1. Field
This invention is in the field of shipping (and display) containers for food and other lightweight items, particularly for relatively inexpensive bags of frangible foods such as Tostitos®, potato chips and the like, wherein container weight must be minimized for many reasons including shipping and handling cost while providing protection against breakage and crushing of the items during transportation, diaplay and handling, e.g., by forklift trucks.
2. Prior Art
Heretofore the shipping and display containers for such food items having utilized fairly heavy materials, including wood sections, an unwieldly number of parts and excessive assembly time and effort, and further have not been entirely satisfactory from the standpoint of container strength, cost of container manufacture, customer appeal, free standing stability, ease of handling, special dimensional adaptation for enhanced transport efficiency, environmental considerations such as container reuseability, container construction material recycleability, or the like, and in particular, where corrugated board is used for the construction, the prior containers have failed to provide adequate resistance to deformation in general, and particularly to twisting deformation of the containers caused, for example, by jostling of the loaded containers by forklift trucks and the like.
A pallet type of shipping and display assembly for frangible, lightweight items such as packaged food or the like comprising an upright stack of pallets having a vertical axis, each pallet having a floor formed with a peripheral upstanding rim means having shoulder means on its inner surface, each said pallet further having a spacer means nested on said floor within the confines of said rim means and having a radially extending array of spacer arms with end portions engaging said shoulder means to prevent angular movement about said axis between said floor and said spacer means, locking tabs on upper edge portions of said spacer means and inserted thru slot means in an adjacent floor of an upper pallet to prevent angular movement about said axis between said spacer means and said adjacent floor, whereby the combination of said tabs, slot means, arm end portions and rim means provides a pallet assembly having exceptionally large resistance to twisting deformation, wherein said spacer means has a sufficient height to space said pallets vertically sufficiently to contain packages of said items on the pallet floors and to display said items to the viewing public, and wherein each spacer means and an upper floor attached thereto are readily disassembled from the stack by lifting said spacer means out of the associated rim means.
The invention will be understood further from the drawings herein and their description wherein the figures are not to scale or consistent portions or dimensions, and wherein:
Referring to the drawings and with particular reference to the claims herein, the present pallet assembly 14 having a vertical axis 16, comprises an upright stack of pallets A-F each of which has a longitudinal plane 18 and a lateral plane 20, a floor 22 bordered by an upstanding rim 23, and a spacer means generally designated 24 which spaces and supports each floor generally vertically from other floors. Each said spacer means comprising a plurality of interconnected vertical spacer arms such as 26, 28, 30, 32 having upper 34 and lower 36 edges, wherein said upper edges are formed with floor contact portions 38 and vertically extended lock tabs 40. Any number of such spacer arms can be employed depending on the size, weight and shape of the items to be contained in the assembly. The tabs 40 are shown to have been slidably inserted thru slots 42 in the floors to prevent independent individual rotation of any of the floors about the vertical axis. The support arms extend radially outward from said vertical axis in a laterally spaced generally wedge shaped pattern to provide open front item 45 storage and display alcove areas such as 44, 46, 48, 50 which are readily viewable around said pallet assembly.
The pallet stack such as A, B, C can be varied in number, e.g., 2-10 pallets since the present individual pallet construction can readily be manufactured to a weight of about 3.5 lbs. or less to provide a pallet stack which can support weights of 2 to 3 hundred pounds or more of food items employing a commercial grade and weight of corrugated board.
The floors 22 are preferably made from corrugated board blanks such as shown in
The spacer means 24 is formed preferably from a corrugated board blank 70 (
Referring to
The 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 with the spirit and scope of the invention.
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