AU708800B2 - Method and apparatus for the manufacture of packets - Google Patents

Method and apparatus for the manufacture of packets Download PDF

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Publication number
AU708800B2
AU708800B2 AU63709/98A AU6370998A AU708800B2 AU 708800 B2 AU708800 B2 AU 708800B2 AU 63709/98 A AU63709/98 A AU 63709/98A AU 6370998 A AU6370998 A AU 6370998A AU 708800 B2 AU708800 B2 AU 708800B2
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AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
thread
loops
packets
webs
web
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.)
Ceased
Application number
AU63709/98A
Other versions
AU6370998A (en
Inventor
Michael John Cahill
Gregory William Vernon
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.)
Unilever PLC
Original Assignee
Unilever PLC
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
Priority claimed from GB9406833A external-priority patent/GB9406833D0/en
Application filed by Unilever PLC filed Critical Unilever PLC
Priority to AU63709/98A priority Critical patent/AU708800B2/en
Publication of AU6370998A publication Critical patent/AU6370998A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU708800B2 publication Critical patent/AU708800B2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65DCONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
    • B65D85/00Containers, packaging elements or packages, specially adapted for particular articles or materials
    • B65D85/70Containers, packaging elements or packages, specially adapted for particular articles or materials for materials not otherwise provided for
    • B65D85/804Disposable containers or packages with contents which are mixed, infused or dissolved in situ, i.e. without having been previously removed from the package
    • B65D85/808Disposable containers or packages with contents which are mixed, infused or dissolved in situ, i.e. without having been previously removed from the package for immersion in the liquid to release part or all of their contents, e.g. tea bags
    • B65D85/812Disposable containers or packages with contents which are mixed, infused or dissolved in situ, i.e. without having been previously removed from the package for immersion in the liquid to release part or all of their contents, e.g. tea bags with features facilitating their manipulation or suspension
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65BMACHINES, APPARATUS OR DEVICES FOR, OR METHODS OF, PACKAGING ARTICLES OR MATERIALS; UNPACKING
    • B65B29/00Packaging of materials presenting special problems
    • B65B29/02Packaging of substances, e.g. tea, which are intended to be infused in the package
    • B65B29/04Attaching, or forming and attaching, string handles or tags to tea bags
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65DCONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
    • B65D85/00Containers, packaging elements or packages, specially adapted for particular articles or materials
    • B65D85/70Containers, packaging elements or packages, specially adapted for particular articles or materials for materials not otherwise provided for
    • B65D85/804Disposable containers or packages with contents which are mixed, infused or dissolved in situ, i.e. without having been previously removed from the package
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65DCONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
    • B65D85/00Containers, packaging elements or packages, specially adapted for particular articles or materials
    • B65D85/70Containers, packaging elements or packages, specially adapted for particular articles or materials for materials not otherwise provided for
    • B65D85/804Disposable containers or packages with contents which are mixed, infused or dissolved in situ, i.e. without having been previously removed from the package
    • B65D85/808Disposable containers or packages with contents which are mixed, infused or dissolved in situ, i.e. without having been previously removed from the package for immersion in the liquid to release part or all of their contents, e.g. tea bags

Description

1 METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR THE MANUFACTURE OF PACKETS This invention relates to packets in which a quantity of infusible material is held in a porous envelope which can be immersed in water to prepare an infusion and the packet can be contracted by a drawstring to enhance the extraction of infused liquid. It is concerned in particular with a method of producing such packets and with apparatus for producing the packets.
When an infusion is prepared using such a packet a quantity of infused liquid is retained in the packet, usually both by the infusible material and by the material of the packet envelope, and mechanical means have been proposed for extracting at least some of that liquid by applying pressure to the packet. In particular, it has been proposed as a convenient and hygienic solution to provide the packet with draw strings which can be manipulated to contract the packet.
Examples of such packets are disclosed in US 3539355, 3237550, 2881910 and 2466281.
**According to one aspect of the present invention, a method is provided of producing infusion packets containing doses of infusible material, in which e* S a thread forming a pattern comprising a longitudinally spaced series of loops has said loops enclosed between opposed heat-sealable packet walls of porous material, portions of the thread between said loops projecting from the packets to provide a means for contracting said loops when in use, said walls being secured together to form enclosed packages by heat-sealing the edges of said packets, each packet edge seal having a first region securing an intermediate portion of the loop, in the production of packets, the looped thread being placed against one of a pair of webs of said porous material and a second of said webs being placed against the first web with the thread loops between the webs before the edges of the webs are heat-sealed together along their length and the webs are sealed together transversely at intervals along their length to divide them into a series of sealed compartments each having a thread loop and a dose of said infusible material, the separation of said compartments from the webs providing the packets, said sealing of the webs leaving channels for said portions of the thread between the loops to project from the packets.
An advantage of such a method of producing the packets is that it can operate in a continuous manner, the thread being laid in said pattern of loops in a continuous length, preferably before being brought together with said one web, and the individual loops being separated from each other after they are secured to said one web. Conveniently the material to be packaged is placed on the other of the webs before it is brought together with said one web and the looped thread thereon.
According to another aspect of the invention, apparatus is provided for producing packets of infusible material, comprising means for bringing a pair of webs together, means for locating between the webs spaced doses of the infusible material and means for placing a series of correspondingly spaced loops of thread against one of the webs before the webs are brought together, the apparatus further comprising sealing means for sealing the peripheries of the packets to enclose said doses of infusible material, means being provided for dividing the joined webs into packets each having a dose of said material and a corresponding thread loop and for separating the ends of each thread loop from said loops of adjoining packets.
The end portions of each loop may be secured to an edge region of the webs, preferably in an easily releasable manner. The intermediate region may be secured to an opposite edge region of the webs and if so this is preferably done simultaneously with the securing *e* of said end portions.
To form the loops a tubular delivery member may be provided as a thread guide, an outlet end of the member from which the thread is dispensed being displaceable in a circulatory path by drive means acting on the delivery member to form said loops.
In a preferred arrangement of the apparatus, the loops are formed upon a roller by means of which they are carried on one of said webs to be attached thereto.
To lay the thread in an optimum form of loop may require the speed of delivery of the thread to vary in 4 the course of forming the loop. To limit the tension produced in the thread by the cyclical acceleration, suction means may be provided to maintain a free loop of thread in a feed line to the delivery device, whereby the rate of delivery from said free loop can be varied relative to the rate of feed thereto.
The invention will be further described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: Fig. 1 illustrates a preferred form of an infusion packet which can be produced by the method and apparatus of the invention, Fig. 2 is a schematic illustration of a part of a process for producing a series of packets of the form .o 15 shown in Fig. 1, ~Fig. 3 illustrates a means for forming the thread loops, *Fig. 4 is a detail illustration sharing a feature of the arrangement in Fig. 3, Fig. 5 illustrates one form of thread feed mechanism for forming the loops, Fig. 6 illustrates a tension control device for the thread feed means, and Fig. 7 illustrates an alternative thread feed device for forming the loops.
Fig. 1 illustrates a tea bag T which comprises two identical layers 2 of conventional heat sealable paper, eg. Dexter 7146, heat sealed together around their peripheries with a crimped or flat seal 4. Within the peripheral seal 4 a dose 6 of infusible material is held between the two paper layers. A length of thread 8 is also sandwiched between the layers in a loop pattern, its crossed ends emerging from an upper edge of the tea bag.
A central portion 8a of the thread is firmly fixed by the heat seal 4 where it is between the layers in a wider, lower edge portion 12 of the seal. The two ends 8b,8c of the thread emerge from the peripheral seal at opposite ends of the wider lower edge portion 12 and extend between the layers, diagonally oppositely across the tea bag, and through the upper edge seal 14. Within the upper edge seal the two ends of the thread are held in narrow channels 16 where the paper layers are more 15 lightly sealed together than the remainder of the peripheral seal. The retention of the thread by the heat seal material in these channels can easily be sheared by pulling on the exposed thread ends and the thread is then able to slide in these channels. It is possible alternatively to leave the channels 16 unsealed if they **are sufficiently restricted to avoid any significant leakage of the contents of the bag.
In use, after the tea in the bag has been S0* 0 infused, the tea bag may be removed from the liquid, held by the free ends 8b,8c of the thread which are then pulled apart. Although this frees them to slide in the channels 16 they are still held within those channels and between the ends the thread 8 is still firmly secured by the wider lower edge seal portion 12. The bag itself is therefore contracted and puckered by the tension in the thread so that the infusible material within it is subjected to a wringing action to extract infusion liquid in the bag.
The top and bottom sealing margins 12,14 through which the thread 8 passes are made relatively wide to increase their resistance to tearing or delamination when the thread ends are pulled to apply a wringing force.
Reliefs 22 at the ends of the lower edge portion 12 give a relatively wide seal area there to take the force that the thread applies across the seal. The relatively wide upper edge seal 14 also has the advantage of increasing the length of the channels 16 and so reducing any 15 tendency of particles of the infusible material to escape along these restricted routes when the seal in them is broken.
Tea bags of the illustrated form can be produced in a continuous process as outlined in Fig. 2. This shows a first web 2a of the heat sealable paper carrying spaced doses 6 of infusible material, which have been deposited by a dosing wheel 31 in known manner, and a second similar web 2b joining the first web to enclose the doses between the webs. The second web 2b enters around the upper one of a pair of heat seal rollers 32,34 and the two webs sealed together as they come together in the nip between the rollers to form the peripheral seals 4 before the individual tea bags are separated. Adjacent the path of the web over the upper roller 32 is a third roller 36 with which is associated a thread positioning mechanism 38 for deploying the thread in its looped pattern on the periphery of the third roller. As the laid thread comes adjacent the upper roller 36 it is attached to the web 2b running over that roller and is so carried on its web to be sandwiched between the two webs 2a,2b as they pass through the heat seal rollers 32,34.
Following severing rollers 35 separate the individual packets and also cut the thread between the packets.
The sealing pattern impressed by the rollers 32,34 preferably comprises crimped lines running in the direction of movement of the webs, in particular in the lower edge region where the central portion 8a of the 15 thread is fixed, parallel to the crimped lines. In this manner the portion 8a can be fixed without risk to the integrity of the seal.
Figs. 3 and 4 show some details of carrier means S"on the third roller 36 for the thread deployed from the positioning mechanism, arranged to allow a continuous series of spaced thread loops to be formed on the periphery of the roller at a pitch corresponding to the width of the tea bags. For each thread loop there is an arrangement of four projecting pins 42 provided with notches 44 (Fig. 4) or hooks or both near their outer ends, so arranged as to catch a thread that is laid around them by a dispensing wand (Fig. 4 or Fig. It will be noted that the thread is shown disposed entirely 8 to one side of a centre line 48 indicating a radial plane at the middle of the axial length of the roller. A similar thread loop pattern can therefore be laid on the other half of the roller periphery, in mirror image to the illustrated thread pattern. With this arrangement the webs 2a,2b are double the width of the individual tea bags so as to form two rows of bags side by side, the bags being separated from each other after they have been fully formed. Because the thread for each row does not extend over the centre of the web width, the two thread loop patterns are formed and secured independently of each other.
Fig. 5 illustrates a first wand mechanism for positioning the thread on the carrier means of the roller 15 36. The mechanism comprises a parallelogram linkage one of the arms of which is formed by a wand 52 in the form of an elongate tube 54 through which the thread is fed over an entry guide roller 56. One of the pivots of the arm 60 parallel to the wand has a fixed anchorage 62 arm 60 and a further arm 64 of the linkage have extensions 60a,64a carrying followers which are guided in closed tracks 66,68 of respective rotary cams 70,72. The cams a e 70,72 are rotated in synchronism and their tracks 66,68 are so shaped that the thread exit end of the wand 52 orbits on a path 74 in the form of an approximately triangular loop.
Because the third roller 36 is rotating as the wand tip describes its loop-forming orbit, the thread 8 reaches the surface of the roller and is laid around successive sets of pins 42 in a series of loops which are spaced at intervals around the roller periphery, one such loop being shown in Fig. 3. These loops are temporarily retained by the notches or hooks 44 of the pins. In the portions of the periphery of the third roller associated with each loop a set of four heatable sealing pads 76 are provided in locations which are crossed by the thread 8.
As the third roller rotates each loop is brought in turn to the paper web 2b entering the apparatus around the upper roller 32 and the associated sealing pads 76 are then heated to tack the thread to the web. The tacked thread loops are immediately released from the carrier means of the third roller 36 and travel onwards with the web 2b. The pads 76 are so located that the tacking welds are in zones that are overlaid eventually by the edge seal portions 12 and 14 of the tea bags.
*To hold the thread loops stably on the third ":.roller 36 before transfer to the web 2b and to ensure transfer without snagging, the pins 42 are preferably displaceably mounted on the roller. For example, the pins may be radially displaceable to be lowered flush with the third roller periphery when the loops are transferred; this displacement may be obtained by holding the pins resiliently in their projecting positions or by providing a cam-operated mechanism to draw the pins in.
The thread may be sprung over the ends of the pins 42 as they are retracted if it is held by hooks or notches 44 such as are shown in Fig. 4. It may be desired, however, to rotate the pins, eg. by a cam mechanism operating on an arm 78 (Fig. 4) of each pin, at the moment of transfer to facilitate the release of the looped thread from the third roller.
Whatever way the transfer is effected, it is preferable to ensure that by this stage the thread has been drawn taut into the loop pattern assumed in the finished tea bag. It is particularly desirable to locate as precisely as possible the ends 8a,8b that pass through the passages 16 in the upper edge seal 14 in order to keep the width of the passages to a minimum.
Forming the loop patterns with the thread may require significant variations of velocity of the thread 15 as it emerges from the wand. It is desirable to ensure that accelerations imposed on the thread do not lead to excessive tension loads. Fig. 6 illustrates a thread feed mechanism for limiting thread tension which comprises a motorised drive device 80 drawing the thread 8 from a bobbin 82 through an entry guide eyelet 84.
Downstream of the drive device the thread runs in an open loop 8' depending into the outer end of a suction tube 86. A central barrier 88 in the tube keeps the two lengths of the loop separate and a pervious screen limits the penetration of the loop into the tube.
Between the barrier 88 and the screen 90 the presence of the thread loop is detected by a sensing device 92, eg. a light-sensitive device, which is connected to a control 11 circuit (not shown) for the drive device If the thread loop 8' is too short to reach the sensing device the drive 92 is operated to draw more thread from the bobbin. As thread gathers to lengthen the loop 8' it triggers the sensing device 92 and the drive is stopped or slowed. The distance of the sensing device from the barrier 90 and the rate at which the drive device 80 draws thread from the bobbin ensure that the thread loop 8' is always maintained at such a length that it will not tighten around the barrier 88. Apart from any friction in the wand, the tension load on the thread feed to the third roller 36 is thus limited to the suction force applied to it in the tube 86.
Fig. 7 illustrates an alternative mechanism for 15 generating the looped path 74 of the tip of the wand 54 99.9 required to place the thread around the pins 42 on the third roller 36. The wand is held slidably in a longitudinally fixed but pivotable guide 94 so that it can move longitudinally in the guide under the action of a first driven crank 96. A second driven crank 98 99. pivoted to the wand remote from the guide swings the wand tip laterally and by coordination of the movements of the two cranks the required loop-form path is produced for the wand tip.
P:\WPDOCS\PATCOMPRISE. 29/4/98 lla- Throughout this specification and the claims which follow, unless the context requires otherwise, the word "comprise", or variations such as "comprises" or "comprising", will be understood to imply the inclusion of a stated integer or step or group of integers or steps but not the exclusion of any other integer or step or group of integers or steps.
13 transferred and secured to said one web.
3. A method according to claim 2 wherein the material to be packaged is placed on the other of the webs before it is brought together with the one web and the looped thread thereon.
4. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 3 wherein at said passages for the thread ends the thread is detachably secured to the webs by said sealing means.
A method according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the thread loops of the respective packets are severed from each other simultaneously with said separation of the sealed compartments providing the packets.
6. A method according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the looped thread is placed against said one web so as to overlap a side edge of the web to form said projecting thread portions.
7. Apparatus for producing packets of infusible material, comprising means for bringing a pair of webs together, means for locating between the webs spaced doses of the infusible material and means for placing a series of correspondingly spaced loops of thread against one of the webs before the webs are brought together, the 12 The Claims defining the invention are as follows:
C
C
i. A method of producing infusion packets containing doses of infusible material, in which a thread forming a pattern comprising a longitudinally spaced series of loops has said loops enclosed between opposed heat-sealable packet walls of porous material, portions of the thread between said loops projecting from the packets to provide a means for contracting said loops when in use, said walls being secured together to form enclosed packages, by heat-sealing the edges of said packets, each packet edge seal having a first region securing an intermediate portion of the loop, in the production of the packets, the looped thread being placed 15 against one of a pair of webs of said porous material and a second of said webs being placed against the first web with the thread loops between the webs before the edges of the webs are heat-sealed together along their length and the webs are sealed together transversely at intervals along their length to divide them into a series of sealed compartments each having a thread loop and a dose of said infusible material, the separation of said compartments from the webs providing the packets, said sealing of the webs leaving channels for said portions of the thread between the loops to project from the packets.
2. A method according to claim 1 wherein the thread is laid in said pattern of spaced loops and is thereafter
C.
C. C. C C C

Claims (12)

  1. 3. A method according to claim 2 wherein the material to be packaged is placed on the other of the webs before it is brought together with the one web and the looped thread thereon.
  2. 4. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 3 wherein at said passages for the thread ends the thread is detachably secured to the webs by said sealing means. A method according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the thread loops of the respective packets are severed from each other simultaneously with said 15 separation of the sealed compartments providing the packets.
  3. 6. A method according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the looped thread is placed against said one web so as to overlap a side edge of the web to form said projecting thread portions.
  4. 7. Apparatus for producing packets of infusible Ve material, comprising means for bringing a pair of webs together, means for locating between the webs spaced doses of the infusible material and means for placing a series of correspondingly spaced loops of thread against one of the webs before the webs are brought together, the 14 apparatus further comprising sealing means for sealing the peripheries of the packets to enclose said doses of infusible material, and means being provided for dividing the joined webs into the packets each having a dose of said material and a corresponding thread loop, and for separating the ends of each thread loop from said loops of adjoining packets. S8. Apparatus according to claim 7 comprising a roller and means for forming said loops on said roller.
  5. 9. Apparatus according to claim 8 wherein means are provided for bringing said one web adjacent said roller for attaching the loops on said roller to said one web. *10. Apparatus according to claim 8 or claim 9 S"wherein said loops are laid onto the roller by a tubular 9* t delivery member through which the thread passes, an outlet end of the member being displaced in a circulatory 99** 20 path to form the loops on the roller.
  6. 11. Apparatus according to any one of claims 8 to wherein said roller is provided with projecting location 9• means around which the loops are held, said location means being displaceable for assisting the transfer of the loops to said other web.
  7. 12. Apparatus according to any one of claims 8 to 11 wherein the roller is provided with heating means to attach the loops by heat seals to said one web.
  8. 13. Apparatus according to any one of claims 7 to 12 wherein the doses of infusible material are placed on the other of said pair of webs before the webs are brought together.
  9. 14. Apparatus according to any one of claims 7 to 13 wherein suction means are provided to maintain a free loop of thread in a feed line of thread for forming the loops to be attached to said one web, whereby to limit S"the feed tension of the thread. o*o*
  10. 15. Apparatus according to any one of claims 7 to 14 wherein means for forming said thread loops are located between means for dispensing said doses of material and said sealing means for sealing the peripheries of the packets.
  11. 16. A method of producing infusion packets substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
  12. 17. Apparatus for producing packets of infusible material substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings. 29/4/98 16 DATED this 29th day of April 1998 UNILEVER PLC By Its Patent Attorneys DAVIES COLLISON CAVE OS@@ *0 SO S 0 000@ S. 00** 0 *6 00 0 0 00 0 0O 0 90 *04 0S a 0 9009 9*00 *00* 0 0006 0000 0 00 0* 00 0 0 00 0 METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR THE MANUFACTURE OF PACKETS ABSTRACT To form infusion packets having a looped thread within the packets to wring moisture from the packet in use, a continuous series of thread loops are formed on one elongate web of packet material and doses of infusion material are placed on a second elongate web of packet material before bringing the webs together with the thread loops and infusion material between them. The two webs are then welded together and the individual packets are separated from the joined webs. (Fig. 1) e
AU63709/98A 1994-04-07 1998-04-29 Method and apparatus for the manufacture of packets Ceased AU708800B2 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU63709/98A AU708800B2 (en) 1994-04-07 1998-04-29 Method and apparatus for the manufacture of packets

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB9406833A GB9406833D0 (en) 1994-04-07 1994-04-07 Packets and their manufacture
GB9406833 1994-04-07
AU21126/95A AU698347B2 (en) 1994-04-07 1995-04-04 Infusion packets
AU63709/98A AU708800B2 (en) 1994-04-07 1998-04-29 Method and apparatus for the manufacture of packets

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU21126/95A Division AU698347B2 (en) 1994-04-07 1995-04-04 Infusion packets

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Publication Number Publication Date
AU6370998A AU6370998A (en) 1998-07-16
AU708800B2 true AU708800B2 (en) 1999-08-12

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AU63709/98A Ceased AU708800B2 (en) 1994-04-07 1998-04-29 Method and apparatus for the manufacture of packets

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Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2334256A (en) * 1942-03-25 1943-11-16 Pneumatic Scale Corp Method of and apparatus for making bags
US2350930A (en) * 1942-01-01 1944-06-06 Ivers Lee Co Machine for making and filling packages
GB910724A (en) * 1960-01-16 1962-11-14 Fulvio Morpurgo Improvements in or relating to tea bags and apparatus for use in their manufacture

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2350930A (en) * 1942-01-01 1944-06-06 Ivers Lee Co Machine for making and filling packages
US2334256A (en) * 1942-03-25 1943-11-16 Pneumatic Scale Corp Method of and apparatus for making bags
GB910724A (en) * 1960-01-16 1962-11-14 Fulvio Morpurgo Improvements in or relating to tea bags and apparatus for use in their manufacture

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