US20040178212A1 - Dispenser pack for small solid articles for consumption, in particular sweets, pills and the like - Google Patents

Dispenser pack for small solid articles for consumption, in particular sweets, pills and the like Download PDF

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US20040178212A1
US20040178212A1 US10/798,866 US79886604A US2004178212A1 US 20040178212 A1 US20040178212 A1 US 20040178212A1 US 79886604 A US79886604 A US 79886604A US 2004178212 A1 US2004178212 A1 US 2004178212A1
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dispensing
articles
cavity
container
article
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US10/798,866
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Corrado Parmigiani
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CGM SpA
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CGM SpA
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Assigned to C.G.M. S.P.A. reassignment C.G.M. S.P.A. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: PARMIGIANI, CORRADO SAVERIO
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    • 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
    • B65D83/04Containers or packages with special means for dispensing contents for dispensing annular, disc-shaped, or spherical or like small articles, e.g. tablets or pills
    • B65D83/0481Containers or packages with special means for dispensing contents for dispensing annular, disc-shaped, or spherical or like small articles, e.g. tablets or pills the articles passing through a small opening or passage, without additional dispensing devices and without retaining means for the following article

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a dispenser pack for small solid articles for consumption, in particular sweets, pills and the like.
  • dispenser packs for sweets, pills and the like comprising a rigid container having, in the vicinity of its head, means for dispensing the articles to the outside in a controlled manner, and means for closing the dispensing outlet.
  • the dispenser pack according to the invention comprises, for containing the loose articles, a limp container of yieldable material having a mouth and a rigid dispensing head which is joined to the container mouth to close the mouth, and has an outlet for the articles, means for dispensing the articles to the outside in a controlled manner, and means for closing said outlet.
  • the foldable container is in the form of a limp tube having one end closed on itself and the opposite end open to define the container mouth, which is closed by the rigid head to which the edge of the end is fixed.
  • Another object of the invention is to overcome this and other technical problems.
  • the dispenser pack of the invention comprises a dispensing element to project outwards from the head and having a dispensing cavity able to receive, virtually as an exact fit, one article at a time disposed with predetermined orientation, said cavity having, in one side, an outlet aperture to enable the article to leave the cavity, and a insertion corridor substantially coaxial with the major axis of the dispensing cavity and communicating therewith via a passage section located in the plane perpendicular to the major axis of the cavity, which corridor is arranged to convey into the corridor, one at a time, the articles disposed loose in the container, and from the corridor into the dispensing cavity in a predetermined orientation.
  • the dispenser element is arranged to assume two different stable positions: an open position in which it projects outwards from the dispensing head and the outlet aperture is positioned external to the inner chamber, to dispense to the outside one article at a time, and a closed position in which the outlet aperture is enclosed in the interior of the inner chamber.
  • said outlet aperture is positioned in a lateral wall of the dispensing element coplanar with a side of the insertion corridor, at the passage section of the insertion corridor there being positioned a projection which projects slightly towards the interior of the section starting from the said wall in which the outlet aperture is located, to halt the travel, towards the dispensing cavity, of an article which rests on that surface of the insertion corridor coplanar with the wall in which the outlet aperture is located, but to allow passage of the same article when resting on the opposite surface of the insertion corridor.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the dispenser pack, disposed in a prone position with the dispensing element in its open position.
  • FIG. 1A is perspective view of the dispenser pack of FIG. 1 in an erect position, with the dispensing element in its closed position and with the dispensing head and the limp container shown detached from each other.
  • FIG. 2A is an enlarged detail of the dispensing head of FIG. 1A (the limp container having been removed).
  • FIG. 2B is a perspective view of FIG. 2A from a different viewpoint.
  • FIG. 3 is a section through the rigid head, with the dispensing element in its open position.
  • FIG. 3A is a section such as FIG. 3, with the dispensing element in its closed position.
  • FIG. 4 is a section on the plane IV-IV of FIG. 3, with the pack disposed in the position for releasing an article to the outside.
  • FIG. 5 shows an article of the type suitable to be contained in the pack of the invention.
  • FIGS. 1 and 1A show a dispenser pack according to the invention, having a rigid dispensing head 20 , in particular made of sufficiently rigid synthetic resin, and a limp container 10 of yieldable material to contain loose articles 8 , and having an upper mouth 11 closed by the dispensing head 20 , to which the edge 12 of the mouth 11 adheres and is rigidly joined in a sealed manner.
  • the limp container 10 is preferably made of a thin film of foldable yieldable polyethylene shaped as a limp tube (possibly made by folding a sheet back on itself and bonding the side edges together) with its upper end open to define the mouth 11 and its opposite lower end closed along a sealing edge 13 ;
  • the dispensing head 20 is preferably also made of the same material or of polypropylene.
  • the edge 12 of the mouth adheres to the outer surface of a lateral wall 25 of the dispensing head 20 and is joined rigidly thereto preferably by hot bonding, or by glue, or by other known methods.
  • the head 20 possesses an outlet 22 for the articles 8 , means for dispensing the articles to the outside in a controlled manner, and means for closing the outlet 22 .
  • the size of the pack decreases on the basis of the quantity of articles contained; for example when the articles are relatively few in number, the limp container folds about itself so that when placed in a pocket, a bag or other similar storage space, its overall size reduces correspondingly.
  • this is typically suitable for containing and dispensing articles 8 having a shape in which the main dimensions along the three Cartesian axes X, Y and Z are different, such as in the case of the tablet shown in FIG. 5, which is of generally parallelepiped form with rounded corners, in which the length along the X axis is the maximum dimension and the width, i.e. the dimension along the Y axis, is less than the length but greater than the thickness, i.e. the dimension along the Z axis.
  • the dispensing head 20 comprises an outer shell composed substantially of the skirt-shaped outer lateral wall 25 and an upper wall 26 , and a dispensing element 30 having a dispensing cavity 31 able to receive, virtually as an exact fit with small clearance, one article 8 at a time disposed in predetermined orientation.
  • the dispensing element 30 is of roughly parallelepiped shape with a major axis X′ and two minor axes, its cavity 31 being closed by two major walls 33 located on one of the two major faces, by a minor wall 34 located on one of the two minor faces, and by two intermediate walls 35 located on the two faces of intermediate size.
  • One of the two major walls 33 is virtually completely open to define the outlet aperture 22 enabling the article to leave the cavity.
  • an insertion corridor 23 substantially coaxial with the major axis of the dispensing cavity 31 when this is in its open position, and communicating therewith via a passage section 37 positioned in the plane perpendicular to the major axis of the cavity 31 , the corridor being arranged to convey, one at a time, the articles disposed loose in the container 10 , firstly into the corridor 23 and from there into the dispensing cavity 31 .
  • the cross-section of the corridor 23 has dimensions substantially equal to the cross-section of the cavity 31 , to enable an article 8 to pass only if disposed with a predetermined orientation determined by the shape of the cavity 31 , i.e. disposed with is major axis substantially coinciding with the axis of the corridor 23 .
  • the surfaces of the corridor 23 are substantially coplanar with the lateral faces of the cavity 31 .
  • the corridor in its initial portion the corridor has a wider shape, which narrows until it reaches a constant dimension which it maintains as far as the passage section 37 .
  • the surfaces of the corridor 23 are not defined by smooth walls, but instead by the inner edges, all parallel to each other and to the axis of the corridor 23 , of a plurality of fins 24 which, joined to the inner surface of the lateral wall 25 , project inwards; these fins 24 are sufficiently close together, in relation to the dimensions of the articles 8 , to define with the envelope defined by their inner edges a slide and guide surface for the articles.
  • the dispensing element 30 is able to assume two different stable positions: an “open position” in which it projects outwards from the outer shell of the dispensing head 20 and the outlet aperture 22 lies external to the pack in order to dispense one article 8 at a time to the outside, and a “closed position” in which the outlet aperture lies inside the inner chamber.
  • the dispensing element 30 is able to rotate about one of its minor corners, that situated on the outer side of the upper wall 26 , and is joined to, and integral with, the head 20 by a thin strip of material defining a hinge 36 ;
  • the dispensing element 30 can rotate through approximately 90 degrees about the hinge 36 , to assume the open position (see FIGS. 1, 2A, 3 and 4 ) or the closed position (see FIGS. 1A and 3A).
  • the major axis X′ of the cavity 31 substantially coincides with the axis of the insertion corridor 23 .
  • the dispensing element 30 penetrates into the head 20 by passing through an aperture 27 provided in the upper wall 26 , to be housed to the side of the corridor 23 and partly within it; when in its closed position, one of the walls 35 of the dispensing element 30 exactly closes the aperture 27 .
  • an elastically deformable flat spring 28 is provided which undergoes elastic deformation following rotation of the element 30 .
  • the flat spring 28 is composed of a front portion 28 ′ which, when the dispensing element 30 is in its open position, is disposed virtually parallel to the axis of the corridor 23 (see FIG. 3), and of a rear portion virtually parallel to the upper wall 26 .
  • the flat spring 28 is in geometrical relationship with the dispensing element 30 such that its two flat portions are deformed to a maximum extent when the dispensing element 30 is in an intermediate position between the open position and the closed position, and vice versa are deformed to a minimum extent when the element 30 is in one of its two end positions, which are consequently stable because of the action of the spring 28 .
  • the front portion 28 ′ of the spring also defines a side of the insertion corridor 23 when the dispensing element 30 is in its open position.
  • the correct manual operations involved in dispensing one article at a time consist firstly of holding the pack in a prone position with the dispensing element 30 open, the aperture 22 facing upwards and the head 20 lower than the container 10 (as shown in FIG. 1), to enable the articles 8 to enter the corridor 23 one at a time by gravity, and then to slide along the surfaces of the corridor and reach the cavity 31 .
  • the projection 39 lies on the top of the corridor 23 and hence, as the articles slide on the lower surface of the corridor and as there is a slight difference between the dimensions of the articles and those of the passage section 37 , the projection 39 does not touch the articles and there is no obstacle to their passage through the section.
  • an article 8 When an article 8 is positioned in the cavity 31 , it can be taken from the cavity by the fingers or, more comfortably, the pack can be inverted through 180 degrees about the axis X′ so that the aperture 22 faces downwards and the article 8 falls by gravity from the cavity 31 (see FIG. 4).
  • the projection 39 plays an important role as it is in contact with the front end of the article located upstream of the passage section 37 and hence holds it at rest to prevent it being able to reach the cavity 31 and also escape from the cavity 22 .

Abstract

The dispenser pack comprises: for containing the loose articles, a limp container (10) of yieldable material having a mouth (11) and a rigid dispensing head (20) which is joined to the container mouth (11) to close the mouth (11) and has an outlet (22) for the articles, means for dispensing the articles to the outside in a controlled manner, and means for closing said outlet (22).
According to another aspect of the invention, the dispensing head (20) comprises a dispensing element (30) arranged to project outwards from the head and having a dispensing cavity (31) able to receive, virtually as an exact fit, one article (8) at a time disposed with predetermined orientation, said cavity (31) having, provided in one side, an outlet aperture enabling the article (8) to leave the cavity (31), and an insertion corridor (23) substantially coaxial with the major axis of the dispensing cavity (31) and communicating therewith via a passage section (37) located in the plane perpendicular to said major axis of the cavity (31), and which is arranged to convey the articles disposed loose in the container (10) one at a time into the corridor (23), and from there into the dispensing cavity (31) in a predetermined orientation.

Description

    FIELD OF THE INVENTION
  • The present invention relates to a dispenser pack for small solid articles for consumption, in particular sweets, pills and the like. [0001]
  • Numerous different dispenser packs for sweets, pills and the like are known, comprising a rigid container having, in the vicinity of its head, means for dispensing the articles to the outside in a controlled manner, and means for closing the dispensing outlet. [0002]
  • These packs are able to dispense the contained articles hygienically, as they are able to dispense them one at a time without it being necessary to return part of the dispensed articles to the container after having touched them with the hand. [0003]
  • However, a drawback of these dispenser packs is that being rigid, and mostly of synthetic resin, they maintain their original dimensions not only when completely filled with articles, but even when they contain only one, hence occupying a uselessly large space and creating a corresponding obstruction, particularly in the consumer's pocket. [0004]
  • Another drawback is that if the articles themselves are rigid, these packs are rather noisy because of collisions between the articles and between these and the inner walls of the container when the pack is shaken, as is typically the case if the pack lies in a moving consumers pocket or bag. [0005]
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • A first object of the invention is to overcome these and further drawbacks. To this end, the dispenser pack according to the invention comprises, for containing the loose articles, a limp container of yieldable material having a mouth and a rigid dispensing head which is joined to the container mouth to close the mouth, and has an outlet for the articles, means for dispensing the articles to the outside in a controlled manner, and means for closing said outlet. [0006]
  • Preferably, the foldable container is in the form of a limp tube having one end closed on itself and the opposite end open to define the container mouth, which is closed by the rigid head to which the edge of the end is fixed. [0007]
  • Another problem connected with known dispensers is that in dispensing the articles in a controlled manner one at a time, intrinsic difficulties arise in terms of their shape when this is such that the main dimensions along the three Cartesian axes X, Y and Z are different, such as in the case of the tablet shown in FIG. 5, which has a generally parallelepiped shape with rounded corners, in which the length along the X axis is the maximum dimension, the dimension along the Y axis being less than the length but greater than the thickness, i.e. the dimension along the Z axis. [0008]
  • Another object of the invention is to overcome this and other technical problems. [0009]
  • To this end, the dispenser pack of the invention comprises a dispensing element to project outwards from the head and having a dispensing cavity able to receive, virtually as an exact fit, one article at a time disposed with predetermined orientation, said cavity having, in one side, an outlet aperture to enable the article to leave the cavity, and a insertion corridor substantially coaxial with the major axis of the dispensing cavity and communicating therewith via a passage section located in the plane perpendicular to the major axis of the cavity, which corridor is arranged to convey into the corridor, one at a time, the articles disposed loose in the container, and from the corridor into the dispensing cavity in a predetermined orientation. [0010]
  • Preferably, the dispenser element is arranged to assume two different stable positions: an open position in which it projects outwards from the dispensing head and the outlet aperture is positioned external to the inner chamber, to dispense to the outside one article at a time, and a closed position in which the outlet aperture is enclosed in the interior of the inner chamber. [0011]
  • Preferably, said outlet aperture is positioned in a lateral wall of the dispensing element coplanar with a side of the insertion corridor, at the passage section of the insertion corridor there being positioned a projection which projects slightly towards the interior of the section starting from the said wall in which the outlet aperture is located, to halt the travel, towards the dispensing cavity, of an article which rests on that surface of the insertion corridor coplanar with the wall in which the outlet aperture is located, but to allow passage of the same article when resting on the opposite surface of the insertion corridor. [0012]
  • The invention is described in detail hereinafter with the aid of the accompanying figures which illustrate one embodiment thereof by way of non-limiting example.[0013]
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the dispenser pack, disposed in a prone position with the dispensing element in its open position. [0014]
  • FIG. 1A is perspective view of the dispenser pack of FIG. 1 in an erect position, with the dispensing element in its closed position and with the dispensing head and the limp container shown detached from each other. [0015]
  • FIG. 2A is an enlarged detail of the dispensing head of FIG. 1A (the limp container having been removed). [0016]
  • FIG. 2B is a perspective view of FIG. 2A from a different viewpoint. [0017]
  • FIG. 3 is a section through the rigid head, with the dispensing element in its open position. [0018]
  • FIG. 3A is a section such as FIG. 3, with the dispensing element in its closed position. [0019]
  • FIG. 4 is a section on the plane IV-IV of FIG. 3, with the pack disposed in the position for releasing an article to the outside. [0020]
  • FIG. 5 shows an article of the type suitable to be contained in the pack of the invention.[0021]
  • DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
  • FIGS. 1 and 1A show a dispenser pack according to the invention, having a rigid dispensing [0022] head 20, in particular made of sufficiently rigid synthetic resin, and a limp container 10 of yieldable material to contain loose articles 8, and having an upper mouth 11 closed by the dispensing head 20, to which the edge 12 of the mouth 11 adheres and is rigidly joined in a sealed manner.
  • The [0023] limp container 10 is preferably made of a thin film of foldable yieldable polyethylene shaped as a limp tube (possibly made by folding a sheet back on itself and bonding the side edges together) with its upper end open to define the mouth 11 and its opposite lower end closed along a sealing edge 13; the dispensing head 20 is preferably also made of the same material or of polypropylene. The edge 12 of the mouth adheres to the outer surface of a lateral wall 25 of the dispensing head 20 and is joined rigidly thereto preferably by hot bonding, or by glue, or by other known methods.
  • The [0024] head 20 possesses an outlet 22 for the articles 8, means for dispensing the articles to the outside in a controlled manner, and means for closing the outlet 22.
  • By virtue of the invention, the size of the pack decreases on the basis of the quantity of articles contained; for example when the articles are relatively few in number, the limp container folds about itself so that when placed in a pocket, a bag or other similar storage space, its overall size reduces correspondingly. [0025]
  • Moreover, this behavior means that the articles remain amassed tightly against each other and, even when the pack is shaken for example because lying in a pocket or bag in movement, it produces no substantial noise. [0026]
  • According to a different aspect of the invention, this is typically suitable for containing and dispensing [0027] articles 8 having a shape in which the main dimensions along the three Cartesian axes X, Y and Z are different, such as in the case of the tablet shown in FIG. 5, which is of generally parallelepiped form with rounded corners, in which the length along the X axis is the maximum dimension and the width, i.e. the dimension along the Y axis, is less than the length but greater than the thickness, i.e. the dimension along the Z axis.
  • The dispensing [0028] head 20 comprises an outer shell composed substantially of the skirt-shaped outer lateral wall 25 and an upper wall 26, and a dispensing element 30 having a dispensing cavity 31 able to receive, virtually as an exact fit with small clearance, one article 8 at a time disposed in predetermined orientation. The dispensing element 30 is of roughly parallelepiped shape with a major axis X′ and two minor axes, its cavity 31 being closed by two major walls 33 located on one of the two major faces, by a minor wall 34 located on one of the two minor faces, and by two intermediate walls 35 located on the two faces of intermediate size. One of the two major walls 33 is virtually completely open to define the outlet aperture 22 enabling the article to leave the cavity.
  • Within the internal chamber of the dispenser pack there is positioned an [0029] insertion corridor 23, substantially coaxial with the major axis of the dispensing cavity 31 when this is in its open position, and communicating therewith via a passage section 37 positioned in the plane perpendicular to the major axis of the cavity 31, the corridor being arranged to convey, one at a time, the articles disposed loose in the container 10, firstly into the corridor 23 and from there into the dispensing cavity 31.
  • In its final part, i.e. in proximity to the [0030] passage section 37, the cross-section of the corridor 23 has dimensions substantially equal to the cross-section of the cavity 31, to enable an article 8 to pass only if disposed with a predetermined orientation determined by the shape of the cavity 31, i.e. disposed with is major axis substantially coinciding with the axis of the corridor 23. In addition the surfaces of the corridor 23 are substantially coplanar with the lateral faces of the cavity 31. In contrast, in its initial portion the corridor has a wider shape, which narrows until it reaches a constant dimension which it maintains as far as the passage section 37. In particular, in the embodiment shown in the figures, the surfaces of the corridor 23 are not defined by smooth walls, but instead by the inner edges, all parallel to each other and to the axis of the corridor 23, of a plurality of fins 24 which, joined to the inner surface of the lateral wall 25, project inwards; these fins 24 are sufficiently close together, in relation to the dimensions of the articles 8, to define with the envelope defined by their inner edges a slide and guide surface for the articles.
  • The dispensing [0031] element 30 is able to assume two different stable positions: an “open position” in which it projects outwards from the outer shell of the dispensing head 20 and the outlet aperture 22 lies external to the pack in order to dispense one article 8 at a time to the outside, and a “closed position” in which the outlet aperture lies inside the inner chamber. The dispensing element 30 is able to rotate about one of its minor corners, that situated on the outer side of the upper wall 26, and is joined to, and integral with, the head 20 by a thin strip of material defining a hinge 36; The dispensing element 30 can rotate through approximately 90 degrees about the hinge 36, to assume the open position (see FIGS. 1, 2A, 3 and 4) or the closed position (see FIGS. 1A and 3A).
  • When the dispensing [0032] element 30 is in its open position, the major axis X′ of the cavity 31 substantially coincides with the axis of the insertion corridor 23. When moved into its closed position, the dispensing element 30 penetrates into the head 20 by passing through an aperture 27 provided in the upper wall 26, to be housed to the side of the corridor 23 and partly within it; when in its closed position, one of the walls 35 of the dispensing element 30 exactly closes the aperture 27.
  • To maintain the dispensing [0033] element 30 in its closed or alternatively open position, an elastically deformable flat spring 28 is provided which undergoes elastic deformation following rotation of the element 30. The flat spring 28 is composed of a front portion 28′ which, when the dispensing element 30 is in its open position, is disposed virtually parallel to the axis of the corridor 23 (see FIG. 3), and of a rear portion virtually parallel to the upper wall 26.
  • The [0034] flat spring 28 is in geometrical relationship with the dispensing element 30 such that its two flat portions are deformed to a maximum extent when the dispensing element 30 is in an intermediate position between the open position and the closed position, and vice versa are deformed to a minimum extent when the element 30 is in one of its two end positions, which are consequently stable because of the action of the spring 28.
  • The [0035] front portion 28′ of the spring also defines a side of the insertion corridor 23 when the dispensing element 30 is in its open position.
  • At the passage section of the [0036] insertion corridor 23, on the same side as the outlet aperture 22, there is a projection 39 which projects slightly towards the interior of the section, to halt the travel, towards the dispensing cavity 31, of an article resting on that surface of the insertion corridor which is coplanar with the wall where the outlet aperture 22 is positioned, whereas it enables the same article to pass if resting on the opposite surface of the insertion corridor 23.
  • In detail, the correct manual operations involved in dispensing one article at a time consist firstly of holding the pack in a prone position with the dispensing [0037] element 30 open, the aperture 22 facing upwards and the head 20 lower than the container 10 (as shown in FIG. 1), to enable the articles 8 to enter the corridor 23 one at a time by gravity, and then to slide along the surfaces of the corridor and reach the cavity 31. In this state, the projection 39 lies on the top of the corridor 23 and hence, as the articles slide on the lower surface of the corridor and as there is a slight difference between the dimensions of the articles and those of the passage section 37, the projection 39 does not touch the articles and there is no obstacle to their passage through the section.
  • When an [0038] article 8 is positioned in the cavity 31, it can be taken from the cavity by the fingers or, more comfortably, the pack can be inverted through 180 degrees about the axis X′ so that the aperture 22 faces downwards and the article 8 falls by gravity from the cavity 31 (see FIG. 4). In this stage the projection 39 plays an important role as it is in contact with the front end of the article located upstream of the passage section 37 and hence holds it at rest to prevent it being able to reach the cavity 31 and also escape from the cavity 22.
  • Hence only one article is dispensed each time the pack is inverted, as is required. [0039]
  • Numerous modifications of a practical and applicational nature can be made to the invention, but without leaving the scope of the inventive idea as claimed below. [0040]

Claims (7)

What is claimed is:
1. A dispenser pack for small solid articles for consumption, in particular sweets, pills and the like, characterized by comprising:
for containing the loose articles, a limp container (10) of yieldable material having a mouth (11) and
a rigid dispensing head (20) joined to the container mouth (11) to close the mouth (11) and having an outlet (22) for the articles, means for dispensing the articles to the outside in a controlled manner, and means for closing said outlet (22).
2. A dispenser pack as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the limp container (10) is in the form of a limp tube having one end closed on itself and its opposite end open to define the container mouth (11), which is closed by the dispensing head (20) to which the edge (12) of the end is fixed.
3. A dispenser pack for small solid articles for consumption, the main dimensions along the three Cartesian axes of which are different, comprising a container (10) for containing the loose articles, and a dispensing head (20) having an outlet (22) for the articles, means for dispensing the articles to the outside in a controlled manner, and means for closing said outlet (22), characterized by comprising a dispensing element (30) arranged to project outwards from the dispensing head (20) and having a dispensing cavity (31) able to receive, virtually as an exact fit, one article (8) at a time disposed with predetermined orientation, said cavity (31) having, provided in one side, an outlet aperture enabling the article (8) to leave the cavity (31), and an insertion corridor (23) substantially coaxial with the major axis of the dispensing cavity (31) and communicating therewith via a passage section (37) located in the plane perpendicular to said major axis of the cavity (31) and arranged to convey the articles disposed loose in the container (10) one at a time into the corridor (23), and from there into the dispensing cavity (31) in a predetermined orientation.
4. A dispenser pack as claimed in claim 3, characterized in that said dispenser element (30) is arranged to assume two different stable positions: an open position in which it projects outwards from the dispensing head (20) and the outlet aperture (22) is positioned external to the chamber of the container (10), to dispense to the outside one article at a time, and a closed position in which the outlet aperture (22) is enclosed in the interior of the container (10).
5. A dispenser pack as claimed in claim 4, characterized in that said dispensing element (30) is able to rotate about a hinge (36) to assume said open and closed positions.
6. A dispenser pack as claimed in claim 5, characterized by comprising an elastic flat spring (28) which undergoes elastic deformation following rotation of the dispensing element (30), to maintain the element (30) in its closed or alternatively open position.
7. A dispenser pack as claimed in claim 3, characterized in that at the passage section of the insertion corridor (23), on the same side as the outlet aperture (22), there is provided a projection (39) which projects slightly towards the interior of the section (39), to halt the travel, towards the dispensing cavity (31), of an article resting on that surface of the insertion corridor (23) which is coplanar with the wall (33) where the outlet aperture (22) is positioned, whereas it enables the same article to pass if resting on the opposite surface of the insertion corridor (23).
US10/798,866 2003-03-14 2004-03-12 Dispenser pack for small solid articles for consumption, in particular sweets, pills and the like Abandoned US20040178212A1 (en)

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ITRE2003A000027 2003-03-14
IT000027A ITRE20030027A1 (en) 2003-03-14 2003-03-14 "PACKAGE-DISPENSER FOR SMALL SOLID CONSUMABLES,

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Cited By (1)

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US20080290110A1 (en) * 2005-12-16 2008-11-27 Gelardi John A Child Resistant Dispenser

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US2086296A (en) * 1937-01-08 1937-07-06 Gilbert Charles Emile Box unloading device
US2472871A (en) * 1946-04-17 1949-06-14 Marshall I Williamson Dispensing container
US5484089A (en) * 1994-11-23 1996-01-16 Picerno; Virginia L. Pill bottle and dispensing cap combination
US5860742A (en) * 1997-08-28 1999-01-19 Faircloth, Jr.; J. Wade Flexible bag dispenser

Patent Citations (4)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2086296A (en) * 1937-01-08 1937-07-06 Gilbert Charles Emile Box unloading device
US2472871A (en) * 1946-04-17 1949-06-14 Marshall I Williamson Dispensing container
US5484089A (en) * 1994-11-23 1996-01-16 Picerno; Virginia L. Pill bottle and dispensing cap combination
US5860742A (en) * 1997-08-28 1999-01-19 Faircloth, Jr.; J. Wade Flexible bag dispenser

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20080290110A1 (en) * 2005-12-16 2008-11-27 Gelardi John A Child Resistant Dispenser

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EP1457433A2 (en) 2004-09-15
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