US3137424A - Dispensing carton for wrapping material in the form of sheets and films, and method of making same - Google Patents

Dispensing carton for wrapping material in the form of sheets and films, and method of making same Download PDF

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US3137424A
US3137424A US18283062A US3137424A US 3137424 A US3137424 A US 3137424A US 18283062 A US18283062 A US 18283062A US 3137424 A US3137424 A US 3137424A
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Prior art keywords
edge
overlap
carton
tear
panel
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Finn William Wallace
James J Bicknell
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ST Regis Paper Co
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ST Regis Paper Co
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B31MAKING ARTICLES OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER; WORKING PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31BMAKING CONTAINERS OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31B50/00Making rigid or semi-rigid containers, e.g. boxes or cartons
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B31MAKING ARTICLES OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER; WORKING PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31BMAKING CONTAINERS OF PAPER, CARDBOARD OR MATERIAL WORKED IN A MANNER ANALOGOUS TO PAPER
    • B31B50/00Making rigid or semi-rigid containers, e.g. boxes or cartons
    • B31B50/74Auxiliary operations
    • B31B50/81Forming or attaching accessories, e.g. opening devices, closures or tear strings
    • B31B50/811Applying strips, strings, laces or ornamental edgings to formed boxes
    • 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
    • Y10T225/00Severing by tearing or breaking
    • Y10T225/20Severing by manually forcing against fixed edge
    • Y10T225/238With housing for work supply
    • 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
    • Y10T225/00Severing by tearing or breaking
    • Y10T225/20Severing by manually forcing against fixed edge
    • Y10T225/238With housing for work supply
    • Y10T225/248Single blank container
    • 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
    • Y10T225/00Severing by tearing or breaking
    • Y10T225/20Severing by manually forcing against fixed edge
    • Y10T225/238With housing for work supply
    • Y10T225/248Single blank container
    • Y10T225/249Blade unitary with container

Definitions

  • Mm In has a ⁇ N RM NM Ill June 16, 1964 w.w. FINN ETAL 3,137,424
  • the tear edge has generally comprised a metal strip appropriately mounted on the carton exterior in such manner as to provide a projecting tear edge, usually serrated or burred for facilitating the severing of withdrawn sections of the rolled sheet material.
  • a metal tear strip of this character adds to the expense of the carton to the extent of the cost of making the same, burring or .serrating the edge and attaching to the carton.
  • the sheet stock is subjected to a die stamping and cutting operation such as appropriately to crease, score and cut a carton blank for formation into a carton and also to provide the same with a serrated edge, such that when the blank is formed into a carton, the serrated edge will be appropriately positioned to form a tear edge for the sheet material to be packaged therein.
  • the blank as thus stamped and cut is brushed to remove loose particles and fed between a pair of squeeze rolls which are chamfered at one end in complementary fashion for setting the serrated edge of the blank at a slight angle.
  • the serrated edge as thus set is next coated on both sides with a thermosetting resin varnish by a rolling or spraying application.
  • thermosetting resins in a suitable solvent such as a thermosetting polyester, polyurethane, epoxy, epoxyphenol or phenolic resin dissolved in a suitable solvent such as a ketone, alcohol or ester.
  • a suitable solvent such as a ketone, alcohol or ester.
  • the preferred resin is an epoxy resin, Class II, formed by reacting bisphenolepi-chlorohydrin with a vinyl-phenolcomplex, the preferred solvent being methyl-ethyl-ketone, in the proportions of about 10% by volume of the solvent to the resin content.
  • the blank is then passed through a drying oven for removing the solvent from the resin varnish and also for curing the resin to the thermoset condition. As the sticking together.
  • the resin coated edge is dusted with powder as by means of an Oxydrie spray for preventing the stacked blanks from
  • a tear edge produced as above or by equivalent procedures incorporating such a resin in the thermoset state is extremely strong, rigid and permanent, being unafiected by moisture, and is extremely effective for severing any of the various rolled sheet materials employed for protecting comestibles and the like, such as aluminium foil, waxed paper or any of theplastic film materials suchas the polyester resin sheet, sold as Mylar, or that sold as Saran Wrap" being a copolymer of vinylidine chloride and vinyl chloride, or polyethylene or other plastic sheet materials.
  • the carton blank in preferably so creased and scored, as hereinafter described more in detail, as to provide end flaps and interposed, substantially rectangular, side wall,
  • the blank may be formed into a substantially rectangular box by bending along the creaselines and lapping and sealing the base and side wall end flaps leaving the cover panel and thereto attached overlap panel free.
  • the roll of sheet material may then be placed in the carton and the overlap panel bearingat its outer extremity the tear edge, thereupon be sealed at 'its base against the lower edge of the contiguous side wall panel,- in such manner that the tear edge projects slightlybelow or outwardly from the base, thus to seal the cartonclosed with the roll housed therein.
  • the end flaps at one end of the blank may be left unsealed and the overlap panel sealed in the'manner aforesaid prior to loading with the roll of sheet stock, which may be inserted via end loading through the open flaps which may thereupon be lapped and sealed.
  • the overlap panel is scored along a pair of. lines spaced from its tear edge to provide a tear strip for opening the carton and freeing the cover so that the end of the roll may be withdrawn across the tearedge sealed as aforesaid to the base of the side wall, thus' to permit severing of withdrawn sections of the roll as aforesaid.
  • the invention thus provides anextremely simple and economical method of forming a roll packaging and dispensing carton from a single blank of sheet stock embodying a strong, rigid and permanent, thermoset resin incorporating tear edge, and which thus requires no separate formation and attachment of a metal or othertear strip, as in various heretofore known constructions. Also it eliminates the weak and ineifective tear edge constructions of other types of cartons heretofore proposed.
  • FIGURE 1 is a more or less diagrammatic showing in perspective, of the preferred method of producing carton blanks having a tear edge in accordance'with the inven tion;
  • FIGURE 1a is an enlarged fragmentary view in elevation of the aforesaid chamfered squeeze rolls also shown in FIG. 1, between which the blanks are fed for setting serrated tear atan angle.
  • FIGURE 1b ' is a view 3 in end elevation of the oven shown in FIG. 1 for drying and curing the resin coated serrated tearing edge of the carton blank;
  • FIGURE 2 is a plan view of a carton blank as produced in accordance with the method and apparatus of FIG. 1;
  • FIGURE 3 is a perspective view showing the carton blank of FIG. 2 as formed into a substantially rectangular carton and containing a roll of the sheet material to be dispensed; this view also illustrating the carton with the tear strip removed and manner in which the sheet material is withdrawn and flexed over the tear edge for severing;
  • FIGURE 4 is a fragmentary, perspective view of the right end portion of the carton assembly of FIG. 3, but showing the carton as sealed by the tear strip prior to its removal;
  • FIGURE 5 is a fragmentary, perspective view of the right-hand portion of FIG. 3 following the severing of a withdrawn sheet section at the tear edge, and illustrating the manner in which the residual strip edge of a plastic sheet material, such as Mylar, adheres by electrostatic at traction to the resin coated portion of the tear edge, thus to prevent the strip end from slipping back into the roll of sheet stock;
  • FIGURE 6 is a fragmentary, sectional detail as taken at 6-6 of FIG. 5;
  • FIGURE 7 is a fragmentary, perspective detail showing the preferred embodiment of the tear edge construction as set at an angle to the balance of the carton in the manner aforesaid.
  • FIG. 1 there is shown at the left a stack 1 of carton blanks as delivered from a die stamping, creasing and scoring machine, for cutting each blank from cardboard sheet stock to the shape shown at 2, one longitudinal edge of which is serrated, as at 3, and the opposite ends of which are cut to provide end flaps, as at 4, the blank being also longitudinally and transversely creased, as at 5, 6, and scored, as at 7, as explained more in detail below.
  • the blanks 2 are fed successively from the stack 1, longitudinally past a brushing station wherein a rotating brush 8, disposed as shown, brushes the serrated edge 3, of the blank and thereby removes all dust particles therefrom.
  • the blanks are fed thence past a crimping station, between a pair of crimping squeeze rolls 9, 10, the upper ends of which are shown in FIG. 1, are positioned to engage the serrated edge 3 of the blanks 2, these ends being champfered in complementary fashion, as shown at 11, 12 of FIG. 1a, for imparting an angular set to the serrated edge 3 of the blanks as compared to the remaining planar position thereof, as shown by portion 3a, FIG. 2, of the blank with reference to portion 2a thereof.
  • This crimping step may be omitted if desired.
  • the blanks are fed next to a coating station, where a coating of resin varnish of the character aforesaid, is sprayed as at 13, 14, or otherwise applied, to the upper and lower surfaces of the blank 2 along the serrated edge 3 thereof, in such manner as to apply the resin varnish along the marginal upper and lower edges thereof, as at 15.
  • the blanks are fed thence past a resin drying and curing station at which is disposed a drying tunnel 16, FIGS. 1 and 1b, provided with a slotted opening along one side, as at 17, for passage of the blank 2, with the resin coated portion 3a thereof disposed within the oven as shown in FIG. 1b.
  • the oven is provided with electrical resistance heating units, as at 18, supplied with power over leads 18a. 7 During passage through the oven, the solvent in the resin coating is volatilized, and also the resin is cured to the permanently thermoset state.
  • the blanks are fed next to a dusting station where a plastic dust is sprayed onto the upper and lower resin coated portions of the blanks, as by means of dusting units as at 19, to prevent the blanks from sticking together in subsequent stacking.
  • FIG. 2 is a plan view of one of the carton blanks 2 after processing as in FIG. 1, the
  • the overlap panel terminates at its extremity in the resin treated tear edge 37.
  • the blank in assembling the carton, is bent at right angles along the crease lines 21-24, into substantially rectangular, tubular shape, with the overlap panel 31 overlapping the front wall panel 27 as shown.
  • the end flaps 32, 34, 36 are turned in under the base end flap 33 at each end, and sealed thereto in the manner illustrated in FIG. 4, the end flaps 35 of the cover 30 being left free.
  • the cover 30 having the thereto attached overlap panel 31 is raised and the roll of plastic sheet material 40 or of other material, is placed in the carton.
  • the carton is thereupon closed by gluing the base 41 of the overlap panel 31 to the base of the front wall panel 27, in such manner that the resin incorporating" the open end of the carton, and the end flaps at that end.
  • a tab 39 of the tear strip 38' is gripped and the tear strip thus removed, leaving the portion 41 of the overlap panel which carries the tear edge 37, firmly glued to the base of the front wall panel 27. Removal of the tear strip releases the cover 30 and V the upper portion 31a,FIG. 3, of theoverlap panel which thus becomes part of the cover, so that the cover may be raised and the end of the roll 40 gripped, for withdrawing the sheet material from the roll, which is drawn down across the tear edge 37 in the manner illustrated at 43, FIG. 3, to a desired length and thereupon severed by pulling against the serrated teeth of the tear edge 37.
  • the sheet material of the roll 40' is made of a plastic material, such as Mylar, it will adhere by electrostatic attraction to the resin coated portion 44,
  • FIG. 5 of the tear edge, as it is drawn thereacross, so
  • the resin coated portion 50 is bent up as shown at 51, in the manner above described, so that the plane of synthetic resin varnish, and treating said edge at elevated pensing thin sheet material in roll form, said method comprising: die cutting said blank from cardboard base stock, to impart a serrated edge to said blank, removing dust particles from said edge and bending said edge at an angle to said base stock, thereupon applying to the upper" and lower surfaces of said edge, heavy coatings of a thermosetting synthetic resin varnish, and treating the so-coated edge at elevated temperature suflicient to remove volatiles from said resin coating and to cure the resin to the thermoset condition, thereby permanently to set said edge at said angle to the remainder of said blank, and to provide a strong and sharply pointed tearing edge for said blank.
  • I 3 In combination: a roll of electrically insulative plastic sheet material, a container housing the same, said container having an opening for progressively withdrawing said material from said roll, and said container exteriorly mounting along said opening in the direction of said withdrawal, a supporting strip of electrically insulative material, impregnated and coated with a hardened plastic, providing a rigid tearing edge for severing preselected lengths of said material Withdrawn from said roll, and for electrostatically adhering thereto the severed end of said material integral with the material of said roll.
  • a roll of plastic sheet material a cardboard container housing the same, said container having an opening for progressively withdrawing said mate rial from said roll, and said container exteriorly mount ing along said opening in the direction of said withdrawal,
  • a container for housing and dispensing sheet material in roll form comprising a front wall panel, an overlap panel, a supporting strip depending from one edge of said overlap panel and adapted to overlap saidfront wall panel, the overlap portions of said front wall panel and said supporting strip being adhered one to the other, said edge for severing preselected lengths of said material as withdrawn.
  • a container for housing and dispensing sheet material in roll form comprising a front wall panel, an overlap panel, a supporting strip depending from one edge of said overlap panel and adapted to overlap said front wall panel, the overlap portions of said front Wall panel and said supporting strip being adhered one to the other,
  • said overlap panel beingprovided with a tear strip for providing an elongated opening intosaid contained-the terminal portion of saidsupponting strip incorporating a hardened plastic, for providing atear edge for severing lengths of said sheet material as dispensed through said elongated opening, I i 1 7.
  • a container for housing and dispensing sheet mate-' rial in roll form comprising a front wall panel, an overlap panel, a supporting strip depending from one edge ofsaid overlap panel and adapted to overlap said front wall panel, the overlap portions of said front wall paneland said supporting strip'b'eing adhered one to the'other, said overlap panel being provided with a tear strip for providing an elongated opening into said container, said supporting strip having a longitudinally extendingserrated edge, incorporating a thermoset synthetic resin providing a rigid tearingedge for severing preselected lengths of 7 said overlap panel and adapted to overlap said front wall a panel, the overlap portions of said front wall panel and said supporting strip being adhered one to the other,
  • said overlap'panel being provided with a tear strip
  • said supponting strip having a longitudinally extending serrated edge, incorporating a thermoset synthetic resin providing a rigid tearing edge for severing preselected lengths of said material as withdrawn through said elongated opening and for electrostatically adhering thereto.

Description

3,137,424 IAL IN THE FORM June 1964 w. w. FINN ETAL DISPENSING CARTON FOR WRAPPING MATER OF SHEETS AND FILMS, AND METHOD OF MAKING SAME Filed March 27, 1962 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 \w A %\i llllw irlili QM n \w Wm #8 W s II- a m kw wm Wm wm m.
Mm In has a \N RM NM Ill June 16, 1964 w.w. FINN ETAL 3,137,424
DISPENSING CARTON FOR WRAPPING MATERIAL IN THE FORM OF SHEETS AND FILMS, AND METHOD OF MAKING SAME Filed March 27, 1962 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 VV/LL/AM WEN/V.
BY JAMES JB/CK/VgLL United States PatentO 3,137,424 DISPENSING CARTON FOR WRAPPING MATE- RIAL IN THE FORM OF SHEETS AND FILMS, AND METHOD OF MAKING SAME I William Wallace Finn, Stonehall City, and James J. Bicknell, Marshall, Mich., assignors to St. Regis Paper Company, New York, N.Y., a corporation of New York Filed Mar. 27, 1962, Ser. No. 182,830 8 Claims." (Cl. 225-48) This invention pertains to cartons for packaging and dispensing rolls of foil or sheet stock, and more especially 'to an improved tear edge or tear stript herefor for dispensing the materials in desired lengths, and to methods of making the same.
It is known to provide dispensing cartons for packaging rolls of thin sheet material, such as aluminum or other metal foil, waxed paper, plastic film and the like, with a tear edge or tear strip for progressively dispensing the roll stock and severing preselected length over the tear edge.
In cartons of this type as heretofore constructed, the tear edge has generally comprised a metal strip appropriately mounted on the carton exterior in such manner as to provide a projecting tear edge, usually serrated or burred for facilitating the severing of withdrawn sections of the rolled sheet material. The provision of a metal tear strip of this character adds to the expense of the carton to the extent of the cost of making the same, burring or .serrating the edge and attaching to the carton.
Even inquantity production, the added expense is an I appreciable item in the over-all cost of the carton.
To minimize or eliminate this expense, it has also been proposed'to substitute a tear strip of cardboard or, alternatively, to provide the carton itself with a serrated tear edge at the strip withdrawal opening, but neither of these expedients has proved satisfactory owing to the inherent weakness of the cardboard tear edgewhich distorts or breaks under the force of the strip severing operation and is soon rendered useless for such purposes.
In accordance with the present invention, we have effectively overcome the above-mentioned disadvantages of the aforesaid and other prior constructions in an extremely economical manner in the process of forming the carton blank from cardboard or other sheet stock of fibrous organic material. According to the present invention, the sheet stock is subjected to a die stamping and cutting operation such as appropriately to crease, score and cut a carton blank for formation into a carton and also to provide the same with a serrated edge, such that when the blank is formed into a carton, the serrated edge will be appropriately positioned to form a tear edge for the sheet material to be packaged therein. The blank as thus stamped and cut is brushed to remove loose particles and fed between a pair of squeeze rolls which are chamfered at one end in complementary fashion for setting the serrated edge of the blank at a slight angle. The serrated edge as thus set is next coated on both sides with a thermosetting resin varnish by a rolling or spraying application.
For this operation any of the various thermosetting resins in a suitable solvent may be employed, such as a thermosetting polyester, polyurethane, epoxy, epoxyphenol or phenolic resin dissolved in a suitable solvent such as a ketone, alcohol or ester. The preferred resin is an epoxy resin, Class II, formed by reacting bisphenolepi-chlorohydrin with a vinyl-phenolcomplex, the preferred solvent being methyl-ethyl-ketone, in the proportions of about 10% by volume of the solvent to the resin content. The blank is then passed through a drying oven for removing the solvent from the resin varnish and also for curing the resin to the thermoset condition. As the sticking together.
blank emerges from the drying and curing oven, the resin coated edge is dusted with powder as by means of an Oxydrie spray for preventing the stacked blanks from A tear edge produced as above or by equivalent procedures incorporating such a resin in the thermoset state, is extremely strong, rigid and permanent, being unafiected by moisture, and is extremely effective for severing any of the various rolled sheet materials employed for protecting comestibles and the like, such as aluminium foil, waxed paper or any of theplastic film materials suchas the polyester resin sheet, sold as Mylar, or that sold as Saran Wrap" being a copolymer of vinylidine chloride and vinyl chloride, or polyethylene or other plastic sheet materials.
'A further novel aspect of the carton embodying the resin incorporating tear edge of the present invention as applied to the packaging of rolls of such plastic materials, is that as the plastic stock is withdrawn from the carton and in frictional engagement across the tear edge, the strip adheres to the resin coated tear edge by electrostatic attraction, so that upon severing a withdrawn section, the
severed end remaining integral with the materialof the roll, adheres to the tear edge and thus is prevented from slipping back into the carton.
The carton blank in preferably so creased and scored, as hereinafter described more in detail, as to provide end flaps and interposed, substantially rectangular, side wall,
,base and cover panels together with an additional side wall, overlap panel along the longitudinal extremity of which the resin incorporating tear edge is formed. The blank may be formed into a substantially rectangular box by bending along the creaselines and lapping and sealing the base and side wall end flaps leaving the cover panel and thereto attached overlap panel free. The roll of sheet material may then be placed in the carton and the overlap panel bearingat its outer extremity the tear edge, thereupon be sealed at 'its base against the lower edge of the contiguous side wall panel,- in such manner that the tear edge projects slightlybelow or outwardly from the base, thus to seal the cartonclosed with the roll housed therein. Alternatively, the end flaps at one end of the blank may be left unsealed and the overlap panel sealed in the'manner aforesaid prior to loading with the roll of sheet stock, which may be inserted via end loading through the open flaps which may thereupon be lapped and sealed.
In accordance with a further feature of the invention, the overlap panel is scored along a pair of. lines spaced from its tear edge to provide a tear strip for opening the carton and freeing the cover so that the end of the roll may be withdrawn across the tearedge sealed as aforesaid to the base of the side wall, thus' to permit severing of withdrawn sections of the roll as aforesaid. V
The invention thus provides anextremely simple and economical method of forming a roll packaging and dispensing carton from a single blank of sheet stock embodying a strong, rigid and permanent, thermoset resin incorporating tear edge, and which thus requires no separate formation and attachment of a metal or othertear strip, as in various heretofore known constructions. Also it eliminates the weak and ineifective tear edge constructions of other types of cartons heretofore proposed.
Having thus described the invention in general terms, reference will now be had .to the accompanying drawings for a more detailed description, wherein:
FIGURE 1 is a more or less diagrammatic showing in perspective, of the preferred method of producing carton blanks having a tear edge in accordance'with the inven tion; FIGURE 1a is an enlarged fragmentary view in elevation of the aforesaid chamfered squeeze rolls also shown in FIG. 1, between which the blanks are fed for setting serrated tear atan angle. FIGURE 1b 'is a view 3 in end elevation of the oven shown in FIG. 1 for drying and curing the resin coated serrated tearing edge of the carton blank;
FIGURE 2 is a plan view of a carton blank as produced in accordance with the method and apparatus of FIG. 1;
FIGURE 3 is a perspective view showing the carton blank of FIG. 2 as formed into a substantially rectangular carton and containing a roll of the sheet material to be dispensed; this view also illustrating the carton with the tear strip removed and manner in which the sheet material is withdrawn and flexed over the tear edge for severing;
FIGURE 4 is a fragmentary, perspective view of the right end portion of the carton assembly of FIG. 3, but showing the carton as sealed by the tear strip prior to its removal;
FIGURE 5 is a fragmentary, perspective view of the right-hand portion of FIG. 3 following the severing of a withdrawn sheet section at the tear edge, and illustrating the manner in which the residual strip edge of a plastic sheet material, such as Mylar, adheres by electrostatic at traction to the resin coated portion of the tear edge, thus to prevent the strip end from slipping back into the roll of sheet stock; FIGURE 6 is a fragmentary, sectional detail as taken at 6-6 of FIG. 5; and FIGURE 7 is a fragmentary, perspective detail showing the preferred embodiment of the tear edge construction as set at an angle to the balance of the carton in the manner aforesaid.
Referring to FIG. 1, there is shown at the left a stack 1 of carton blanks as delivered from a die stamping, creasing and scoring machine, for cutting each blank from cardboard sheet stock to the shape shown at 2, one longitudinal edge of which is serrated, as at 3, and the opposite ends of which are cut to provide end flaps, as at 4, the blank being also longitudinally and transversely creased, as at 5, 6, and scored, as at 7, as explained more in detail below.
The blanks 2 are fed successively from the stack 1, longitudinally past a brushing station wherein a rotating brush 8, disposed as shown, brushes the serrated edge 3, of the blank and thereby removes all dust particles therefrom. The blanks are fed thence past a crimping station, between a pair of crimping squeeze rolls 9, 10, the upper ends of which are shown in FIG. 1, are positioned to engage the serrated edge 3 of the blanks 2, these ends being champfered in complementary fashion, as shown at 11, 12 of FIG. 1a, for imparting an angular set to the serrated edge 3 of the blanks as compared to the remaining planar position thereof, as shown by portion 3a, FIG. 2, of the blank with reference to portion 2a thereof. This crimping step may be omitted if desired.
The blanks are fed next to a coating station, where a coating of resin varnish of the character aforesaid, is sprayed as at 13, 14, or otherwise applied, to the upper and lower surfaces of the blank 2 along the serrated edge 3 thereof, in such manner as to apply the resin varnish along the marginal upper and lower edges thereof, as at 15. The blanks are fed thence past a resin drying and curing station at which is disposed a drying tunnel 16, FIGS. 1 and 1b, provided with a slotted opening along one side, as at 17, for passage of the blank 2, with the resin coated portion 3a thereof disposed within the oven as shown in FIG. 1b. The oven is provided with electrical resistance heating units, as at 18, supplied with power over leads 18a. 7 During passage through the oven, the solvent in the resin coating is volatilized, and also the resin is cured to the permanently thermoset state.
The blanks are fed next to a dusting station where a plastic dust is sprayed onto the upper and lower resin coated portions of the blanks, as by means of dusting units as at 19, to prevent the blanks from sticking together in subsequent stacking.
Referring now to FIG. 2, which is a plan view of one of the carton blanks 2 after processing as in FIG. 1, the
blank which is of roughly rectangular form as shown, is creased along parallel lines, as at 20 to 24, inc., andis scored, i.e., cut halfway through, along parallel lines, as at 25, 26. The crease lines 21-24, inc., divide the blank into five substantially. rectangular panels 27-31, inc., which in the assembled carton, as explained below, comprise respectively the front wall, base, rear wall, coverand overlap panels thereof. These panels terminate at their opposite ends, respectively, in end flaps as at 32-36, inc.
The overlap panel terminates at its extremity in the resin treated tear edge 37. The score cuts 25, 26, bound a tear strip 38, which during the blanking operation, is cut to form champfered end tabs, as at 39, for ease of grasp- 7 ing to remove the tear strip.
Referring now to FIGS. 3-5 along with FIG. '2, in assembling the carton, the blank is bent at right angles along the crease lines 21-24, into substantially rectangular, tubular shape, with the overlap panel 31 overlapping the front wall panel 27 as shown. If now the carton is to be arranged for top loading, the end flaps 32, 34, 36, are turned in under the base end flap 33 at each end, and sealed thereto in the manner illustrated in FIG. 4, the end flaps 35 of the cover 30 being left free. With the carton thus assembled, the cover 30 having the thereto attached overlap panel 31, is raised and the roll of plastic sheet material 40 or of other material, is placed in the carton. The carton is thereupon closed by gluing the base 41 of the overlap panel 31 to the base of the front wall panel 27, in such manner that the resin incorporating" the open end of the carton, and the end flaps at that end.
thereupon lapped and glued as heretofore described.
-For opening the carton, a tab 39 of the tear strip 38' is gripped and the tear strip thus removed, leaving the portion 41 of the overlap panel which carries the tear edge 37, firmly glued to the base of the front wall panel 27. Removal of the tear strip releases the cover 30 and V the upper portion 31a,FIG. 3, of theoverlap panel which thus becomes part of the cover, so that the cover may be raised and the end of the roll 40 gripped, for withdrawing the sheet material from the roll, which is drawn down across the tear edge 37 in the manner illustrated at 43, FIG. 3, to a desired length and thereupon severed by pulling against the serrated teeth of the tear edge 37.
As above stated, if the sheet material of the roll 40'is made of a plastic material, such as Mylar, it will adhere by electrostatic attraction to the resin coated portion 44,
FIG. 5, of the tear edge, as it is drawn thereacross, so
(that upon severing the length 43 of the sheet material, the
remaining end portion 45 which extends back to the roll 40, will adhere to the resin of the tear edge and thus prevent the sheet material from slipping back onto'the roll.
Referring to the preferred tear edge construction of FIG. 7, the resin coated portion 50, is bent up as shown at 51, in the manner above described, so that the plane of synthetic resin varnish, and treating said edge at elevated pensing thin sheet material in roll form, said method comprising: die cutting said blank from cardboard base stock, to impart a serrated edge to said blank, removing dust particles from said edge and bending said edge at an angle to said base stock, thereupon applying to the upper" and lower surfaces of said edge, heavy coatings of a thermosetting synthetic resin varnish, and treating the so-coated edge at elevated temperature suflicient to remove volatiles from said resin coating and to cure the resin to the thermoset condition, thereby permanently to set said edge at said angle to the remainder of said blank, and to provide a strong and sharply pointed tearing edge for said blank. I 3. In combination: a roll of electrically insulative plastic sheet material, a container housing the same, said container having an opening for progressively withdrawing said material from said roll, and said container exteriorly mounting along said opening in the direction of said withdrawal, a supporting strip of electrically insulative material, impregnated and coated with a hardened plastic, providing a rigid tearing edge for severing preselected lengths of said material Withdrawn from said roll, and for electrostatically adhering thereto the severed end of said material integral with the material of said roll.
4. In combination: a roll of plastic sheet material, a cardboard container housing the same, said container having an opening for progressively withdrawing said mate rial from said roll, and said container exteriorly mount ing along said opening in the direction of said withdrawal,
a strip of cardboard, having a serrated edge, impregnated and coated with a hardened plastic, providing a rigid tearing edge for severing preselected lengths of said material as withdrawn and for electrostatically adhering thereto the severed end of said material integral with the material of said roll. I
5. A container for housing and dispensing sheet material in roll form comprising a front wall panel, an overlap panel, a supporting strip depending from one edge of said overlap panel and adapted to overlap saidfront wall panel, the overlap portions of said front wall panel and said supporting strip being adhered one to the other, said edge for severing preselected lengths of said material as withdrawn.
6. A container for housing and dispensing sheet material in roll form comprising a front wall panel, an overlap panel, a supporting strip depending from one edge of said overlap panel and adapted to overlap said front wall panel, the overlap portions of said front Wall panel and said supporting strip being adhered one to the other,
said overlap panel beingprovided with a tear strip for providing an elongated opening intosaid contained-the terminal portion of saidsupponting strip incorporating a hardened plastic, for providing atear edge for severing lengths of said sheet material as dispensed through said elongated opening, I i 1 7. A container for housing and dispensing sheet mate-' rial in roll formcomprising a front wall panel, an overlap panel, a supporting strip depending from one edge ofsaid overlap panel and adapted to overlap said front wall panel, the overlap portions of said front wall paneland said supporting strip'b'eing adhered one to the'other, said overlap panel being provided with a tear strip for providing an elongated opening into said container, said supporting strip having a longitudinally extendingserrated edge, incorporating a thermoset synthetic resin providing a rigid tearingedge for severing preselected lengths of 7 said overlap panel and adapted to overlap said front wall a panel, the overlap portions of said front wall panel and said supporting strip being adhered one to the other,
said overlap'panel being provided with a tear strip;for
providing an elongated opening into said container, said supponting strip having a longitudinally extending serrated edge, incorporating a thermoset synthetic resin providing a rigid tearing edge for severing preselected lengths of said material as withdrawn through said elongated opening and for electrostatically adhering thereto. the
material integral with the mate-rial of severed end of said said roll.
References Cited in the file of thispatent I 9 UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,887,912 I Begle Nov. 15,1932 2,336,842 Broeren et a1. Dec. 14, 1943 2,613,879 Carr Oct. 14, 1952 2,633,985. Meyer- ;f.-'.. Apr. 7, 1953 2,889,098 Durdan June 2, 1959 2,936,936 Sano' May17, 1960' 2,984,161 Cook et al. May 16, 1961 Y 2,985,075
.Knutsson-l lall; May 23, 1961

Claims (1)

  1. 8. A CONTAINER FOR HOUSING AND DISPENSING SHEET MATERIAL IN ROLL FORM COMPRISING A FRONT WALL PANEL, AN OVERLAP PANEL, A SUPPORTING STRIP DEPENDING FROM ONE EDGE OF SAID OVERLAP PANEL AND ADAPTED TO OVERLAP SAID FRONT WALL PANEL, THE OVERLAP PORTIONS OF SAID FRONT WALL PANEL AND SAID SUPPORTING STRIP BEING ADHERED ONE TO THE OTHER, SAID OVERLAP PANEL BEING PROVIDED WITH A TEAR STRIP FOR PROVIDING AN ELONGATED OPENING INTO SAID CONTAINER, SAID SUPPORTING STRIP HAVING A LONGITUDINALLY EXTENDING SERRATED EDGE, INCORPORATING A THERMOSET SYNTHETIC RESIN PROVIDING A RIGID TEARING EDGE FOR SEVERING PRESELECTED LENGTHS OF SAID MATERIAL AS WITHDRAWN THROUGH SAID ELONGATED OPENING AND FOR ELECTROSTATICALLY ADHERING THERETO THE SEVERED END OF SAID MATERIAL INTEGRAL WITH THE MATERIAL OF SAID ROLL.
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Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3285483A (en) * 1965-06-21 1966-11-15 Hebert Julien Dispensing container for sheet wrapping material
US3330685A (en) * 1962-11-14 1967-07-11 United Shoe Machinery Corp Method for forming a serrated tearing edge with a hardened thermoplastic resin layer
US3800677A (en) * 1971-05-03 1974-04-02 Xepex Ind Inc Apparatus for forming carton
US3933288A (en) * 1974-11-15 1976-01-20 Diamond International Corporation Dispensing carton with cutting edge
US4127229A (en) * 1977-12-05 1978-11-28 Champion International Corporation Flip top dispenser box
US4346829A (en) * 1980-09-02 1982-08-31 The Nivison-Weiskopf Co. Roll dispenser carton
US4371104A (en) * 1981-01-23 1983-02-01 Champion International Corporation Dispenser box with cutting edge
US4405066A (en) * 1981-09-25 1983-09-20 Champion International Corporation Dispenser carton with improved end closure
US4417678A (en) * 1981-09-08 1983-11-29 Champion International Corporation Carton opening device
US4648536A (en) * 1985-05-31 1987-03-10 James River Corporation Of Virginia Carton for dispensing sheet material in roll form
US4655377A (en) * 1985-07-31 1987-04-07 Orangeo Jr Joseph Apparatus for dispensing permanent wave processing paper
DE4101762A1 (en) * 1990-01-22 1991-07-25 Okumura Ayako METHOD AND DEVICE FOR ONE-PIECE DESIGNING A CUTTING DEVICE ON A CARDBOARD UNIT
US5772094A (en) * 1995-10-24 1998-06-30 Allen-Reed Company, Inc. Cutting blade
US20040089691A1 (en) * 2002-03-01 2004-05-13 Gerulski Kristopher W. Wrap dispenser with enhanced cutter bar registration

Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1887912A (en) * 1929-09-04 1932-11-15 Berst Forster Dixfield Company Dispensing container for paper rolls
US2336842A (en) * 1943-03-27 1943-12-14 Marathon Paper Mills Co Carton
US2613879A (en) * 1949-12-19 1952-10-14 Jr William H Carr Dispenser
US2633985A (en) * 1949-07-29 1953-04-07 Edwin A Meyer Cutter box roll carton
US2889098A (en) * 1957-01-11 1959-06-02 Robert H Durdan Dispensing carton for wrapping material in the form of sheets and films
US2936936A (en) * 1959-05-29 1960-05-17 Tomitaro T Sano Sheet material dispenser
US2984161A (en) * 1953-07-07 1961-05-16 United Wallpaper Inc Manufacture of carton blanks
US2985075A (en) * 1956-02-20 1961-05-23 Knutsson-Hall Folke Knut Method of manufacturing boxes of cardboard

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1887912A (en) * 1929-09-04 1932-11-15 Berst Forster Dixfield Company Dispensing container for paper rolls
US2336842A (en) * 1943-03-27 1943-12-14 Marathon Paper Mills Co Carton
US2633985A (en) * 1949-07-29 1953-04-07 Edwin A Meyer Cutter box roll carton
US2613879A (en) * 1949-12-19 1952-10-14 Jr William H Carr Dispenser
US2984161A (en) * 1953-07-07 1961-05-16 United Wallpaper Inc Manufacture of carton blanks
US2985075A (en) * 1956-02-20 1961-05-23 Knutsson-Hall Folke Knut Method of manufacturing boxes of cardboard
US2889098A (en) * 1957-01-11 1959-06-02 Robert H Durdan Dispensing carton for wrapping material in the form of sheets and films
US2936936A (en) * 1959-05-29 1960-05-17 Tomitaro T Sano Sheet material dispenser

Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3330685A (en) * 1962-11-14 1967-07-11 United Shoe Machinery Corp Method for forming a serrated tearing edge with a hardened thermoplastic resin layer
US3285483A (en) * 1965-06-21 1966-11-15 Hebert Julien Dispensing container for sheet wrapping material
US3800677A (en) * 1971-05-03 1974-04-02 Xepex Ind Inc Apparatus for forming carton
US3933288A (en) * 1974-11-15 1976-01-20 Diamond International Corporation Dispensing carton with cutting edge
US4127229A (en) * 1977-12-05 1978-11-28 Champion International Corporation Flip top dispenser box
US4346829A (en) * 1980-09-02 1982-08-31 The Nivison-Weiskopf Co. Roll dispenser carton
US4371104A (en) * 1981-01-23 1983-02-01 Champion International Corporation Dispenser box with cutting edge
US4417678A (en) * 1981-09-08 1983-11-29 Champion International Corporation Carton opening device
US4405066A (en) * 1981-09-25 1983-09-20 Champion International Corporation Dispenser carton with improved end closure
US4648536A (en) * 1985-05-31 1987-03-10 James River Corporation Of Virginia Carton for dispensing sheet material in roll form
US4655377A (en) * 1985-07-31 1987-04-07 Orangeo Jr Joseph Apparatus for dispensing permanent wave processing paper
DE4101762A1 (en) * 1990-01-22 1991-07-25 Okumura Ayako METHOD AND DEVICE FOR ONE-PIECE DESIGNING A CUTTING DEVICE ON A CARDBOARD UNIT
DE4101762C2 (en) * 1990-01-22 2002-06-27 Okumura Ayako Method and device for forming a cutting device on a carton
US5772094A (en) * 1995-10-24 1998-06-30 Allen-Reed Company, Inc. Cutting blade
US20040089691A1 (en) * 2002-03-01 2004-05-13 Gerulski Kristopher W. Wrap dispenser with enhanced cutter bar registration

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