Bulk bin with improved setup and bulge resistance
This invention relates to packaging, and more particularly to a bulk bin having improved bulge resistance and easy setup.
This invention relates to packaging, and more particularly to a bulk bin having improved bulge resistance and easy setup.
BACKGROUND ARTMany products are shipped and stored in bulk containers made of corrugated paperboard capable of holding in excess of 2,400 pounds of product. Conventional corrugated containers typically have four or eight sides. Four-sided bulk containers are susceptible to excessive side wall bulge when loaded with product, and do not have very great strength for stacking filled containers on top of one another. Eight-sided containers of a size comparable to a four-sided container experience less side wall bulge than the four-sided container due to the narrower side walls in an eight-sided container. Eight-sided containers also have greater stacking strength than a four-sided container. Both four and eight-sided containers are commonly manufactured and shipped to a user in a flattened condition, and then erected by the user to prepare the container for use.
Round or cylindrical containers are also known in the prior art, and these containers have greater resistance to side wall bulge than eight-sided containers. However, round or cylindrical containers cannot be manufactured and shipped in a flattened condition and then erected by a user.
A container having sixteen sides is also known in the art, but this container is an open-ended tubular structure with separate end caps applied to close the ends. The use of separate end caps adds to the cost of the container, and in use the tubular structure may tend to “walk up” in the bottom cap, so that the cap is no longer fully seated on the end of the tubular structure and product can leak out of the container.
Accordingly, there is need for an inexpensive, one-piece, easy to use bulk container that has minimal side wall bulge and that may be manufactured and shipped in a flattened condition, and then easily set up by a user.
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention comprises a bulk container that has minimal side wall bulge, and that may be manufactured and shipped in a flattened condition to a user, and easily set up by the user.
More specifically, the bulk container of the invention has sixteen sides, thereby approximating a cylinder (right circular cylinder) in shape, and achieving the bulge resistance, or very nearly achieving the bulge resistance, of a cylindrical container. Construction of the container of the invention as a sixteen-sided container enables it to be manufactured and shipped in a flattened condition, in contrast to a truly cylindrical container, which must be manufactured and shipped in an erected, ready-to-use condition. Moreover, the container of the invention has integral bottom-forming flaps, thereby avoiding the necessity of using a separate end cap.
The container is made from a single unitary blank, and has four bottom flaps foldably connected to selected side walls. Locking tabs are formed on the free edges of a first set of opposed flaps for interlocking engagement with the free edges of a second set of opposed flaps to hold the flaps and thus the container in fully erected condition. The locking tabs are easily and quickly engaged simply by folding the flaps into operative folded position and then inserting the locking tabs between the opposed edges of the second set of flaps. At least one flap and adjacent side walls have self-aligning means which become engaged when the flaps are folded into their operative position to square up the container and hold it in position.
The blank has a generally elongate rectangular shape, with sixteen serially arrayed wall-forming panels foldably connected together at adjacent edges. A seventeenth panel is foldably connected to one end of the blank to serve as a glue panel to secure the blank in a flattened tubular position when the blank is folded upon itself and glued by the manufacturer. A bottom-forming flap is foldably connected to each fourth wall panel, and these wall panels form opposed side wall panels and opposed end wall panels in a container erected from the blank. The remaining wall panels form three diagonal wall panels between each pair of adjacent side and end wall panels. In a preferred construction, the side wall panels have a first width that is greater than the width of any of the remaining panels, and the end wall panels have a second width that is approximately 70% of the width of the side wall panels. First diagonal panels immediately adjacent each of the side and end wall panels are all of the same width and have a third width that is approximately 78% as wide as the side wall panels, and approximately 90% as wide as the end wall panels. Second diagonal panels, located between adjacent first diagonal panels, have a width that is approximately 50% as wide as the first diagonal panels. To produce a container having a symmetrical outside shape, one of the side wall panels is slightly wider than the opposite side wall panel, and one of the end wall panels is slightly wider than the opposite end wall panel, to accommodate the space taken by the glue panel, which, in the particular example shown and described herein, is glued inside the container.
Four bottom-forming flaps are foldably connected to respective side and end wall panels along one side edge of the blank, and include a pair of major bottom flap panels and a pair of minor bottom flap panels. In the particular example shown and described herein, the minor bottom flap panels are joined to the side wall panels, and the major bottom flap panels are joined to the end wall panels. The minor bottom flap panels each have a width greater than its associated side wall panel, and project at their opposite side edges approximately one-half the width of the adjacent first diagonal panels. The major bottom flap panels each have a width greater than its associated end wall panel, and project at their opposite side edges past the adjacent first diagonal panels, past the second diagonal panels, and approximately one-third the width of the first diagonal panels adjoining the side wall panels. Those portions of the major and minor bottom flap panels extending beyond the side edges of their associated side and end panels are separated from the diagonal panels by cuts extending collinear with the folded connections of the bottom flap panels.
The outer end edges of the major bottom flap panels, opposite their folded connection, are narrower than the folded edge, and an angled shoulder extends between the narrow outer end edge and adjacent side edges. The narrow end edge has a width adapted to fit closely between the folded connection of the minor bottom flap panels to their associated side wall in a container erected from the blank.
An aligning tab projects from the end of each first diagonal panel adjoining each end wall panel, and from the end of the second diagonal panels adjoining said first diagonal panels. A plurality of holes or slots are formed in each major bottom flap panel in positions to be aligned with the aligning tabs when a container is erected from the blank, and the aligning tabs extend into the holes to square up the container and hold it squared.
A plurality of cuts are made in the outer end edge of each minor bottom flap panel, opposite its folded edge, and form a T-shaped locking tab with laterally outwardly projecting arms that are adapted to flex when the locking tab is inserted between the confronting end edges of the major bottom flaps, and then spring back out behind the confronting end edges to lock the minor bottom flaps in inwardly folded position over the major bottom flaps, and thus hold the flaps in operative folded position in a container erected from the blank.
To erect a container, the flattened tubular construction as supplied by the manufacturer is expanded by the user to an open tubular configuration and inverted so that the bottom flaps are oriented upwardly. The major bottom flaps are then folded inwardly, so that the aligning tabs extend into the slots to square up the container. The minor bottom flaps are then folded inwardly, and the T-shaped locking tabs pressed downwardly so that the laterally outwardly projecting arms flex past the confronting edges of the major bottom flaps. Upon release of pressure on the locking tabs, the locking arms spring out behind the confronting edges of the major bottom flaps, locking the flaps in their inwardly folded operative position.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSThe foregoing, as well as other objects and advantages of the invention, will become apparent from the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference characters designate like parts throughout the several views, and wherein:
Referring more specifically to the drawings, a prior art sixteen-sided container is indicated generally at 10 in
A sixteen-sided container according to the invention is indicated generally at 20 in
The bottom flaps include a pair of opposed major bottom flaps 22 and 24 foldably connected to respective opposite end wall panels 28 and 29, and a pair of opposed minor bottom flaps 23 and 25 foldably connected to respective opposite side wall panels 26 and 27.
Aligning tabs 40 project from the ends of first diagonal wall panels 30 and 31 and adjacent second diagonal wall panels 32, and these tabs engage in slots or openings 41, 42 in the major bottom flaps to square up the container and hold it square.
T-shaped locking tabs 50 are formed in the free end edge of the minor bottom flaps 23 and 25, and have laterally outwardly projecting arms 51, 52 that flex when the locking tab is pressed through the space between the confronting edges of the major bottom flaps and then spring out behind the major bottom flaps to hold the tabs in locked position.
A blank B from which the container may be erected is shown in
Claims
1. A container, comprising:
- at least eight side walls;
- at least one bottom-forming flap that is connected to at least one side wall; and
- at least one locking tab formed on at least one free edge of at least one flap;
- wherein the side walls form a shape that is not a true cylinder; and at least one flap and its adjacent sidewall comprises a self-aligning means that become engaged when the flap is folded.
2. The container according to claim 1, wherein the container comprises:
- at least twelve side walls.
3. The container according to claim 1, wherein the container comprises:
- at least sixteen side walls.
4. The container according to claim 3, wherein the container comprises:
- a plurality of flaps that are each connected to at least one side wall.
5. The container according to claim 4, wherein each flap is connected to a different side wall.
6. The container according to claim 3, wherein the container comprises:
- a plurality of locking tabs.
7. The container according to claim 6, wherein the locking tabs are each connected to a different flap.
8. The container according to claim 7, wherein the locking tabs are interlockingly engaged with at least one free edge of an opposing flap.
9. The container according to claim 8, wherein the bottom-forming flaps are engaged to form a shape that is not a true circle.
10. The container according to claim 9, wherein the bottom-forming flaps are engaged to form a shape that approximates a true circle.
11. The container according to claim 9, wherein the shape of the engaged bottom-forming flaps approximates or is at least one member selected from the group consisting of a square, rectangle, triangle, parallelogram, rhombus, hexagon, octagon, heptagon, nonagon, and trapezoid.
12. The container according to claim 9, wherein the side walls form a shape that approximates a true cylinder.
Type: Application
Filed: Oct 3, 2005
Publication Date: Apr 13, 2006
Inventor: Tony Abshire (Broussard, LA)
Application Number: 11/242,252
International Classification: B65D 5/10 (20060101);