Trash bags are mainly used to line a receptacle. The problem is the liners are never near the receptacle and someone has to retrieve a liner from a remote location to complete the function, too much time and too many man hours are wasted in this process.
Many people in a residential or commercial application will store several extra bags in the bottom of the trash can receptacle as a means to speed up the entire cycle of changing trash can liners.
In an industrial cleaning, health care, or fast food application the time and cost factor for this process is significant.
Many times this job has been delegated to people with handicaps or mental illness. A more efficient, easier, cleaner, and less cumbersome way of having these bags readily available has been needed for some time.
The invention is a system which is convenient and economical for packaging, deploying, and distributing plastic bags, primarily, but not exclusively in the waste arena. The invention puts bags at the source of where they are being used. For example in the waste industry the Speedy Bag System will be in the bottom of the receptacle, when the full bag is removed the next one to replace it is automatically discharged and ready to line the receptacle. Thus speeding up the process of relining the receptacle, rather than creating a need to find a replacement bag that may be in a remote location like a back store room or cleaning cart.
Because the bags are connected at a point of weakness and packed sequentially, the next bag to be used follows the full bag being removed. After all but the last bag are used up, the last bag is attached to the container through a score in the underside of the container causing the said container to follow the last bag out of the receptacle as the last bag is removed. The container can be disposed of, recycled, or refilled.
Then a new Speedy Bag System is put into the bottom of the receptacle so that a large number of bags in a protected container will remain at the bottom of the trash receptacle for the process to be repeated.
Other details and advantages of the invention will become apparent with the following description of the embodiment and accompanying drawings.
Referring now more particularly to the drawings, there is shown a plan view
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5353950 | Taylor et al. | Oct 1994 | A |
5564762 | Ring | Oct 1996 | A |
5632401 | Hurd | May 1997 | A |
20060138149 | Tracy | Jun 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060226153 A1 | Oct 2006 | US |