GB2100238A - A closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening - Google Patents

A closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2100238A
GB2100238A GB8216297A GB8216297A GB2100238A GB 2100238 A GB2100238 A GB 2100238A GB 8216297 A GB8216297 A GB 8216297A GB 8216297 A GB8216297 A GB 8216297A GB 2100238 A GB2100238 A GB 2100238A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
closure
closure device
skirt
drive means
members
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Granted
Application number
GB8216297A
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GB2100238B (en
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Individual
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Individual
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Priority to GB8216297A priority Critical patent/GB2100238B/en
Publication of GB2100238A publication Critical patent/GB2100238A/en
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Expired 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
    • B65D50/00Closures with means for discouraging unauthorised opening or removal thereof, with or without indicating means, e.g. child-proof closures
    • B65D50/02Closures with means for discouraging unauthorised opening or removal thereof, with or without indicating means, e.g. child-proof closures openable or removable by the combination of plural actions
    • B65D50/04Closures with means for discouraging unauthorised opening or removal thereof, with or without indicating means, e.g. child-proof closures openable or removable by the combination of plural actions requiring the combination of simultaneous actions, e.g. depressing and turning, lifting and turning, maintaining a part and turning another one
    • B65D50/041Closures with means for discouraging unauthorised opening or removal thereof, with or without indicating means, e.g. child-proof closures openable or removable by the combination of plural actions requiring the combination of simultaneous actions, e.g. depressing and turning, lifting and turning, maintaining a part and turning another one the closure comprising nested inner and outer caps or an inner cap and an outer coaxial annular member, which can be brought into engagement to enable removal by rotation

Abstract

The invention relates to a closure device 1 such as a screw cap for a container such as a medicine bottle having a screw neck, the device 1 having inner and outer caps 2 and 3 comprising respectively an end member 4 and 5 and a skirt member 6 and 7, there being first drive means 8 between the skirt members 6 and 7 and second drive means 9 associated with biassing means 10 in the form of a resilient ring formed integrally with the outer cap 3. In order to tighten the device 1 on a bottle, the outer cap is rotated, the first drive means comprising ratchets 12 and driving dogs 13 driving the caps in unison. If the outer cap is now unscrewed, the ratchets 12 click over the dogs 13 and the inner cap is not unscrewed until the outer cap is depressed to overcome the force of the ring 10, which normally acts to bias the caps apart, so engaging dogs 15 in sockets 14 comprising the second drive means. The two caps can then be unscrewed in unison. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION A closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening Technical Field of the Invention The invention relates to a closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening.
Background Art Generally closure devices such as screwthreaded caps of containers with a screwthreaded opening such as a neck can be removed relatively easily by unscrewing. This can be dangerous when the container houses drugs, dangerous chemicals and the like and a child for example unscrews the closure device and gains access to the contents and then takes the contents with possibly harmful or even fatal results.
Closure devices which seek to provide for safer or authorised opening of the container have been proposed, but they are generally complex and expensive.
Disclosure of the Invention It is an object of the invention to seek to mitigate these disadvantages of prior closures for containers.
According to the invention there is provided a closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening, comprising inner and outer closure members each comprising an end member and skirt member, and first and second drive means, the first drive means being between the respective skirt members and being operative to rotate the closure members in unison in one sense only, the second drive means being associated with means biasing the inner and outer members axially apart and being operative to rotate the closure members in unison in the opposite sense only when pressure is applied to the outer member in the axial direction sufficiently to overcome the pressure of the biasing means to move the outer member towards the inner member and the outer member is rotated in the opposite sense.
Using the invention it is possible to provide a closure device which can be screwed or unscrewed easily and positively onto or from a container yet provides a safety closure as it cannot readily be removed by an unauthorised person.
The closure members are preferably cylindrical.
The first drive means may comprise a driving dog on one skirt member and a ratchet on the facing wall of the other skirt member. This construction is relatively simple yet provides a positive action to mount the closure device on the container and allows the outer cylindrical closure member to rotate relative to the inner cylindrical member, the ratchet clicking over the dog, if the force of the biasing means is not overcome, so preventing removal of the closure device from the container.
The driving dog may preferably be on the inner surface of the outer skirt member and the ratchet may be on the outer surface of the inner skirt member. This construction provides for a positive driving action in the one sense when the closure device is being tightened on the container.
There may be a plurality of spaced apart driving dogs and ratchets. This construction spreads the tightening force around the skirt members so that there is no localised application of force which might lead to failure at a particular point.
The second drive means may comprise a socket of one end member and a projection of the other end member, and the biasing means may comprise a resilient member carried by one end member and contacting the adjacent surface of the other end member. This construction is again a relatively simple one to manufacture and it provides a relatively simple yet efficient way of ensuring a positive turning in the opposite (unscrewing) sense.
There may preferably be a plurality of projections and a plurality of sockets. This construction provides for positive driving engagement without the requirement for a large wrist movement before turning in the opposite sense is effected.
There may be two projections and eight sockets. This arrangement provides for a relatively rapid engagement of the second driving means on pushing and turning of the outer cylindrical closure member.
The or each projection may be on the inner surface of the end member of the outer cylindrical member and the or each socket may be carried by the outer surface of the end member of the inner cylindrical closure member. This construction provides for a positive spigot and socket kind of engagement when the pressure of the resilient member is overcome.
The resilient member may be a ring integral with and projecting from the inner surface of the member of the outer cylindrical closure member.
This construction is relatively easy and inexpensive to manufacture, particularly when the inner and outer cylindrical closure members are made of plastics, suitable by injection moulding.
It will be understood that the invention extends to a container having a screw-threaded cylindrical opening and a closure device as hereinbefore defined in which the inner surface of the skirt of the inner cylindrical closure member has a screw thread which mates, or can mate, with the screwthreaded cylindrical opening.
Two safety closure devices for the externally screw-threaded neck of a bottle are hereinafter described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Brief Description of the Drawings Figure 1 is a side elevational view of an inner cylindrical closure member of a first closure device; Figure 2 is a plan view of the closure member of Figure 1; Figure 3 is a sectional view of the line A-A of Figure 2; Figure 4 is a side elevational view of an outer cylindrical closure member of the first closure device; Figure 5 is a plan view of the closure member of Figure 4; Figure 6 is a sectional view on the line B-B of Figure 5; Figure 7 is a scrap section on the line X-X of Figure 5; and Figure 8 is a transverse sectional view of the assembled closure device; Figures 9, 10, 11 and 12 are respectively side elevational, top plan, bottom plan and transverse sectional views of an outer cylindrical closure member of a second safety closure device; Figures 1 3, 14, 1 5 and 1 6 are respectively side elevational, top plan, bottom plan and transverse sectional views of a cylindrical closure member of a second safety closure device; and Figure 1 7 shows a transverse sectional view of the assembled second safety closure device mounted on the externally screw-threaded neck of a bottle for containing potentially hazardous substances such as drugs.
Referring firstly to Figures 1 to 8 of the drawings, the closure device 1 shown comprises inner and outer cylindrical closure members 2 and 3 each comprising respectively an end member 4 and 5 and a skirt member 6 and 7 and first and second drive means 8 and 9, the first drive means 8 being between the skirt members 6 and 7, the second drive means 9 being associated with biasing means in the form of a resilient member or ring 10 which biases the inner and outer members 2 and 3 axially apart.
The inner cylindrical closure member or cap 2 is smaller on its outer diameter than the inner diameter of the outer cylindrical closure member or cap 3, so there is a gap 11 between the two caps in which the first drive means 8 is situated.
The first drive means 8 for turning the two caps 2 and 3 in unison in one sense to tighten the closure device 1 on the neck (not shown) comprises four equally circumferentially spaced apart ratchets 1 2 on the outer (as viewed) surface of the skirt 6 and four driving dogs 13 equidistantly circumferentially spaced apart on the inner (as viewed) surface of the skirt 7.
The second drive means 9 comprises eight equidistantly spaced apart sockets 14 carried by the outer surface of the end member 4 of the cap 2 and two diametrically opposed dogs 1 5 which are of generally triangular section with a flat 16 and which project from the inner surface of the end member 5 of the outer cylindrical cap 3.
The ring 10 is of less diameter than the diametrical spacing of the drive dogs 15 and has greater height than those dogs 1 5 so that the inner and outer caps 2 and 3 are spaced apart with the drive dogs 1 5 out of engagement with the sockets 14.
Both caps 2 and 3 are injection mouided as a separate integral unit, the inner surface of the skirt 6 having a screw thread 1 7 formed thereon during moulding. Polypropylene is the preferred plastics.
The two caps 2 and 3 are force-fitted together so that they assume the assembled condition shown in Figure 8. The inner cap springs past a circumferential lip 1 8 on the outer cap 3 on assembly and anti-removal means in the form of four detents 19 on the inner cap 2 prevent it from springing out of the outer cap 3 past the lip 1 8 after assembly.
In order to tighten the closure device 1 on the screw-threaded neck of a bottle such as a medicine bottle, the closure device is offered up to the neck and the screw threads engage when the outer cap 3 is turned in one sense, clockwise, to effect tightening. This turning causes the drive dogs 13 to engage the free edges of the ratchets 12 so that both inner and outer caps 2 and 3 turn in unison in the tightening direction.
If the outer cap 3 is now rotated in the opposite sense, in the anti-clockwise or tightening direction, the drive dogs 13 merely click over the ratchets 12, which are resilient. The closure device 1 remains firmly in place on the neck. In order to remove the closure device 1 from the neck, it is necessary to depress the outer cap 3 axially so that the pressure of the ring 10 urging the caps 2 and 3 apart is overcome, the depression being sufficient to engage the drive dogs 1 5 in the sockets 14. On turning the outer cap 3 the inner cap 2 now turns with it so the two can be rotated in unison and removed from the neck. When removed the resilient ring 10 urges the two caps 2 and 3 axially apart again so that the drive dogs 1 5 and sockets 14 disengage, ready for re-assembly of the closure device 1 with the neck as described.
It will be understood that the invention above described and shown in Figures 1-8 may be modified. For example there may be more ratchets 12 and dogs 13, or fewer ratchets 12 and dogs 13, than the four shown. Also, there may be only one drive dog 1 5, or more than two drive dogs 1 5 and there may be more or fewer sockets 14 than the eight shown. Also, the sockets 14 may have chamfered lead-in edges to provide for as rapid and as easy location of the drive dogs thereon as possible. Also, the biasing means may comprise a separate spring means or resilient body rather than the integral ring 10 shown.
The inner cap 2 is shown as having an integral sealing ring 20 for sealing with the opening of the neck when the closure device is tightened on the neck. The inner cap 2 may however be formed without this feature. Also, the outer cap is shown with serrations 21 on the outer surface of the skirt 7 to assist in manipulation and with a legend 22 giving operating instructions. Either or both of these may be omitted or modified.
Referring now to Figures 9-1 7, the closure device 100 (Figure 17) shown comprises inner and outer cylindrical closure members 102 and 103 each comprising respectively an end member 104 and 105 a skirt member 106 and 107 and first and second drive means 108 and 109, the first drive means 108 being between the skirt members 106 and 107, the second drive means 109 being associated with biasing means in the form of a resilient member or ring 110 which is split into six circumferentially spaced segments 1 10a (of which three are shown in Figures 12 and 17) and which biases the inner and outer members 102 and 103 axially apart.
The inner cylindrical closure member or cap 102 is smaller on its outer diameter than the inner diameter of the outer cylindrical closure member or cap 103, so there is a gap 111 between the two caps in which the first drive means 108 is situated. The first drive means 8 for turning the two caps 102 and 103 in unison in one sense to tighten the closure device 100 on the externally screw-threaded neck 101 of the container 101a comprises four equally circumferentially spaced apart drive dogs 112 on the inner (as viewed) surface of the skirt 107 and ratchets 113 equidistantly circumferentially spaced apart on the outer (as viewed) surface of the skirt 106.
The second drive means 109 comprises equidistantly spaced apart sockets 114 carried by the outer surface of the end member 104 of the cap 102 and four diametrically opposed dogs 11 5 which are of generally triangular section with a flat 116 like the flat 1 6 of the first and which project from the inner surface of the end member 105 of the outer cylindrical cap 103.
The segments 11 Oa are on a circumference of less diameter than the diametrical spacing of the drive dogs 11 5 and have greater height than those dogs 11 5 so that the inner and outer caps 102 and 103 are spaced apart with the drive dogs 11 5 out of engagement with the sockets 114 which are themselves defined by walls which are inclined to the vertical on one side.
Both caps 102 and 103 are injection moulded as a separate integral unit, the inner surface of the skirt 106 having a screw thread 11 7 formed thereon during moulding. Polypropylene is the preferred plastics.
The two caps 102 and 103 are force-fitted together so that they assume the assembled conditions shown in Figure 17. The inner cap springs past a circumferential lip 118 on the outer cap 103 on assembly.
In order to tighten the closure device 100 of the screw-threaded neck 101 of the bottle 101 a such as a medicine bottle, the closure device 100 is offered up to the neck and the screw threads 117 engage when the outer cap 103 is turned in one sense, clockwise, to effect tightening. This turning causes the drive dogs 11 2 to engage the free edges of the ratchets 113 so that both inner and outer caps 102 and 103 turn in unison in the tightening direction.
If the outer cap 103 is now rotated in the opposite sense, in the anti-clockwise or untightening direction, the drive dogs 11 2, which are flexible and resilient merely click over the ratchets 113 to produce an audible clicking sound.
The closure device 100 remains firmly in place on the neck 101. In order to remove the closure device 100 from the neck 101, it is necessary to depress the outer cap 103 axially so that the pressure of the segments 11 Oa urging the caps 102 and 103 apart is overcome, the depression being sufficient to engage the drive dogs 11 5 in the sockets 114. On turning the outer cap 103 the inner cap 102 now turns with it so the two can be rotated in unison and removed from the neck.
When removed the resilient ring segments 11 Oa urge the two caps 102 and 103 axially apart again so that the drive dogs 11 5 and sockets 114 disengage, ready for re-assembly of the closure device 100 with the neck as described.
It will be understood that the invention above described and shown in the drawings may be modified. For example there may be fewer or more ratchets 113 and dogs 112, than those shown.
Also, there may be only one drive dog 11 5, or more than four drive dogs 11 5 and there may be more or fewer sockets 114 than those shown.
In all cases the sockets 114 have the inclined, or chamfered, lead-in edges to provide for as rapid and as easy location of the drive dogs therein as possible. Also, the biasing means may comprise a separate spring means or resilient body rather than the segments 11 Oa shown.
The closure devices shown may be made to fit any standard container or bottle. No special container or bottle is required.
Both closure devices 1 and 100 are made by injection moulding and, because of the arrangement of the first and second drive means being separated so that one is between the skirts and the other is between the tops of the respective inner and outer closure members stripping of the formed members from the mould tools using a stripper plate to "knock" them off in an axial direction from the respective mould tool is relatively easy and rapid because it is not necessary to rotate the mould tools as it is in the prior art. This obviation of the rotational step in the moulding cycle saves 5-10 seconds per injection moulding "shot". Also the obviation of the need to rotate the mould tool in manufacture of a closure member embodying the invention means that the requirement for a gear-box is obviated, whereas it is required in other machines.This provides for a cost saving on the injection moulding itself and, importantly, also provides that the mould tool itself can have more impressions which means that more closure members can be produced per injection moulding "shot" or cycle. The invention embodied in the closure devices shown and described thus provides a rapid production of an increased number of the devices per injection moulding cycle over the prior art.
Thus the time per cycle be reduced to 1 5 sec from 25 sec for the prior art and the number of devices produced may be 20 devices to 12 devices in the prior art.
It will be understood that the expression "closure device" used herein includes within its scope a device such as a nut which is rotatably closed down on a spigot, stud or bolt as by screwing, for example the wheel hub nut of a motor vehicle. Unauthorised removal of a nut embodying the invention is thereby prevented or hindered.

Claims (14)

1. A closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening, comprising inner and outer closure members each comprising an end member and skirt member and first and second drive means, the first drive means being between the respective skirt members and being operative to rotate the closure members in unison in one sense only, the second drive means being associated with means biasing the inner and outer members axially apart and being operative to rotate the closure members in unison in the opposite sense only when pressure is applied to the outer member in the axial direction sufficiently to overcome the pressure of the biasing means to move the outer member towards the inner member and the outer member is rotated in the opposite sense.
2. A closure member device according to Claim 1, the first drive means comprising a driving dog on one skirt member and a ratchet on the facing wall of the other skirt member.
3. A closure device according to Claim 2, the driving dog being on the inner surface of the outer skirt member and the ratchet being on the outer surface of the inner skirt member.
4. A closure member according to Claim 2 or Claim 3, comprising a plurality of spaced apart driving dogs and ratchets.
5. A closure device according to any preceding claim, the second drive means comprising a socket of one end member and a projection of the other end member, the biasing means comprising a resilient member carried by one end member and contacting the adjacent surface of the other end member.
6. A closure device according to Claim 5, there being a plurality of projections and a plurality of sockets.
7. A closure device according to Claim 6, there being two projections and eight sockets.
8. A closure device according to any of Claims 5 to 7, the or each projection being on the inner surface of the end member of the outer closure member and the or each socket being carried by the outer surface of the end member of the inner closure member.
9. A closure device according to any of Claims 5 to 8, the resilient member being a ring integral with and projecting from the inner surface of the end member or the outer closure member.
10. A closure device according to any of Claims 1 to 4, in which the biasing means is a separate spring means or resilient body.
11. A closure device according to any preceding claim, in which the inner and outer closure members are each made of plastics.
12. A closure device according to Claim 11, the closure members each being made by injection moulding.
13. A closure device according to any preceding claim, the closure member being cylindrical.
14. A closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening, substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to and as shown in the accompanying drawings.
1 5. A container having a screw threaded cylindrical opening and a closure device according to any preceding claim in which the inner surface of the skirt of the inner closure member has a screw thread which mates, or can mate, with the screw threaded cylindrical opening.
GB8216297A 1981-06-04 1982-06-04 A closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening Expired GB2100238B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8216297A GB2100238B (en) 1981-06-04 1982-06-04 A closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB8117100 1981-06-04
GB8216297A GB2100238B (en) 1981-06-04 1982-06-04 A closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2100238A true GB2100238A (en) 1982-12-22
GB2100238B GB2100238B (en) 1985-05-22

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Family Applications (1)

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GB8216297A Expired GB2100238B (en) 1981-06-04 1982-06-04 A closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening

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Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0123810A1 (en) * 1983-04-29 1984-11-07 WASSILIEFF, Victor Child-resistant closure
GB2142612A (en) * 1983-07-01 1985-01-23 Puresevic Peter J A child proof and tamper indicating closure
EP0140843A2 (en) * 1983-11-02 1985-05-08 CAPSULIT S.r.l. An anti-loose closure, in particular for closing noxious substances containers
GB2155447A (en) * 1984-03-06 1985-09-25 Puresevic Peter J A closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening
GB2167050A (en) * 1984-11-12 1986-05-21 King Precision Eng Spencer Closure device for containers
EP0182519A2 (en) * 1984-11-12 1986-05-28 Metal Closures Group Plc Closure device for containers
EP0297160A1 (en) * 1987-07-01 1989-01-04 Georg Menshen GmbH + Co. KG Child-proof screw cap
EP0764591A1 (en) * 1995-09-22 1997-03-26 Rieke Corporation Tamper evident child-resistant closure
US5762215A (en) * 1991-07-30 1998-06-09 Glaxo Wellcome Cap for a container
WO2012075405A1 (en) * 2010-12-03 2012-06-07 Rexam Healthcare Packaging Inc. Push-and-turn child-resistant closure, shells, and package
WO2016100129A1 (en) * 2014-12-15 2016-06-23 Johnson & Johnson Consumer Inc. Child resistant closure for a container
DE212018000106U1 (en) 2017-01-09 2019-07-12 Bormioli Pharma S.p.A. Child-safe closure

Cited By (24)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0123810A1 (en) * 1983-04-29 1984-11-07 WASSILIEFF, Victor Child-resistant closure
DE3315548A1 (en) * 1983-04-29 1984-12-06 Victor Paris Wassilieff LOCKING, IN PARTICULAR CHILD LOCKING LOCK
GB2142612A (en) * 1983-07-01 1985-01-23 Puresevic Peter J A child proof and tamper indicating closure
EP0140843A2 (en) * 1983-11-02 1985-05-08 CAPSULIT S.r.l. An anti-loose closure, in particular for closing noxious substances containers
EP0140843A3 (en) * 1983-11-02 1986-08-13 CAPSULIT S.r.l. An anti-loose closure, in particular for closing noxious substances containers
GB2155447A (en) * 1984-03-06 1985-09-25 Puresevic Peter J A closure device for a container having a cylindrical opening
GB2167050A (en) * 1984-11-12 1986-05-21 King Precision Eng Spencer Closure device for containers
EP0182519A2 (en) * 1984-11-12 1986-05-28 Metal Closures Group Plc Closure device for containers
EP0182519A3 (en) * 1984-11-12 1988-03-02 Spencer King Precision Engineers Ltd. Closure device for containers
GB2167050B (en) * 1984-11-12 1989-08-02 King Precision Eng Spencer Closure device for containers
EP0297160A1 (en) * 1987-07-01 1989-01-04 Georg Menshen GmbH + Co. KG Child-proof screw cap
US5762215A (en) * 1991-07-30 1998-06-09 Glaxo Wellcome Cap for a container
EP0764591A1 (en) * 1995-09-22 1997-03-26 Rieke Corporation Tamper evident child-resistant closure
WO2012075405A1 (en) * 2010-12-03 2012-06-07 Rexam Healthcare Packaging Inc. Push-and-turn child-resistant closure, shells, and package
CN103328339A (en) * 2010-12-03 2013-09-25 雷克萨姆保健包装公司 Push-and-turn child-resistant closure, shells, and package
US8857638B2 (en) 2010-12-03 2014-10-14 Bprex Healthcare Packaging Inc. Push-and-turn child-resistant closure, shells, and package
WO2016100129A1 (en) * 2014-12-15 2016-06-23 Johnson & Johnson Consumer Inc. Child resistant closure for a container
US9580213B2 (en) 2014-12-15 2017-02-28 Johnson & Johnson Consumer Inc. Child resistant closure for a container
CN107000901A (en) * 2014-12-15 2017-08-01 强生消费者公司 The Childproof closure member of container
US9840353B2 (en) 2014-12-15 2017-12-12 Johnson & Johnson Consumer Inc. Child resistant closure for a container
US10118739B2 (en) 2014-12-15 2018-11-06 Johnson & Johnson Consumer Inc. Child resistant closure for a container
CN107000901B (en) * 2014-12-15 2019-11-22 强生消费者公司 The Childproof closure member of container
RU2717900C2 (en) * 2014-12-15 2020-03-26 Джонсон энд Джонсон Консьюмер Инк. Childproof cover for container
DE212018000106U1 (en) 2017-01-09 2019-07-12 Bormioli Pharma S.p.A. Child-safe closure

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Publication number Publication date
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732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
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Effective date: 20010604