GB2246557A - Packaging carton - Google Patents

Packaging carton Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2246557A
GB2246557A GB9021893A GB9021893A GB2246557A GB 2246557 A GB2246557 A GB 2246557A GB 9021893 A GB9021893 A GB 9021893A GB 9021893 A GB9021893 A GB 9021893A GB 2246557 A GB2246557 A GB 2246557A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
carton
blank
length
tear strip
lid
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.)
Granted
Application number
GB9021893A
Other versions
GB2246557B (en
GB9021893D0 (en
Inventor
Roger Joseph Wonnacott
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.)
St Regis Packaging Ltd
Original Assignee
St Regis Packaging Ltd
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 St Regis Packaging Ltd filed Critical St Regis Packaging Ltd
Publication of GB9021893D0 publication Critical patent/GB9021893D0/en
Priority to AT91914003T priority Critical patent/ATE133126T1/en
Priority to DE69116559T priority patent/DE69116559T2/en
Priority to PCT/GB1991/001278 priority patent/WO1992002424A1/en
Priority to EP91914003A priority patent/EP0541642B1/en
Priority to AU83039/91A priority patent/AU8303991A/en
Priority to IE268191A priority patent/IE912681A1/en
Publication of GB2246557A publication Critical patent/GB2246557A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2246557B publication Critical patent/GB2246557B/en
Priority to HK162296A priority patent/HK162296A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related 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
    • B65D5/00Rigid or semi-rigid containers of polygonal cross-section, e.g. boxes, cartons or trays, formed by folding or erecting one or more blanks made of paper
    • B65D5/42Details of containers or of foldable or erectable container blanks
    • B65D5/64Lids
    • B65D5/66Hinged lids
    • B65D5/6602Hinged lids formed by folding one or more extensions hinged to the upper edge of a tubular container body
    • B65D5/6611Hinged lids formed by folding one or more extensions hinged to the upper edge of a tubular container body the lid being held in closed position by application of separate elements, e.g. clips, hooks, elastics
    • 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
    • B65D5/00Rigid or semi-rigid containers of polygonal cross-section, e.g. boxes, cartons or trays, formed by folding or erecting one or more blanks made of paper
    • B65D5/42Details of containers or of foldable or erectable container blanks
    • B65D5/54Lines of weakness to facilitate opening of container or dividing it into separate parts by cutting or tearing
    • B65D5/5405Lines of weakness to facilitate opening of container or dividing it into separate parts by cutting or tearing for opening containers formed by erecting a blank in tubular form
    • B65D5/542Lines of weakness to facilitate opening of container or dividing it into separate parts by cutting or tearing for opening containers formed by erecting a blank in tubular form the lines of weakness being provided in the container body
    • B65D5/5425Lines of weakness to facilitate opening of container or dividing it into separate parts by cutting or tearing for opening containers formed by erecting a blank in tubular form the lines of weakness being provided in the container body and defining after rupture a lid hinged to the upper edge of the container body
    • B65D5/543Lines of weakness to facilitate opening of container or dividing it into separate parts by cutting or tearing for opening containers formed by erecting a blank in tubular form the lines of weakness being provided in the container body and defining after rupture a lid hinged to the upper edge of the container body the container being provided with an internal frame or the like for maintaining the lid in the closed position by friction
    • 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
    • B65D5/00Rigid or semi-rigid containers of polygonal cross-section, e.g. boxes, cartons or trays, formed by folding or erecting one or more blanks made of paper
    • B65D5/42Details of containers or of foldable or erectable container blanks
    • B65D5/56Linings or internal coatings, e.g. pre-formed trays provided with a blow- or thermoformed layer
    • B65D5/566Linings made of relatively rigid sheet material, e.g. carton

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Cartons (AREA)

Abstract

An openable carton (35) is formed from a blank of stiff but foldable board material having a length of reinforcing material providing a tear strip (30) to delimit first and second canon parts which are hingedly connected after use of the tear strip. The tear strip (30) has a cut (32) formed in the length of reinforcing material to represent the end of the tear, residues of the said length serving as reinforcement for the hinge connection (34) or the two pants (36, 37). <IMAGE>

Description

IMPROVED PACKAGING CARTON AND BLANK THEREFOR This invention relates to an improved packaging carton made from stiff but foldable board material and in particular to a carton having an easy-open tear strip defined by at least one length of reinforcing material applied to the board material. The invention also relates to a blank formed from a sheet of board material incorporating a reinforced easy-open tear strip, the blank being cut from the board material in a manner to sever the length(s) of tear strip reinforcing material whereby part only of the incorporated material is available for its intended function of tearing board material in a carton folded up from the blank.
There are requirements in packaging for one carton format during transport, display and sale of the carton and its packaged contents, but a different format during use of the carton, following sale. Commonly the one format is a fully-closed carton and the different format is an open or openable carton. The use of reinforced tear strips is well known to permit the above-described format change and this invention relates to novel designs of carton and blanks that permit easy production, in an economical manner, of a wide range of new and useful format-changeable cartons.
In its carton aspect, the invention relates to a carton formed from stiff but foldable board material having at least one length of reinforcing material applied to the board material to define an easy-open tear strip delimiting first and second carton parts which parts are hingedly connected following use of the tear strip, which carton is characterised in that the length(s) of reinforcing material is/are cut through along a line transverse to its/their elongate direction, whereby on use of the tear strip, the line of cut represents the end of the tear, the residue of the said length(s) serving as reinforcement for the hinge connection of the two parts.
Suitably the torn length(s) up to the line of cut provide edge reinforcement on at least one of the parts.
In its blank aspect the invention relates to a one piece blank of stiff but foldable board material designed to be erected into a carton whose format can be changed by use of a tear strip to leave a carton base with a hinged lid, said blank including at least one length of reinforcing material applied to the board material, which blank is characterised in that the length(s) of reinforcing material extend(s) from side to side of the blank but its/tneir use as a tear strip is limited to part only of its/their length by virtue of at least one cut in the board material which extends transversely across the length(s) intermediate its/their end(s), the residue of the length(s) of reinforcing material beyond the said cut serving as a hinge reinforcement for the lid and the torn length(s) provide(s) reinforcement for edges of the lid.
Suitably the board material is a pluri-ply corrugated paperboard. Preferably the reinforcing material is applied to the paperboard during its manufacture on a corrugator and conveniently is incorporated between plies thereof. A convenient reinforcing material is a tape known under the trade mark Sesame (available from Sesame Industries Ltd.
of Quebec, Canada) which is fibre-based and incorporates a heat-sensitive adhesive.
The use of a tape which is splittable longitudinally is preferred and the use of two tapes each splittable longitudinally is particularly preferred.
The invention has particular utility in the provision of a fully closed parallelepipedic carton intended to contain a liner for packaged contents which when opened leaves a lid hinged to one wall of the carton for easy reclosing and access to the packaged contents via the openable lid.
The liner can be a rigid inner receptacle, also erected from stiff but foldable board material, which on opening of the lid reveals an upstanding rim around which side regions of the lid bear as the latter is reclosed.
The rigid inner receptacle can contain a plastics bag in which the packaged contents are stored for use as required.
Handle openings can be provided in the carton walls below the level of the tear strip and suitably, in the case of a right parallelepipedic carton, it is the two walls adjacent to the wail providing the reinforced hinge connection which have handle openings.
Where the carton is designed to carry a rigid inner receptacle and a flexible bag within the inner receptacle, should transport regulations dictate no access to the bag via the handle openings, the inner receptacle can provide a barrier preventing finger contact with the bag through the openings provided for carrying the carton.
A particularly preferred form of rigid inner recep tacle has three superimposed layers of board material lining each carton wall provided with a handle opening, the two outermost layers of which have handle openings coinciding with the respective handle opening in the carton wall, but the innermost layer of which has no such opening and protects the bag from contact by a hand using the aligned handle openings to carry the carton.
Other desirable features of the invention will become clear from a study of the accompanying drawings which, by way of example, illustrate three embodiments of cartons and blanks in accordance with the invention.
In the drawings: Figures 1 and 2 show respectively a one-piece blank for erecting into the outer casing of a lidded carton and a one-piece blank for a rigid inner receptacle for the casing, Figures 3 and 4 show the carton created from the blanks of Figures 1 and 2 in its two use formats, Figure 5 shows a one-piece blank for erecting into a lined lidded carton, Figures 6 and 7 show the carton made from the blank of Figure 5 in its two use formats, Figures 6 and 9 show two blanks for erecting into a further lidded carton, Figures 10 and 11 show the carton made from the blanks of Figures 8 and 9 in its two use formats, and Figure 12 shows a scrap view, on an enlarged scale, of a tear strip and the reinforcing residues it leaves after activation.
The one-piece blank 10 of Figure 1 is shown from the inside and is intended to provide the outer casing of a carton. It is cut and creased from a sheet of double-faced corrugated paperboard (the flutes of the central corrugated ply running in the direction of the arrows A) to exhibit external side wall panels 11, 12, 13 and 14, each provided with top flaps 11a to 14a and bottom flaps 11b to 14b. The wall panels are delimited by creases 15, 16 and 17 extending in the flute direction and the flaps are delimited by other creases (unnumbered) extending normal thereto. A narrow gluing tab 14c is formed as an extension of panel 14. Carrying holes 18 are provided in the wall panels 11 and 13.
Figure 2 shows (from the inside) the blank 10a for the rigid inner receptacle for the casing erected from the blank 10 of Figure 1. Again the preferred board material is double-faced corrugated paperboard and the arrows A indicate the direction in which the flutes of the central corrugated ply run in the board. The blank 10a exhibits a central base panel 19 with outer side wall panels 19a and 19b connected thereto via respective creases 22 and 23 extending parallel to the flute directions A, a left wall panel 20 and a right wall panel 21, linked to the central base panel 19 by respective creases 24 and 25 extending normal to the directions A.Inner sidewall panels 21a and 21b are connected by respective creases 26 and 27 to the wall panel 21 and intermediate sidewall panels 20a and 20b are connected by respective creases 26 and 9 to the wall panel 20. Four further carrying holes 30 are formed one in each of the sidewall panels 19a, 19b and 20a, Ob. No carrying holes are provided in the inner sidewall panels 21a and 21b.
To erect the rigid inner receptacle from the blank of Figure 2, the six sidewall panels 19a to 21b are bent up through 90C relative to their respective base and wall panels 19 to 21 and then the two outer U-shaped structures so formed are each bent inwardly about respective creases 24 and 25. The three creases 22, 26 and 26 and the three creases 23, 27 and 29 are staggered one with respect to the others to allow the three U-shaped structures to combine to form an open-topped right parallelepipedic carton liner having three thicknesses of blank material on two opposite edges of the base panel 19 and a single thickness of blank material (i.e. the left and right wall panels 20 and 21) on the other two opposite edges of the base panel 19.
The folding arrangement described leaves two carrying holes 30 aligned in each of the triple thickness sidewalls but since the sidewall panels 21a and 21b of these triple thickness walls are innermost in the inner receptacle, the holes 30 do not extend completely through the sidewalls of the inner receptacle.
Extending throughout all four wall panels 11 to 14 of blank 10 are lengths of reinforcing material 30 which terminate in panel 11 in a tab 31. In practice, the preferred material 30 is made up of an 11 mm wide strip of Sesame tape located between the outer facing sheet of the board material and the corrugated ply and an 11 mm wide strip located on the face of the inner facing sheet which faces away from the corrugated ply to lie symmetrically behind the first mentioned strip. The material 30 (i.e.
both tapes) is severed by a cut 32 formed in crease 17 but is continuous between tab 31 and cut 32. The tab 31 diagonally severs all but a central 3 mm strip of both tapes whereby pulling on the tab 31 starts a longitudinal tear in both tapes which results in the central 3 mm widths of each tape and the board material sandwiched between being removed from the blank (see also Figure 12).
To assemble the lined lidded carton from the two blanks 10 and 10a, blank 10a is erected into the inner receptacle as described above and this is located open-top up inside the tube erected from blank 10 when gluing tab 14a is secured to the outer edge of panel 11 and the bottom flaps 11b to 14b are folded in and secured together in conventional manner.
The carton is now ready to receive the contents to be packaged therein and these are disposed in the inner receptacle either directly or after locating a flexible bag (e.g. of plastics material) within the receptacle. After adding the required volume of contents (and closing the bag if such is being used) the top flaps 11a to 14a are secured together to close the carton.
Figure 3 shows the blank 10 of Figure 1 and the blank 10a of Figure 2 erected into a closed carton 35. This is the format in which it would be passed to the end user.
Figure 4 shows the carton 35 in its other format ready for use. Pulling on the tab 31 causes the reinforcing material 30 to tear open the carton around three of the four sides as far as the cut 32. This action divides the carton into a base 36 and a hinged lid 37.
Since only 3 mm regions of the two strips of tape forming the reinforcing material are torn away when the tear strip is actuated, the tape widths left adhering to the material of blank 10 provide reinforcement on each side of the tear. One of these sides represents the three edges of the lid 37 and this reinforcement is valuable in resisting wear and tear on the edges of the lid as they rub against the upper extremity of the inner receptacle when the lid 37 is hinged open or hinged back into its closed condition. Since the contents packaged may well be used in small amounts on many different occasions, reinforcement of the lid edges is a valuable advantage which results from the invention. A further advantage is that the line of the hinge in panel 14 is reinforced by the unused lengths of the reinforcing material 30.The hinge line can be defined by a line of perforations (sometimes known as a matrix bend").
With the inner receptacle located in the carton, each hand hole available in panels 11 and 13 consists of one hole 16 and two holes 30 providing three wall thicknesses to accept the carrying load on each side of the carton.
The holes 18, 30, 30 however do not extend to the interior of the inner receptacle (by virtue of the unapertured sidewall panels 21a and 21b) thus meeting the requirement for bagged transport of certain dangerous goods" that hand contact with the bag must not occur. The unapertured sidewall panels 21a and 21b also allow packaging of particulate materials without an inner bag.
Figures 5, 6 and 7 illustrate a second embodiment of carton according to this invention. For ease of understanding the many areas of similarity between the first embodiment, similar reference numerals with the addition of 100 will be used to indicate similar integers and the description will be restricted to the areas of difference.
In blank 110, wall panel 112 has the precursor of a lid closure tongue 50 formed therein and two tabs 131a and 131b flank this. The cut 132 is formed between panels 113 and 114 on the crease line 117. The internal wall panels 119, 120 and 121 are connected to blank 110 and lack top and bottom flaps, but panel 120 includes a slot 51 (cut through the lengths of reinforcing material 130) to receive the tongue 50 in the second format of the carton.
Figure 6 shows the carton 55 erected from the blank 110 of Figure 5 (e.g. to receive photographic materials in sheet form). Figure 7 shows the format change available when the tabs 131a and 131b are pulled to activate tear strips to left and right of the tongue 50. The cut 132 stops the tear at the right-hand back corner of the carton 55 leaving a lid 53 hinged to a carton base 54,'the hinge line occurring along the (unused) lengths of material 130 which thus reinforces the hinge. After first opening, the lid 53 can be reclosed by locating the tongue 50 in the slot 51. The lengths of reinforcing material 130 extending between the tabs 131a and 131b acts to reinforce a central region of the tongue 50. The residues of the tear strip left around the lid reinforce this edge against wear and tear as previously described.
Figures 8 to 11 show a third embodiment of blank and carton according to this invention and for the description of this embodiment, the reference numerals of Figures 1 and 2 with the addition of 200 will be used for equivalent integers. Figure 8 shows the outer blank 210 of a double walled heavy-duty powder case (of 72 litres capacity), the inner blank 210A being shown in Figure 9.
The outer blank 210 has the tear strip reinforcing material 230, the cut 232 being formed on crease 215 between panels 211 and 212. The blank 210A has four rectangular inner wall panels 219 to 1 and 63, an edge connecting panel 64 being provided to link panels 63 to 219.
Figure 10 shows a carton 60 in its first format, erected by latin the blank of Figure 9 inside the blank of Figure 8 and folding over the top and bottom flaps 211a to 214a and 211b to 214b.
Figure 11 shows the carton 60 in its second format, created by using the tear strip through pulling on tab 231.
The unused tear strip reinforcing material 230 reinforces the hinge of the lid 61 on the base 62 of the carton and residues of the torn lengths of tear strip reinforce the edges of the lid protecting the same against abrasion caused by repeated opening and closing of the lid 61 on the base 62.
Although the use of 3-ply corrugated paperboard material is preferred, it is not the only material that can be used in the exercise of this invention.
Figure 12 shows a section of 3-ply corrugated board material 70 being severed by a tear strip 71. The tear strip 71 is created in the manner described above by applying an inner strip 72 and an outer strip 73 of longitudinally tearable tape material, respectively, to the concealed surface of the outer ply 74 and the exposed surface of the inner ply 75. The tab 76 is cut diagonally along lines 77a and 77b to leave a central region of both tape strips 72, 73 unweakened by the cut lines 77a, 77b and it is this central region of both tapes which creates the narrow tear strip 71.
As the tear strip is pulled through the board material all three plies are severed cleanly but the two uncorrugated plies (74, 75) are left with the residues of the tape strips adhering thereto on either side of the material removed to form the tear strip.
As Figure 12 shows, the residues 7a and 78b on ply 75 are exposed and give wear-resistance to the board material (e.g. around the lower edge of the lid 61).
In place of two strips of longitudinally tearable tape of similar width, the inner strip can be narrower than the outer and need not then be longitudinally tearable. A single length of reinforcing tear strip material can also be used but this would fail to leave reinforcing material around the edge regions of the lid.

Claims (15)

1. A carton formed from stiff but foldable board material having at least one length of reinforcing material applied to the board material to define an easy-open tear strip delimiting first and second carton parts which parts are hingedly connected following use of the tear strip, characterised in that the lengths of reinforcing material is/are cut through along a line transverse to its/their elongate direction, whereby on use of the tear strip, the line of cut represents the end of the tear, the residue of the said length(s) serving as reinforcement for the hinge connection of the two parts.
2. A carton as claimed in claim 1, in which the torn length or at least one of the torn lengths up to the line of cut provides edge reinforcement on at least one of the parts.
3. A carton as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2, in which the board material is double-faced corrugated board having outer facing plies and an inner corrugated ply and a tape of reinforcing material is applied to each facing ply whereby use of the tear strip removes a part of each tape from the board material.
4. A carton as claimed in any preceding claim, in the form of a fully closed parallelepipedic carton containing a liner housing packaged contents and which, when opened, leaves a lid hinged to one wall of the carton for easy reclosing and access to the packaged contents via the openable lid.
5. A carton as claimed in claim 4, in which the liner is a rigid inner receptacle, also erected from stiff but foldable board material, which on opening of the lid reveals an upstanding rim around which side regions of the lid bear as the latter is reclosed.
6. A carton as claimed in claim 4 or claim 5, in which the rigid inner receptacle contains a plastics bag in which the packaged contents are stored for use as required.
7. A carton as claimed in claim 4, 5 or 6, in which handle openings are provided below the level of the tear strip in the two walls adjacent to the wall providing the reinforced hinge connection.
8. A carton as claimed in claim 7 when dependent on claim 6, in which the liner provides a barrier preventing finger contact with the bag through the openings provided for carrying the carton.
9. A carton as claimed in claim 7, in which the liner is a rigid inner receptacle having three superimposed layers of board material lining each carton wall provided with a handle opening, the two outermost layers of which have handle openings coinciding with the respective handle opening in the carton wall, but the innermost layer of which has no such opening.
10. A one piece blank of stiff but foldable board material designed to be erected into a carton whose format can be changed by use of a tear strip to leave a carton base with a hinged lid, said blank including at least one length of reinforcing material applied to the board material, characterised in that the length(s) of reinforcing material extend(s) from side to side of the blank but its/their use as a tear strip is limited to part only of its/their length by virtue of at least one cut in the board material which extends transversely across the length(s) intermediate its/their end(s), the residue of the length(s) of reinforcing material beyond the said cut serving as a hinge reinforcement for the lid and the torn length(s) provide(s) reinforcement for edges of the lid.
11. A blank as claimed in claim 10, in which the board material is a pluri-ply corrugated paperboard and the reinforcing material is applied to the paperboard during its manufacture on a corrugator.
12. A blank as claimed in claim 11, in which a fibrebased tape that incorporates a heat-sensitive adhesive and is splittable longitudinally is used, the tape being located between plies of the paperboard.
13. A carton blank substantially as herein described with reference to and as illustrated in Figures 1 and 2, Figure 5 or Figures 8 and 9 of the accompanying drawings.
14. A carton substantially as herein described with reference to Figures 3 and 4, Figures 6 and 7 or Figures 10 and 11 of the accompanying drawings.
15. A carton as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 9 or 14 incorporating a tear strip substantially as shown in Figure 12 of the accompanying drawings.
GB9021893A 1990-08-03 1990-10-09 Improved packaging carton and blank therefor Expired - Fee Related GB2246557B (en)

Priority Applications (7)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE69116559T DE69116559T2 (en) 1990-08-03 1991-07-29 FOLDING BOX AND CUTTING
AT91914003T ATE133126T1 (en) 1990-08-03 1991-07-29 FOLDING BOX AND CUTTING
PCT/GB1991/001278 WO1992002424A1 (en) 1990-08-03 1991-07-29 Improved packaging carton and blank therefor
EP91914003A EP0541642B1 (en) 1990-08-03 1991-07-29 Packaging carton and blank therefor
AU83039/91A AU8303991A (en) 1990-08-03 1991-07-29 Improved packaging carton and blank therefor
IE268191A IE912681A1 (en) 1990-08-03 1991-07-30 Improved packaging carton and blank therefor
HK162296A HK162296A (en) 1990-08-03 1996-08-29 Packaging carton and blank therefor

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB909017066A GB9017066D0 (en) 1990-08-03 1990-08-03 Improved packaging carton and blank therefor

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB9021893D0 GB9021893D0 (en) 1990-11-21
GB2246557A true GB2246557A (en) 1992-02-05
GB2246557B GB2246557B (en) 1994-08-31

Family

ID=10680128

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB909017066A Pending GB9017066D0 (en) 1990-08-03 1990-08-03 Improved packaging carton and blank therefor
GB9021893A Expired - Fee Related GB2246557B (en) 1990-08-03 1990-10-09 Improved packaging carton and blank therefor

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB909017066A Pending GB9017066D0 (en) 1990-08-03 1990-08-03 Improved packaging carton and blank therefor

Country Status (2)

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GB (2) GB9017066D0 (en)
ZA (1) ZA916043B (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2313828A (en) * 1996-06-03 1997-12-10 Smith David S Packaging Carton and blank therefor with tear strips
FR2832386A1 (en) * 2001-11-22 2003-05-23 Smurfit Socar Sa Packaging able to be divided into two separate parts has tearing band extending along contiguous walls partially covered by added band extending above tearing band edge

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2313828A (en) * 1996-06-03 1997-12-10 Smith David S Packaging Carton and blank therefor with tear strips
GB2313828B (en) * 1996-06-03 1999-09-29 Smith David S Packaging Packaging carton and blank therefor
FR2832386A1 (en) * 2001-11-22 2003-05-23 Smurfit Socar Sa Packaging able to be divided into two separate parts has tearing band extending along contiguous walls partially covered by added band extending above tearing band edge

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
ZA916043B (en) 1993-04-28
GB2246557B (en) 1994-08-31
GB9017066D0 (en) 1990-09-19
GB9021893D0 (en) 1990-11-21

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PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 20021009