AU1861697A - Cosmetic dispenser - Google Patents

Cosmetic dispenser

Info

Publication number
AU1861697A
AU1861697A AU18616/97A AU1861697A AU1861697A AU 1861697 A AU1861697 A AU 1861697A AU 18616/97 A AU18616/97 A AU 18616/97A AU 1861697 A AU1861697 A AU 1861697A AU 1861697 A AU1861697 A AU 1861697A
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
dispenser
pump
cosmetics
nozzle
cosmetics dispenser
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
AU18616/97A
Other versions
AU709023B2 (en
Inventor
Cedric M. Borcherds
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Publication of AU1861697A publication Critical patent/AU1861697A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU709023B2 publication Critical patent/AU709023B2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47KSANITARY EQUIPMENT NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; TOILET ACCESSORIES
    • A47K5/00Holders or dispensers for soap, toothpaste, or the like
    • A47K5/06Dispensers for soap
    • A47K5/12Dispensers for soap for liquid or pasty soap
    • A47K5/1202Dispensers for soap for liquid or pasty soap dispensing dosed volume
    • A47K5/1204Dispensers for soap for liquid or pasty soap dispensing dosed volume by means of a rigid dispensing chamber and pistons
    • A47K5/1207Dispensing from the bottom of the dispenser with a vertical piston

Description

TITLE
COSMETIC DISPENSER
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a dispenser for dispensing
cosmetic substances.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Hotel rooms are typically supplied with various cosmetic
products such as body lotions, soaps, shampoos, etc. The cosmetics
are typically packaged within individual containers that are provided as
a complimentary item by the hotel proprietor. For sanitary reasons the
containers must be discarded when the seal is broken, even if a bottle
still contains lotion, shampoo, etc. The hotel supplies a new set of
cosmetic bottles after each room occupancy.
The discarded unused cosmetic products represents a waste
that increases the cost of operating the hotel. Additionally, the
separate bottles increase the cost of maintaining the rooms and the
waste storage space in general.
There has been marketed soap dispensers that are mounted to
the wall of hotel rooms. The dispensers typically have a pump which
ejects a volume of cosmetic product when a pump tip is depressed by
the hotel patron. The dispenser is replenished by removing a cover
and pouring the cosmetic product into a dispenser reservoir. Removing the cover and pouring the cosmetics can be a time
consuming operation, particularly when repeated in a number of rooms
within a hotel. The additional time required to fill the dispensers
increase labor cost and the operating expense of the hotel.
Additionally, the dispensers tips tend to accumulate dirt which must
be cleaned by the hotel personnel, further increasing the operating
expense.
Other types of prior art cosmetics dispensers include disposable
containers which overcome at least some of the shortcomings of the
aforementioned reservoir dispensers.
Generally speaking disposable container dispensers fall into two
categories - a rigid or semi rigid container connected to a separate
pump mechanism and a flexible container having a flexible neck which
forms part of the dispenser pump mechanism.
Typical prior art cosmetics dispensers are disclosed in patent
specifications GB 1434095, US 52731 86, US 48861 92, US
5242083, AU-A-81 740/91 , US 4778085, US 4324349 and DE
3333569 A1 .
GB 1434095 describes a cream soap dispenser with hollow
body which receives an inverted container having a screw threaded
neck which is received in a screw threaded socket in the base of the
housing. A displaceable plug is located in the neck of the container
and is displaced by a spike when the container is screwed into the socket thereby allowing liquid soap to flow into an internal soap
chamber in the base of the housing. The soap chamber is in fluid
communication with a lever actuated piston pump and nozzle
assembly formed integrally with the housing. The pump and nozzle
have separate check valves for filling the pump cylinder.
US 52731 86 describes a portable hand held dispenser for one
handed dispensing of controlled quantities of a concentrated liquid
detergent into a container of water to produce a diluted cleaning liquid
of predetermined strength. This apparatus comprises a body with a
rack and pinion operated piston pump and a removable cartridge
having a flexible pouch therein to contain concentrated detergent. The
body has a hollow needle connected to the pump to pierce a
membrane in an output nozzle of the cartridge.
US 48861 92 is concerned with a soap dispenser having a wall
mounted bracket with a lever and piston device to actuate a flexible
dispensing nozzle. The dispensing nozzle is connected to a tank which
may be filled directly with liquid soap or the tank may receive a
disposable cartridge. A plurality of ribs with cutting edges extend
upwardly from the base to pierce a sealed cap on the cartridge as it is
inserted to release liquid soap into the tank.
US 5242083 discloses a liquid dispensing system having a
housing which supports therein a disposable flexible pouch. A pivoted
actuating arm compresses a flexible peristaltic pumping tube formed integrally with the pouch. A mechanical check valve arrangement
coacts with the actuating arm to open a flat or "duck bill" nozzle at
the end of the tube and thereafter to create a suck back to prevent
drips.
AU-A-81 740/91 describes a similar system to that of US
5242083 except that the flexible peristaltic tube pump is formed as an
attachment to the flexible pouch. A mechanical check valve is
provided in the tip of the pump nozzle to avoid drainage of the pouch
contents. US 4778085 is directed to a peristaltic dispensing nozzle
connected to an exposed rigid or semi-rigid bottle supported on top of
a dispenser housing. The dispensing nozzle is screw threadably
connected to a threaded neck of the bottle.
US 432439 describes a liquid dispenser supported in an
inverted position by a screw threaded connection between the neck of
a flexible bottle and a socket in the top of a support base. An air
chamber is formed between a dispensing nozzle and the interior of the
bottle to avoid leakage after dispensing a quantity of liquid by
manually squeezing the flexible bottle.
DE 3333569 A1 discloses a liquid dispenser having a flexible
bottle squeezable between a projection on an actuator and a projection
on the interior wall of the dispenser housing. A two way check valve
system permits dispensing of liquid under actuator pressure by a first
check valve. A second check vale located within the first check valve v permits ingress of air to equalise pressures and both the first and
second check valves prevent leakage under gravitational pressure.
While most of the prior art systems are generally satisfactory for
their intended purpose, they all suffer from one or more
disadvantages.
It would be desirable to provide a cosmetic dispenser which is
more cost efficient and sanitary than dispensers of the prior art and
which is otherwise easier to refill and simpler and more reliable in use.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
According to one aspect of the invention there is provided a
cosmetics dispenser comprising:-
a housing having a base member and a cover member pivotally
attached thereto to define a hollow interior;
one or more cosmetic cartridges removable securable in an
inverted position within said hollow interior, said one or more cosmetic
cartridges each having a reciprocable piston pump sealingly engaged in
a neck of a respective cartridge, said pump in use being actuable by
depression of a hollow dispensing nozzle connected to a piston of said
pump.
Suitably said cover member and said base member are
releasably securable in a closed position by a latch member.
Preferably the latch member is hidden when the cover member is closed and an unobtrusive access is provided for release of said
latch member.
The one or more cartridges may be releasably securable in said
base member.
Alternatively the one or more cartridges may be releasably
securable in said cover member.
Suitably said one or more cartridges are secured in said housing
by resiliently deformable latch fingers associated with said housing.
Preferably said one or more cartridges are secured in said
housing by resiliently deformable spring latch fingers releasably
engagable with corresponding contours on a surface of said one or
more cartridges.
The dispenser may comprise a nozzle hood associated with a
respective nozzle, said nozzle hood being slidably engagable with said
housing.
The nozzle hood may be captively engaged with said housing
when said cover member is closed and releasable when said cover
member is open.
Suitably the nozzle hood includes a nozzle aperture in a lower
face to receivably locate a free end of a respective nozzle, said pump
in use being actuable by depression of said nozzle hood.
Preferably said nozzle hood includes a forwardly facing recess
surrounding said nozzle aperture to direct, in use, a cosmetics substance onto a user's fingers in the direction of the user's palm.
Preferably said one or more cartridges each include an air vent
located in a normally upper region thereof.
The air vent may include a removable sealing member.
The removable sealing member may be adhesively secured to a
respective cartridge.
The removable sealing member may comprise a hollow
protrusion extending outwardly of a wall of a respective cartridge.
Suitably the piston pump is integrally formed with a screw
threaded closure sealingly engagable with a screw threaded neck on a
respective cartridge.
If required the piston pump may comprise a cylindrical body
sealingly engagable with the neck of a respective cartridge.
Preferably the piston pump does not include operative air vents
communicating between a normally lower region of the pump body
and the interior of a respective cartridge.
Most preferably the piston pump is in fluid communication with
the interior of a respective cartridge only via a check valve located in a
normally upper portion of said pump body.
Suitably the piston pump comprises a conventional dispenser
pump for a top dispensing container said dispenser pump characterised
in that air vents provided in the pump body adjacent one end remote
from a check valve located at an opposite end are fluidically sealed. If required the air vents may be fluidically sealed by an
elastomeric seal located between the pump body and an interior wall
of a respective container.
Suitably the dispenser pump is further characterised by the
removal of a feeder tube spigot adjacent the check valve.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
The objects and advantages of the present invention will
become more readily apparent to those ordinarily skilled in the art after
reviewing the following detailed description and accompanying
drawings, wherein:
Figure 1 is a perspective view of a cosmetic dispenser of the
present invention;
Figure 2 is a front view of the dispenser with a cover rotated to
an open position;
Figure 3 is a cross-sectional side view taken at line 3-3 of Fig.1 ;
Figure 4 is a cross-sectional top view taken at line 4-4 of Fig. 1 ;
Figure 5 is an enlarged sectional view showing a latch of the
cover;
Figure 6 is an enlarged sectional view showing a pivot joint of
the cover.
Figure 7 is an enlarged cross-sectional side view of the
dispenser pump in a retracted position. Figure 8 is an enlarged cross-sectional side view of the
dispenser pump in an extended position.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Referring to the drawings more particularly by reference
numbers, Figure 1 shows a cosmetic dispenser 1 0 of the present
invention. The dispenser 10 is typically mounted to a wall 1 2, such as
a bathroom wall of a hotel or motel room. Although use within a hotel
room is described, it is to be understood that the dispenser 1 0 of the
present invention may be used in any structure. The dispenser 10
discharges a volume of a cosmetic substance 1 4 on the hand of an
end user. The cosmetic substance 14 may be a body lotion, shampoo,
soap or any other similar product. The dispenser 10 may contain three
separate outlets 1 6, 1 8 and 20 that eject three different cosmetic
substances such as a soap, a shampoo and a body lotion. Although
three separate outlets are shown and described, it is to be understood
that the dispenser 1 0 may have any number of outlets.
As shown in Figures 2-4, the dispenser 10 has a plurality of
cosmetic cartridges 22 located within an inner cavity 24 of a cabinet
26. Each cartridge 22 contains a cosmetic substance. The cartridges
22 are constructed from a transparent, or at least a translucent
plastics material which allows a user to see the amount of cosmetic
substance that is within the cartridge 22. Located at one end of each cartridge 22 is a pump 28 which is described in detail with reference
to Figures 7 and 8. The pump 28 has a tip 30 which discharges a
cosmetic substance when the tip 30 is depressed. Pump 28 does not
have breather ports so that cosmetics do not leak from the inverted
cartridge. The top of the cartridge 22 has a vent 6 that allows air to
flow therein as the liquid volume diminishes. Other than vent 6 the
cartridge is otherwise sealed to prevent the cosmetic substance from
spilling when the cartridge is being replaced. The cartridge 22,
cosmetic substance 1 4 and pump 28 are typically provided as a single
disposable unit.
The cartridges 22 are attached to the cabinet 26 by a plurality
of resilient latch fingers 32. The fingers 32 are deflected to apply a
biassing force that holds the cartridges 22 firmly in position. The
cosmetic cartridges 22 can be removed by merely pulling the
cartridges 22 away from the fingers 32. The resilient fingers 32
deflect to allow for the easy removal of the cartridges 22.
The nozzles 30 of cartridges 22 are supported in respective
hoods 34 slidably located adjacent the base of the cabinet 26. The
hoods 34 each have a shouldered opening 36 that allow the free ends
of nozzle 30 of the pumps 28 to extend therethrough and terminate
substantially flush with an outer wall surface 7 of hoods 34. A collar
9 surrounding each nozzle 30 engages against a shouldered projection
1 1 surrounding opening 36. The hoods 34 preferably have an outer collar 38 that is supported by lower lip features 40 and 42 of the
cabinet 26 when cover 48 is closed. Each hood 34 is slidably located
in the cabinet base 50 by a T-shaped tab 44 that slides along a
corresponding slot 46 of the base 50. A hood 34 can be removed
from the base 50 by sliding the tab 44 up and out of the slot 46. The
tabs 44 and slots 46 further support and align the hoods 34 within the
cabinet 26.
The cabinet 26 comprises an outer cover 48 that is pivotally
connected to a base 50. The base 50 typically has apertures (not
shown) that allow the cabinet 26 to be mounted to the wall 1 2 by
screws or the like or otherwise by strips of double sided adhesive
tape. The cover 48 can be rotated between closed position and an
open position to conceal and expose the cartridges 22, respectively.
As shown in Fig. 1 , the cover 48 has a plurality of discreet viewing
apertures 52 that allow a user to view the level of cosmetic substance
14 within each cartridge 22 as the cartridge nears depletion.
Figure 5 shows a latch 54 of the cover 38 that can be inserted
into a corresponding slot 56 of the cabinet 26 to secure the cover 48
in the closed position. The latch 54 has a resilient finger 58 which
can be deflected to allow the cover 48 to be rotated to the open
position. Finger 58 is accessible for release by inserting a small pin¬
like object via an unobtrusive aperture 5.
Figure 6 shows a pivot joint 60 for the cabinet 26. There are typically two cabinet pivot joints 60 in the dispenser 1 0. The cover
48 has a tab 62 that extends into a slot 64 of the base 48 and is
captured by two base fingers 66. The cabinet cover 48 is preferably
constructed from resilient plastics material which will deflect when the
cover 48 is rotated to the open position or over-rotated to disengage
cover 48 for removal.
For a cosmetic dispensing system employing disposable
cartridges to be commercially viable, it is essential that the cost of the
cartridge is kept to a minimum. Most of the prior art cosmetic
dispensers employ a specially designed or fabricated pump and nozzle
to suit a particular dispenser system. This adds substantially to cost.
In the present invention, it has been found surprisingly that with
suitable modifications a commonly available dispenser pump normally
employed with upright hand held dispensers can be used effectively in
an inverted position without leakage as might otherwise be expected.
Such dispenser pumps are normally employed with containers of
window or other surface cleaners and screw threadably engage with
the threaded neck of a glass or plastic bottle with the pump body
located in the neck of the bottle. The pump has a spray nozzle at its
upper end with one or more fine orifices to generate a fine mist.
The pump is actuated by downward thumb or finger pressure on
the top of the nozzle body to produce a mist spray at right angles to
the axial direction of reciprocating pump motion. The pump cylinder includes an inlet port at its lower end to which a flexible tube is
attached to provide a supply of non viscous liquid from the bottom of
the bottle.
To avoid the formation of a vacuum within the bottle as the
liquid level diminishes, vent ports are provided near the top of the
pump cylinder to allow ingress of air into an annular cavity between
the inside wall of the bottle neck and the outer wall of the pump body.
A check valve comprising a normally gravitationally seated metal
sphere prevents drainage of fluid from the feeder tube between pump
strokes or between uses to avoid the necessity of re-priming the pump
each time.
When such a spray container is inverted however, the check
valve is unseated allowing liquid to flow into the pump chamber from
the feeder tube as well as via the vent ports. Liquid collecting in the
pump chamber on the upper side of the pump piston then leaks from
the container via the piston rod aperture in the valve cap.
While at first blush, there would be no reason to contemplate
the use of such a pump system in an inverted dispenser of viscous
cosmetic liquids, the present invention demonstrates the manner in
which such a readily available and inexpensive "off-the-shelf" system
can be so employed.
Figures 7 and 8 show a dispensing pump system according to
the invention in a retracted dispensing position and an extended rest position.
In FIG 7, the dispenser pump 70 is frictionally engaged within
the neck of cartridge 22 and is retained therein by screw threaded
engagement between cap 71 and the threaded end 72 of cartridge 22.
A fluid tight seal is effected between pump 70 and cap 71 by
the tight frictional engagement between the outer wall 73 of pump
body 74 and the inner wall surface of cartridge neck 75. The lower
region 76 has a tight frictional engagement with a mounting flange 77
integrally formed with cap 71 and a resilient rubber band 78 encircling
air vents 79 is compressed between wall 73 of pump body 74 and the
inner wall surface of cartridge neck 75.
It can be seen therefore that there is a tight fluidic seal between
the interior of cartridge 22 and pump body 74 which prevents any
leakage of liquid from the pump to when in an inverted position.
Pump 70 comprises a double acting piston 80 of a soft resilient
plastics material with an upwardly extending flange 81 and a
downwardly extending flange 82. Dispensing nozzle 30 is slidably
supported in base 82 of pump 70 and includes a hollow tubular
portion 83 with inlet ports 84 at the upper end of the tubular portion
83. On the upper end of tubular portion 83 is a tapered head 85
which located one end of a helical coil spring 86, the upper end of
which abuts against a shoulder 87 in inlet nozzle 88.
A check valve in the form of a spherical steel ball 89 is located for free movement in a chamber 90 having a tapered inlet orifice 91 .
The conventional dispenser pump 70 is further modified by removal of
flange 92 (shown in phantom) which normally locates a feeder tube
employed in a conventional top mounted pump dispenser bottle.
Similarly the spray nozzle (not shown) is removed from its frictional
engagement with the free end of nozzle 30, collar 9 acting in use to
support the spray nozzle and also to act as a limiter for the stroke of
the pump to avoid damage to piston 80.
At the base of tapered head 85 is a flange 93, the upper
shoulder of which supports coil spring 86 and the lower edge 94 of
which forms a fluidic seal with the inner wall 95 of a frusto conical
aperture 96 in piston 80.
A narrow cylindrical neck 97 is formed in the region of inlet
ports 84 between the lower edge 94 of flange 93 and a shouldered
abutment 98 formed on tubular portion 83.
As can be seen from Figures 7 and 8, piston 80 is supported on
shouldered abutment 98 during an upward dispensing stroke by a
shouldered projection 99 at the base of frusto conical aperture 96.
During an upward dispensing stroke, inlet ports 84 are exposed
and check valve 89 moves to a closed position thus forcing liquid into
inlet ports 84 via tubular portion 83 to nozzle 30.
As upward pressure on nozzle 30 is released, the biassing
influence of spring 86 moves tubular portion downwardly. As the frictional engagement of the piston 80 with the inner wall of pump 70
is greater than the frictional engagement between cylindrical neck 97
and frusto conical aperture 96, a limited amount of lost motion occurs
between piston 80 and tubular portion 83.
As the lower edge 94 of flange 93 engages against the inner
wall 95 of frusto conical aperture 96, inlet ports 84 are thus fluidically
sealed from the inner region of pump 70 on the upper side of piston
80 and piston 80 moves to the position shown in Figure 8 under the
biassing influence of spring 86 acting on tubular portion 83.
As piston 80 begins to move downwardly, reduced pressure
within the pump 70 above the piston 80 causes check valve 89 to
open and the liquid cosmetic substance in the cartridge 22 enters the
pump body. Air compressed on the lower side of piston 80 is expelled
via a slight clearance between tubular portion 83 and pump base 82
without any leakage of cosmetic substance which would otherwise
occur if air vents 79 were not sealed.
When the piston reaches a rest position as shown in Figure 8 a
lower flange 100 locates in a recessed socket 101 which limits the
travel of piston 80 and supports it against the pressure of spring 84
urging the sealing engagement between the lower edge 94 of flange
93 and the frusto conical wall 95 of central piston aperture 96.
In the unlikely event of a breach, in the rest position, of the
primary seal between edge 94 and wall 95, the inlet ports 84 are located above a secondary seal between the lower edge of wall 95
and cylindrical neck 97 whereby any leakage will flow to nozzle 30
rather than into the lower region of the pump body.
It will be readily apparent to a person skilled in the art that with
appropriate modifications as described, a commonly available and
inexpensive dispensing pump, otherwise quite unsuitable for use in an
inverted position with a viscous cosmetic liquid, surprisingly can
provide a reliable dispensing system with superior sealing against
leakage.
In operation, a user presses upwardly on hoods 34 to discharge
a finite volume of cosmetic substance onto the user's hand. As
shown in Fig. 2, the hoods 34 each have a forwardly directed recess
68 surrounding the free end of- a respective nozzle 30 to direct the
substance gently to the user's hand toward the palm region without
splash or splatter thereby maintaining the nozzles 30 and hoods 34
free from contamination. Hotel personnel can periodically inspect the
dispenser 30 via the apertures 32 to determine the level of cosmetic
substance 1 4 within each cartridge 22. When the level of a cosmetic
substance has fallen below the aperture 52, the dispenser can be
replenished by opening the cover 48, pulling the depleted cartridge 22
out to the cabinet 26, and snapping a new full cartridge 22 back into
the finger 32.
Cartridges 22 include a removable seal (not shown) for air vent 6 to prevent spillage or leakage during filling, transportation and
storage of filled cartridges. Typically the seal may comprise a
removable adhesive tape or a frangible protrusion formed during a
blow moulding process. Preferably the seal is formed by a small thin
walled nipple which may be cut or torn from the cartridge when it has
been inverted. The air vent makes such a cartridge difficult to refill via
the cartridge filler neck due to leakage in the upright position or via the
small air vent aperture due to the viscosity of the cosmetic liquids.
Sanitation standards are thus maintained by reducing the temptation
to try to refill the otherwise disposable container. Similarly there is no
temptation to steal the cartridge due to the risk of leakage from the air
vent 6. The hood 34 may also be removed, cleaned and re-attached
to the cabinet 26 if required. The dispenser 10 of the present
invention provides a sanitary and cost efficient means for dispensing
cosmetic substances.
Similarly, while certain preferred embodiments have been
described with reference to the accompanying drawings, it should be
understood that many modifications or variations may be made to the
invention without departing from the spirit and scope thereof .
For example, instead of locating the cartridges 22 and their
attendant nozzle hoods 34 in the base 50 of cabinet 10, the cartridges
and hoods may be mounted in the pivotal cover 48.

Claims (22)

1 . A cosmetics dispenser comprising:-
a housing having a base member and a cover member pivotally
attached thereto to define a hollow interior;
one or more cosmetic cartridges removable securable in an
inverted position within said hollow interior, said one or more cosmetic
cartridges each having a reciprocable piston pump sealingly engaged in
a neck of a respective cartridge, said pump in use being actuable by
depression of a hollow dispensing nozzle connected to a piston of said
pump.
2. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in claim 1 wherein said cover
member and said base member are releasably securable in a closed
position by a latch member.
3. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in claim 2 wherein the latch
member is hidden when the cover member is closed and an
unobtrusive access is provided for release of said latch member.
4. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in any one of claims 1 -3
wherein said one or more cartridges may be releasably securable in
said base member.
5. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in any one of claims 1 -3
wherein one or more cartridges may be releasably securable in said
cover member.
6. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in any one of claims 1 -5 wherein said one or more cartridges are secured in said housing by
resiliently deformable latch fingers associated with said housing.
7. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in claim 6 wherein said one or
more cartridges are secured in said housing by resiliently deformable
spring latch fingers releasably engagable with corresponding contours
on a surface of said one or more cartridges.
8. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in any preceding claim
wherein the dispenser comprises a nozzle hood associated with a
respective nozzle, said nozzle hood being slidably engagable with said
housing.
9. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in claim 8 wherein the nozzle
hood is captively engaged with said housing when said cover member
is closed and releasable when said cover member is open.
1 0. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in claim 8 or claim 9 wherein
the nozzle hood includes a nozzle aperture in a lower face to receivably
locate a free end of a respective nozzle, said pump in use being
actuable by depression of said nozzle hood.
1 1 . A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in any one of claims 8-10
wherein said nozzle hood includes a forwardly facing recess
surrounding said nozzle aperture to direct, in use, a cosmetics
substance onto a user's fingers in the direction of the user's palm.
1 2. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in any preceding claim
wherein said one or more cartridges each include an air vent located in a normally upper region thereof.
1 3. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in claim 1 2 wherein the air
vent includes a removable sealing member.
14. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in claim 1 3 wherein the
removable sealing member is adhesively secured to a respective
cartridge.
1 5. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in claim 1 2 or claim 1 3
wherein the removable sealing member comprises a hollow protrusion
extending outwardly of a wall of a respective cartridge.
1 6. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in any preceding claim
wherein the piston pump is integrally formed with a screw threaded
closure sealingly engagable with a screw threaded neck on a
respective cartridge.
1 7. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in any preceding claim
wherein the piston pump comprises a cylindrical body sealingly
engagable with the neck of a respective cartridge.
1 8. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in any preceding claim
wherein the piston pump does not include operative air vents
communicating between a normally lower region of the pump body
and the interior of a respective cartridge.
1 9. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in any preceding claim
wherein the piston pump is in fluid communication with the interior of
a respective cartridge only via a check valve located in a normally upper portion of said pump body.
20. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in any preceding claim
wherein the piston pump comprises a conventional dispenser pump for
a top dispensing container said dispenser pump characterised in that
air vents provided in the pump body adjacent one end remote from a
check valve located at an opposite end are fluidically sealed.
21 . A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in claim 20 wherein the air
vents are fluidically sealed by an elastomeric seal located between the
pump body and an interior wall of a respective container.
22. A cosmetics dispenser as claimed in claim 21 wherein the
dispenser pump is further characterised by the removal of a feeder
tube spigot adjacent the check valve.
AU18616/97A 1996-02-28 1997-02-27 Cosmetic dispenser Ceased AU709023B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US60811296A 1996-02-28 1996-02-28
US08/608112 1996-02-28
PCT/AU1997/000119 WO1997031563A1 (en) 1996-02-28 1997-02-27 Cosmetic dispenser

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU1861697A true AU1861697A (en) 1997-09-16
AU709023B2 AU709023B2 (en) 1999-08-19

Family

ID=24435080

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU18616/97A Ceased AU709023B2 (en) 1996-02-28 1997-02-27 Cosmetic dispenser

Country Status (4)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0828450A4 (en)
AU (1) AU709023B2 (en)
TW (1) TW366918U (en)
WO (1) WO1997031563A1 (en)

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KR100808102B1 (en) 2006-08-23 2008-03-07 김용선 Fixing of liquid phase cleaning case
WO2011133077A1 (en) 2010-04-22 2011-10-27 Sca Hygiene Products Ab Pump soap dispenser

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Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU709023B2 (en) 1999-08-19
WO1997031563A1 (en) 1997-09-04
TW366918U (en) 1999-08-11
EP0828450A1 (en) 1998-03-18
EP0828450A4 (en) 2000-07-12

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