This application is the U.S. national phase of PCT/IB2012/052366, filed May 11, 2012.
The present invention relates to a rigid, swing-open packet of cigarettes, and relative production method.
Rigid, hinged-lid packets of cigarettes are currently the most widely marketed, by being easy to produce and easy and practical to use, and by effectively protecting the cigarettes inside.
In addition, rigid, slide- or swing-open packets of cigarettes have been proposed comprising two containers, one inserted inside and partly extractable from the other, i.e. an inner container containing a group of cigarettes and housed inside an outer container to move, with respect to the outer container, between a closed position inserted inside the outer container, and an open position extracted from the outer container. The movement of the inner container with respect to the outer container may be linear (slide-open) or rotary (swing-open) about a hinge connecting the two containers.
Embodiments of rigid, slide-open packets of cigarettes are described in FR2499947A3, U.S. Pat. No. 4,534,463A and U.S. Pat. No. 5,080,227A, and two embodiments of rigid, swing-open packets of cigarettes in WO03053818A1 and WO2006021581A1.
Patent EP2017198B1 describes a rigid, swing-open packet of cigarettes comprising: two inner packages, each containing a wrapped group of cigarettes; two inner containers, each housing a respective inner package and having a hinged lid; an outer container housing the two inner containers and having two opposite open lateral ends; and two hinges, each connecting an inner container to the outer container to allow the inner container to rotate between a closed position inserted inside the outer container, and an open position at least partly extracted from the outer container. The lid of each inner container has a control system, which connects the lid to the outer container to open the lid ‘automatically’ (i.e. without the user having to touch the lid) by exploiting the relative movement between the inner container and outer container. Each control system comprises a control tab extending inwards of the outer container from a top-wall edge of the outer container; and a slit formed through the top wall of the lid and engaged by the control tab.
The lid control system described in Patent EP2017198B1, however, has several drawbacks: when the inner container is in the closed position, the top wall of the lid must be kept well clear of the top wall of the outer container, thus preventing optimum use of the volume of the outer container, by having to leave a fairly large empty (i.e. unused) space at the top of the outer container.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a rigid, swing-open packet of cigarettes and relative production method, designed to eliminate the above drawbacks, and which, in particular, are cheap and easy to implement.
According to the present invention, there are provided a rigid, swing-open packet of cigarettes and relative production method, as claimed in the accompanying Claims.
A number of non-limiting embodiments of the present invention will be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Number 1 in
The packet 1 of cigarettes in
Each inner container 3 is in the form of a cup-shaped parallelepiped, and comprises an open top end 5 for access to inner package 2; a bottom wall 6 opposite open top end 5; a front wall 7; a rear wall 8 opposite and parallel to front wall 7; and two opposite parallel lateral walls 9.
Outer container 4 is also parallelepiped-shaped, and comprises a top wall 10; a bottom wall 11 opposite and parallel to top wall 10; two opposite parallel lateral walls 12; and two opposite open lateral ends 13, through which respective inner containers 3 are extracted/inserted from/into outer container 4 into the open/closed position.
Each inner container 3 is hinged to outer container 4 by a hinge 14 located close to an edge of bottom wall 6 of inner container 3 and an edge of bottom wall 11 of outer container 4, at an open lateral end 13 of outer container 4. More specifically, each hinge 14 is located a given distance from an edge of bottom wall 6 of inner container 3 and an edge of bottom wall 11 of outer container 4, at an open lateral end 13 of outer container 4, i.e. is located a given distance from a bottom transverse edge of inner container 3 and a bottom transverse edge of outer container 4.
In a preferred embodiment, rear wall 8 of each inner container 3 is lower than front wall 7, so that, in the closed position, front wall 7 closes the respective open lateral end 13 of outer container 4 completely, and rear wall 8 does not impede rotation about hinge 14 of inner container 3 with respect to outer container 4 by interfering with top wall 10 of outer container 4. Also, the top portions of lateral walls 9 of each inner container 3 are shaped to connect front wall 7 to rear wall 8 smoothly and compensate for the difference in height.
Packet 1 of cigarettes has stops for limiting withdrawal, and preventing detachment, of each inner container 3 from outer container 4, and which, for each inner container 3, comprise two retaining tabs 15 projecting outwards of inner container 3 from lateral walls 9 and located close to rear wall 8 of inner container 3; and two retaining pockets 16 projecting inwards of outer container 4 from lateral walls 12 and located close to open lateral end 13 of outer container 4. In actual use, when inner container 3 is rotated with respect to outer container 4 about hinge 14 into the open position, each retaining tab 15 slides inside a respective retaining pocket 16 to arrest withdrawal of inner container 3.
To extract an inner container 3, the user of packet 1 of cigarettes must move inner container 3 with respect to outer container 4 by gripping outer container 4 with one hand, and inner container 3 with the other. As shown in
In the
As shown in
Each lid 29 comprises a rectangular top wall 31, which is opposite and parallel to bottom wall 6 of inner container 3 when lid 29 is closed; a rectangular rear wall 32, which forms an extension of rear wall 8 of inner container 3 when lid 29 is closed; and two triangular lateral walls 33, which form extensions of lateral walls 9 of inner container 3 when lid 29 is closed. Hinge 30 of each lid 29 connects a top edge of rear wall 8 of inner container 3 to a bottom edge of rear wall 32 of lid 29.
As shown in
Each control tab 34 has a top end 35 permanently integral with top wall 10 of outer container 4; and a bottom end 36 opposite top end 35 and permanently integral with top wall 31 of lid 29 of corresponding inner container 3. Each control tab 34 folds up (as shown in
In the
In the
As shown in
Inner blank 17 has two longitudinal fold lines 18, and a number of transverse fold lines 19 which define, between longitudinal fold lines 18, a panel 8′ forming rear wall 8; a panel 6′ forming bottom wall 6; and a panel 7′ forming front wall 7.
Panel 7′ has a reinforcing flap 20 connected to panel 7′ along a transverse fold line 19, and which is folded 180° onto panel 7′ to reinforce the top of front wall 7.
Panel 8′ has two lateral wings 9′, which form respective inner portions of lateral walls 9, are located on opposite sides of panel 8′, and are separated from panel 8′ by longitudinal fold lines 18. Panel 7′ has two lateral wings 9″, which form respective outer portions of lateral walls 9, are located on opposite sides of panel 7′, and are separated from panel 7′ by longitudinal fold lines 18. Each lateral wing 9′ of panel 8′ has a tab 21 separated from lateral wing 9′ by a transverse fold line 19, and which is folded 90° with respect to lateral wing 9′ and fixed to an inner surface of panel 6′. A window 22, containing a respective retaining tab 15, is formed in each lateral wing 9′; and each lateral wing 9″ has a recess 23 designed to overlap a respective retaining tab 15.
Inner blank 17 also comprises a panel 32′, which forms rear wall 32 of lid 29 and is connected to panel 8′ along hinge 30; a panel 31′, which forms top wall 31 of lid 29; and two lateral wings 33′ forming lateral walls 33 of lid 29, and each of which has a tab 31″, which is folded 90° with respect to lateral wings 33′ and fixed to an inner surface of panel 31′.
As shown in
Blank 24 has two longitudinal fold lines 25, and a number of transverse fold lines 26 which define, between longitudinal fold lines 25, a panel 11′ forming an inner portion of bottom wall 11; a panel 12′ forming one lateral wall 12; a panel 10′ forming top wall 10; a panel 12″ forming the other lateral wall 12; and a panel 11″ forming an outer portion of bottom wall 11.
Panel 10′ has two reinforcing tabs 27, which are located on opposite sides of panel 10′, are separated from panel 10′ by longitudinal fold lines 25, and are folded 180° and glued onto panel 10′ to reinforce top wall 10.
Panels 12′ and 12″ each have two retaining pockets 16, which are located on opposite sides of panel 12′, 12″, are separated from panel 12′, 12″ by longitudinal fold lines 25, and are folded 180° and glued onto panel 12′, 12″.
Panel 11′ has two connecting tabs 28, which are located on opposite sides of panel 11′, are separated from panel 11′ by longitudinal fold lines 25, are folded 180° onto panel 11′, and are each glued to bottom wall 6 of a respective inner container 3 to hinge inner container 3 to outer container 4.
In the
One advantage of the
In the alternative embodiment in
In the
Compared with the
It is important to note that, in all the embodiments described, control tabs 34 serve solely to open lid 29 ‘automatically’, and withdrawal of inner containers 3 from outer container 4 is limited (arrested) solely by the stops (i.e. by retaining tabs engaging retaining pockets 16). Consequently, each control tab 34 is designed to only unfold completely if the corresponding inner container 3 exceeds the limit posed by the stops. By virtue of the stops, each control tab 34 therefore never unfolds completely, never limits the withdrawal movement of corresponding inner container 3, and therefore never runs any risk of tearing.
Packet 1 of cigarettes described has numerous advantages.
In particular, it enables optimum use of the inner volume of outer container 4, by the design of control tab 34 allowing the top wall 31 of lid 29 to be positioned extremely close to top wall 10 of outer container 4 when inner container 3 is in the closed position. In the
Packet 1 of cigarettes described is also cheap and easy to produce, by involving only a few minor alterations to a similar standard packet of cigarettes.
A method of producing the above packet 1 of cigarettes will now be described with reference to
The method comprises forming the two inner packages 2; depositing each inner package 2 on a corresponding inner blank 17; folding each inner blank 17 about inner package 2 to form the corresponding inner container 3; depositing the two inner containers 3 on outer blank 24; and folding outer blank 24 about inner containers 3 to form outer container 4.
As shown in
As shown in
Finally, each inner container 3 is moved (translated) with respect to outer blank 24 to rest completely on outer blank 24 (i.e. is moved into a position corresponding to the closed position, in which inner container 3 is inserted inside outer container 4) and so fold up control tab 34 (from the
Once the two inner containers 3 are pushed inwards of outer blank 24 (i.e. into the position corresponding to the closed position), outer blank 24 is folded about inner containers 3 to complete packet 1 of cigarettes.
As shown in
Glue 40 and/or 41 may be applied ‘fresh’ just before use (i.e. just before end 35 or 36 of control tab 34 is applied to reinforcing tab 27 of panel 10′ or to top wall 31 of lid 29), or may be applied in advance (even well in advance), allowed to dry completely before use, and heat-activated when needed (i.e. after applying end 35 or 36 of control tab 34 to reinforcing tab 27 of panel 10′ or to top wall 31 of lid 29).
The above method has numerous advantages.
In particular, it provides for producing packets 1 of cigarettes quickly and accurately.
Also, it is cheap and easy to implement, even on existing packing machines, with only a few minor alterations.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2012/052366 | 5/11/2012 | WO | 00 | 11/6/2014 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2013/167938 | 11/14/2013 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4534463 | Bouchard | Aug 1985 | A |
5080227 | Focke | Jan 1992 | A |
7712607 | Ghini | May 2010 | B2 |
7992708 | Hein | Aug 2011 | B2 |
8042685 | Bourgoin | Oct 2011 | B2 |
20090205982 | Hein et al. | Aug 2009 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2017198 | Jan 2009 | EP |
2499947 | Aug 1982 | FR |
WO-03053818 | Jul 2003 | WO |
WO-2006021581 | Mar 2006 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report and Written Opinion, International Application No. PCT/IB2012/052366, mailed Jan. 14, 2013. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150108017 A1 | Apr 2015 | US |