This invention relates to the securing of sheet material which is in the form of a liner, a cover or a curtain.
It is known to protect goods being shipped in a shipping container from variations in temperature by providing a liner in the shipping container. Examples of such liners are disclosed in, PCT specification WO2010/046790 and EP Specification 1 780 147 A1.
The fitting of shipping container liners is not a simple matter as they must be secured to the lashing points of the shipping container in such manner that an air gap is created between the walls and roof of the shipping container and the liner. Also, the liner must not sag down and touch the goods in the container.
In WO 2010/046790 the attachment hooks on the liner are fixed. However the lashing points on containers are not always at the same location. The number of lashing points and the spacing between them varies. Consequently, some hooks are found to be offset from the respective lashing point and this makes satisfactory installation of the liner difficult or even impossible. In respect of the liner is disclosed in EP Specification 1 780 147 A1, using a single piece of webbing on each side of the container and threading it through a number of hooks before trying to pull it taut does not, in practice, work very well. The liner can still sag to an unacceptable extent.
It is not only shipping containers that need to be fitted with liners. The load spaces of some transport trucks and trailers have lashing points. These, if the goods being transported require it, have to be fitted with liners.
The term “shipping container” as used herein consequently encompasses not only the ISO type of container used mainly for sea transport but also trucks and trailers which have lashing points.
There are other circumstances where sheet material must be secured in place. An example is that of tarpaulins which are used to cover goods on, for example, an open vehicle. Tarpaulins usually have eyelets and a cord is threaded through the eyelets and around hooks or other protuberances on the vehicle. Threading the cord through the eyelets, then around whatever mountings are provided can be time-consuming. In other circumstances sheet material has to be hung to form a curtain.
In all these situations a rapid method of attaching the sheet material to a fixed structure is advantageous.
According to one aspect of the present invention there is provided a mounting securing in place a sheet which constitutes a liner, cover or curtain, the sheet having an elongate attachment zone which is thicker than the material of the sheet, the mounting including a clip which is formed with an elongate hollow portion having a longitudinal slit along the length thereof, said attachment zone being in said hollow portion with the sheet emerging from said portion through the slit, and an elongate element connected to a lashing point, said clip having a passageway through which said elongate element passes thereby to attach said clip and the attachment zone to said lashing point.
Said elongate element can be a cord which passes through said passageway, there being a hook on the cord for attachment to the lashing point. In this form said passageway is preferably constituted by the bore of a cylinder, the axes of said cylinder and said hollow portion being parallel to one another.
In a further form said elongate element is a cable tie including a block which has a slot through it, a ratchet tooth in the slot and a strap which has a plurality of transverse ribs, the strap extending from the block and the ribs and ratchet tooth coming into interlocking engagement when the strap is pushed through the slot thereby to prevent the strap being withdrawn from the slot in the opposite direction, said passageway being constituted by an aperture of the clip into which said block fits.
Said attachment zone is preferably formed by folding said sheet over on itself with a cord between the superimposed layers, the layers being secured together to trap the cord.
According to a further aspect of the present invention there is provided the combination of:
For a better understanding of the present invention, and to show how the same may be carried into effect, reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawings in which:
The clip illustrated in
A mounting portion 20 is moulded integrally with the portion 12. The portions 12 and 20 are offset with respect to one another as best seen in the end elevation of
The mounting portion 20 extends for most of the length of the cylindrical portion 12 and has therein a central aperture which is designated 22. The aperture 22 is closed on three sides. Raised ribs designated 24, 26 and 28 form the boundary of the aperture 22 on these three sides. On the fourth side of the aperture there is a bar designated 30 which, as best seen in
The clip 10.1 shown in
The clips are used with what are known in the art as “cable ties”. A cable tie conventionally comprises a locking portion which is in the form of a block which has a slot through it with a flexible ratchet tooth in the slot. The cable tie further has a strap which is integral with the block and has a plurality of transverse ribs. As the strap is pushed through the slot, the ratchet tooth is deformed by the transverse ribs as they pass it. The tooth and the ribs are configured so that there is a locking action between them and the part of the strap that has passed through the slot consequently cannot be pulled back through the slot.
The aperture 22 in
The part of the strap which is immediately adjacent the block lies against the bar 30 and the remainder of the strap protrudes upwardly from the clip 10 as the clip 10 is viewed in
The clips and cable ties can be used to mount a thermally reflective liner in a shipping container as is described below. They can also be used to mount any other sheet material such as a tarpaulin the upper edge of which is to be secured to a fixed structure so that the tarpaulin hangs down from the fixed structure to form a curtain.
The liner for the shipping container is fabricated from metallized sheet material and comprises side, top and bottom walls. At one end the liner is closed by an end wall and at the other end it has a flap which can be pulled to a closed position after the cargo has been loaded into the liner.
As the liner is fabricated, cords are incorporated into it. In the preferred form there are vertical cords where the side walls join the end wall and horizontal cords where the top and bottom walls join the sidewalls. The cords can be incorporated by folding the sheet material around the cord and then sewing the sheet material along a line parallel to the cord so that the cord is in a tube constituted by the material of the liner itself.
Two of the clips of the form shown in
Clips of the form shown in
Two of the clips illustrated in
Further clips are used to connect the liner to the upper and lower lashing points along the full length of the container.
The clips of
If the clips are to be used to suspend a tarpaulin or other sheet material which is in the form of a curtain, then the cord is incorporated into the tarpaulin along its upper edge. Clips of either of the forms described, depending on the weight of the tarpaulin which is to form the curtain, are slid along the cord until they are appropriately positioned with respect to whatever lashing points are provided and then the ties are used to secure the upper edge of the curtain to the lashing points.
Where the clip 10.2 of
A triangular flange 38 extends for about half the length of the cylindrical portion 12 and protrudes radially outwardly from the portion 12. A short cylinder 40 is moulded integrally with the flange 38. The axis of the portion 12 and the axis of the cylinder 40 are parallel to one another.
Turning now to
A plurality of the clips 10.2 of
Part of the side wall of a liner, designated 56, is shown in
Cords 58 (
Two further cords 62 are provided. Each of these passes through the cylinders 40 of the respective set of clips 10.2. The cords 62 are thus external of the seam 60. Between each adjacent pair of clips 10.2 there is one of the hooks 42. The cords 50 pass through the passageways 46 in the hooks 42. The hooks 42 can slide along the cords 62.
To secure the liner inside the container, the ends of the cords 62 are tied to anchorages that are provided at the closed end of the container. At this stage the closed end of the liner hangs down from the anchorages and the liner lies on the floor along the length of the container. The first hook 42 on each cord 62 is then attached to those lashing points which are closest to the closed end of the container. The clips 10.2 closest to the closed end of the container are slid along the seams 60 until they are approximately under the first lashing points and hooks. The lashing point is designated 64 in
The next two hooks are attached to the next two lashing points and the next two clips are moved to positions approximately under the hooks. This procedure continues until hooks are attached to all the lashing points that can be accessed and there are clips close to the lashing points which have hooks attached to them.
The ends of the two cords 62 which are at the open end of the liner are then gripped and the cords are pulled is taut as possible. This has the effect of lifting the clips 10.2, and hence the seams 60 to which they are fitted, towards the roof of the container.
Starting at the closed end of the container, the first clips 10.2 on each side are slid along the seams 60 so that the lengths of the parts of the cords 62 between the anchorage points and the first clips are reduced to a minimum. All the remaining clips 10.2 are moved along the seams 60 to shorten the distances between the clips and the adjacent hooks 42. This has the effect of pulling the clips further upwardly and outwardly towards the lashing points. The clips 10.2 on opposite sides of the liner move apart during this procedure and the inevitable sag of the top wall of the liner is reduced. The top wall still sags down under its own weight but not to an extent such that it interferes with loading of the cargo into the liner or touches the goods in the loaded container.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2013/08869 | Nov 2013 | ZA | national |
2014/07040 | Sep 2014 | ZA | national |
This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 14/527,075, filed Oct. 29, 2014, which claims the benefit of South African Patent Application No. 2014/07040, filed Sep. 29, 2014, and South African Patent Application No. 2013/08869, filed Nov. 26, 2013, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein in their entirety by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14527075 | Oct 2014 | US |
Child | 15397608 | US |