular to the external thread. When the reservoir is made by molding and of glass, plastic, or some other material, by using two half-shells which define a join plane between them, the locking edge is situated in said join plane. It is easier to form walls that are perpendicular to the neck at the join plane.
According to another characteristic of the invention, the external thread is provided with at least one recess formed immediately beyond the projection in the tightening direction. Advantageously, said recess includes a stopping wall situated in the same plane as the locking wall of the projection so that they coincide where they meet. Thus, the area of the locking wall of the projection is larger, and in particular in a zone in which the internal thread of the ring comes into engagement. When the ring is screwed fully onto the neck, said ring abuts against the top end of the neck so that it is pressed strongly upwards against the bottom face of the external thread of the neck. Therefore, the thread tends to be deformed in its top portion corresponding to the bottom portion of the external thread of the neck. That is why it is advantageous to provide a recess that makes it possible to extend the working area of the locking wall.
Preferably, said recess includes a slope which extends substantially from the crest of the thread to the base of the stopping wall. Thus, during tightening, the thread does not encounter any resistance at the recess.
The invention also relates to a fluid dispenser equipped with such a reservoir. In which case, the ring is a fixing ring (rather than a cap) making it possible to fix a pump or a valve to the neck of the reservoir.
The invention is described more fully below with reference to the accompanying drawings which give an embodiment of the invention by way of non-limiting example.
In the figures:
Advantageously, the thread 13 may be formed with a recess 131 situated beyond the projection 16 in the tightening direction. This recess 131 defines a stopping wall 133 situated in the same plane as the locking wall 163, so that they coincide with each other where they meet, as can be seen in FIG. 2. Therefore, the stopping wall 133 extends the locking wall 163 upwards, thereby increasing the working area thereof. The recess 131 has a slope 132 which extends substantially tangentially to the drum 12 of the neck 11. Thus, during tightening, the recess 132 substantially does not interfere with the thread of a member to be screwed on.
It should also be noted that the locking means of the invention may, for example, be formed at the join plan of half shells necessary for molding the reservoir. The join plan is represented in
By means of the invention, unscrewing a member is made more difficult, whereas the member can be tightened with a force substantially identical to the force exerted on a conventional neck not provided with locking means.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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99 16025 | Dec 1999 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR00/03474 | 12/12/2000 | WO | 00 | 8/27/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO01/44067 | 6/21/2001 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3339770 | Weigand | Sep 1967 | A |
3682345 | Baugh | Aug 1972 | A |
3952899 | Cooke | Apr 1976 | A |
4034882 | Wright | Jul 1977 | A |
4320844 | Cooper | Mar 1982 | A |
5845798 | Carrier | Dec 1998 | A |
6123212 | Russell et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030029887 A1 | Feb 2003 | US |