CA1094966A - Opening arrangement for packing containers - Google Patents

Opening arrangement for packing containers

Info

Publication number
CA1094966A
CA1094966A CA330,839A CA330839A CA1094966A CA 1094966 A CA1094966 A CA 1094966A CA 330839 A CA330839 A CA 330839A CA 1094966 A CA1094966 A CA 1094966A
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
opening
packing
thread
tearing
packing container
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.)
Expired
Application number
CA330,839A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Sven-Olof Andren
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.)
Tetra Pak AB
Original Assignee
Tetra Pak International AB
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 Tetra Pak International AB filed Critical Tetra Pak International AB
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1094966A publication Critical patent/CA1094966A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

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
    • B65D77/00Packages formed by enclosing articles or materials in preformed containers, e.g. boxes, cartons, sacks or bags
    • B65D77/22Details
    • B65D77/30Opening or contents-removing devices added or incorporated during filling or closing of containers
    • B65D77/32Tearing-strings or like flexible elements

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Packages (AREA)
  • Auxiliary Devices For And Details Of Packaging Control (AREA)
  • Bag Frames (AREA)

Abstract

ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE

Opening arrangements for packing containers are realized inter alia in the form of a portion of the wall of the packing container delimited by means of an opening indication line which portion is opened with the help of a tearing thread. The applica-tion of the tearing thread along a non-rectilinear opening indica-tion line is difficult and up to now it has not been possible to realize it automatically in the rapid manufacture of packing con-tainers from e.g. a moving material web. In accordance with the invention an opening arrangement is now provided wherein an open-able part of the container wall, limited by a curved opening indication line, is opened with the help of a tearing thread which extends rectilinearly between two points on the opening indication line. The tearing thread is applied so that on open-ing it follows and breaks up the material of the packing container along the curved opening indication line. The possibility of applying the thread rectilinearly makes the opening arrangement especially suitable for application in the manufacture of packing containers from a moving material web, since the thread can be applied at high speed parallel with the direction of the web.

Description

lO~

: TETRA PAK INTERNATIONAL AB TP 496 ::
OPENING ARR~NGEMENT FOR PACKING CONTAINERS
:~ _______________________________________________ .
:
The present invention relates to an opening arrange-ment for packing containers of the type wherein a part of .~ the packing container wall which is openable by means of a tearing thread is limited by an opening indication line.
It is customary fox an opening arrangement in a - packing container wall of paper or laminated plastic mate-rial to be formed with the help of a weakening line arranged in the wall, which extends around an openable portion. When ~:~ the packing container is to be opened, this is usually done 10 in that the openable portion, delimited by the weakening ~:~ line, is pressed into the package, whereupon it may be torn :.
.,,.
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:

10.9 19fi6 off. This type of opening arrangement is customary in packing containers e.g. for washing powders or flakes.
In packing containers e.g. for liquid contents the opening arrangement described is not suitable. In packages for liquid contents other solutions have therefore been tried and a common one among these consists in providing the packing container wall with a punched-out hole which is covered by a tear-off tearing strip. However, this opening arrangement is both expensive and more complicated and moreover provides inferior impermeability to liquid and gas which is a disadvantage in particular in the case of sensitive foodstuffs.
A desirable solution consists therefore in modi~ying the firstmentioned opening arrangement in such a manner that the openable portion of the packing container wall can be opened without having to be pressed into the packing con-tainer and without the risk of splashing or spilling. This modification can take the form of the opening arrangement being provided with a tearing thread applied along the weakening line, one end of which is accessible from the outside of the package and by means of which the connection of the openable part of the wall with the remaining packing container wall can be broken. An opening arrangement com-prising a tearing thread of this type functions very well but will be somewhat complicated to manufacture, since the application with sufficient accuracy of the tearing thread is time-consuming and difficult, especially when the tear-ing thread is to be applied along a curved opening indica-tion line. In the mechanical, rapid manufacture of packing containers from a moving material web therefore it has not been possible up to now to apply the tearing thread with sufficient accuracy.
It is an object of the present invention to pro-vide an opening arrangement for packing containers which is not subject to the abovementioned disadvantages.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an opening arrangement which is simple and fairly 10~

inexpensive and which moreover is easily openable.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an opening arrangement with a tearing thread which is easy to apply also in the rapid, automatic manufacture of packing containers, especially from moving material webs.
These objects have been achieved in accordance with the invention in that an opening arrangement for packing containers of the type wherein a part of the wall of the packing container which is openable by means of a tearing 1~ thread is delimited by an opening indication line, is given the characteristic that the opening indication line is curved or arched, that the tearing thread extends substan-tially rectilinearly between two points of the opening in-dication line, and that the tearing thread is firmly at-tached to the packing container wall at least at one of thesaid points. Owing to the tearlng thread being applied rec-tilinearly in such a manner that it coincides only in two points with the opening indication line, the application is appreciably facilitated without the openability being im-paired, since the tearing thread, once the tearing has pro-perly started, will follow the weakened opening indication line in the material.
An embodiment of the opening arrangement in accord-ance with the invention has been g~ven the fuxther charac-teristic that the tearing thread in packing containers whichare manufactured from weblike material runs parallel with the direction of the web.
A further embodiment of the arrangement in accord-ance with the invention has been given the further charac-teristic that the tearing thread is fixed in a detachablemanner to the surface layer of the packing container wall facing towards the inside of the package.
A further embodiment of the arrangement in accord-ance with the invention has been given the further charac-teristic that the opening indication line constitutes asealing line between two wall parts forming the packing con-tainer.

10!~49~;6 A further embodiment of the arrangement ln accord-ance with the invention has been given the further charac-teristic that the one end of the tearing thread extends through the opening indication line and is located outside the packing container.
A further embodiment of the arrangement in accord-ance with the invention has been given the further charac- -teristic that the end of the tearing thread extending out-side the packing container is connected to a part of the packing container material in the shape of a tearing tab~
A further embodiment of the arrangement in accord-ance with the invention has been given the further charac-teristic that the front end of the tearing thread located outside the packing container meets the opening indication line in an obtuse angle.
A further embodiment of the arrangement in accord-ance with the invention has been given the further charac-teristic that the openable part of the wall of the packing container i5 in the form of a turn-up lid which is pivotable about a straight line which extends between the end points of the opening indication line and delimits the openàble lid part from an adj~ining part of the packing container wall.
A further embodiment of the arrangement in accord-ance with the invention has been given the further charac-teristic that the said line coincides with the straight linealong which the tearing thread is detachably fixed to the packing container wall.
The arrangement in accordance with the invention will be described in more detail in the following with special reference to the enclosed drawings which schemati-cally show a preferxed embodiment of the arrangement in accordance with the invention as provided in a known type of packing container.
Figure 1 shows a packing container with an opening arrangement in accordance with the invention before the opening.
Figure 2 shows the packing container in accordance 101949~;6 with figure 1 after the opening.
Figure 3 shows the successive phases in the manu-facture of a packing container in accordance with figure 1.
The packing container shown in figure 1 is substan-tially of the same type as that described thoroughly inSwedish patent no. 330.505, to which reference is made.
The packing container is made of a laminated all-plastic material which comprises an inside layer of foamed plastic material, e.g. polystyrene, which is covered on both sides by homogeneous layers of the same material. The central foamed carrier layer has a thickness of approx. 0,8 mm, whilst the two homogeneous outer layers have a thickness of only 0,1 mm. The com~ination of a relatively thick, central foamed layer and homogeneous surface layers im-parts to the material a good rigidity and makes it liquid-tight at the same time. Through the choice of a thermo-plastic material it becomes possible in a simple manner to heat-seal the packing container.
As will be evident from the drawing, the packing container is made of two parts, namely a semi-circular or U-shaped curved casing part 1 and a back part 2, the upper and lower end parts of which form the top part 3 and bottom part 4 of the packing container. The casing part 1 and back part 2 are joined to one another by means of a heat seal 5 extending around the whole edge surface of the casing part. The outer end of the top part 3 re-mote from the central portion 2' of the back part 2 has the shape of an openable lid 6, the boundary line of which against the remainder of the top part 3 coincides with a tearing thread 7 which is situated in the lower surface of the top part facing towards the inside of the package and runs substantially parallel with the folding line between the central portion 2' of the back part and the top part 3. The tearing thread 7 passes through the seal 5 in the vicinity of its end points/ and the one end of the tearing thread extends a little outside the seal where it forms a gripping tab 8, wherein the tearing ., .

109~ 6 G

thread end is attached to a projecting portion of the top part 3.
The tearing thread 7 extends substantially recti-linearly between two points situated symmetrically on the sealing line 5. The part of the seal 5 situated between these points (which may be weakened compared with the re-maining extent of the seal) serves as an opening indication line 5' along which the seal is caused to break with the help of the tearing thread 7 when the packing container is to be opened. As mentioned prev'ously, one end of the tearing thread 7 is attached to the opening tab 8, and the opposite end of the tearing thread, where it meets the opening indication line 5' is also durably attached to the packing container material. The portion of the tearing thread 7 situated between the said points of attachment is either wholly free or it is also joined detachably to the surface of the packing container wall facing the inside of the package.
In figure 2 the packing container in accordance with figure 1 is shown after its opening. The packing container according to figure 2 is otherwise identical with that shown in figure 1 and comprises a casing part 1, an elongated back part 2, the end parts of which form the top part 3 and bottom part 4. The lid part 6, located at the outer end of the top part 3, is shown in open or turned-up state, the straight line which extends between end points of the opening indica-tion line 5', that is to say, the line along which the tear-ing thread 7 is situated before the opening, serves as a folding line or hinge. As can be seen from figure 2, after the opening of the packing container, the tearing t~read 7 continues to be attached with its one end to the packing container. At the opposite end or front end of the tearing thread the opening tab 8 attached to the tearing thread is apparent which has been torn off the top part 3 on opening.
Figure 3 shows schematically the manufacture of a packing container in accordance with figures 1 and 2. The lOg'~9~;6 casing part 1 and the back part 2 respectively of the packing container are manufactured from two separate webs which in the first place are mechanically processed and formed each for itself to be subsequently combined and attached to one another so as to form packing contalners.
The manufacturing process, which is also described in de-tail in Swedish patent no. 330.505 will here only be de-scribed schematically to facilitate understanding of the invention.
The two material webs consist as mentioned pre-viously of a laminated material comprising a central layer of foamed plastic material which is covered on both sides with homogeneous thermoplastic material. One of the webs, that is to say, the web which is to form the back parts of the packing containers, i5 appreciably wider than the other web and is provided moreover in the vicinity of its upper edge ~figure 3) with the tearing thread 7, which can be joined detachably to the homogeneous plastic layer which eventually will constitute the inside of the packing con-tainer. During the successive feed through the packingmachine the packing material web is converted in that cer-tain portions ~including parts of the tParing thread) are punched out along these two edges so that a line of sub-stantially U-shaped lugs or off-cuts located opposite one another is formed along the two edges. The lugs or off-cuts will subequently form the top and bottom parts of the packing containers and are situated in pairs opposite one another transversely over the material web and they are connected via intermediate portions which correspond to the actual back part 2' of the finished packing con-tainer. The off-cuts, as mentioned previously, are sub-stantially of U-shape and consist thus of a portion located closest to the centre back part 2' which is delimited by substantially parallel edge lines and an end portion which is limited by a substantially semicircular edge line. In the off-cut which is to form the top part of the packing container the semicircular edge line is broken by a pro-~09 ~9~;6 B

jecting tearing ta~ 8, which extends unilaterally from theone side of the top part at even height with the tearing thread 7 running across the top part. To ensure a firmer attachment of the two end parts of the tearing thread to the top part 3 the a~ea on the tearing tab 8 as well as the area on the opposite end or back end of the tearing thread 7 can be subjected to a warming up to softening temperature and to a compression which ensures attachment of the tearing thread ends to the material of the top part.
At the same time as the abo~ementioned conversion of the one material web a mechanical processing of the other material web, that IS to say, the material web which is to form the casing parts 1 of the packing containers is also taking place. This material web is narrower than the material web forming the back parts and has a width which corresponds to the width of the punched-out area which is to form the actual back parts 2' of the packing container.
The curved casing parts 1 of the packing containers are now formed in that the packing material web is warmed up to its softening temperature, whereupon it is subjected to a mecha-nical shaping process during which the material web with the help of a shaping tool is pressed down into a series of continuous U-shaped recesses. Thanks to the thermo-plastic characteristics of the material this shaping pro-cess can be done without any damage to the material andresults in the material web being converted to a line of continuous U-shaped casing parts l.
After this preliminary forming of the two material webs, they are made to run substantially parallel and are then brought together successively in such a manner that the end portions of the legs of the U-shaped casing parts come to rest against the central portion of the wider material web which is to constitute the actual back par~s 2'.
It is ensured that the casing parts are so placed opposite the top and bottom parts 3 and 4 respectively that these parts in a following folding-down operation end up in correct position and seal up the open sides of the casing parts. After correct placing, a warming up of the material surfaces which are to be joined together with top and bottom parts 3 and 4 respectively takes place, whereupon the latter are folded down so that they come to rest against the late-ral edges of the casing part 1 where a heat sealing iscarried out in that the material parts are pressed together for a brief instant and are allowed to cool. Thereafter, the packing containers are filled with the help of a ~iller pipe not shown on the drawing which, making use of the flexibility of the material, extends into the continuous line of packing containers via the interspace between the back parts 2 and the end portions of the legs of the casing parts 1. The filling, like the whole of the manufacturing process, occurs whilst the material webs are in continuous movement, and simultaneously with a packing container having been filled to the required extent it is also being moved past the end of the ~iller pipe for the pack part to be pressed against and sealed to the leg end of the casing part, so that the packing container will now be fully closed.
This continuous line o~ filled and closed packing containers is then divided whilst continuing its travel throuyh the packing machine into individual packing containers, by means of a cutter, not shown, which by transverse cuts separates the still coherent packing containers from one
2~ another, whereupon the packing containers are ready.
When the packing containers are manufactured from the packing laminate mentioned earlier consisting of a central layer of foamed material, e.g. polystyrene, which is covered on both sides with thin homogeneous polystyrene layers, it is suitable for use as a tearing thread a cotton thread which is impregnated with an acrylic polymer. The thread should have a diameter of approx. 0,5 mm. As mentioned earlier~ the two end parts of the thread are attached to the packing container material in that the portions which are to be joined are heated to the softening temperature of the material (approx. 235C), whereupon the areas are allowed to cool under compression so that a heat-sealing takes place.

The part of the tearing thread located between these por-tions may either extend freely along the inner surface of the packing material or be joined detachably to the same, e.g. by spot heat-sealing or hy a non-permanent sealing which can be achieved by carrying out the heat-sealing at a somewhat lower temperature and/or pressure.
Naturally, different materials or combinations of materials are conceivable for the layers combined in the packing laminate, bearing in mind a number of different factors, e.g. the contents for which the package is intended, the durability of the package, costs etc. The manner of rea-lization of the tearing thread too may vary in respect of shape as well as of material and it is conceivable e.g. to give the tearing thread the shape of a relatively flat and wide band. It is also possible to attach the thread ends to the packing material with the help of an additional material, e.g. a so-called hot-melt~ It is important, however, that the tearing thread should be placed so that it extends sub-stantially rectilinearly between the two points of attachment on the edge lines of the lid part and furthermore that the tearing thread extends parallel with the direction of the web which appreciably facilitates the application. It is, of course, important that the end of the tearing thread should extend outside the packing container and it has been found appropriate to join in the manner described above the end of the tearing thread to a part of the packing container material shaped as a tearing tab 8, since this appreciably facilitates the opening of the package.
When the packing container is to be opened, the pro-jecting tearing tab 8 is gripped and the tearing is startedupwards or possibly obliquely outwards across the rounded edge lines of the openable lid part. The tearing tab will then break and will be separated from the top part proper of the packing container whilst the front end of the tearing thread 7 connected to the tearing tab 8 commences to run along and to cut through the seal between the top part 3 and the casing part 1 serving as an opening indication line 5'.

' 1~949~6 Slnce the end of the tearing thread 7 located outside the packing container, owing to the rounded-off outer end of the top part meets the opening indication line 5' at an oblique angle (the angLe between the projecting front end of the tearing thread and the opening indication line is obtuse and preferably amounts to between 120 and 150, which value has proved to give a safe control to allow a safe guiding of the thread), the thread will run in the right direction along the sealing line on opening. The tearing thread 7, if it is at all attached to the inside of the packing mate-rial, will then successively come loose and run along the whole opening indicati~n line 5' until it is connected to the packing container only by its back end. Owing to the relatively great strength of the packing material compared with the strength of the opening indication line 5, the tearing thread runs without difficulty along the opening indication line. This is also helped of course by the fairly slight attachment of the major part of the thread and the fact that the inside of the packing con~ainer mate-rial is uniform and smooth, so that there is no risk ofthe thread running along a straight line towards its back end.
When the seal along the opening indication line 5 has been wholly broken by the thread 7, the front portion of the top part serving as a lid 6 can be folded upwards so that an opening is produced th~ough which the contents can be emptied out. Thanks to the rounded shape of the casing part the packing container is given excep~ional pouring properties and even relatively sluggishly running, highly viscous contents can be poured out in a well converging jet without after-drip.
Since the packing container material owing to its laminated and relatively thick build-up presents a certain resistance to bending, which can make the opening of the lid part 6 somewhat difficult, it may be advantageous in certain cases if the tearing thread 7 during the manufac-ture of the package i5 joined to the inner surface layer ~0~g~19~6 of the packing material by a heat-seal, since this results in a certain weakening of the inner layer along the straight line between the end points of the opening indication line along which the tearing thread is fixed. This weakening of the inner layer of the packing material facilitates the folding up of the lid part and helps to make it possible moreover to keep the lid part 6 in open position without -having to retain it in this position by hand.
With certain types of tearing thread there may be a risk of the tearing thread acting as a capillary tube and conducting contents through the seal and out to the end of the tearing thread located outside the packing container.
This risk can, of course, be overcome in most cases by giving the tearing thread a suitable design or impregnation, but in order to obtain absolute safety it is also possible to place the thread underneath the surface layer of the packing laminate, that is to say, between the surface layer and the carrier layer. Since in such cases the thread is applied to the carrier layer before the surface layer, the thread will be partly embedded in the surface layer when the surface layer is extruded and pressed to the carrier layer, so that its function on opening of the packing con-tainer will not be jeopardized. Such a placing of the tear-ing thread has proved to work excellently together with e.g.
the said type of laminate comprising carrier layers of plas-tic foam and surface layers of homogeneous polystyrene. By using such a placing of the thread it was found that the special sealing of the end parts of the tearing thread can be wholly omitted, since the fixing of the tearing thread in the material will be sufficiently strong in order to prevent the tearing thread from being pulled loose in longitudinal direction when the opening procedure is initiated.
To prevent the tearing tab 8 from suffering damage or causing a premature opening of the package catching and 3S being pulled up during the handling of the packing container, it is possible to fold the tearing tab downwards so that it lies against the outer surface of the casing part 1 and to .

~0!949fi6 fix it there with the help of an easily detachable seal.
This does not make the opening any more difficult, but pro- -vides good safety against inadvertent opening.
Although the opening arrangement in accordance with S the invention has been described in the foregoing in direct connection with a certain type of packing container, it is o~ course also possible to utilize the opening arrangement with other types of packing containers which e.g. may have a wholly different shape or be manufactured from a different material, be provided with conventional tearing indication lines in the form of weakening perforations or differ in some other manner from the preferred combination of packing con-tainer and opening arrangement shown. What matters here is only that the opening arrangement should be as specified by the invention, that it to say, that the tearing thread should extend substantially rectilinearly between two points on a non-rectilinear opening indication line and be firmly attached to the packing container wall at least at one of these points.
As a result of the design in accordance with the invention, important advantages have been obtained when packing con-tainers, e.g. of the type de,scribed, are to be manufactured automatically, which previously has not been possible. By placing the tearing thread so that its dixection coincides with the direction of the web, the tearing thread of unbroken length can be applied to the pack~ng container material at a very high ~ate.
Finally the opening arrangement in accordance with the invention will be very economical, since apart from the actual tearing thread no extra material is re~uired. The tearing tab, as shown in the example described, can often be made of surplus material which otherwise would not ~e used.

Claims (9)

THE EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION IN WHICH AN EXCLUSIVE
PROPERTY OR PRIVILEGE IS CLAIMED ARE DEFINED AS FOLLOWS:
1. An opening arrangement for packing containers of the type wherein a part of the packing container wall which is openable by means of a tearing thread is limited by an opening indication line and the opening indication line is curved or arched, the tearing thread extends substantially rectilinearly between two points on the opening indication line, and the tear-ing thread is firmly attached to the packing container wall at least at one of the said points.
2. An opening arrangement in accordance with claim 1, wherein the tearing thread in packing containers which are manu-factured from web-like material runs parallel with the direction of the web.
3. An opening arrangement in accordance with claim 1, wherein the tearing thread is fixed in a detachable manner to the surface layer of the packing container wall facing towards the inside of the packing container.
4. An opening arrangement in accordance with any one of claims 1 to 3 wherein the opening indication line constitutes a sealing line between two wall parts forming the packing con-tainer.
5. An opening arrangement in accordance with claim 1, wherein the one end of the tearing thread extends through the opening indication line and is located outside the packing con-tainer.
6. An opening arrangement in accordance with claim 5, wherein the end of the tearing thread extending outside the pack-ing container is connected to a part of the packing container material in the shape of a tearing tab.
7. An opening arrangement in accordance with any one of claims 1 to 3 wherein the front end of the tearing thread located outside the packing container meets the opening indication line at an obtuse angle.
8. An opening arrangement in accordance with claim 1, wherein the openable part of the wall of the packing container is in the form of a turn-up lid which is pivotable about a straight line which extends between the end points of the opening indica-tion line and delimits the openable lid part from an adjoining part of the packing container wall.
9. An opening arrangement in accordance with claim 8, wherein the said line coincides with the straight line along which the tearing thread is detachably fixed to the packing container wall.
CA330,839A 1978-07-03 1979-06-29 Opening arrangement for packing containers Expired CA1094966A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
SE7807468A SE422673B (en) 1978-07-03 1978-07-03 PACKAGING CONTAINER OPENING DEVICE
SE7807468-9 1978-07-03

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA1094966A true CA1094966A (en) 1981-02-03

Family

ID=20335367

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA330,839A Expired CA1094966A (en) 1978-07-03 1979-06-29 Opening arrangement for packing containers

Country Status (7)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0006652B1 (en)
JP (1) JPS5538293A (en)
AU (1) AU527310B2 (en)
CA (1) CA1094966A (en)
DE (1) DE2963576D1 (en)
IT (1) IT1166893B (en)
SE (1) SE422673B (en)

Families Citing this family (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPH0134946Y2 (en) * 1985-03-07 1989-10-24
JP5348609B2 (en) * 2008-11-10 2013-11-20 旭硝子株式会社 Plate-shaped body loading device and transport vehicle
US10370158B2 (en) 2014-11-03 2019-08-06 Å&R Carton Lund Aktiebolag Container with display function
SE1550130A1 (en) 2015-02-05 2016-08-06 A & R Carton Lund Ab Paperboard packaging container for bulk solids.
SE1550128A1 (en) 2015-02-05 2016-08-06 A & R Carton Lund Ab Packaging container with rim and lid.

Family Cites Families (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1878677A (en) * 1930-12-03 1932-09-20 George W Curtis Container seal
DE1611678A1 (en) * 1967-11-18 1972-02-03 Hans Paal Connection element for producing adhesive connections
SE330505B (en) * 1969-08-13 1970-11-16 Tetra Pak Int
JPS5011942B1 (en) * 1971-06-07 1975-05-08
DE7537404U (en) * 1975-11-25 1976-03-18 Natronag Papierprod Gmbh Cross-bottom paper sack with a tear-off device

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
IT1166893B (en) 1987-05-06
SE422673B (en) 1982-03-22
IT7923992A0 (en) 1979-06-29
AU527310B2 (en) 1983-02-24
AU4852179A (en) 1980-01-10
EP0006652B1 (en) 1982-08-25
SE7807468L (en) 1980-01-04
EP0006652A1 (en) 1980-01-09
JPS5538293A (en) 1980-03-17
DE2963576D1 (en) 1982-10-21

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