Related pending United States patent application include Ser. No. 10/860,459 filed Jun. 3, 2004 for a Vehicle Locator and Identification Card; Ser. No. 11/007,509 filed Dec. 8, 2004 for a Vehicle Locator and Identification Card; Ser. No. 11,076,351 filed Mar. 9, 2005 for a Service Hang Tag and Ser. No. 11/342,791 filed Jan. 30, 2006 for a Vehicle Identification Card.
Business concerned with parking or servicing vehicles have a problem of correlating the ignition key and the vehicle owner with a particular vehicle. Paper cards with three segments separated by perforations and carrying the same number have been provided so that one segment serves as a claim check, a second segment is placed in the vehicle and a third segment has a key ring stapled to it. A computer type multiple copy form with perforated tear-off strips has been proposed for correlation of ignition key, vehicle and customer which includes perforation lines permitting separation of the form into sections—one to be placed on the vehicle, one to be connected to the ignition key in some undisclosed manner and one to be given to the automobile owner as a claim check. It has been found that in inclement weather, the paper vehicle key tag can become wet; causing it to lose strength, thereby increasing the risk of it breaking and a consequential loss of the key.
A three segment vehicle locator and key tag card made of a thin paperboard is perforated or slotted to form three detachable segments all carrying the same locator number, namely an upper segment adapted to be placed in the vehicle, a first lower segment serving as a customer claim ticket and a second lower segment in which a vehicle key tag is formed. A patch of synthetic paper has a silicon coated patch bonded to the back side of the second lower segment by a nondrying adhesive and the front side of the second lower segment is covered by a transparent MYLAR laminate. A spatula shaped key tag is formed in the second lower segment by a die cut through the MYLAR laminate and the paperboard card. The spatula shaped key tag has a narrow handle part attached to a much wider blade part. The blade is perforated across its midsection through the MYLAR laminate and the paperboard on a line at right angles to the direction of elongation of the handle and a pair of holes are punched in the paperboard blade at opposite sides of and at equally distances from the line of perforations. When the key tag is removed from the patch, the free end of the handle may be placed through the usual hole in the ignition key or though a ring commonly attached to the ignition key and then the free end of the handle is folded over onto the adhesive side of the blade. The blade is then folded at its line of perforations bringing the two holes in alignment and adhering the folded parts of the blade together with the end of the handle adhesively bonded therebetween.
The invention is illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which:
As shown in
Referring also to
When the key tag 26 is removed from the card 11 the rubber cement remains on its back side, as is illustrated in
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