Bottle neck with internal embossments and method of manufacture

A bottle of one-piece integrally formed construction has a body with a closed base and a shoulder at an end of the body remote from the base, and a neck extending from the shoulder along an axis and terminating in a neck finish for attachment of a closure. The bottle neck includes at least one internal embossment for affecting flow of liquid from the body through the neck. In exemplary embodiments of the disclosure, the at least one internal embossment includes at least one internal annular rib or at least one internal rib coplanar with the neck axis or at least one internal spiral rib or at least one internal elliptical rib.

Skip to: Description  ·  Claims  ·  References Cited  · Patent History  ·  Patent History
Description

The present disclosure relates to manufacture of longneck bottles having at least one internal embossment on the bottle neck for affecting flow of fluid during dispensing through the bottle neck.

BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY OF THE DISCLOSURE

Longneck bottles are popular in the beverage packaging industry, particularly for packaging beer. A general object of the present disclosure is to provide a longneck bottle having at least one internal embossment in the bottle neck for affecting flow of fluid during dispensing through the bottle neck.

The present disclosure embodies a number of aspects that can be implemented separately from or in combination with each other.

A bottle of one-piece integrally formed construction, in accordance with one aspect of the present disclosure, has a body with a closed base and a shoulder at an end of the body remote from the base, and a neck extending from the shoulder along an axis and terminating in a neck finish for attachment of a closure. The bottle neck includes at least one internal embossment for affecting flow of liquid from the body through the neck. In exemplary embodiments of the disclosure, the at least one internal embossment includes at least one internal annular rib or at least one internal rib coplanar with the neck axis or at least one internal spiral rib or at least one internal elliptical rib.

A method of making a bottle, in accordance with another aspect of the present disclosure, includes forming a parison or preform and blowing the parison into a bottle. During formation of the parison and/or blowing of the parison into a bottle, at least one internal rib is formed on the neck of the bottle. The at least one internal rib may be formed by forming an external rib on the neck during the parison-forming operation and pushing the external rib into the neck during the blowing operation. In another exemplary embodiment, the at least one internal rib is formed by forming at least one external channel in the neck and a corresponding internal rib in the neck during the parison forming and/or the bottle blowing operation.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The disclosure, together with additional objects, features, advantages and aspects thereof, will best be understood from the following description, the appended claims and the accompanying drawings, in which:

FIG. 1 is an elevational view of a longneck bottle in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIGS. 2, 3 and 4 are sectional views taken substantially along the respective lines 2-2, 3-3 and 4-4 in FIG. 1;

FIG. 5 is an elevational view of a longneck bottle in accordance with another exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIGS. 6, 7 and 8 are sectional views taken substantially along the respective lines 6-6, 7-7 and 8-8 in FIG. 5;

FIG. 9 is an elevational view of a longneck bottle in accordance with a third exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIGS. 10, 11 and 12 are sectional views taken substantially along the respective lines 10-10, 11-11 and 12-12 in FIG. 9;

FIG. 13 is an elevational view of a longneck bottle in accordance with a fourth exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure;

FIGS. 14, 15 and 16 are sectional views taken substantially along the respective lines 14-14, 15-15 and 16-16 in FIG. 13; and

FIGS. 17 and 18 are elevational views of longneck bottles in accordance with respective further exemplary embodiments of the disclosure.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

FIG. 1 illustrates a longneck bottle 20 in accordance with one exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure as including a bottle body 22 having a closed base 24 and a shoulder 26, and a bottle neck 28 extending along an axis 29 from shoulder 26 to a bottle mouth 30 (FIGS. 2 and 3). Neck 28 terminates in a neck finish 32 contoured for attachment of a desired closure. Bottle 20 has an overall height 34, and neck 28 (including neck finish 32) has a height 36. For purposes of the present disclosure, the term “longneck bottle” is defined as a bottle in which the height 36 of the bottle neck is at least 25% of the overall bottle height 34. In exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, neck height 36 is in the range of 33% to 40% of bottle height 34.

Longneck bottle 20 is of one-piece integrally formed construction, preferably glass or metal construction. (The term “integrally formed construction” does not exclude one-piece integrally molded layered glass constructions of the type disclosed for example in U.S. Pat. No. 4,740,401, or one-piece glass or metal bottles to which other structure is added after the bottle-forming operation.) Longneck glass bottles can be fabricated in a press-and-blow manufacturing operation. A molten glass charge or gob is placed in a blank mold and a plunger is moved into the blank mold to form the molten glass gob against the inside surfaces of the blank mold. The glass preform or parison is then removed from the blank mold and placed in a blow mold, in which the parison body and a major portion of the neck are stretched by blow gas (usually air) against the internal surfaces of the blow mold while the neck finish remains in the geometry formed in the blank mold. Longneck glass bottles also can be formed in a blow-and-blow manufacturing operation. Longneck metal bottles can be formed by any suitable technique.

In accordance with the present disclosure, at least one internal feature or embossment is formed on bottle neck 28 for affecting flow of liquid through the bottle neck during dispensing. In the embodiment of FIGS. 1-4, such internal feature or embossment takes the form of a plurality of internal ribs 40 that spiral around axis 29, which preferably is coaxial with body 22 and forms the central axis of the bottle. Spiral ribs 40 preferably are substantially identical and at uniform angular spacing from each other. As liquid product, such as beer, soda or other beverage, is dispensed from bottle 22, spiral internal ribs 40 impart a swirling action to the liquid.

FIGS. 5-8 illustrate a longneck bottle 42 in accordance with a second exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure. Elements in bottle 42 (and in the bottles of FIGS. 9-17) that are the same or substantially the same as elements in bottle 20 of FIGS. 1-4 are indicated by correspondingly identical reference numerals. In bottle 42, the internal embossments or ribs on bottle neck 43 take the form of closed elliptical ribs 44. Each elliptical rib 44 preferably is disposed in a plane at an angle to axis 29. There are three elliptical ribs 44 in the exemplary embodiment of FIGS. 5-8. Elliptical ribs 44 preferably are in spaced parallel planes at an angle to the axis 29 of the bottle. As liquid beverage is dispensed from bottle 42, passage over ribs 44 tends to agitate the liquid and release gas from the liquid helping to form a head in beer, or to aerate wine for example.

FIGS. 9-11 illustrate a longneck bottle 46 in which the internal embossments on neck 48 take the form of angularly spaced longitudinal ribs 50. Each rib 50 is coplanar with axis 29. In the example of FIGS. 9-12 in which neck 48 is substantially conical, each rib 50 is linear and at an angle to axis 29. If neck 48 were of the “bulged” configuration of FIG. 13, longitudinal ribs 50 would be curved but still coplanar with axis 29. Ribs 50 extend in the direction of the bottle neck—i.e., ribs 50 are not angled to the direction of product flow through the bottle neck. Ribs 50 thus tend to channel product flow and to reduce agitation of product during dispensing.

FIGS. 13-16 illustrate a longneck bottle 52 in accordance with a fourth exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure. Bottle 52 has a neck 54 that is of exemplary bulged geometry, as compared with the more conical geometries of bottle necks 28, 43 and 48 in FIGS. 1-12. The internal embossments in bottle 52 include at least one annular internal rib 56 disposed in a plane perpendicular to the longitudinal axis 29 of neck 54. In the example of FIGS. 13-16, there are a pair of axially spaced internal ribs 56 in parallel planes on the inside surface of neck 54. Ribs 56 tend to agitate product as the product is dispensed through the bottle neck, releasing gas and tending to form a head in beer for example.

FIG. 17 illustrates a longneck wine bottle 60 having a body 62 and a neck 64 with a cork-type finish 66. Spiral ribs 68 are formed on the inside surface of neck 64. FIG. 17 also illustrates that the internal embossments in the bottle neck are not necessarily confined to the neck but can extend into the body 62 of the bottle.

A longneck bottle may be made by forming a preform or parison, such as in a plunger-type pressing operation although a blowing operation could be employed. The parison is then moved from the parison or blank mold to a blow mold in which the bottle neck and body are formed in a blowing operation. The bottle neck finish 32 or 66 typically is formed to final geometry in the parison-forming operation, while the bottle neck and the bottle body are reformed in the blowing operation. The exemplary embodiments illustrated in the drawings include screw thread-type neck finishes 32 for attachment of threaded closures. However, the neck finish could be of any suitable geometry, such as a crown finish geometry for crimp-attachment of a bottle cap or a cork-type finish 66.

The internal embossments on the bottle neck that characterize the present disclosure could be formed in any suitable operation. In one exemplary implementation of the present disclosure, the internal neck embossments are formed in accordance with the disclosure of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/904,437 filed Sep. 27, 2007, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. Briefly stated, the blank mold body has an internal surface with at least one debossment or pocket of predetermined geometry (a rib-shaped geometry in the present disclosure) corresponding to the geometry of the desired internal embossment on the bottle neck. The neck portion of the parison is pushed against the internal surface of the blank mold body forming at least one external embossment on the neck portion of the parison corresponding to the at least one internal debossment on the mold body internal surface. When the parison subsequently is blown against the internal surface of the blow mold, the external embossment on the parison neck is effectively pushed through the wall of the neck to form at least one internal embossment corresponding to the external embossment on the parison. Forming at least one internal embossment, preferably but not necessarily rib-shaped on the bottle neck in accordance with the present disclosure, does not preclude also forming internal functional and/or ornamental embossments on the bottle body.

As an alternative method of manufacture illustrated in FIG. 18, the at least one internal embossment on the bottle neck 70 in accordance with the present disclosure could be made by forming at least one external channel 72 on the bottle neck and a corresponding internal rib 74 on the neck during the parison-forming or the operation in which a bottle is blown from the parison. If the external channel and corresponding internal rib are formed during the parison-forming operation, the external channel will tend to disappear during the bottle blowing operation.

As clearly shown in FIGS. 2-4, the spiral rib embossments or features in the embodiment of FIGS. 1-4 extend inwardly from an inside surface of the bottle neck. The inner edges of these ribs are rounded. The same is true of the embodiment of FIGS. 5-8, embodiment of FIGS. 9-12, the embodiment of FIGS. 13-16 and the embodiment of FIGS. 17-18. As also clearly shown in FIGS. 1-4, the spiral rib embossments or features in this embodiment are disposed around neck 28 well below the inside surface of finish 32 and where the neck widens between finish 32 and shoulder 26. The same is true in the other embodiments.

In summary, a longneck bottle in accordance with the present disclosure is of one-piece integrally formed construction and has a neck that is at least 25% of the overall height or length of the bottle, preferably at least 33% to 40% of the overall bottle length. The bottle neck has at least one internal embossment for affecting flow of liquid through the bottle neck during dispensing. In the several exemplary embodiments of the disclosure, such internal embossments include spiral ribs (FIGS. 1-4 and 17) for imparting a swirling action to the liquid during dispensing, longitudinal ribs (FIGS. 9-12) for retarding swirling action during dispensing, and elliptical ribs (FIGS. 5-8) or annular ribs (FIGS. 13-16) for agitating the liquid during dispensing.

There thus have been disclosed a longneck bottle and method of manufacture that fully satisfy all of the objects and aims previously set forth. The bottle and method of manufacture have been disclosed in conjunction with several exemplary embodiments, and additional modifications and variations have been discussed. Other modifications and variations readily will suggest themselves to persons of ordinary skill in the art in view of the foregoing description. The disclosure is intended to embrace all such modifications and variations as fall within the spirit and broad scope of the appended claims.

Claims

1. A method of making a glass longneck bottle having a body with a closed base and a shoulder at an end of said body remote from said base, and a neck extending from said shoulder along an axis and terminating in a neck finish for attachment of a closure, wherein said neck widens between said neck finish and said shoulder, said method including the steps of:

(a) forming a parison,
(b) blowing said parison into a glass longneck bottle of one-piece integrally formed construction, and
(c) during said step (a) and/or said step (b), forming at least one internal rib on said neck,
wherein said step (c) includes:
(c1) forming at least one external rib on said neck during said step (a), and
(c2) pushing said at least one external rib into said neck during said step (b); or
(c3) forming at least one external channel in said neck and a corresponding internal rib on said neck,
wherein said step (c) further includes forming said at least one internal rib to be disposed entirely within said neck where said neck widens and at positions spaced from an internal surface of said finish and not extending into said shoulder.

2. The method set forth in claim 1 wherein said at least one internal rib formed in step (c) includes at least one spiral rib around said axis, or at least one elliptical rib in a plane at an angle to said axis, or at least one longitudinal rib coplanar with said axis, or at least one annular rib in a plane perpendicular to said axis.

3. The method set forth in claim 1 wherein said at least one internal rib is integrally formed with and extends inwardly from an inside surface of said neck.

4. The method set forth in claim 1 wherein said at least one internal rib comprises one or more spiral ribs.

5. The method set forth in claim 1 wherein said at least one internal rib is spiral.

6. The method set forth in claim 1 wherein said at least one internal rib is elliptical.

7. The method set forth in claim 1 wherein said at least one internal rib is circular.

8. The method set forth in claim 1 wherein said at least one internal rib is longitudinal.

9. A method of making a glass longneck bottle having a body with a closed base and a shoulder at an end of said body remote from said base, and a neck extending from said shoulder along an axis and terminating in a neck finish for attachment of a closure, wherein said neck widens between said neck finish and said shoulder, said method including the steps of:

(a) forming a parison,
(b) blowing said parison into a glass longneck bottle of one-piece integrally formed construction, and
(c) during said step (a) and/or said step (b), forming at least one internal rib on said neck,
wherein said step (c) includes: (c1) forming at least one external rib on said neck during said step (a), and (c2) pushing said at least one external rib into said neck during said step (b),
wherein said step (c) further includes forming said at least one internal rib to be disposed entirely within said neck where said neck widens and at positions spaced from an internal surface of said finish and not extending into said shoulder.

10. The method set forth in claim 9 wherein said at least one internal rib is integrally formed with and extends inwardly from an inside surface of said neck.

11. A method of making a glass longneck bottle having a body with a closed base and a shoulder at an end of said body remote from said base, and a neck extending from said shoulder along an axis and terminating in a neck finish for attachment of a closure, wherein said neck widens between said neck finish and said shoulder, said method including the steps of:

(a) forming a parison,
(b) blowing said parison into a glass longneck bottle of one-piece integrally formed construction, and
(c) during said step (a) and/or said step (b), forming at least one internal rib on said neck, by forming at least one external channel in said neck and a corresponding internal rib on said neck,
wherein said step (c) further includes forming said at least one internal rib to be disposed entirely within said neck where said neck widens and at positions spaced from an internal surface of said finish and not extending into said shoulder.
Referenced Cited
U.S. Patent Documents
482682 September 1892 Heartfield
D36781 February 1904 Blower
763973 July 1904 Flynn
868914 October 1907 Dawson
1024894 April 1912 Heinemann
1654365 December 1927 Emerick
1832806 November 1931 Dawson
2006041 June 1935 Darling
2026304 December 1935 Deady
2064042 December 1936 Von Till
2321314 June 1943 Pelzer
D155868 December 1948 Braun
2609955 September 1952 Moore
3468648 September 1969 Nowak
3792988 February 1974 Nowak et al.
3837535 September 1974 Gerk
3944104 March 16, 1976 Watson et al.
3956441 May 11, 1976 Uhlig
4105428 August 8, 1978 Adams
4170622 October 9, 1979 Uhlig
4852751 August 1, 1989 Halfacre
5607076 March 4, 1997 Anthony
5687862 November 18, 1997 Barbier et al.
D406065 February 23, 1999 Cheng
5947310 September 7, 1999 Wagner
6102225 August 15, 2000 Lynn
6216897 April 17, 2001 Wagner
6405887 June 18, 2002 Cargile
7063221 June 20, 2006 Garcia-Cuenca et al.
7798357 September 21, 2010 Hanafusa et al.
20030019830 January 30, 2003 Garcia-Cuenca et al.
20030168372 September 11, 2003 Headen et al.
20040182047 September 23, 2004 Thierjung et al.
20070125720 June 7, 2007 Stecca
20070267422 November 22, 2007 Barducci
20080290101 November 27, 2008 Stecca
20090084799 April 2, 2009 Mondon
20100270260 October 28, 2010 Jung
20120031915 February 9, 2012 Hewison
Foreign Patent Documents
13034 April 1880 DE
2459469 November 1975 DE
0027780 April 1981 EP
27780 January 1985 EP
0909711 April 1999 EP
0667300 June 1999 EP
331391 April 1903 FR
920663 April 1947 FR
1246454 January 1960 FR
2795714 January 2001 FR
2881421 August 2006 FR
360145918 August 1985 JP
2001322161 November 2001 JP
20078536 January 2007 JP
200255577 December 2001 KR
100906227 July 2009 KR
100916631 September 2009 KR
9212901 August 1992 WO
0158777 August 2001 WO
2004085257 October 2004 WO
2005120306 December 2005 WO
2010064749 June 2010 WO
Other references
  • FR2795714 machine translation performed by EPO website Sep. 1, 2015.
  • Dictionary.com—Definition of Parison printed Sep. 1, 2015.
  • English Translation of FR2795714 Performed by FLS, Inc. Sep. 2015.
  • “What's New in Glass Might Surprise You” by Lisa McTigue Pierce Food & Drug Packaging Oct. 2006.
  • Chinese First Office Action Dated: May 20, 2013 Agent: China Patent Agent (H.K.) Ltd. Patent App. No. 200980158896.3 App Date: Sep. 17, 2009 Title: Bottle Neck with Internal Embossments and Method Manufacture.
Patent History
Patent number: 9339967
Type: Grant
Filed: Oct 22, 2013
Date of Patent: May 17, 2016
Patent Publication Number: 20140042672
Assignee: Owens-Brockway Glass Container Inc. (Perrysburg, OH)
Inventors: Michael J. Lonsway (Toledo, OH), Bruce A. Becker (Perryburg, OH), Vincent J. Bailey (Perrysburg, OH)
Primary Examiner: Lisa Herring
Application Number: 14/059,912
Classifications
Current U.S. Class: Contoured Sidewall (e.g., Curved, Corrugated, Ribbed, Variable Thickness, Etc.) (215/382)
International Classification: C03B 9/325 (20060101); B29C 49/02 (20060101); B65D 1/02 (20060101);