CA2230920A1 - Carton for smoking articles with extinguishing means and method of charging it - Google Patents

Carton for smoking articles with extinguishing means and method of charging it Download PDF

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Publication number
CA2230920A1
CA2230920A1 CA002230920A CA2230920A CA2230920A1 CA 2230920 A1 CA2230920 A1 CA 2230920A1 CA 002230920 A CA002230920 A CA 002230920A CA 2230920 A CA2230920 A CA 2230920A CA 2230920 A1 CA2230920 A1 CA 2230920A1
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
carton
tube
charge
tubes
cigarette
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.)
Abandoned
Application number
CA002230920A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Ferdinand Paulus Van Gass Nel
Theodore Roland Philip Thomas
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.)
Rothmans International Services Ltd
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 CA2230920A1 publication Critical patent/CA2230920A1/en
Abandoned 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
    • B65D85/07Containers, packaging elements or packages, specially adapted for particular articles or materials for compressible or flexible articles
    • B65D85/08Containers, packaging elements or packages, specially adapted for particular articles or materials for compressible or flexible articles rod-shaped or tubular
    • B65D85/10Containers, packaging elements or packages, specially adapted for particular articles or materials for compressible or flexible articles rod-shaped or tubular for cigarettes
    • B65D85/1081Inserts or accessories added or joined to the container, e.g. coins, pens, cards, spacers
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A24TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
    • A24FSMOKERS' REQUISITES; MATCH BOXES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES
    • A24F15/00Receptacles or boxes specially adapted for cigars, cigarettes, simulated smoking devices or cigarettes therefor
    • A24F15/12Receptacles or boxes specially adapted for cigars, cigarettes, simulated smoking devices or cigarettes therefor for pocket use
    • A24F15/18Receptacles or boxes specially adapted for cigars, cigarettes, simulated smoking devices or cigarettes therefor for pocket use combined with other objects

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Packaging Of Annular Or Rod-Shaped Articles, Wearing Apparel, Cassettes, Or The Like (AREA)

Abstract

A carton for smoking articles has means for holding and/or extinguishing used such articles, which are capable of being handled in conventional handling machinery. In one embodiment, cigarettes (4) are preassembled in individual holding tubes (5) before assembly of the charge of cigarettes. The charge is then inserted into a pre-erected carton or other carton is erected around it.
The articles may have portions (18, 19) of different diameters one being a tighter fit with a tubular holder (15) than the other, to ensure extinction, but not being engageable with the holder while the article is still full-length. The holder (15) may be lined (16) with heat-conductive or -absorbent material.

Description

CARTON FOR SMOKING ARTICLES WlTH EXI INGUISHING MEANS AND MFI'HOD OF
CHARGING lT

FIELD OF THE lNv~NllON

This invention relates to cartons for smoking articles and in particular but not exclusively for cigarettes.
The present invention is concerned with providing a carton which allows for the extinguishing and retention of a used or part-used smoking article.
For brevity the smoking article will be referred to as a cigarette hereafter and will be exemplified for cigarettes. It is concerned also with methods of charging such cartons.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
There have been numerous prior proposals for cigarette cartons having additional functions and in particular cartons have been proposed which incorporate ashtrays or compartments in which used cigarettes or butts can be stored. See for example US-A-4886161 and US-A-4789059. In EP-A-586233 a flexible divider is provided on one side which of which unused cigarettes are held in the carton and to the other side of which used cigarettes are returned - these being cigarettes oE a special type which do not ~i m;ni sh in length upon smoking.
The purpose of the present invention is however primarily to provide means by which a used cigarette is safely extinguished. In some embodiments it will be firmly retained in the carton while in others it may be removed by the user and discarded. Retention is p~eferred because of the environmental advantages o~
not having to dispose o~ discarded cigarette butts.
In US-A-4793478 a block is mounted inside a cigarette carton. The block has a slanted upper face and a plurality of parallel tubes formed in it which are to receive respectively a cigarette, with the end of the cigarette accessible above the sloping face. It is clear that a tube which has been vacated by a cigarette could be used therea~ter for extinguishing and receiving that cigarette again, though this use is not disclosed. In US-A-4207976 a cigarette butt is inserted through the base of the carton to be held in a tube in a block in the carton and to push up a new cigarette in the same tube. However, the positioning in manu~acturing terms of cigarettes in blocks of this type would be a matter o~ extreme di~iculty.
In GB-A-2275258 a grid ~or the reception o~
cigarettes in a carton is formed by a plurality o~
tubes secured together. The tubes have steps or shoulders in them so that accessible ends o~ the cigarettes are presented in a sloping array. In US-A-3960270 a grid is ~ormed with detent means interacting with a sliding lid o~ a carton to allow progressive presentation o~ cigarettes stored in the grid.
In Japanese Patent Applications JP-A-6-46822 and 6-70740 are disclosures o~ cartons with two portions, one with a grid ~or receiving cigarettes and the other having one or more tapered extinguishing tubes into which used cigarettes are put. It is also disclosed that butts may be stored in the cells o~ the grid.
It is a common ~eature o~ all these proposals that there is a pre-~ormed grid into which cigarettes must be loaded ~either be~ore or a~ter insertion o~ the grid into the carton or ~ormation o~ the carton around the grid).
In EP-A-0077867 it is stated that a charge o~
cigarettes may be inserted into a carton which has a ~alse bottom. Used cigarettes may be inserted into a container ~ormed by that ~alse bottom, through a tube in a side o~ the carton.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides cartons which have extinguishing means and in some cases'retention and storage means ~or used cigarettes but which at the same time allow ~or the extremely high manu~acturing speeds which are required in economic terms ~or objects o~ this nature. Furthermore, they are ~or the most part adaptable either to insertion o~ the charge into a AME~D S) IEET

W097/092~0 PCT/GB96/02094 preformed carton or, as is more common in this art, the formation o~ a carton around a prqassembled charge.
In a first general embodiment of this invention a carton of cigarettes has, surrounding part of the length of each cigarette, a tube which is a sufficiently close fit for the cigarette to extinguish a lighted such cigarette when placed in it, each tube being discrete and separate from each other tube. Such a charged carton is assembled first by fitting individually a tube onto a cigarette so as to leave one end of the cigarette free and preferably with the other end of the cigarette flush with one,end of the tube, assembling a collocation of such tubed cigarettes and inserting that collocation into an erected carton or erecting a carton from a blank around that collocation so that the free ends of the cigarettes are exposed at an opening end of the carton. All of these operations can be done on st~n~rd machines, the insertion of the cigarette into the tube being done on a filter-tip assembler machine; and the ~im~n~ions of the carton so obtained can be extremely similar to, if not identical to, those of a st~n~d carton.
The tubes involved are preferably tubes of substantially rigid card assembled by spiral winding in known manner and may have two or more layers. An innermost layer o~ the tube may be a heat dispersion or insulation layer such as for example a carbon-containing layer and such a layer especially if it is carbon may also have a deodorant activity.
In another general embodiment of the invention a charged carton contains in one portion a standard collocation of cigarettes. By a standard collocation we mean a shaped bundle of for example 15 or 20 or 25 cigarettes assembled in standard machinery and enwrapped in a conventional foil-backed paper wrapping.
This part of the carton may be defined by a conventional carton inner frame.
In the other portion of the carton there is provided one or more extinguishing tubes. In one embodiment a plurality of tubes is tight packed into that portion of the carton, preferably having shaped upper ends so as to guide a downwardly directed burning end of a cigarette into a central one of the tubes. In another embodiment the second portion of the carton is occupied by a closed container into which the one or more extinguishing tubes debouches. The length of the extinguishing tube should be sufficient to ensure extinction of a cigarette placed in it but may be short enough that there is room below it within the container for a cigarette end which is pushed through the tube to be able to get clear of the tube. In these embodiments the tubes may be of card or like material as mentioned above or may be moulded or extruded plastics material tubes, and the container may be of plastics material.
The invention also provides for assuring oxygen exhaustion within an extinguishing tube while permitting the ready withdrawal of an unused cigarette from a tube. Ready withdrawal implies a clearance between the inner wall of the tube and the cigarette and that clearance obviously offers a path for oxygen from the ambient air. To help assure extinction, the invention proposes that the diametrical dimension of a portion o~ the cigarette should be an interference fit with a tube which receives that cigarette; however, in the condition in which the unused cigarette is presented in a carton the interference fit portion of the cigarette is free of the tube. As soon as an appreciable length of the cigarette has been burnt off however, insertion of the cigarette into the tube will bring the interference fit portion o~ the cigarette into engagement with the tube thereby sealing the tube.
The interference fit portion may be assured for example by a thick overwrap on a filter or by a specifically-provided seal ring projection either on a filter assembly or near the mouth end of an un~iltered ;;
cigarette.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Figure 1 is a perspective view o~ a first carton charged with cigarettes;
Figure 2 is a partial section on the line II-II;
Figure 3 is a perspective view of a second carton embodying the invention;
Figure 4 is a section on the line IV-IV;
Figure 5 is a top view of the second embodiment;
Figure 6 is a perspective view of the third embodiment;
Figure 7 is a section on the line VII-VII of Figure 6 and Figure 8 is shown in modification; and Figure 9 is an enlarged view of a cigarette having an inter~erence ~it portion.

DESCRIPTIQN QF PARTICYLAR EMBQDIMENTS
In Figure 1 there is shown what is in principle a standard "flip-top" carton with a body 1 to which is hinged a lid 2 openable to expose the mouthpiece or filter ends 3 o~ a charge of (usually twenty) cigarettes 4, and retained in its closed position against accidental opening by inner ~rame 7.

For a substantial portion, e.g. about two-thirds of its length, each cigarette is surrounded by a tube 5. The tube 5 may be (as described below) a hollow spiral wound tube of two or more layers o~ card or may be a plastics material extrudate, ~or example.
The fit between the cigarette and the tube should be just enough to resist accidental displacement o~ one in relation to the other and to allow handling of the two together.
Each cigarette 4 with its respective tube 5 is preassembled together on a filter tip assembler such as a Hauni MAX 5 or MAX 80 machine and the assembly thus made is treated as if it were a cigarette, being passed to a packing and assembling machine which in the conventional way prepares a charge of cigarettes, e.g.
twenty in number, in the desired dimensions. This assembled charge is then either inserted into a preassembled carton 1 or as is more usual has a carton 1 assembled around it, both o~ these being operations which are per se standard. The charge may have a wrapping around such as the conventional aluminium ~oil/paper wrap.
The smoker having opened the carton can select any o~ the ends 3 presented to him, smoke that cigarette and then reinsert its remains into the tube 5 thereby extinguishing the butt end and at the same time storing it in the carton and avoiding distasteful littering of the environment.
If as will be described the cigarette has-an interference fit portion then the tube will engage the S used cigarette more firmly than it engaged the unused one.
Figures 3, 4 and 5 show a second embodiment where in a carton 1' with a lid 2 a conventional charge 6 of cigarettes is held, pre~erably wlth the provision of the conventional inner frame 7.
The charge 6 may be wrapped in for example conventional ~oil-backed paper.
In a second inner frame 7' in the carton 1' there are tight packed a plurality, here nine, of tubes 9 analogous to tubes 5 of the first embodiment.
Upper ends lO of the tubes are pre~erably shaped so as to define a concavity which will tend to guide a smoker inserting a part-used cigarette to the central one of the tubes 9. Reception of the cigarette in any of these tubes will result in its extinction especially if there is the interference fit feature which will be described in more detail below. The upper ends 10 may be covered by a hinged cover flap 8 of the second inner frame 7'.
This embodiment can be assembled on standard machinery treating the charge 6 on the one hand and the bundle of tubes 9 on the other as sub-assemblies to be held together while being inserted into a pre-erected carton or while having a carton erected around them.
The tubes 9 may be adhered together to assist in this handling stage.
In a third embodiment seen in Figures 6 and 7, a carton 1' with lid 2 again has two portions, one of which is occupied by a conventional wrapped charge 6 of cigarettes.
In the other portion 11 of the carton 1' there is an extinguishing tube 12 which debouches into a closed container 13. The length of the tube 12 should be such as to assure as far as possible extinction of the coal of a cigarette placed in it but nevertheless its lower end should be sufficiently clear of the floor of the container 13 that a cigarette end pushed through it will be able to get clear axially of the tube so as not to impede a next cigarette. As in the previous embodiment the charge 6 and the container 13 are treated as sub-assemblies for purposes o~ charging a pre-erected carton or erecting the carton around them.
Figure 8 shows how a container 13' may be the full height of the carton, with tube 12' being inset into a depending tube or funnel 14 in the top wall of the container.
Figure 9 shows in more detail a pre~erred form o~ cigarette and tube combination. A tube here given the reference 15 but which may be a tube 5, 9, 12 or 12' o~ the embodiments described, has on its inne-r ~ace a layer 16 of heat-insulant or heat-conductor which in particular may be a layer o~ carbon-loaded paper.
There is a slight clearance 17, somewhat exaggerated in Figure 9, between the tobacco rod 18 of the cigarette 4 and the layer 16. In practice this clearance should be so slight that there is not quite ~ree movement o~ the cigarette in relation to the tube.
The mouth end 3 o~ the cigarette is however either wholly or partially o~ a diameter which is a tight inter~erence ~it with the layer 16. The di~erence between diameters o~ the mouth end and tobacco rod has also been exaggerated in Figure 9.
This interference ~it may ~or example be achieved by the use o~ an overwrap material 19 to unite a ~ilter assembly to the tobacco rod or by the speci~ic provision o~ a projecting ring 20 by wrapping a strip around the cigarette, either in addition to or alternatively to an overwrap 19, the ridge 20 then providing the tight inter~erence ~it with the inside o~
the tube.
The position o~ the portion o~ the cigarette which forms the tight inter~erence ~it should be such that when the cigarette is unused and is being presented as is seen in Figure 9 the inter~erence ~it portion is clear of the ~ree end 21 of the tube but that once there has been appreciable use of the cigarette so that its length diminishes placing the cigarette back into the tube will cause the interference fit portion to engage with that tube thereby giving better assurance of oxygen exhaustion and of retention of the used cigarette in the tube.
Such an expedient can clearly, and advantageously, be used in conjunction with any o~ the embodiments of carton which have been described.

Claims (12)

CLAIMS:
1. A carton (1,1') containing both a preassembled charge of (6) smoking articles and holder means (5,9,13,13') for holding used ones of that charge, the holder means including a tube or tubes (5,9,12,12') characterized in that the tube or tubes include a heat-conductive heat-dispersive or deodorant inner layer (16) for contacting a used article.
2. A carton according to claim 1 wherein the layer is a carbon-containing layer.
3. A carton (1,1') containing both a preassembled charge (6) of smoking articles (4) and holder means (5,9,13,13') for holding used ones of that charge, the holder means being or including a tube (5,9,12,12'), each smoking article having portions (18,19) of two diameters, characterized in that the article in its unused state is engageable in the carton only by means of one of the portions (18) having a lesser diameter with a tube (5,9,12,12') of said holding means (5,9,13,13') but in a used state being more tightly engageable with one end thereof by means of the other of the portions (19) to give better assurance of oxygen exhaustion in the tube.
4. A carton according to claim 1, claim 2 or claim 3 wherein the tubes are separate said tubes (5) fitted -individually to individual unused smoking articles (4).
5. A carton according to claim 4 wherein the holder means is an assembly of said tubes (10) separated in the carton (1') from the charge (6).
6. A carton according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the holding means is a container (13,13') separated in the carton (1') from the charge (6) and having at least one said tube (12,12') for introduction of the used article into the container.
7. A method of packing smoking articles (4) in a carton (1,1') together with means (5,9,13,13') for holding used such articles which include a tube (5,9,12,12'), which includes i) assembling a charge (6) of at least the smoking articles and ii) erecting the carton around that charge as well as the holding means.
8. A method of packing smoking articles (4) in a carton (1,1') together with holder means (5,9,13,13') for holding used such articles, which includes i) assembling a charge (6) of at least the smoking articles and ii) inserting the assembled charge together with the holding means into a pre-erected said carton.
9. A method according to claim 7 or claim 8 which includes the preliminary step of assembling each smoking article (4) with an individual tubular holder means (5) and then performing step (i) on the assembled articles (4) and means (5).
10. A method according to claim 7 or claim 8 wherein the charge (6) of smoking articles is placed side by side with holder means (9,13,13') in the carton.
11. A method according to any one of claims 7 to 10 wherein the smoking articles (4) have portions (18,19) of two diameters, the article in its unused state being engageable in the carton only by means of one of the portions (18) having a lesser diameter with the tube or tubes (5,9,12,12') of said holder means (5,9,13,13').
12. A method according to any one of claims 7 to 11 wherein the holding tube or tubes include a heat-conductive, heat-dispersive or deodorant inner layer (16).
CA002230920A 1995-09-01 1996-08-30 Carton for smoking articles with extinguishing means and method of charging it Abandoned CA2230920A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GBGB9517884.4A GB9517884D0 (en) 1995-09-01 1995-09-01 Carton for smoking articles
GB9517884.4 1995-09-01

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA2230920A1 true CA2230920A1 (en) 1997-03-13

Family

ID=10780066

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA002230920A Abandoned CA2230920A1 (en) 1995-09-01 1996-08-30 Carton for smoking articles with extinguishing means and method of charging it

Country Status (8)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0853590A1 (en)
JP (1) JPH11501599A (en)
AU (1) AU704424B2 (en)
CA (1) CA2230920A1 (en)
GB (1) GB9517884D0 (en)
NZ (1) NZ316144A (en)
WO (1) WO1997009250A1 (en)
ZA (1) ZA967378B (en)

Families Citing this family (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB9716899D0 (en) * 1997-08-08 1997-10-15 Rothmans International Ltd Machine and process for packaging smoking articles
FR2811519A1 (en) * 2000-07-17 2002-01-18 Mouv F F I DEVICE CREATING THE OBLIGATION FOR THE SMOKER TO MANAGE ITS STUFFS
AU2008267765A1 (en) * 2007-06-25 2008-12-31 Kristen Mihas Improved apparatus and method for the extinguishing and storage of used cigarette butts
ES1075173Y (en) * 2011-06-07 2011-11-11 Urnieta Rafael Daniel Gorostidi CIGARETTE PACKAGE WITH INCORPORATED CENICERO
WO2017072909A1 (en) * 2015-10-29 2017-05-04 日本たばこ産業株式会社 Container for combustion residues of carbon heat source of rod-shaped tobacco products, butt container, and package for rod-shaped tobacco products
BE1025082B1 (en) * 2017-03-22 2018-10-24 Ibrahim Nasaj DEVICE FOR DEAFING AND / OR odorless STORAGE OF A CIGARETTE.
FR3069856A1 (en) * 2017-08-04 2019-02-08 Eric Fieschi ECOLOGICAL CIGARETTE PACKAGE

Family Cites Families (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3888264A (en) * 1973-10-10 1975-06-10 Paul S Baclit Combined cigarette package holder and ashtray compartment
GB2063811B (en) * 1979-11-29 1983-10-05 Molins Ltd Packing of cigarettes
EP0077867A1 (en) * 1981-10-23 1983-05-04 Nicolaas Neuwahl Cigarette box with an ash receptacle for the butts
US4771882A (en) * 1987-06-24 1988-09-20 Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation Cigarette package with spacer
JPH0670740A (en) * 1992-08-28 1994-03-15 Nekusuto One:Kk Tobacco case serving also as cigarette butt container having fire extinguishing function
US5385157A (en) * 1993-07-23 1995-01-31 Smith; Kenneth Cigarette snuffing and storing device

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU6830596A (en) 1997-03-27
EP0853590A1 (en) 1998-07-22
WO1997009250A1 (en) 1997-03-13
NZ316144A (en) 1998-10-28
AU704424B2 (en) 1999-04-22
ZA967378B (en) 1997-03-10
GB9517884D0 (en) 1995-11-01
JPH11501599A (en) 1999-02-09

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