GB2080884A - Handle and actuating device for pressurised dispensers - Google Patents

Handle and actuating device for pressurised dispensers Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2080884A
GB2080884A GB8103261A GB8103261A GB2080884A GB 2080884 A GB2080884 A GB 2080884A GB 8103261 A GB8103261 A GB 8103261A GB 8103261 A GB8103261 A GB 8103261A GB 2080884 A GB2080884 A GB 2080884A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
dispenser
moulding
actuating member
handle
actuating
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Granted
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GB8103261A
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GB2080884B (en
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Priority to US06/279,265 priority Critical patent/US4432474A/en
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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
    • B65D83/00Containers or packages with special means for dispensing contents
    • B65D83/14Containers or packages with special means for dispensing contents for delivery of liquid or semi-liquid contents by internal gaseous pressure, i.e. aerosol containers comprising propellant for a product delivered by a propellant
    • B65D83/16Containers or packages with special means for dispensing contents for delivery of liquid or semi-liquid contents by internal gaseous pressure, i.e. aerosol containers comprising propellant for a product delivered by a propellant characterised by the actuating means
    • B65D83/20Containers or packages with special means for dispensing contents for delivery of liquid or semi-liquid contents by internal gaseous pressure, i.e. aerosol containers comprising propellant for a product delivered by a propellant characterised by the actuating means operated by manual action, e.g. button-type actuator or actuator caps
    • B65D83/201Lever-operated actuators
    • B65D83/202Lever-operated actuators combined with a hand grip

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Dispersion Chemistry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Containers And Packaging Bodies Having A Special Means To Remove Contents (AREA)

Abstract

A combined handle and actuating device for pressurised dispensers (20) has a body (1) including a handle (3) to be gripped by the user and a means (2) for readily attaching the device to the dispenser. The coupling means (2) may comprise resiliently deformable nose and tail portions (10, 11) which co-operate with a channel (25) in the top of the dispenser. The device includes an actuating means (5) which is operable to depress or release the actuating member or button (24) of the dispenser, and which includes a trigger (7) for operation by the hand of the user, and may also incorporate a restoring spring (9). <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Handle and actuating device for pressurised dispensers This invention relates to a combined handle and actuating device for pressurised dispensers.
Pressurised dispensers are well known and widely used. Conventionally they comprise a container for a pressurised active ingredient such as paint, deodorant, weedkiller or insect killer; and a means for permitting release of a spray of the contents of the container in the form of a discharge valve which is manually operable by the depression of an actuating member or button. For short periods of use these cans are particularly convenient and may simply be operated by the index finger of the hand holding the container or can. However where the spray is to be directed for a prolonged period of time this normal operational method can be tiring for the user.
Further, where the contents of the can are not particularly pleasant, for example when they are paints or insect sprays, it is often unadvisable to control the spray by means of the finger. Thus it becomes uncomfortable to hold the can and manipulate the valve actuating member, and moreover the contents of the can may impinge on the fingers of the user.
In addition, there is often no convenient positive indication of the direction of the spray, nor particularly good control over the release of the spray.
Various devices have been proposed for coupling to pressurised dispensers so as to cbnstitute handles and triggers for operating the dispenser valve. However a problem is that such known devices are not readily coupled to the dispenser. Thus some require rather cumbersome rings in which the dispenser or can must be inserted and secured before use, or simply push onto the outside of the can rim (see, for example GB 1002216 (Johnson) and GB 1487719 (SMRT) ). Others such as GB 2038952A (Four Square) may be coupled to the can by means of a so-called snap fit in which a clip portion in the form of a part circular flange is pushed into the outer groove which in conventional dispensers is formed between the upper part of the can and the seal thereof. A snap fit form of attachment is particularly advantageous since this generally permits ready detachment of the device from the dispenser.Thus yet other devices are known which make use of the standard shape and size of the valve assembly of conventional pressurised dispensers as means for coupling to handle/trigger devices. In standard dispensers the inside surfaces of the rims of the valve assembly are undercut slightly so as to form an annular channel opening towards the push button which, when depressed, actually releases the contents of the can. Some known devices are provided with lugs which may be pressed into the channel so as to enable the device to grip the can, but in general the provision of such lugs has not been found to be satisfactory because the grip provided is not sufficient to permit lifting and manipulation of full cans.Thus GB 2001 706A (I to I Plastics Limited) describes a handle attach ment wherein resilient lugs engage into the rim of the valve, and are forced outwardly against the rim to provide grip by means of a cam rotatable by a lever. GB 829508 (Donald Josephs Limited) describes a device which is attached to the can by means of an annular formation which is adapted to encircle the valve assembly, and has depending lugs spaced round the annulus which after suitable manoeuvring resiliently engage the channel.
Thus there is effectively an outer flange gripping the outside of the valve assembly, and a plurality of lugs gripping the inside of the valve assembly. The flange and lugs are preferably of metal, presumably to provide sufficient strength to grip the full dispenser. GB 11 63978 (miller) describes a similar means of attachment wherein the flange and lugs are constituted by an inner and outer hood. Indeed only the inner hood is stated to be required, in which case attachment is by pressing the device downwardly onto the valve assembly. The inner hood member, which is provided with slits and beads so as to constitute lugs, is then elastically deformed into the channel to grip the can.
The known devices are thus attached by means of a plurality of lugs which either require additional means for ensuring tight attachment, or include a plurality of lugs, often formed separately from the handle, which necessitate careful handling to obtain good coupling. Further, it has been found in practice that a tight snap fit which is easily obtained, strong, and provides ready detachment, is not provided.
It is desirable therefore to provide a device which is easy to attach to the dispenser and can readily be detached therefrom, whilst at the same time providing a strong coupling enabling the can to be lifted and manipulated without danger of detachment. It is further desirable to provide a device which may be produced, with the exception of the trigger, in the form of a single moulding.
According to the present invention there is provided a combined handle and actuating device for a pressurised dispenser of the kind comprising a container containing a pressurised active ingredient and having a discharge valve assembly manually operable by a depressable actuating member, the valve assembly including an annular channel opening towards the actuating member, which device comprises a body including a handle to be gripped by the user and a coupling means adapted for ready supportive attachment to and detachment from the dispenser, and an actuating means operable by the hand of the user holding the handle to depress or release the actuating member, wherein the coupling means comprises a nose portion and a tail portion arranged in spaced relationship and formed to suit substantially diametrically op posed regions of said channel, said nose and tail portions being of a stiffness and at least one of them being of a resilient deformability sufficient to permit supportive attachment of the device to the dispenser by insertion of one of said nose and tail portions into one region of said channel followed by pivotting of the device relative to the dispenser so as to snap engage the other of said nose and tail portions into a substantially diametrically opposed region of the channel.
In a preferred embodiment the actuating means comprises a lever pivotally mounted in the body, one end of the lever extending out of the body to form the trigger and the other end, when the device is attached to the dispenser, engaging the actuating member such that pulling of the trigger causes the lever to pivot and depress the actuating member.
In use of the device, that is when the device is attached to the dispenser, the up ward force on the valve actuating member is transmitted through the actuating lever of the device, and so the trigger is maintained in its inoperative position, that is away from the body or handle when the trigger is not actually being pulled by the user. However when the device is not attached to a dispenser the lever may simply pivot freely which means that the trigger may apparently flap loosely between its operative and inoperative positions.Accordingly it is preferred for reasons of appearance so as to present an apparently reactive trigger to the prospective customer, to provide the lever with a spring for reaction against the body of the device so as to maintain the trigger in its inoperative position when the device is not attached to the dispenser and when the trigger is not being pulled by the user. Any convenient form of spring may be used; for example a strip of resilient material may extend from the lever and contact the body to maintain the trigger in the "off" position when pressure is not actually being applid to the trigger, that is when the trigger is not being pulled.
It is a particularly convenient feature of the device that the means for coupling the device to the dispenser is such that the device may readily be attached to and detached from the dispenser.
Attachment is by the insertion and pivotting technique described above; of course detachment is the reverse of this procedure, by snap disengagement of e.g. the tail portion from the channel followed by withdrawal of in this case the nose portion from the opposite region of the channel.
The term supportive attachment as used above means that the coupling means is not only attachable to the dispenser but that when in the attached configuration the coupling is sufficiently strong for the device to support the dispenser i.e. the dispenser can be carried by the handle without the need for other means of support.
The device according to the- invention may be formed, for example, of metal. However it is a particularly advantageous feature of one embodiment of the invention that the device is wholly or in part formed from one or more plastics materials such as polypropylene. The use of such materials enables the coupling means to be inherently deformable, although additional means for providing resilient deformation, such as notches or grooves, may be provided where appropriate. Of course the design of the coupling means is such that an opening is provided to permit spray to pass through when the trigger of the device is pulled. This is conveniently provided in a particularly preferred embodiment by the configuration of the nose and tail portions.Thus the tail portion may be consideneal as an upwardly extending channel having at its base a bead or rim which in use engages in the dispenser, whilst the nose portion may be considered as a cantilever extending from the upper part of the upwardly extending channel and having at its base another bead or rim which again in use engages in the dispenser.
The cantilever configuration permits the deformability and resilience which is required in attaching the device to the dispenser, togeti with the rigidity which gives strength to the device. This is particularly important since the diameter of the inner rim of the valve assembly of standard dispensers may vary by e.g.
0.7 mm and so a range of deformations must be possible to give firm attachment in all cases. Some prior art devices having coupling means comprising a plurality of relatively short lugs are at a disadvantage here since they do not permit the large deformations which are possible with the cant-ilevered nose and tail coupling of the prssent invention.
In one particularly preferred form the body is in the form of a onepart plastics moulding of "butterfly" construction, matching sections of the moulding including cooperating por tions and being secured together by snap engagement of said co-operating portions. The co-operting portions may be in the form of press-studs which snap together when the "butterfly" is folded along its "spine" or axis of reflection, and are preferably included' in the sections which in the folded confsuratiort constitute the handle. This embodiment is particularly advantageous since it enables the device to be produced in only two pieces namely the combined handle avi coupling means, and the actuating rfZt" 8fl" On a simple two plate tol with k * b tof + s, -S core members. This is thus distinguished from certain prior art devices which are in several pieces and hence require complicated moulding procedures and several stages of assembly.
In another embodiment the body is in the form of a two-part plastics moulding comprising two matching components which include co-operating portions and are secured together by snap engagement of said co-operating portions.
In the above described constructions, the moulding preferably includes a pin disposed in an appropriate position such that it may be used to constitute a pivot point for the actuating means when this is in the form of a pivotted lever. To form the device in the preferred manner, therefore, a butterfly moulding or pair of matching components including an appropriate pin and press-stud portions in the matching handle sections, is formed in a single moulding stage and a lever having a hole to suit the pin is formed in a second moulding. The lever is then fitted over the pin and the matching parts are assembled so that the press-studs snap together, forming a device with the lever pivotted in the body and constituted by an external trigger at one end and another end for actuating the button of the dispenser.If required the press-studs may be of a size such that a standard sized dispenser button may be stored within the handle so that it is conveniently available for putting on a dispenser which does not have a conventionally sized or shaped button.
The nose and tail portions are particularly important features of the invention and may together form a substantially part-annular resiliently deformable member having a lip which suits the channel of the dispenser when the device is attached thereto.
Preferably the side surfaces of the nose and tail portions are flat, e.g. coplanar with the side surfaces of the handle. This configuration has the advantage that ready packaging and stacking of a plurality of devices is permitted.
More importantly, though, the flat sides are advantageous since they mean that the device may readily be attached by first inserting, say, the nose portion into the channel without deformation, and then pivoting the device about the nose portion so that the tail portion deforms into and engages the channel. This is distinguished from certain prior art devices which are provided with a plurality of lugs extending substantially annularly about the dispenser actuating member when in the attached configuration, meaning that to attach the device to the dispenser, the lugs must all be fully deformable as the device is pressed, usually vertically downwards, onto the valve assembly. In contrast, this embodiment of the invention requires only half the deformation which is required of conventional lug arrangements, to provide the same strength of attachment.Further, the nose and tail portions may, because of the mode of attachment, be of dimensions which permit much fuller seating into the channel than has hitherto been possible with conventional lug arrangements.
When the device is moulded in the manner described above each of the nose and tail portions is effectively formed in the two halves of the mould cavity which means that the nose is split, as is the tail. This is advantageous since it means that when the moulding is folded together there is a certain amount of resilience in the nose and tail respectively, by virtue of the two halves of each portion being forced together. This is in addition to the natural resilience of the material from which the moulding is formed, and so assists the grip of the nose and tail portions into the channel of the dispenser when the device is in the attached configuration.Preferably the moulding is such that one half of the nose, and one half of the tail, is provided with a pin, and the other respective halves are provided with a hole to suit so that when the moulding is folded, no relative motion between the matching halves is permitted other than the slight springing apart which, as has been described above, assists grip in the channel.
For a better understanding of the invention and to show how the same may be carried into effect, reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawings in which: Figure 1 is a vertical cross-section through an embodiment of the invention; and Figure 2 shows the device of Fig. 1 in combination with a pressurised dispenser.
Referring to Fig. 1 there is shown a device according to the invention having a body 1 including a portion 2 adapted for coupling to a pressurised dispenser and a handle 3. The handle, which is intended to be gripped in the hand of the user, is provided internally with cooperating portions in the form of pressstuds 4 which snap together to aid assembly of the body. Indeed in the embodiment shown the body is moulded as a single item in the form of mirror image halves joined at the upper edge in a "butterfly" configuration. To produce the body the butterfly is folded along the joined edge and the co-operating portions 4 are snapped together to secure the two halves of the body together.
The device includes an actuating means which is operable to depress or release the actuating member of the dispenser to which the device is intended for attachment, which actuating means comprises a lever 5 having one end 6 which, in use, is in contact with the actuating member of the dispenser, and an opposite end 7 in the form of a trigger extending outside the body. The lever 5 is pivotally mounted at pivot point 8 within the body of the device, the pivot point being constituted by a pin formed on one half of the body during the moulding procedure.
In use the hand of the user grips the handle 3 and the index finger passes around the trigger 7. The application of pressure by pulling the trigger 7 causes the lever 5 to pivot about point 8 and hence causes depression of the end 6 and thus of the actuating member of the dispenser. The actuating member of the dispenser is, as is well known, effectively spring loaded by the pressure contained within the dispenser. Thus when attached to a dispenser, release of the trigger 7 will automatically mean that the actuating member moves upwards against the end 6 and hence the lever 5 pivots back into the "inoperative" position of the trigger. However when the device is not attached to a dispenser, the trigger 7 apparently flaps freely adjacent the handle. Thus for reasons of appearance the embodiment shown includes a spring for reaction against the body.The spring is in the form of a resilient strip 9 integral with and extending from the lever 5 to the upper portion of the body; this effectively maintains the trigger in the "inoperative" position when the device is not attached to a dispenser and, of course, when the trigger is not being pulled by the user.
The portion 2 adapted for coupling to the dispenser comprises a nose portion 10 and a tail portion 11. Each of these two portions has a lip 12 to suit an annular channel opening towards the actuating member of a dispenser to which attachment is intended. The nose and/or tail portions are resiliently deformable and are shaped such as to be engageable in substantially diametrically opposed regions of the channel. Deformation of the nose and/or tail portions is permitted, apart from the natural resilience of the polypropylene from which the illustrated embodiment is formed, by means of an effectively cantilevered configuration, the two components of the cantilever being spaced by a channel 1 3 in the flat sides of the nose and tail portions. The portions which in use actually engage the dispenser are part annular to provide good grip with the valve assembly.The embodiment shown is formed by a "butterfly" moulding process, and so necessarily the body is in two sections linked across a common "spine". One section of each of the nose and tail portions has a moulded pin, and the other section has a moulded hole to suit (shown but not numbered); the pin in the hole prevents movement in the member once the fold along the "spine" has been made, thus conferring a degree of rigidity on the respective nose and tail portions which may not be present before assembly is completed.
Use of the embodiment shown in Fig. 1 is illustrated in Fig. 2, which shows the device 1 attached to a pressurised dispenser 20 comprising a container 21 and a valve arranged ment 22. For clarity, a part of the coupling means of the device has been omitted. The dispenser has a conventional upper shoulder 23. The valve section of the dispenser includes an actuating member 24, that is the conventional button which is usually depressed by the index finger in operation of the dispenser, and an annular channel 25 which opens inwardly towards the actuating member. The device is attached to the dispenser by virtue of co-operation between the lips 1 2 of the nose portion 10 and tail portion 11, and the walls of the channel 25.In attaching the device to the dispenser, the nose portion 10 is first inserted completely into the appropriate part of the channel 25 without the need for any deformation to take place. Thereafter the device is pivotted about the nose portion 10 with respect to the dispenser until the tail portion 11 is ' "snapped" into a diametrically opposed portion of the channel 25, by virtue of its resilient deformation. Detachment of the device from the dispenser is the reverse of this operation. As may be seen from Fig. 2, pressure on the trigger 7 will cause the lever end 6 to move downwards and hence to depress the actuating member of the dispenser and release a spray of the pressurised active ingredient contained in the dispenser through the open front of the device.
As is mentioned above, the device shown in the drawings is formed from plastics materials such as polypropylene or nylon, by a "butterfly" moulding technique, and so may have constructional aids and strengthening members which are not shown. It is not essential that the material from which the trigger is moulded should be the same as that of the body. The stiffness of the sections constituting the nose and/or tail portions is such that they are resilient enough to permit coupling in the manner described, and rigid enough to permit supportive attachment as required. Indeed the embodiment shown is of a configuration and rigidity such as permits ready attachment to a dispenser whilst using only one hand, and also may be supportively attached to conventional dispensers even allowing for the range of tolerance in the size of valve assemblies which are usually supplied to the market.

Claims (14)

1. A combined handle and actuating device for a pressurised dispenser of the kind comprising a container containing a pressurised active ingredient and having a discharge valve assembly manually operable by a depressable actuating member, the valve assembly including an annular channel opening towards the actuating member, which device comprises a body including a handle to be gripped by the user and a coupling means adapted for ready supportive attachment to and detachment from the dispenser, and an actuating means operable, ty the hand of the user holding the handle to depress or release the actuating member, wherein the coupling means comprises a nose portion and a tail portion arranged in spaced relationship and formed to suit substantially diametrically opposed regions of said channel, said nose and tail portions being of a stiffness and at least one of them being of a resilient deformability sufficient to permit supportive attachment of the device to the dispenser by insertion of one of siad nose and tail portions into one region of said channel followed by pivotting of the device relative to the dispenser so as to snap engage the other of said nose and tail portions into a substantially diametrically opposed region of the channel.
2. A device according to claim 1 wherein the actuating means comprises a lever pivotally mounted in the body, one end of the lever extending out of the body to form the trigger and the other end, when the device is attached to the dispenser, engaging the actuating member such that pulling of the trigger causes the lever to pivot and depress the actuating member.
3. A device according to claim 2 wherein the lever is provided with a spring for reaction against the body to maintain the trigger in an inoperative position when the device is not attached to the dispenser and when the trigger is not being pulled by the user.
4. A device according to any one of the preceding claims which is wholly or in part formed from one or more plastics materials.
5. A device according to claim 4 wherein the or one of the plastic materials is polypropylene.
6. A device according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the body is in the form of a one part plastics moulding of "but terfly construction, matching sections of the moulding including co-operating portions and being secured together by snap engagement of said co-operating portions.
7. A device according to any one of claims 1 to 5 wherein the body is in the form of a two-part plastics moulding comprising two matching components which include cooperating portions and are secured together by snap engagement of said co-operating portions.
8. A device according to claim 5 or 6 wherein said co-operating portions are disposed in the parts of the moulding which constitute the handle of the assembled device.
9. A device according to claim 6, 7 or 8 when appendant to claim 2 or 3 wherein the moulding includes a pin which constitutes the pivot point about which the lever is pivotally mounted in the body.
10. A device according to claim 6, 7, 8 or 9 wherein the parts of the moulding which, when assembled, constitute the nose portion, are provided respectively with a pin and a cooperating hole such that in the assembled configuration relative movement of the sections lateral of the pin is substantially prevented.
11. A device according to any one of claims 6 to 10 wherein the parts of the moulding which, when assembled, constitute the tail portion, are provided respectively with a pin and a co-operating hole such that in the folded configuration relative movement of the sections lateral of the pin is substantially prevented.
1 2. A device according to claim 1 substantially as described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
1 3. A device according to claim 1 substantially as hereindescribed.
14. In combination, a pressurised dispenser comprising a container containing a pressurised active ingredient and having a discharge valve assembly manually operable by a depressable actuating member, the valve assembly including an annular channel opening towards the actuating member, and, attached thereto, a combined handle and actuating device according to any one of the preceding claims.
GB8103261A 1980-07-08 1981-02-03 Handle and actuating device for pressurised dispensers Expired GB2080884B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US06/279,265 US4432474A (en) 1980-07-08 1981-07-01 Handle and actuating device for pressurized dispensers

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8022233 1980-07-08
GB8028427 1980-09-03

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2080884A true GB2080884A (en) 1982-02-10
GB2080884B GB2080884B (en) 1984-05-23

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GB8103261A Expired GB2080884B (en) 1980-07-08 1981-02-03 Handle and actuating device for pressurised dispensers

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Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2190709A (en) * 1986-04-04 1987-11-25 Farco A cap for an aerosol can
GB2218471A (en) * 1988-05-19 1989-11-15 Item Products Ltd Aerosol can accessory
GB2220989A (en) * 1988-07-04 1990-01-24 Chen Teng Mo Shaving cream dispenser
WO1992002120A1 (en) * 1990-08-07 1992-02-20 The O.M. Scott & Sons Company Portable spreading devices
USRE33860E (en) * 1988-05-24 1992-03-31 Fountain shaving device
GB2259030A (en) * 1991-06-07 1993-03-03 Bristol Myers Squibb Co A trigger spray
FR2724636A1 (en) * 1994-09-16 1996-03-22 Plastiques De France Ind Aerosol container spray cap
GB2418416A (en) * 2004-08-12 2006-03-29 Gotohti Com Inc Cantilevered spring and disposable dispenser
US7270250B2 (en) 2004-08-30 2007-09-18 Hygiene-Tecknik Inc. Disposable dispenser
US7568598B2 (en) 2004-08-12 2009-08-04 Gotohti.Com Inc. Cantilevered spring
US7743950B2 (en) * 2006-09-06 2010-06-29 Apex Mfg. Co., Ltd. Device for holding and actuating a sprayer

Cited By (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2190709A (en) * 1986-04-04 1987-11-25 Farco A cap for an aerosol can
GB2190709B (en) * 1986-04-04 1989-11-22 Farco A cap for an aerosol can
GB2218471A (en) * 1988-05-19 1989-11-15 Item Products Ltd Aerosol can accessory
GB2218471B (en) * 1988-05-19 1991-11-20 Item Products Ltd Aerosol can accessory
USRE33860E (en) * 1988-05-24 1992-03-31 Fountain shaving device
GB2220989A (en) * 1988-07-04 1990-01-24 Chen Teng Mo Shaving cream dispenser
GB2220989B (en) * 1988-07-04 1992-05-13 Chen Teng Mo Shaving cream dispenser
WO1992002120A1 (en) * 1990-08-07 1992-02-20 The O.M. Scott & Sons Company Portable spreading devices
US5123598A (en) * 1990-08-07 1992-06-23 The O. M. Scott & Sons Company, Inc. Portable spreading devices
GB2259030B (en) * 1991-06-07 1995-06-28 Bristol Myers Squibb Co Ergonomic trigger sprayer
GB2259030A (en) * 1991-06-07 1993-03-03 Bristol Myers Squibb Co A trigger spray
FR2724636A1 (en) * 1994-09-16 1996-03-22 Plastiques De France Ind Aerosol container spray cap
GB2418416A (en) * 2004-08-12 2006-03-29 Gotohti Com Inc Cantilevered spring and disposable dispenser
GB2418416B (en) * 2004-08-12 2008-06-11 Gotohti Com Inc Cantilevered spring and disposable dispenser
GB2445290A (en) * 2004-08-12 2008-07-02 Gotohti Com Inc Cantilevered spring and disposable dispenser
GB2445290B (en) * 2004-08-12 2008-10-22 Gotohti Com Inc Cantilevered spring and disposable dispenser
US7568598B2 (en) 2004-08-12 2009-08-04 Gotohti.Com Inc. Cantilevered spring
US7748574B2 (en) 2004-08-12 2010-07-06 Gotohti.Com Cantilevered spring
DE102005038247B4 (en) 2004-08-12 2022-07-07 Gotohti.Com Inc. Disposable dispenser
US7270250B2 (en) 2004-08-30 2007-09-18 Hygiene-Tecknik Inc. Disposable dispenser
US7743950B2 (en) * 2006-09-06 2010-06-29 Apex Mfg. Co., Ltd. Device for holding and actuating a sprayer

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
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Date Code Title Description
PE20 Patent expired after termination of 20 years

Effective date: 20010202