This invention relates to a system for the spaced packing of elongated objects and a corresponding method for the packing of elongated objects in a system of this type.
Elongated objects, e.g. bars, flat shapes, round shapes etc. are characterized by the fact that the diameter of the elongated object is significantly less than its length. For the packing of multiple elongated objects of this type, in the prior art the objects are separated from one another with spaces by the presence of continuous partitions in the interior of a packing sleeve that surrounds the object all around its outside periphery and are vertically continuous, so that when an elongated object of this type is inserted an insertion channel is formed that holds the elongated object and leads to the bottom of the packing.
System packings of this type are used successfully in a wide range of applications, although they have the disadvantage that they are difficult to produce and consume a great deal of material. Specifically, the insertion channels that extend from the upper side of the packing to the bottom must be manufactured individually, and with plastic packing it is difficult and expensive to produce continuous insertion channels of this type that make possible a reliable separation of the individual objects inserted into the packing.
For packing in cardboard boxes, for example, the prior art includes the use of two-piece separator arrangements that are also called lattice supports. The manufacture of cardboard packing of this type is simple, because different folding cut-out blanks are assembled. It is known that one lattice support can be placed into the packing on the bottom side and another lattice support can be placed on the top side, wherein the two lattice supports are in contact with each other as much as possible over their longitudinal extensions to make possible a continuous insertion opening in the area of an insertion channel.
Packing of this type can therefore be produced economically and efficiently only in the form of cardboard packages because the assembly of a plurality of cardboard cutouts and their gluing together can be automated. However, when the task at hand is the packing of high-value objects that may also weigh a considerable amount, only plastic packing or sheet metal packaging can be considered.
Plastic-coated cardboard packaging can also be considered.
One disadvantage with all these types of packaging, however, is that with heavy objects, secure packing is not possible. For example, metal bars or similar high-value objects cannot be packed in a spaced system packing of this type so that they do not touch one another. Especially when the objects to be packed are relatively long, such as objects in the length range between 10 cm and 100 cm, cardboard packages of this type can no longer be used. On account of the weight of these objects, there is a danger that the rod-shaped object will puncture the bottom or top of the cardboard package.
In particular, it is a question of packing elongated objects of this type with a diameter-to-length ratio in the range of 30 D, which is not possible with conventional packing.
The prior art does not describe a plastic package that would make it possible to realize continuous insertion channels.
Therefore the object of the invention is to develop a system for the spaced packing of a plurality of elongated objects so that the elongated objects can be packed in a spaced manner, preventing contact between them, in a packing sleeve made of plastic.
The object of the system is to make possible a secure and reliable spacing between the elongated objects and thereby to maintain small distances between the objects without the objects touching one another. It therefore becomes possible to pack a plurality of elongated objects in a narrow space with a high packing density while maintaining a distance between them without running the risk that the rod-like objects will come into contact with or even puncture the package in the event of an impact or movement of the packing.
In particular, this invention provides—although only as one preferred exemplary embodiment—a very small package for the packing of 25 metal bars or rods, wherein the package may have a total outside diameter of only 55×55 mm, and the elongated objects have a diameter, for example, of 6 mm and a distance between one another in the range of approximately 2 to 3 mm. The result is a plastic package with high packing density.
In spite of this small distance it is possible to successfully protect the rods and prevent them from coming into contact with one another as a result of the features according to the invention.
One feature of the invention is that on the opening of the packing sleeve, a multi-part top part consisting of at least one lattice-like top part and at least one bottom part consisting of a lattice support that can be detachably connected with the top part can be placed, that the rods extend with their bottom-side ends through the lattice openings of the top and bottom parts that are flush with one another, and that the at least one bottom part is detachably connected with the top part and is designed so that it can slide in the interior of the packing sleeve.
The resulting advantage is that with the bottom part sitting on the base surface of the packing sleeve and its bottom surface, on which the bottom-side ends of the rods sit, protection against puncturing of the packing is simultaneously achieved without the need for additional complex, expensive and separate bottom-side protective cushions.
The focus of this invention is therefore a system that consists of a packing sleeve that is open on one end, at which a multi-layer lattice support is placed.
According to the invention, the multi-layered lattice support is at least a two-part piece and consists of a top part and a bottom part which is detachably connected with the top part. The top part is designed and constructed so that it sits on the opening of the packing sleeve, and the bottom part which is detachably connected with the top part is designed and constructed so that it can be detached and separated from the top part.
For example, it is preferable if during the packing of the elongated objects, the bottom part can be detached from the top part by finger pressure and, together with the objects to be packed, which are loaded with the end side on the bottom part, can be pushed in a sliding manner into the interior of the packing sleeve until they rest on the bottom surface on the inside of the packing sleeve.
Therefore a completely new system for the spaced packing of elongated objects is created, because it is now possible for the first time, without the need for continuous, elongated insertion channels, to achieve the spaced packing of elongated objects even in an extremely narrow space without the need to create insertion channels that extend over the entire length of the plastic packing.
The core teaching of the invention is that a lattice support is designed and constructed in at least two parts and the following steps are used for the execution of the packing method:
1. In a first method step, the lattice carrier that is composed of multiple layers is placed over the opening of the packing sleeve. In one preferred embodiment, the lattice carrier can be designed and constructed so that it can be locked with its top part on the opening of the packing sleeve.
2. In a second step of the method, the elongated objects are placed on the lattice carrier and are inserted with their lower ends into the lattice openings, so that their bottom sides extend through the lattice openings of the top part and are engaged in the lattice openings of the bottom part, and sit on the bottom wall located there, which forms the boundary of the lattice openings on the bottom side of the bottom part.
3. In the next step of the method, the detachable connection between the top part in the bottom part is separated by finger pressure, and in this step of the method the elongated objects drop downward as a result of their own weight or by the application of manual force, as a result of which, either by the dead weight of the elongated objects or by manual pressure on the elongated objects, the bottom part is separated from the top part and is displaced into the interior of the packing, and specifically until the bottom part sits on the base surface in the interior of the packing sleeve.
Therefore the insertion channels that create the spaces consist only of an upper part configured on the upper opening of the packing sleeve with corresponding lattice openings and an additional part located in the base area of the packing sleeve, which is designed and constructed in the for in of a bottom part with identical lattice openings.
The lattice openings of the top and bottom parts are aligned with one another and therefore continuous insertion channels are no longer formed, but only insertion channels that are present in the lattice-like top part that remains on the upper side of the packing sleeve, and additional insertion channels or lattice openings that are present in the bottom part, which when the packing is in its final state, sit on the base surface of the packing sleeve and are locked in place there.
Therefore one advantage of the invention is that it conserves material, because it is no longer necessary to use continuous insertion channels, because according to the invention only a lattice-like top part on the top side of the packing and a lattice-like bottom part that sits on the base side of the packing sleeve remain. The centering of the bars or rods to be packed is maintained during the packing process between the lattice-like top and the lattice-like bottom parts without the need for continuous insertion channels.
The mutual arrangement and orientation of the lattice openings between these two parts (top part and bottom part) therefore remains unchanged during the packing of the elongated objects. The elongated objects therefore ensure an automatic centering on the top and bottom part because during the packing process they press the bottom part toward the base surface of the packing sleeve and ultimately are immobilized there in the packed state.
In this manner it is possible for the first time, while saving plastic material and expensive production costs, to create a lattice-like internal distribution of a packing sleeve that is located only on the top side of the packing and on the inside base surface of the packing.
This invention preferably relates to a two-part lattice support that consists of the lattice-like top part and the lattice-like bottom part that is detachably connected with it.
The closure (detachable connection) between the top and bottom parts, which can preferably be opened and released by manual pressure, preferably consists of a snap connection. However, the invention is not limited to this embodiment. A connection of this type could also consist of a frictional connection or of other mechanically detachable connections such as, for example, a wedge-action connector or similar type of connection.
Likewise, the invention teaches that the detachable connection between the top part and the bottom part consists of a breakaway connector, so that by applying a certain force the connector webs between the top part and the bottom part are separated when the packing process begins.
Although it was indicated above that the lattice support are preferably designed and constructed in two parts, it should be noted that the invention is not restricted to lattice carriers consisting of this number of parts.
In another configuration, a lattice support that consists of more than two parts can also be present, in which case the method described above for the packing of elongated objects of this type then proceeds in a plurality of steps.
This configuration has the advantage that with particularly elongated objects that are more than 50 cm long, for example, additional spacing lattice elements can be located in the in-between space in the packing sleeve.
In an additional configuration of the invention, the above-mentioned multi-part lattice support can be inserted into a relatively short packing sleeve, and the packing method proceeds in the same manner, although the packing sleeve can be covered or closed by a relatively long protective sleeve. In this case, lattice-like spacing elements can also be located on the inside of the protective sleeve to hold the head area of the elongated objects.
It is also unimportant how the packing sleeve, which is open on one end, is closed from the top side. The closure can be a simple protective cap that is screwed or snapped or pushed onto the packing sleeve. A screw-cap packing can also be provided.
Instead of a simple protective cap that is used to close the packing sleeve, a second, additional, elongated packing sleeve can also be used which is also either screwed, inserted or snapped on.
The subject matter of the present invention is derived not only from the subject matter of the individual patent claims but also from the combination of the individual patent claims with one another.
All the information and features disclosed in the documents, including the abstract, and in particular the three-dimensional embodiment depicted in the drawings, are hereby claimed as essential to the invention inasmuch as they are novel individually or in any combination in comparison with the prior art.
Inasmuch as individual subject matters are referred to as “essential to the invention” or “important,” this does not mean that these subject matters necessarily must form the subject matter of an independent claim. This is determined only by the respective valid version of the independent patent claim.
The invention is explained in greater detail below on the basis of several drawings which illustrate several means of embodiment. Additional features that are essential to the invention and advantages of the invention can be derived from these drawings and the description thereof.
In the figures:
A packing sleeve 1 illustrated in
The base surface 3 can also be eliminated and the packing sleeve 1 can be open on the base side. The invention is accordingly not limited to a closed base surface 3.
According to the invention, the system packing now consists of the spaced packing of elongated, bar-shaped or rod-shaped objects in the illustrated exemplary embodiment of the packing of bars 16 which, as illustrated in the first step of the method illustrated in
As illustrated in
Likewise,
The locking connection illustrated here between a locking mounting between the bottom part 8 and the top part 7 is shown exclusively by way of example. All detachable connections that can preferably be released by manual force applied in the direction of the arrows 13 are claimed.
Instead of manual force, a mechanical actuation in the direction of the arrow 13 can also be applied to unlock the snap connection between the top part 7 and the bottom part 8 connected with it in a locking manner.
The two parts can be plugged into each other in the direction indicated by the arrow 29 and thus form an at least two-part plug-and-socket part which is called the lattice support 10. The lattice support assembled in this manner as illustrated in
As illustrated in
It is preferable if the outside periphery of the bottom part 8 occupies the interior 2 of the packing sleeve in a more or less form-fitting manner while reserving some clearance for movement 1, to thereby prevent a tipping or rotation in the position illustrated in
Also, as illustrated in
Of course it is possible to improve or to make possible the axially directed displacement of the bottom part 8 into the interior of the packing sleeve 1 by manual or mechanical force applied to the upper side of the bars 16.
It has already been noted in the general descriptive portion that is not absolutely necessary to have a locking or snap connection between the top part 7 and the bottom part 8, because the connection can also be made by means of breakaway webs or similar connectors, so that by the application of a corresponding axial force on the bars 16, the connection between the top part 7 and bottom part 8 can be released and the webs broken off, so that the bottom part 8 is displaced into the interior 2 of the packing sleeve 1 as illustrated in
So that the top part 7 is not displaced with the bottom part 8 into the interior 2 of the packing sleeve 1, as illustrated in
The stop edge 9 need not be continuous. It can also be provided in the form of individual nubs or protuberances.
As soon as the bars 16 illustrated in
The upper side of the packing sleeve 1 can be closed by any type of known protective sleeve 18 or by a flat cover 19, wherein the protective sleeve 18 or the cover 19 can be either snapped, screwed or pushed on or attached with a wedge-type connector. The closure between the parts 18 and 19 and the packing sleeve 1 can be any appropriate closure and can be accomplished in a manner which is in itself known. All that is necessary is that it be a re-openable packing.
During the placement of the top part 7 on the encircling opening 5 of the packing sleeve 1, it is preferable if the top part 7 is placed on the packing sleeve by means of a locking connection. For this purpose
Starting from the stacking edge 20, there are locking lugs 25 directed radially outward that engage with the opening 5 of the packing sleeve 1 so that the top part 7 is reliably connected with the packing sleeve 1.
Instead of a snap-on connection of this type, other connecting mechanisms can also be provided, such as, for example, wedge-type connectors, an adhesive connection or a welded connection.
A comparison of
To release the snap connection between the two parts 7 and 8, in the top part there are cutouts 21 opposite one another, in the vicinity of which the locking slots 15 are located, so that by means of manual force, the locking tabs 12 of the bottom part 8 that project into the slots 21 can be pressed together with finger pressure, to once again release the locked connection.
The flexible property of the locking tabs 12 is the result of the fact that there are slots 27 on both sides of the locking tabs, to provide them with radial flexibility.
Also in the vicinity of the external nubs 24 there are slots 27 on one side to also provide a flexible bias for the external nubs 24, to guarantee that the bottom part 8 is centered and simultaneously moves downward in the interior 2 of the packing sleeve 1 in the direction indicated by the arrow 17, without tipping or jamming.
The lattice support 10 used for this purpose is therefore designed and constructed of multiple parts and consists of a top part 7 and three bottom parts 8 that snap together, wherein the base-side bottom part 8 is the same as the bottom part described above and illustrated in
This arrangement illustrated in
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