Not applicable.
Not applicable.
This invention relates to bottle holders and bottle carriers which retain bottles of various cap and neck diameter sizes to another object, such as a user's pants belt, and particularly to plastic bottles with a plastic indicia label, and especially those bottle holders and carriers which are made from a one piece pliable, planar, and elongate plastic material substrate.
Previous items used to attach a plastic bottle of water or soda to another object would comprise many various means of attachment. A few of those included clips, snaps, strings, stretchable plastics or rubbers, hard plastics to grip a bottles cap stop rim, etc. Almost all of said means were expensive to produce, expensive to purchase, and yet bulky and clumsy to store on a user's body when not being used.
None were found which would serve as a throw-away or disposable bottle support or carrier, as all were overly complicated in design, and thus too expensive.
The number of patents which have already been applied for and issued reflect this foreseen need for a user to carry a bottle with their hands free, yet none were found which filled a need for a universal size fitting, while being cost effectively packageable with each bottle produced. Of all prior art searched, most fell into two categories; one of which retained a held bottle within a bag or pouch, and those which gripped a bottle's neck, cap, and or cap stop rim. None were found which sharingly distributed a held bottle's liquid weight stress load between a bottle's cap stop rim neck area, and a bottle's sidewall and or its indicia label, and the object being held to. None were found which made use of an elongate through cut slit formed aperture for a more universal size bottle neck fitting. None were found which used friction as one means of retaining a bottle gripping device to a bottle's sidewall. None were found which used tabular projections as one means to retain a bottle gripping device to said sidewall's attached indicia label. None were found with sanitary proof knock-out apertures. None were found which were made from an indicia label itself. None were found which used their own perimeter shape to foldingly provide their own containment pouch. None were found which could be manufactured from a wide variety of pliable plastic materials, and a wide range of thicknesses.
A more universal fitting bottle gripping appendage for retaining a bottle to another object such as a user's pants belt, wherein said appendage comprises a pliable, planar, and elongate plastic substrate with at least one or more aperture forming through cut slit(s), and a means for attachment to a bottle's sidewall; wherein a held liquid weight stress load is cooperatively shared between said comprisements and said another object to permit a more universal size fitting bottle gripping aperture.
In today's market, small bottles of water are carried everywhere by consumers. When a user needs to have free hands for carrying other items, a bottle of water usually gets jammed into a purse, or stuffed into a pocket, or left behind. This particular universal fit bottle gripping appendage is always close at hand, as it is easily packagable to any bottle with most any standard size neck diameter. One common size which fits several sizes of bottle necks is only one of its merits.
This universal fit bottle gripping appendage may also become part of a company's promotional advertising campaign, as indicia space is provided in the center portion of its main body.
This bottle gripping appendage may also be made from a wide variety of pliable plastics, and ranging from wrap around plastic indicia labels now in use by the bottling industry, to standard milk jug material, to low density polypropylene (LDPE) polyethylene, polystyrene, polyurethane, plastic mylar type films, plasticized cloth type fabrics, and also from a blow molded bottle's sidewall. The type of material chosen by a manufacturer will affect an appendage's bottle neck gripping aperture's size. Said aperture is formed from at least one or more through cut slit(s); wherein a total of said slit(s) form an elongate aperture that elongately parallels said appendage's elongate shape. A single slit aperture is best used for heavier or rip-stop materials such as said (LDPE), or said milk jug material. Said total of said slit(s) is best to arrange in an elongate curvedly shape when a mylar type plastic film substrate is chosen by a manufacturer. Said total of said slit(s) may also form other elongate aperture shapes with chamferred or curved perimeter edge corners to prevent any of one of said total of said slit(s) from tearing to an exterior edge of said appendage.
Once this bottle gripping appendage is temporarily or permanently affixed to a bottle's sidewall, it becomes an appended part of said bottle, or an appendage. A liquid weight stress load is distributed and shared with a locational point of attachment, its means of attachment, a bottle's underside edge of its cap stop rim, a sidewall surface of said bottle's neck located just vertically below said rim, and an object to which said bottle is being held to. Stress forces placed on a bottle gripping aperture are directed from a normally vertically upwards direction to a more lateral direction by said object being held to, and so reduces a need for a more exact fitting bottle neck gripping aperture. Without said locational point of attachment, which is substantially located on a bottle's exterior sidewall and at, on, beneath, or near said indicia label, most weight stress loads would be placed upon said aperture and the immediate area surrounding said aperture, and so would normally require a more exact size and fitting of said aperture.
A means of attachment of said appendage to said bottle's sidewall and or its attached indicia label may be accomplished via adhesive, friction, and or tabular projections. One particular means for said attachment is to position one elongate end of a bottle gripping appendage which is located oppositely from said appendage's gripping aperture's location between a bottle's tightly wrapped plastic indicia label and a bottle's exterior sidewall surface, wherein said appendage is held by friction.
Well over half of the main brands of small bottled water manufacturers use tightly bound plastic labels. Said labels remain tightly wrapped around a bottle, and even after an unsealing and opening of a bottle's cap. As a bottle is emptied, said wrapped label may slightly loosen as a bottle is gripped by a user; yet the liquid weight stress load is lessened also. Said friction between said wrapped label and said bottle is more than sufficient for a retention of said appendage to remain intact as it supports a remaining and smaller liquid weight stress load. Said means of friction works best when using a low density polyethylene material of approximately 0.02 to 0.080 inches thick, and yet is not required, but is preferred.
A consumer who doesn't plan on using a bottle gripping appendage which is frictionally held by a bottle's indicia label, may slightly push a bottle's sidewall inwardly while wiggling said appendage back and forth a few times for its removal and discardment. Meanwhile, a manufacturer's intended indicia message which is printed on said bottle gripping appendage, has been delivered to the consumer as they remove and discard the option of its use.
Accordingly, besides any objects and advantages previously described; further objects and advantages of this present invention are;
(i) A cost effective means for extra indicia space on a plastic bottle, while offering an optional and functional use as a bottle support carrier for a consumer.
(ii) A manufacturer may choose to permanently or temporarily glue an appendage to an exterior surface of a plastic or paper wrapped indicia label.
(iii) A manufacturer may choose to package a bottle gripping appendage behind their own tightly wrapped indicia label, and using said label's own friction as a means for attachment of said support.
(iv) A manufacturer may also choose to allow a consumer to thread their own bottle gripping appendage behind said tightly wrapped indicia label.
(v) An appendage may also be made from a thin plastic mylar type film, wherein it may be folded to create its own pouch, and wherein said pouch may be adhered to a bottle's wrapped label after it's normal application process.
(vi) On some types of plastic substrates, an appendage's through cut slit(s) formed aperture may be in a form of a knock-out, wherein a plurality of said slits are made intermittently in said aperture's perimeter, and wherein a user punches out said aperture for their assurance of first time use and sanitation.
(vii) A bottle gripping appendage which may be appended to both small and large mouth size bottles and to bottles of different vertical heights.
In the drawings, closely related figures may have the same number, but different alphabetic suffixes.
In the drawings, closely related figures may have the same number, but different alphabetic suffixes.
A preferred embodiment of a universal fit bottle gripping appendage is shown in
In the forming of a preferred embodiment of a universal fit bottle gripping appendage, a manufacturing user may use readily available materials such as a sidewall of a standard one gallon plastic milk jug, or a low density polyethylene flat sheet (LDPE).
An elongate rectangle is cut out with its length being approximately near to a standing bottle's vertical height, and with its width being less than said standing bottle's horizontal width, and with said width being greater than a diameter of a small mouth bottle's neck in said neck's area located just vertically beneath said bottle's cap stop rim. An elongate aperture 36 is formed near one end by at least one or more through cut slit(s). Said aperture's elongate direction parallels an elongate direction of said elongate rectangle. Said aperture's elongate length must be longer than 0.924 inches for its ability to spread open wide enough to surround a standard size small mouth bottle's cap and cap stop rim, and until said aperture is positioned just vertically beneath said rim of said small mouth size bottle.
After said positioning is accomplished, an end of said rectangle which is located opposite from said aperture's location is positioned between said bottle's sidewall and its attached plastic indicia label, and in an area behind said label which is not glued. Said rectangle is now appended to said bottle's sidewall, and is held there by a means; and in this embodiment, by a means of friction. Said bottle's new appendage is now shifted further vertically downward until it extends vertically below said label's lower edge.
Said appendage is now removed from said small mouth bottle and then appended to a large mouth bottle, wherein it is also shifted vertically downward until its elongate end reaches a vertically lower edge of its attached indicia label. Said appendage's elongate length may now be shortened if a manufacturing user chooses to, and according to a degree of universal fitting for different height bottles desired.
Said aperture's planar surface is then positioned vertically above said widemouth bottle's cap. Additional said through cut slit(s) are abutingly added to said aperture's most interiorly located elongate end, and until said manufacturer user determines that said aperture's new elongate length will encompass said widemouth bottle's cap, and its cap stop rim. Said aperture is applied fully, and until it is positioned just vertically beneath said rim for assurance of its fitting.
Said aperture is now removed from said bottle and threaded through an opening of another object such as a user's pants belt, and re-applied to said bottle's cap and again positioned just beneath said rim.
See
Said appendment to said bottle's sidewall 60 and or its attached indicia label 62 also cooperates with said object to more laterally direct stresses of said load within said appendage in an area surrounding said aperture. Said cooperation retains a full said load even more securely than when retaining a minimal said load, and wherein said load further aids said cooperation.
When a manufacturing user is satisfied with said aperture's elongate length, and said appendage's bottle retaining function, said appendage may be removed from said large mouth size bottle and re-appended between a small mouth size bottle's sidewall and its attached indicia label.
Said aperture containing end is again threaded through an opening of said another object. Said aperture is then again applied surroundingly over said bottle's cap, and again positioned just vertically beneath said cap stop rim.
Final testing is done at this point, as said small mouth bottle size may belong to a 16 ounce, 20 ounce, or 1 liter bottle or more. If desired retention is not achieved between said bottle's neck and said aperture, said appendage can be formed again with a shorter length of said elongate aperture. Said appendage's material strength and thickness affect any tweaking of said aperture's final length.
Once a proper length of said multiple and abutting slit formed aperture
A manufacturer may also choose to use other means than friction for attachment to a bottle's sidewall and or its attached indicia label. An adhesive may be used within this present embodiment. It may be in a form of glue or double back tape, and may cooperate with a bottle's sidewall directly, or in combination between said sidewall and its attached indicia label, or directly with said label's exterior surface.
Further means include at least one or more tab projections within an alternative embodiment, and are to be addressed within those descriptions.
Comprisements of said elongate aperture, said bottle's sidewall and or its attached indicia label, said another object, said load, said bottle cap stop rim's underside edge, and a vertical exterior sidewall of said bottle's neck located just beneath said cap stop rim, and said means of attachment will all sharingly cooperate to bear said load, as said stress forces surrounding said aperture are directed in a more lateral direction against said vertical exterior sidewall of said bottle's neck to permit a more elongate elongate aperture for a more universal size fitting aperture.
In using a universal fit bottle gripping appendage, a user may also carry it in their hand as they grip an area
A manufacturer may choose to apply advertising indicia in an area reserved for indicia space
When a bottle is emptied and ready to discard, a user may squeeze its sidewall to relieve frictional pressure between said sidewall, its attached indicia label, and said appendage for an easy removal. Said appendage may be saved for future use, or discarded.
In the drawings, closely related figures may have the same number, but different alphabetic suffixes.
Further details concerning all drawings include;
a is an overhead view of the preferred embodiment applied to a standard size small mouth bottle neck with a diameter of approximately 0.924 inches.
Shown in
A manufacturer may choose to form a slightly serrated aperture 38 by using a plurality of said slit(s) with slight gaps between them to form said knock-out shape for a user to physically tear and break open said aperture. Any gaps between said slits in said serrated aperture will be distanced according to a materials thickness and strength to permit a user to easily and completely open said aperture by hand.
Whereas an area surrounding a bottle gripping aperture may come fairly close to a user's mouth, many users prefer to know they are the first to use or come in close contact with said area.
Shown in
A manufacturer may use a plurality of said slit(s) to form said aperture 36 with one elongate end of each said slit abutting the next, until an ending point of a final said slit abuts a beginning point of a first said slit. A total of said slits forms an aperture which is approximately square in shape at one elongate end, and tapered in shape at said aperture's opposite elongate end. Said square area and said tapered area's apex are both chamferred to prevent tearing from said aperture's perimeter edge to said appendage's exterior perimeter edge. Said chamferring allows a greater choice of material substrates to use in the manufacturing of said appendage.
Said square area and said tapered area form said elongate aperture wherein its width is approximately that of a diameter of a small mouth bottles neck, and of the area located just beneath said bottle's cap stop rim, and approximately 0.924 inches. An elongate length of said elongate aperture may be anywhere from 1½ or more times its said width; and wherein a manufacturer chooses its final length to accommodate which and how many sizes of large mouth bottle sizes they wish to apply said appendage to.
Also shown in
Shown in
Note the clearance available for said appendage to slide vertically downward for shipping in
In
An overhead view is shown in
Shown in
When forming said appendage from such a thin plastic material, a cutting of said elongate aperture must be done with precision to prevent any tearing to said appendage's perimeter edge.
When an aperture containing elongate end is completely folded within said pouch, at least one or more of said pouch's pouch forming tabular shapes may be glued to another area of said appendage to form a sealed packet. Said packet may include a glued area 64 on at least one of its two exterior planar surfaces for its attachment to a bottle's sidewall and or its attached indicia label, and at or near a location shown as area 40 in
Said packet may be applied to said bottle's sidewall and or indicia label at a time of manufacturing or by an end user when needed. A user may choose to first apply said aperture over a bottle's cap and just underneath its bottle cap stop rim before adhering said pouch to a bottle's sidewall and or attached indicia label.
FIGS. 13,a,b,c show an unsealed packet in multiple stages of said appendage emerging from its containment pouch.
Accordingly, the reader will see that the scope of this new universal fit bottle gripping appendage goes beyond it's many advantages over previous bottle gripping and carrying devices; wherein
This device will not puncture or harm a human user; and wherein its packageability with a product to be held is much more versatile; and wherein its more universal size fitting aperture is also much more versatile.
Although previous descriptions contain many specificities, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention but as merely providing illustrations of some of the presently preferred embodiments of this invention.