US2333841A - Vacuum-pack canning tin - Google Patents

Vacuum-pack canning tin Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2333841A
US2333841A US410997A US41099741A US2333841A US 2333841 A US2333841 A US 2333841A US 410997 A US410997 A US 410997A US 41099741 A US41099741 A US 41099741A US 2333841 A US2333841 A US 2333841A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
strip
tin
tear
shell
vacuum
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US410997A
Inventor
Erling P Bugge
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.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US410997A priority Critical patent/US2333841A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2333841A publication Critical patent/US2333841A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

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
    • B65D17/00Rigid or semi-rigid containers specially constructed to be opened by cutting or piercing, or by tearing of frangible members or portions
    • B65D17/42Rigid or semi-rigid containers specially constructed to be opened by cutting or piercing, or by tearing of frangible members or portions with cutting, punching, or cutter accommodating means
    • B65D17/46Wires, strings or the like, e.g. rip cords
    • B65D17/462Tearing-strips or -wires
    • B65D17/464Tearing-strips or -wires with tongues or tags for engagement by slotted keys
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/49789Obtaining plural product pieces from unitary workpiece
    • Y10T29/4979Breaking through weakened portion
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/49815Disassembling
    • Y10T29/49821Disassembling by altering or destroying work part or connector

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improvements in vacnum-pack canning tins of the character employing a unitary exterior shell hermetically sealed by top and bottom marginal seams to the end walls of the container, and wherein the said exterior shell is given circumferential 'scorings to delne therebetween a tear-strip terminating at its initiating end in an exposed stripping tongue arranged to be introduced in the slot of a removal I key, the key acting to rupture the shell on the lines of the scorings as the strip is wound upon the same.
  • tin there is also provided a short liner extending about the inner circumference of the shell in lapping relation to the scorings and which is held in iixed relation to the shell by the instrumentality, at a point below the lowermost scoring line, of pressing a circumferentially extending bead into the assembly whereby the material of the liner nests in the material of the shell.
  • the inner liner becomes important to the tin only upon a removal of the tear-strip, thereupon serving as a neck about which the lidforming upper end of the ruptured outer shell may be snugly sleeved to close the container against access of air.
  • the invention consists in the novel construction and in the adaptation and combination of parts hereinafter described and claimed.
  • Figure 1 is a perspective view'of a vacuum-pack canning tin produced in accordance with the preferred embodiment of the present invention and shown in its sealed state.
  • Fig. 2 is a fragmentary enlarged perspective view illustrating the tin in the process of windin the tear-strip upon the removal key.
  • Fig. 3 is a fragmentary transverse vertical section of my tin with the tear-strip intact.
  • Fig. i is a sectional view to an enlarged scale showing the tear-strip fully wound upon the removal key
  • Fig. 5 is an underside plan view of a portion of the tear-strip.
  • the present invention is adapted to be applied to the common form of vacuum-pack tin employing a unitary shell, denoted in the drawing by the numeral III, marginally connected by top and bottom seams I I-I 2 to the end walls I3 and I4 of the tin, and in which the said shell is capable of being rupturedthrough the instrumentality of providing spaced and parallel scorings, as I5 and I6, describing therebetween a tear-strip Il extending about the entire circumference. It is usual in producing the tins to impress lightly into the inner face of the tear-strip a series of oiIset herring-bone scorings (Fig.
  • tongue is disposed in overlying relation to the other end of the blank.
  • My present invention makes no change whatever in the basic steps employed to produce the described tin, and consists in the simple expedient of impressing into the tear-strip on the substantial longitudinal median line thereof an inwardly projecting bead,- as 23, and of correspondingly deforming the material of the liner by expressing the same inwardly as a nesting accommodation therefor, thisv bead being desirably of a width appreciably less than that of the strip.
  • the said tongue 22 I fo'rm to approximately the same width as the bead, and desirably locate the same to dispose its longitudinal median line in correspondence with that of the head.
  • the location of the tongue is such as to disposeV the same within the range of the bead 23, which is to say in a position such that when the tongue is lifted outwardly from the plane of the tin and inserted into the slot 24 of the key 24 and the latter turned to break the seal and initiate a winding action of the strip upon the key, that the tongue thereupon lodges in the channel produced by the inwardly directed bead.
  • Successive wraps or winds of the tear-strip effect a registration with the head of the preceding wrap and produce the nesting result indicatedy in Fig. 4. It is believed to be apparent that the beading, as applied, consequently serves to lock the.
  • tear-strip 'against either a bodily shifting of all of the wraps or of an individual shifting of oneas respects a next adjacent winding.
  • the bead serves the further end of augmenting the lower and reversely applied bead as a means for holding the liner and of reinforcing the container while the latter is in its sealed state, and of strengthening the liner neck upon a removal of the tear-strip.
  • a tearing strip can construction comprising I a body shell deformed to describe an inwardly 'directed and circumferentially extending ribv lying in spaced relation below the filling limits of the can, having scorings above and below said rib and paralleling the latter to dene a tearstrip, and providing a, tongue element joined to the tear-strip and produced as a rectilineal prolongation of the rib with its width corresponding, or approximately corresponding, to the width of the rib and adapted to be engaged by a key for removing the tear-strip; and an internal liner for the shell snugly fitting the latter with its upper limit extending above the' upper scoring and its lower limit extending below the lower scoring, and having means disposed at a point below said lower scoring interconnecting the liner and shell to secure the former against shifting movements lengthwise of the shell.

Description

Nov. 95, w43. E. P. BUGGE VACUUM-PACK CANNING TIN Filed sept. le, 1941 A TTORNEY.
Patented Nov. 9
UNITED STATI-:s PArr-:Nr OFFICE 2,939,841 vacuum-PACK (Mmmm.4 'rm Eran; r. Bugie, seattle, wash. Application september 1s, 1941, semi Nu. 410.991
z cnam. (c1. zzo-59) This invention relates to improvements in vacnum-pack canning tins of the character employing a unitary exterior shell hermetically sealed by top and bottom marginal seams to the end walls of the container, and wherein the said exterior shell is given circumferential 'scorings to delne therebetween a tear-strip terminating at its initiating end in an exposed stripping tongue arranged to be introduced in the slot of a removal I key, the key acting to rupture the shell on the lines of the scorings as the strip is wound upon the same. In this type of tin there is also provided a short liner extending about the inner circumference of the shell in lapping relation to the scorings and which is held in iixed relation to the shell by the instrumentality, at a point below the lowermost scoring line, of pressing a circumferentially extending bead into the assembly whereby the material of the liner nests in the material of the shell. The inner liner becomes important to the tin only upon a removal of the tear-strip, thereupon serving as a neck about which the lidforming upper end of the ruptured outer shell may be snugly sleeved to close the container against access of air.
Considering this type of vacuum-pack canning tin, one objectionable feature stands out, namely a tendency for the tear-strip to work off the end of the removal key in the form of open spiral whorls as the tin is being opened, following a worm pattern rather than the intended closed spiral unless extreme care is taken by the user to hold the key against a longitudinal shifting in relation to the tin. Aside from the danger which can be attributed to the sharp edges of the twisted whorls, considerable annoyance is caused in that a complete severing of the tear-strip from the shell is obtained only with diiiiculty and frequently requires application of pliers.
Stating the same generally, the object of the tin and., upon removal of the strip, of the exposed lid-supporting neck.
It is a still further and a distinct object o i' the invention to provide a receptacle having the foregoing advantages capable of being produced at a cost in no way increased over the pro `duction cost of previous inferior tins.
The invention consists in the novel construction and in the adaptation and combination of parts hereinafter described and claimed.
In the drawing: i
Figure 1 is a perspective view'of a vacuum-pack canning tin produced in accordance with the preferred embodiment of the present invention and shown in its sealed state.
Fig. 2 is a fragmentary enlarged perspective view illustrating the tin in the process of windin the tear-strip upon the removal key. Y
Fig. 3 is a fragmentary transverse vertical section of my tin with the tear-strip intact.
Fig. i is a sectional view to an enlarged scale showing the tear-strip fully wound upon the removal key; and
Fig. 5 is an underside plan view of a portion of the tear-strip.
The present invention, as above stated, is adapted to be applied to the common form of vacuum-pack tin employing a unitary shell, denoted in the drawing by the numeral III, marginally connected by top and bottom seams I I-I 2 to the end walls I3 and I4 of the tin, and in which the said shell is capable of being rupturedthrough the instrumentality of providing spaced and parallel scorings, as I5 and I6, describing therebetween a tear-strip Il extending about the entire circumference. It is usual in producing the tins to impress lightly into the inner face of the tear-strip a series of oiIset herring-bone scorings (Fig. 5) directed inwardlyfrom the side edges towards the originating end of the strip, these light scorings acting in the manner of graming to prevent a converging travel of the rupture lines inwardly from the scorings I5 and I6. The short liner to which I have referred and which is applied to the inner wall of the container in a position to have its upper end lap the tear-strip is indicated at IB, a beading such as indicated at 2B being employed below the lower scoring I6 to press the material of the liner outwardly into nesting relation to the shell for iixing the liner against longitudinal shifting in relation to the Y shell.
tongue is disposed in overlying relation to the other end of the blank.
My present invention makes no change whatever in the basic steps employed to produce the described tin, and consists in the simple expedient of impressing into the tear-strip on the substantial longitudinal median line thereof an inwardly projecting bead,- as 23, and of correspondingly deforming the material of the liner by expressing the same inwardly as a nesting accommodation therefor, thisv bead being desirably of a width appreciably less than that of the strip. The said tongue 22 I fo'rm to approximately the same width as the bead, and desirably locate the same to dispose its longitudinal median line in correspondence with that of the head.
From the foregoing it will be understod that the location of the tongue is such as to disposeV the same within the range of the bead 23, which is to say in a position such that when the tongue is lifted outwardly from the plane of the tin and inserted into the slot 24 of the key 24 and the latter turned to break the seal and initiate a winding action of the strip upon the key, that the tongue thereupon lodges in the channel produced by the inwardly directed bead. Successive wraps or winds of the tear-strip effect a registration with the head of the preceding wrap and produce the nesting result indicatedy in Fig. 4. It is believed to be apparent that the beading, as applied, consequently serves to lock the. tear-strip 'against either a bodily shifting of all of the wraps or of an individual shifting of oneas respects a next adjacent winding. In addition to the locking function, it will likewise be apparent y that the bead serves the further end of augmenting the lower and reversely applied bead as a means for holding the liner and of reinforcing the container while the latter is in its sealed state, and of strengthening the liner neck upon a removal of the tear-strip.
strip. providing Ia tongue element joined to the tear-strip and produced as a rectilineal prolongation of the rib with its width corresponding, or approximately corresponding to the width of the rib and adapted to be engaged by a keyvfor removing the tear-strip, and being deformed below the lower of said scorings to describe a second circumferentially extending rib; and a sleeve member introduced as an internal liner to the body shell, extending at the upper and lower limits above and below said upper scoring and the lower rib, respectively, and deformed/in correspondence with the body shell to snugly fit the latter.
2, A tearing strip can construction comprising I a body shell deformed to describe an inwardly 'directed and circumferentially extending ribv lying in spaced relation below the filling limits of the can, having scorings above and below said rib and paralleling the latter to dene a tearstrip, and providing a, tongue element joined to the tear-strip and produced as a rectilineal prolongation of the rib with its width corresponding, or approximately corresponding, to the width of the rib and adapted to be engaged by a key for removing the tear-strip; and an internal liner for the shell snugly fitting the latter with its upper limit extending above the' upper scoring and its lower limit extending below the lower scoring, and having means disposed at a point below said lower scoring interconnecting the liner and shell to secure the former against shifting movements lengthwise of the shell.
. ERLING P. BUGGE.
US410997A 1941-09-16 1941-09-16 Vacuum-pack canning tin Expired - Lifetime US2333841A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US410997A US2333841A (en) 1941-09-16 1941-09-16 Vacuum-pack canning tin

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US410997A US2333841A (en) 1941-09-16 1941-09-16 Vacuum-pack canning tin

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2333841A true US2333841A (en) 1943-11-09

Family

ID=23627126

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US410997A Expired - Lifetime US2333841A (en) 1941-09-16 1941-09-16 Vacuum-pack canning tin

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2333841A (en)

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2455779A (en) * 1945-06-06 1948-12-07 Continental Can Co Tongueless tearing strip container
US2468487A (en) * 1944-12-30 1949-04-26 Continental Can Co Collar can collar mounting method
US2468485A (en) * 1944-12-30 1949-04-26 Continental Can Co Collar can collar and mounting
US2468488A (en) * 1944-12-30 1949-04-26 Continental Can Co Method of mounting collar can collars
US2605013A (en) * 1947-12-06 1952-07-29 Rubenstein Solomon Multiple compartment can
US2721673A (en) * 1953-12-07 1955-10-25 Hannon Charles N Can top removing device
US2815569A (en) * 1952-09-17 1957-12-10 Gen Electric Method of cutting material having a frangible coating
US2860812A (en) * 1955-07-06 1958-11-18 Continental Can Co Container having tear strip
US3021805A (en) * 1960-01-14 1962-02-20 Continental Can Co Method of making a tear strip can body

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2468487A (en) * 1944-12-30 1949-04-26 Continental Can Co Collar can collar mounting method
US2468485A (en) * 1944-12-30 1949-04-26 Continental Can Co Collar can collar and mounting
US2468488A (en) * 1944-12-30 1949-04-26 Continental Can Co Method of mounting collar can collars
US2455779A (en) * 1945-06-06 1948-12-07 Continental Can Co Tongueless tearing strip container
US2605013A (en) * 1947-12-06 1952-07-29 Rubenstein Solomon Multiple compartment can
US2815569A (en) * 1952-09-17 1957-12-10 Gen Electric Method of cutting material having a frangible coating
US2721673A (en) * 1953-12-07 1955-10-25 Hannon Charles N Can top removing device
US2860812A (en) * 1955-07-06 1958-11-18 Continental Can Co Container having tear strip
US3021805A (en) * 1960-01-14 1962-02-20 Continental Can Co Method of making a tear strip can body

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2405667A (en) Receptacle cover
US3237802A (en) Container lid
US3465910A (en) Container closure having integral strip opening means
US2333841A (en) Vacuum-pack canning tin
US2256257A (en) Container
US3910453A (en) Easy opening can end with push-in tabs
EP0139268A3 (en) Flanged container
US2415609A (en) Container
US2313059A (en) Container
US2521098A (en) Can
US2092118A (en) Friction closure container
US2263446A (en) Can
US2321946A (en) Container
US2002363A (en) Dispensing container and method of making the same
US2344325A (en) Wire opening container
US2048859A (en) Dispensing receptacle
US2392507A (en) Container
US2106330A (en) Can
US2263573A (en) Container
US2289193A (en) Frozen vegetable box
US2743033A (en) Interior collar tearing strip container with reclosure holding means
US2206143A (en) Closure
US2058468A (en) Container closure
US2249022A (en) Closure cork structure
US2183595A (en) Container