WO1993016919A1 - Quick-locking child resistant cap assembly - Google Patents

Quick-locking child resistant cap assembly Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1993016919A1
WO1993016919A1 PCT/US1993/002071 US9302071W WO9316919A1 WO 1993016919 A1 WO1993016919 A1 WO 1993016919A1 US 9302071 W US9302071 W US 9302071W WO 9316919 A1 WO9316919 A1 WO 9316919A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
bottle neck
cylindrical base
locking
cylindrical
coupling means
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1993/002071
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Wilhelmus J. J. Maas
Petrus L. W. Hurkmans
Original Assignee
Afa Products, Inc.
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
Priority claimed from US07/840,759 external-priority patent/US5297701A/en
Priority claimed from US07/840,784 external-priority patent/US5238152A/en
Application filed by Afa Products, Inc. filed Critical Afa Products, Inc.
Publication of WO1993016919A1 publication Critical patent/WO1993016919A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B05SPRAYING OR ATOMISING IN GENERAL; APPLYING FLUENT MATERIALS TO SURFACES, IN GENERAL
    • B05BSPRAYING APPARATUS; ATOMISING APPARATUS; NOZZLES
    • B05B11/00Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use
    • B05B11/0005Components or details
    • B05B11/0027Means for neutralising the actuation of the sprayer ; Means for preventing access to the sprayer actuation means
    • B05B11/0029Valves not actuated by pressure
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B05SPRAYING OR ATOMISING IN GENERAL; APPLYING FLUENT MATERIALS TO SURFACES, IN GENERAL
    • B05BSPRAYING APPARATUS; ATOMISING APPARATUS; NOZZLES
    • B05B11/00Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use
    • B05B11/01Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use characterised by the means producing the flow
    • B05B11/10Pump arrangements for transferring the contents from the container to a pump chamber by a sucking effect and forcing the contents out through the dispensing nozzle
    • B05B11/1001Piston pumps
    • B05B11/1009Piston pumps actuated by a lever
    • B05B11/1011Piston pumps actuated by a lever without substantial movement of the nozzle in the direction of the pressure stroke
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B05SPRAYING OR ATOMISING IN GENERAL; APPLYING FLUENT MATERIALS TO SURFACES, IN GENERAL
    • B05BSPRAYING APPARATUS; ATOMISING APPARATUS; NOZZLES
    • B05B11/00Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use
    • B05B11/01Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use characterised by the means producing the flow
    • B05B11/10Pump arrangements for transferring the contents from the container to a pump chamber by a sucking effect and forcing the contents out through the dispensing nozzle
    • B05B11/1042Components or details
    • B05B11/1043Sealing or attachment arrangements between pump and container
    • B05B11/1045Sealing or attachment arrangements between pump and container the pump being preassembled as an independent unit before being mounted on the container
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B05SPRAYING OR ATOMISING IN GENERAL; APPLYING FLUENT MATERIALS TO SURFACES, IN GENERAL
    • B05BSPRAYING APPARATUS; ATOMISING APPARATUS; NOZZLES
    • B05B11/00Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use
    • B05B11/01Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use characterised by the means producing the flow
    • B05B11/10Pump arrangements for transferring the contents from the container to a pump chamber by a sucking effect and forcing the contents out through the dispensing nozzle
    • B05B11/1042Components or details
    • B05B11/1061Pump priming means
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B05SPRAYING OR ATOMISING IN GENERAL; APPLYING FLUENT MATERIALS TO SURFACES, IN GENERAL
    • B05BSPRAYING APPARATUS; ATOMISING APPARATUS; NOZZLES
    • B05B11/00Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use
    • B05B11/01Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use characterised by the means producing the flow
    • B05B11/10Pump arrangements for transferring the contents from the container to a pump chamber by a sucking effect and forcing the contents out through the dispensing nozzle
    • B05B11/1042Components or details
    • B05B11/1073Springs
    • B05B11/1074Springs located outside pump chambers
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B05SPRAYING OR ATOMISING IN GENERAL; APPLYING FLUENT MATERIALS TO SURFACES, IN GENERAL
    • B05BSPRAYING APPARATUS; ATOMISING APPARATUS; NOZZLES
    • B05B11/00Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use
    • B05B11/01Single-unit hand-held apparatus in which flow of contents is produced by the muscular force of the operator at the moment of use characterised by the means producing the flow
    • B05B11/10Pump arrangements for transferring the contents from the container to a pump chamber by a sucking effect and forcing the contents out through the dispensing nozzle
    • B05B11/1042Components or details
    • B05B11/1073Springs
    • B05B11/1077Springs characterised by a particular shape or material

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a trigger operated dispensing device for mounting to the top neck qf a storage container.
  • trigger sprayers can be reused, often times they are disposed of.
  • a quick-locking and child resistant bottle cap assembly having non-thread coupling structure is provided for coupling the trigger sprayer to the top neck of the liquid storage container.
  • This bottle cap assembly is easy to install and cannot be dislodged by accident, for example, by a playing child and therefore ensures a child resistant bottle cap coupling arrangement.
  • U.S. Patent No. 4,538,745 teaches a trigger sprayer body including a housing which has a depending cylindrical coupling member that includes side openings therein and inwardly extending lugs for coupling the housing to a bottle neck, such as over a snap ring. Also depending from the housing is a smaller-in-diameter cylindrical sealing member 26 which has a lower outer bevelled surface and which is adapted to engage the inner surface of a bottle neck coupled to the housing in sealing relationship therewith.
  • the Kirk, Jr. U.S. Patent No. 4,366,921 teaches a conventional thread coupling defined by threads on a bottle neck and threads on the inside of a bottle cap. Kirk, Jr. also teaches a collar having a plurality of lugs which extend inwardly from the collar so as to prevent upper movement of an annular band extending outwardly at the low end of the closure member. Although the annular band of Kirk, Jr. might be looked at as an annular rib, the collar member of Kirk, Jr. does not provide an annular groove that is adapted to receive, in a snap-fitting manner, an annular rib.
  • the Wesner et al. U.S. Patent No. 4,346,821 discloses a nozzle assembly including a planar safety closure.
  • the planar safety closure is mounted rotatably on a nose piece at an end portion of a trigger sprayer and is held tightly in place by the passing of an annular ridge on the planar safety closure over an annular lip on the nose piece.
  • a generally flat tab is integrally connected to an overcap. The far end of this tab contains a tooth like detent member which extends rearwardly and is engagable in a slot in a top front wall of a trigger. In this position, the nozzle is locked and cannot easily be opened.
  • the operator has to squeeze the trigger to lift the detent member out of its slot and then has to rotate the planar safety closure for about 180° to a spray position. In this position, the trigger sprayer is ready to work.
  • the Wesner et al U.S. Patent 4,346,821 also teaches a child resistant closure for a container mounted spray dispenser and teaches two types of child resistant closures.
  • the first type of child resistant closure is with respect to the nozzle.
  • Wesner teaches a rotatable overcap which has a tab extending downwardly therefrom having an inwardly extending detent. The detent is received in an opening at the top of a trigger. With this structure one has to squeeze the trigger a small amount so that the detent number is out of a slot, whereby the tab can be rotated to rotate the overcap to a spray position. In this way Wesner et al provides a child resistant nozzle assembly.
  • Wesner et al provides a child resistant bottle cap/bottle neck assembly.
  • This assembly includes a screwing cap and a closure member, which is located radially outwardly from the screwing cap and is integral therewith.
  • the closure member has two diametrically opposed longitudinally extending ribs, which are adapted to engage a lug extending outwardly from a bottle neck, as best shown in FIGS. 15 & 16.
  • a child resistant trigger sprayer bottle cap/bottle neck assembly comprising: a trigger sprayer having a body including a cylindrical base; first non-thread coupling structure incorporated into the cylindrical base for coupling to a bottle neck; a bottle neck; second non-thread coupling structure on the bottle neck adapted to engage and couple with the first coupling structure; and a locking ring received over the cylindrical base and the cylindrical neck for maintaining the first and second coupling structure in a coupled locked position.
  • a method for locking a trigger sprayer to a bottle neck of a liquid storage container comprising the steps of: providing at the lower end of a trigger sprayer a cylindrical base including a cylindrical wall; providing in the cylindrical wall first coupling structure for coupling with a bottle neck; providing on the bottle neck second coupling structure for coupling and locking with the first coupling structure; molding with the cylindrical base a locking ring which is detachably connected at a lower edge to the cylindrical base; breaking the locking ring away from the cylindrical base and moving it upwardly on the cylindrical base; pushing the cylindrical base downwardly over the bottle neck until the first coupling structure couples and locks with the second coupling structure; and, pushing the locking ring downwardly over the cylindrical base and the coupled and locked first and second coupling structure.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a trigger sprayer constructed according to the teachings of the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 is an exploded perspective view of the trigge sprayer shown in FIG. 1 and shows a locking ring prior to it detachment from a cylindrical base of the sprayer body.
  • FIG. 3 is a vertical sectional view of the trigger spraye in its at rest position where a spring between a trigger an the sprayer body biases the trigger and a piston rod couple thereto to the most outward position.
  • FIG. 4 is a vertical sectional view of the trigger spraye similar to the view shown in FIG. 3 but showing the trigge fully depressed.
  • FIG. 5 is perspective view of a non-metal trigger spraye spring assembly of the trigger sprayer shown in FIG. 1.
  • FIG. 6 is a side view of the spring assembly shown in FIG. 5.
  • FIG. 7 is a top plan view of the spring assembly shown i FIG. 5.
  • FIG. 8 is a top plan view of another embodiment of th spring assembly constructed according to the teachings of th present invention.
  • FIG. 9 is a side view of the spring assembly shown in FIG 8.
  • FIG. 10 is a bottom plan view of the spring assembly show in FIG. 8.
  • FIG. 11 is a vertical sectional view of the trigger an the piston connected to each other in the home or at res position.
  • FIG. 12 is a vertical sectional view of the trigger an the piston of FIG. 11 in a fully depressed position.
  • FIG. 13 is a side elevated view of the piston shown i FIG. 4.
  • FIG. 14 is a top view of the piston shown in FIG. 13 an is taken along line 14-14 of FIG. 13.
  • FIG. 15 is a vertical sectional view of the piston show in FIG. 14 and is taken along line 15-15 of FIG. 14.
  • FIG. 16 is a vertical sectional view of the trigger alone
  • FIG. 17 is a vertical elevational view of the trigger shown in FIG. 16 and is taken along line 11-11 of FIG. 16.
  • FIG. 18 is a front elevational view of the front end of the sprayer body and a nose bushing that extends from the front end of the body of the trigger sprayer shown in FIG. 2, but without a pull-away piece mounted at the end of the body.
  • FIG. 19 is a back elevational view of the nozzle cap of a nozzle assembly shown in FIG. 2.
  • FIG. 20 is an exploded view in longitudinal vertical section of the nozzle cap and nose bushing shown of the nozzle assembly shown in FIG. 2 with portions broken away.
  • FIG. 21 is a longitudinal, generally vertically sectional view of the nozzle cap and nose bushing coupled together as shown in FIG. 1, with portions broken away.
  • FIG. 22 is a vertical sectional view through the nozzle assembly shown in FIG. 1 after a pull-away piece is removed and is taken along line 22-22 of FIG. 21.
  • FIG. 23 is a vertical sectional view through the nozzle assembly, similar to the view shown in FIG. 22, but showing the side walls of the sprayer body squeezed in to move two legs or prongs extending from the body out of blocking position relative to two lugs on the inner wall of the nozzle cap.
  • FIG. 24 is a front end elevational view of the sprayer body and the nose bushing that extends from the front end of the body of the trigger sprayer shown in FIG. 2, similar to
  • FIG. 25 is a perspective view of the pull-away piece mounted at the front end of the body and constructed according to the teachings of the present invention.
  • FIG. 26 is a side elevational view of the pull-away piece shown in FIG. 25.
  • FIG. 27 is a vertical sectional back view of the pull-away piece and is taken along line 27-27 of FIG. 26.
  • FIG. 28 is an exploded side elevational view of the trigger sprayer bottle cap/bottle neck assembly of the present invention including a quick-locking bottle cap assembly of the present invention positioned over a mating bottle neck.
  • FIG. 29 is a horizontal sectional view through the bottle neck and is taken along line 29-29 of FIG. 28.
  • FIG. 30 is a perspective view of the locking ring.
  • FIG. 31 is a fragmentary rear elevational view of the bottle cap/bottle neck assembly with portions broken away to show the bottle cap/bottle neck assembly in vertical section.
  • FIG. 32 is a transverse vertical sectional view through the trigger sprayer bottle cap/bottle neck assembly.
  • FIG. 1 a perspective view of an all synthetic/plastic trigger sprayer 10 coupled to a bottle 12.
  • An exploded perspective view of the parts of the trigger sprayer 10 is shown in more detail in FIG. 2.
  • the trigger sprayer 10 includes a body 14, a nose bushing 16 at a discharge end 18 of the body 14, a nozzle tamper proof pull away piece 20, a top portion 22 and a hand gripping formation 24 extending rearwardly from the top portion 22 of the body 14 and then downwardly to a cylindrical base 26 of the body 14.
  • the base 26 is held by a locking ring 28 to a neck 30 of the bottle 12.
  • a trigger 32 having a front side 31 is pivotally mounted to the body 14 by having two cylindrical pins 34, molded on the top end of two opposed side walls 36 of the trigger 32, inserted into two corresponding holes 38 in the body 14 of the trigger sprayer 10.
  • a plastic spring assembly 40 is placed between the body 14 and the trigger 32 to urge the trigger 32 always back into its home position.
  • a piston 42 having an outer piston rod 44 which connects with the trigger 32 and an inner cylindrical end 46 which is received in a cylindrical opening 48 in the body 14 for the purpose of varying the volume in a pumping chamber defined in the opening 48.
  • a valve intake stem 50 is received into the bottom of the cylindrical base 26 and has a dip tube 52 releasably fixed thereto and depending therefrom for insertion into the bottle 12.
  • a safe and child resistant sprayer/bottle connection includes locking tabs 53 with lug receiving openings 54 formed in the cylindrical side wall of the cylindrical base 26 and locking lugs on the bottle neck 30 and locked in place by the locking ring 28.
  • the locking ring 28 When the molded sprayer body is removed from a mold, the locking ring 28, connected to the cylindrical base 26 of the body 14 by six links, points, fillets or webs 57 which are necessary for molding the locking ring 28 together with the body 14, is broken away from the cylindrical base 26 by breaking the fillets 57 and moved upwardly on the base 26. During assembly of the parts of the trigger sprayer 10, the locking ring 28 is moved downwardly over the cylindrical base 26.
  • a nozzle assembly 58 is provided and includes a rotatable nozzle cap 60 having a forwardly extending cylindrical extension 62.
  • the nozzle cap 60 is mounted on the nose bushing 16 extending from a cylindrical portion 64 of the body 14 and includes an annular band 66 for holding the nozzle cap 60.
  • a STO position Three different positions of the nozzle cap 60, a STO position, a SPRAY position, and a STREAM position are provided.
  • mounting block 67 of the piece 20 is snap fittingly receive through an opening 68 in the top portion 22.
  • fork arms 69 of the piece 20 extend through notches 70 in th top portion 22 and/or notches 71 in the top wall of the cap 6 between one of two flexible locking legs or prongs 72 and th cylindrical portion 64 for securing the nozzle cap 60 in it STOP position, thereby ensuring a tamper proof and chil resistant locking of the trigger sprayer nozzle assembly 58 t the body 14.
  • the nozzle assembly 58 is mounted on the discharge end 1 of trigger sprayer 10, as described above.
  • the top portion 2 of the body 14 extends rearwardly to a rear end 73 of the han gripping formation 24 and then slants forwardly and downwardl from the rear end 73 to the cylindrical base 26.
  • the six contact fillets or webs 57 are uniforml distributed around the lower end of the cylindrical base 26 an are initially integral with the locking ring 28. During th molding process, the contact fillets or webs 57 are broken an the locking ring 28 is moved upwardly relative to th cylindrical base 26. Later, when the locking ring 28 is move downwardly on the base 26, an annular groove 74 within th locking ring 28 snap-fittingly mates with an annular rib 75 o the base 26.
  • the upper position of the locking ring 28 is th pre-application-to-a-bottle position and the locking ring 28 is held in this position by frictional engagement of the inner wall of the locking ring 28 with the rib segments 76 provided on the outer cylindrical wall of the cylindrical base 26.
  • the upper, partially annular rib segments 76 on the outer cylindrical wall of the cylindrical base 26 locate and to some extent limit upward movement of the locking ring 28.
  • a small diameter seal ring 316 molded within the cylindrical base 26 to a top wall 314 of the cylindrical base 26 is a small diameter seal ring 316.
  • the seal ring 316 is designed to seal against the inner diameter of the bottle neck 30.
  • the seal ring 316 has a bevelled end 318 at its lower side to facilitate insertion of the bottle neck 30 into the base 26 and around the seal ring 316.
  • Within the inner area of seal ring 316 is an opening 320, having a shape according to the shape of the intake stem 50 which is generally oval in cross-section.
  • the intake stem 50 is press-fitted into the opening 320 until ridges 322 on the intake stem 50 snap into mating mounting grooves on the inner surface of the wall of the opening 320. In this way, an air tight seal is provided.
  • the diptube 52 is releasably fixed in the center of the intake stem 50. The length of the diptube 52 depends on the size of the bottle 12. However, it is recommended that the diptube 52 should extend to the
  • the cylindrical opening 48 is located inside the body 14 of the trigger sprayer 10.
  • the piston cylindrical end 46 fits tightly into the cylindrical opening 48 to create a pumping chamber 324 having a variable volume between a fixed back wall 326 of the cylindrical opening 48 and a rearwardly facing wall 328 of the piston cylindrical end 46.
  • the fixed wall 326 of the pumping chamber 324 has an inlet flap valve 330 situated in the lower part thereof and an opening 332 in the upper part thereof.
  • An orifice 334 through a wall of the intake stem 50 is located to mate or register with the inlet flap valve 330 and to establish an inlet passageway.
  • the inlet passageway is provided by the hollow diptube 52, the intake stem 50 and the orifice 334.
  • the opening 332 is located to mate or register with an outlet flap valve 336 on the top side of intake stem 50.
  • Inlet flap valve 330 and outlet flap valve 336 control the fluid flow into and out of pumping chamber 324.
  • the trigger 32 is pivotally mounted on the body 14 of the trigger sprayer 10 by inserting the two laterally extending pins 34 on the upper part of the trigger 32 into the two corresponding holes 38 in the body 14.
  • the plastic spring assembly 40 has a flat tapered end 410 press-fitted into a recess 412 in the body 14 located underneath an inner end of the cylindrical portion 64 of the body 14. Another end 414 of the plastic spring assembly 40 is placed in a trough-like space 416 in the back side of the trigger 32 against a back wall 415. The plastic spring assembly 40 is bent and remains under stress to urge the trigger 32 always back into its home position.
  • FIG. 4 shows the trigger sprayer 10 with the trigger 32 pressed in by the operator.
  • the pressure in the pumping chamber 324 opens outlet flap valve 336 so that the fluid can leave pumping chamber 324.
  • the plastic spring assembly 40 is bent and stressed even more, but it is not stretched above its Hook limit, and the operator needs a maximum force to keep the trigger 32 pressed in.
  • the plastic spring assembly 40 urges the trigger 32 together with piston 42 back into their home positions. While the piston 42 moves back, a vacuum arises inside the pumping chamber 324. This vacuum opens inlet flap valve 330 and sucks in fluid from the bottle 12.
  • the venting system includes a vent hole 344 in the top wall 314 of the cylindrical base 26. This part of the top wall 314 defines a wall area between the lower side of the cylindrical opening 48 inside body 14 of trigger sprayer 10 and a cylindrical cavity 346 within cylindrical base 26.
  • vent hole 344 is opened and a fluid connection between the inside of the bottle 12 and the atmosphere is established so that air is able to get into the bottle 12.
  • the vent hole 344 is covered by the cylindrical end 46 of the piston 42 to close the vent hole 344 thereby preventing fluid from coming out of the bottle 12.
  • the pumping chamber 324 is designed so that, the "dead volume”, i.e. the minimum volume of the pumping chamber 324, is very small, 1/20 to 1/4 the full volume of pumping chamber 324. With a small dead volume, only a very little amount of the fluid or air is left in the pumping chamber 324, after the trigger 32 is fully pressed in.
  • This construction minimizes the size of compressible air space inside the pumping chamber 324 and allows the trigger sprayer 10 to build higher compression against the flap valve 330 during the priming of the trigger sprayer 10. This minimized "dead volume” provides for quicker priming of the trigger sprayer 10 and higher vacuum and high compression during the intake and ejection strokes.
  • An outer end 510 of the piston rod 44 has a transversely located cylinder 512.
  • the cylinder 512 is located transversely to the longitudinal axis of the piston rod 44 between legs 513 and has an axially extending V in cross section slot 514 in the middle thereof for receiving a pivot edge 516 at the vertex of a V in-cross-section outer end of a hook member 517 extending between the sides 36 of the trigger 32.
  • the hook member 517 is part of a bearing formation 518 which is provided on the backside of trigger 32 between the sides 36 and which has an opening 519 through which the outer end 510 is received.
  • the cylinder 512 engages in the bearing formation 518 of the trigger 32 and the sides of the V shaped slot 514 act as (or form) stops to limit the rotational freedom of the connected parts.
  • the arc subtended by or the angle at the vertex of the "V" of the V shaped slot 514 is substantially greater than the arc subtended by or the angle at the vertex of the "V" of the V in- cross-section outer end of the hook member 517 to permit the V- shaped fulcrum end portion to rotate on the V-shaped pivot seat during movement of the trigger from its home position to its fully squeezed in position.
  • the bearing formation 518 in combination with the V shaped slot 514, establish a movable trigger 32 - piston 42 connection with limited, but sufficient, rotational freedom. This enables the piston 42 to be moved within the pumping chamber 324 while being pivotally connected to trigger 32 in a simple and efficient manner.
  • the bearing formation 518 includes two rounded bearing seating surfaces 520 adjacent the inner side of each side 36 of the trigger 32 and between one side 36 of the trigger 32 and the hook member 517 at the top of the opening 519 and between one side 36 and a slot 521 on the bottom of the opening 519.
  • the cylindrical ends of the cylinder 512 seat and rotate on these bearing surfaces 520.
  • the spring assembly 40 includes two leaf springs 610 and 612 which are connected together at each end by a webbing 614 or 616. As shown in FIG. 6 the two springs 610, 612 are bowed slightly to form an upper bowed spring 610 and a lower bowed spring 612. Each of these elongate springs 610, 612 are molded integral to each other and then a separation or split 618 between them is formed by a splitting process or cutting process. Alternatively, the spring assembly 40 can be a one piece molding comprising two blade springs connected together at each end.
  • each spring 610 and 612 is beveled at its ends as indicated by reference numerals 620 and 621 for spring 610 adjacent to the respective webbing 614 or 616.
  • the lower elongate leaf spring 612 is beveled at 622 and 623 to the hinge or webbing 614 or 616 as shown.
  • each spring 610, 612 is wider in a middle portion indicated b reference numeral 625.
  • the lower elongate leaf spring 612 has a notch 626, 627 formed at each end thereof to define a shoulder 628 or 629.
  • the spring assembly 40 with the ends of the springs 61 and 612 formed in the manner described above define the mirror image ends 410 and 414, each of which is configured to fit into the recess 412 with the shoulder 628 or 629 being adapted to engage or hook with a shoulder adjacent the lower outer end of the recess 412 as shown in FIGS. 3 and 4.
  • the leaf springs 610, 612 are made of glass fiber reinforced plastic material such as a mixture of polypropylene and polyamide (nylon) plus 30% by weight glass fibers.
  • FIGS. 8, 9 and 10 Another embodiment of a spring assembly 640 constructed according to the teachings of the present invention is shown in FIGS. 8, 9 and 10.
  • the spring assembly 640 has opposite ends 642 and 644, only one of which, the end 642 is adapted to be received in the recess 412.
  • the spring assembly 640 includes an upper or elongate blade or leaf spring 646 and a lower elongate blade or leaf spring 648.
  • the ends 642 and 644 of the leaf springs 646 and 648 of the spring assembly 640 are beveled and tapered as in the spring assembly 40 shown in FIGS. 5-7.
  • a hinge or web connection 650 is provided between the leaf springs 646 and 648.
  • the leaf springs 646 and 648 are connected by a cylindrical loop 652.
  • the loop 652 is compressed when the trigger 32 is pushed against the outer surface of the blade leaf spring 646 adjacent the end 644 of the spring assembly 640.
  • the lower leaf spring 648 has only one notch 654 on the outer surface thereof adjacent the end 642.
  • a small post 656 spaced inwardly of the notch and extending downwardly from the outer surface of the blade 648 is a small post 656 which serves to limit inward movement of the spring assembly into the recess 412 and to limit downward movement of the spring assembly 640 in use.
  • the spring assembly 40 or 640 is received between the bearing formation 518 and the back side 415 of the front wall 31 of the trigger 32 with the end 410 or 642 received in the recess 412 and the outer surface of the upper blade 610 or 646 bearing against the inner wall surface 415 of the front wall 31 of the trigger 32 in the trough area 416.
  • the spring action is obtained by positioning the end 410 or 642 in the recess 412, by positioning the spring assembly 40 or 640 in the trough area 416 and between the bearing formation 518 and the back side 415 of the front wall 31 of the trigger 32, and by the sliding action of the outer surface of the blade 610 or 646 adjacent end 414 or 644 against the back side 415 of the front wall 31 of the trigger 32.
  • the nose bushing 16 includes a cylindrical extension 702 having an inner cylindrical cavity 704.
  • the cylindrical extension has a first slot 706 through the cylindrical wall thereof which is a so- called tangential slot for directing liquid tangentially into the cylindrical cavity 704 and has a second, so-called radial, slot 708 for directing liquid radially into the cylindrical cavity 704.
  • the cylindrical extension 702 is small-in-diameter and is located coaxially with an outer cylinder 710 having a larger diameter.
  • the smaller cylindrical extension 702 extends outwardly from a web 712 of material which fixes the cylindrical extension 702 in the position shown and defines between, an inner wall 714 of the outer cylinder 710, two waterways 720 and 722 which communicate liquid to be sprayed in a SPRAY or STREAM to the tangential slot 706 or to the radial slot 708. Also, it will be apparent from FIG.
  • the nozzl cap 60 has a generally square configuration with the top sid wall 730 having STOP indicating indicia.
  • a left side wall 734 has SPRAY indicating indicia thereon and a right side wall 73 which has STREAM indicating indicia.
  • the nozzle cap 60 has a bottom wall 742, as shown i FIG. 19.
  • a first outer cylinder 74 which is adapted to receive therein the outer cylinder 710 of the nose bushing 16.
  • a smaller-in- diameter cylinder 748 having a slot 750 extending radially therethrough which is adapted, upon selective rotation of the nozzle cap 60, to mate with either the tangential slot 706 or the radial slot 708 in the cylindrical extension 702.
  • the small r-in-diameter cylinder 748 is adapted to be received over the cylindrical extension 702.
  • liquid can be directed through the waterways 720 and 722 to selectively aligned, axially extending or radially extending, slots for communicating liquid in a swirl or in an axial path to the orifice 752 for effecting a desired discharge of liquid in either a conical spray or mist-like discharge or in a substantially axial STREAM type discharge.
  • different formations can be utilized for effecting the mating of one or more tangential slots through a radial slot to a waterway or one or more radial slots to a radial or longitudinal slot and thence to a waterway, as disclosed in the Quinn et al U.S. Patent No. 4,234,128 or the Dobbs et al U.S. Patent No. 4,706,888, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
  • FIG. 19 there is illustrated a first formation 754 in the lower area on the inside of the side wall 734.
  • This formation 754 defines a lug, boss or detent 754 that extends angularly upwardly and inwardly from the wall 734 inside the nozzle cap 60 to an edge or catch 755.
  • a lug, boss or detent 756 in the lower area of the wall 738 extends inwardly from the wall 738 inside the nozzle cap 60 to an edge or catch 757.
  • the lugs 754 and 756 normally are positioned in the nozzle assembly 58 beneath the legs or prongs 72.
  • the blocking engagement of the legs or prongs 72 relative to the lugs or projections 754 and 756 normally prevents rotation of the nozzle cap 60 of the nozzle assembly 58 until the pull-away piece 20 is pulled away to remove the fork arms 69 from the locking position of each fork arm 69 between the cylindrical portion 64 and a leg or prong 72, and unless and until a user squeezes the side walls of the body 14 in the side wall areas 780 and 782 at the same time the user rotates the nozzle cap 60.
  • the blocking position of the prongs 72 is shown in FIG. 22.
  • the nozzle cap 60 can be rotated clockwise or counterclockwise, as shown in phantom in FIG. 23.
  • the nozzle cap 60 can be rotated counterclockwise 90° to the SPRAY position.
  • the waterways 720 and 722 communicate through the slot 750 and the slot 706 to the cylindrical cavity 704 for effecting a swirl of liquid to the outlet orifice 752 in the front wall 744 of the nozzle cap 60 thereby to effec the SPRAY , mist or fog-like discharge of liquid from th nozzle cap 60.
  • Each lug 754, 756 has an upper surface 760 extending to surface 762 that is close to parallel to the plane of the side wall 734 or 738, the intersection of these surfaces 760, 762 being the edge or catch 755 or 757.
  • extension tab 726 having inclined side edges 784 and 786 is adapted to engage on one side or the other the lug 754 or the lug 756 to prevent further rotation of the nozzle cap 60, counterclockwise or clockwise thereby to ensure that the nozzle cap 60 can only be moved from the STOP position to the SPRAY position or from the STOP position to the STREAM position.
  • the mounting block 67 of the pull-away piece 20 has a generally rectangular planar body 801 and is pressed downwardly after placement over the top portion 22 to snap-fittingly lock the mounting block 67 in the opening 68 in the top portion 22 of the body 14.
  • the fork arms 69 each having a curved inner surface 802 are received through the spaced apart slots or notches 70 in the top portion 22 at the front end thereof and through the slots or notches 71 in the rear edge of the top wall 730 of the nozzle cap 60, with the curved surfaces 802 being received around the cylindrical portion 64 of the body 14 and having lower ends 804 received between the cylindrical portion 64 and the spaced apart legs or prongs 72.
  • the pull-away piece 20 has at the front end thereof a rectangular recess 806 which is adapted to be received over the extension tab 726.
  • the curved surfaces 802 extend downwardly and laterally on the inner side of the fork arms 69 from the edges of the rectangular recess 806.
  • a top rear portion or pull tab 808 of the pull-away piece 20 has PULL indicia 810 thereon.
  • the rear underside of the pull tab 808 is beveled upwardly at 812 as shown in FIG. 26.
  • the mounting block 67 is positioned below the planar bod 801 of the pull-away piece 20 beneath a recess 815 in th planar body 801 and is connected to front and back edges 816,
  • the mounting block 67 has a curved lower surface 820 wit a central longitudinally extending slot 822 separating th mounting block 67 into left and right prong portions 824 an 826.
  • Each prong portion 824 and 826 has an inclined surfac 828, 830 which inclines upwardly and laterally outwardly fro the curved surface 820 to a shoulder 832, 834, as best shown i FIG. 27.
  • the inclined surface 828 and 830 engage the sides of the opening 68 and the slot 82 allows the prong portions 824 and 826 to be deflected inwardl until the shoulders 832 and 834 are moved past lower side edge 835 and 836 of the opening 68 and snap into a locking positio beneath the top wall portion 22 of the body 14 adjacent th side edges 835, 836 of the opening 68.
  • the curved surface 82 will then rest upon the upper surface of the cylindrica portion 64 perhaps with a slight interference fit between th cylindrical portion 64 and the underside of the top wal surface 22.
  • the planar body 801 has a transvers groove 840 in a lower surface 842 thereof to facilitate bendin of the pull tab 808.
  • the pull-away piece 20 provides tamper evident structur for the nozzle assembly 58.
  • the pull-awa piece 20 is broken or missing, that is evidence that the nozzl assembly of the trigger sprayer has been tampered with.
  • a user will grip the pull tab 808 at the rear end of the break away piece 20 and pull upwardly, with the bevel 812 facilitating gripping of the pull tab 808 and the transverse groove 840 facilitating bending of the pull tab 808 upwardly.
  • the pull tab 808 is pulled upwardly, first the webs or fillets 818 at the back edge 817 of the recess 815 are broken followed by breaking of the webs or fillets 818 at the front edge 816 of the recess 815.
  • the pull-away piece 20 can be easily removed from the sprayer body to remove the fork arms 69 from the mating slots or notches 70 and 71 and to remove the lower ends 804 of the fork arms 69 from a blocking position between the cylindrical portion 64 and the legs or prongs 72 to enable a user to use the trigger sprayer 10.
  • FIG. 28 there is illustrated therein the locking ring 28 before it is detached from the cylindrical base 26 by breaking the fillets 57.
  • the cylindrical base 26 and the locking ring 28 form a bottle cap assembly 902 constructed according to the teachings of the present invention which together with a tubular portion 904 of the bottle neck 30 form a bottle cap/bottle neck assembly 906.
  • the locking ring 28 is broken away by twisting same relative to the cylindrical base 26 and then is moved upwardly as indicated by the arrows and as shown in phantom frictionally engaging the locating rib segments 76. In this position, the cylindrical base 26 and the locking ring 28 are ready for being pressed downwardly upon the bottle neck 904 and the locking ring 28 temporarily is held in place by its frictional engagement with the rib segments 76.
  • the cylindrical base 26 has a cylindrical wall portion 908 having a pair of spaced apart upwardly extending slots 911 and 912 formed therein on each side of the sprayer body 14 so as to define therebetween two of the locking tabs 53.
  • At the upper end of each locking tab 53 is a line area of reduced thickness 914 to provide a hinge 914 whereby each locking tab 53 can be flexed inwardly or outwardly relative to the cylindrical wall 908 of the cylindrical base 26.
  • each tab 53 is generally rectangular as shown. There is provided beneath the opening 54 on each locking tab 53 an outwardly extending flange 916 having an inclined lower surface 917 which inclines upwardly and outwardly from the bottom of the tab 53 to an outer surface 918. A top surface or shoulder 919 extends horizontally radially outwardly from the tab 53 to the outer surface 918 and faces upwardly.
  • the bottle neck 904 is generally tubular in shape and has an outer cylindrical surface 920 and an annular top edge 922.
  • a conventional thread 924 is provided on the cylindrical outer surface 920.
  • annular rib 926 Beneath the thread 924 on the outer cylindrical surface 920 is an annular rib 926 having, on diametrically opposite sides of the outer cylindrical surface 920, locking lugs 928 which are generally rectangular in shape with a lower horizontally extending shoulder 930 and an upper incline surface 932 which inclines downwardly from the oute cylindrical surface 920.
  • Each of the lugs 928 is generall rectangular in shape and located circumferentially to the sid of and on each side of each lug 928 is a stop post 934 whic serve to locate the locking tabs 53 when they are pushed dow over the locking lugs 928.
  • the locking ring 28 has the annula groove 74 formed on the inner cylindrical surface 940 thereof.
  • the groove 74 is adapted to receive the annular rib 75 in snap-fitting manner when the locking ring 28 is moved down ove the cylindrical base 26.
  • the cylindrical wall 908 of the bas 26 has an inner cylindrical surface 942 which is received ove the tubular portion 904 and which is typically unthreaded, a shown.
  • the cylindrical wall 908 extends to a top wall 944 of th cylindrical base 26.
  • a sealing ring 948 Inwardly of the cylindrical surface 94 is a sealing ring 948 which has a lower outer beveled edge 95 and which extends downwardly from the top wall 944 and i adapted to be received frictionally within tubular inne surface 954 of the tubular portion 904 of the bottle neck 30 as shown in FIG. 31.
  • the locking ring 28 has a lowe beveled or recessed inner surface 960 which is received ove any protruding portion of the flanges 916 when the locking ring 28 is positioned over the tabs 53.
  • the cylindrical base 26 with the locking ring 28 held in a raised position is pressed downwardly over the tubular portion 904 of the bottle neck 30 to press the sealing ring 948 within the inner surface 954 and at the same time push the tabs 53 downwardly over the inclined surface 932 of each of the locking lugs 928 until each locking lug 928 snaps into one of the openings 54 in one of the locking tabs 53.
  • the locking ring 28 is moved downwardly with the inner surface 940 thereof frictionally engaging the ribs 76 until the rib 75 is snap fittingly received in the annular groove 74 where the locking ring 28 is detachably locked in place against vertical movement of the locking ring 28 with the rib segments 76 being located adjacent the upper annular edge of the locking ring 28.
  • This locking relationship is shown in FIG. 31.
  • the bottle neck/bottle cap assembly 906 shown in FIG. 31 and 10 provides a quick, push on, coupling of the bottle cap assembly 902 onto the bottle neck 30 and the engagement of the locking lugs 928 with the openings 54 in the locking tabs 53 prevents vertical movement of the cylindrical base 26 off of the bottle neck 30, locates the trigger sprayer 10 in a desired relationship with the bottle 12 and prevents relative rotational movement between the cylindrical base 26 and the bottle neck 30.

Landscapes

  • Containers And Packaging Bodies Having A Special Means To Remove Contents (AREA)
  • Closures For Containers (AREA)
  • Fire-Extinguishing By Fire Departments, And Fire-Extinguishing Equipment And Control Thereof (AREA)

Abstract

The child resistant trigger sprayer bottle cap/bottle neck assembly (906) comprises a trigger sprayer (10) having a body (14) including a cylindrical base (26) and a first non-thread coupling structure (53) incorporated into the cylindrical base (26) for coupling to a bottle neck (30). A second non-thread coupling structure (928) on the bottle neck (30) engages and couples with the first coupling structure (53) and a locking ring (28) is received over the cylindrical base (26) and the cylindrical neck (30) for maintaining the first and second coupling structures (53 and 928) in a coupled locked position.

Description

QUICK-LOCKING CHILD RESISTANT CAP ASSEMBLY BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention.
The present invention relates to a trigger operated dispensing device for mounting to the top neck qf a storage container. Although such devices, known as trigger sprayers, can be reused, often times they are disposed of.
A quick-locking and child resistant bottle cap assembly having non-thread coupling structure is provided for coupling the trigger sprayer to the top neck of the liquid storage container.
This bottle cap assembly is easy to install and cannot be dislodged by accident, for example, by a playing child and therefore ensures a child resistant bottle cap coupling arrangement.
2. Description of the Prior Art.
Examples of previously proposed trigger operated sprayers are disclosed in the following patents:
U.S. Patent No. Patentee
4,538,745 Dunning et al.
4,366,921 Kirk, Jr.
4,346,821 Wesner et al. The Dunning et al. U.S. Patent No. 4,538,745 teaches a trigger sprayer body including a housing which has a depending cylindrical coupling member that includes side openings therein and inwardly extending lugs for coupling the housing to a bottle neck, such as over a snap ring. Also depending from the housing is a smaller-in-diameter cylindrical sealing member 26 which has a lower outer bevelled surface and which is adapted to engage the inner surface of a bottle neck coupled to the housing in sealing relationship therewith.
The Kirk, Jr. U.S. Patent No. 4,366,921 teaches a conventional thread coupling defined by threads on a bottle neck and threads on the inside of a bottle cap. Kirk, Jr. also teaches a collar having a plurality of lugs which extend inwardly from the collar so as to prevent upper movement of an annular band extending outwardly at the low end of the closure member. Although the annular band of Kirk, Jr. might be looked at as an annular rib, the collar member of Kirk, Jr. does not provide an annular groove that is adapted to receive, in a snap-fitting manner, an annular rib.
The Wesner et al. U.S. Patent No. 4,346,821 discloses a nozzle assembly including a planar safety closure. The planar safety closure is mounted rotatably on a nose piece at an end portion of a trigger sprayer and is held tightly in place by the passing of an annular ridge on the planar safety closure over an annular lip on the nose piece. A generally flat tab is integrally connected to an overcap. The far end of this tab contains a tooth like detent member which extends rearwardly and is engagable in a slot in a top front wall of a trigger. In this position, the nozzle is locked and cannot easily be opened. To unlock the planar safety closure and to operate the trigger sprayer, the operator has to squeeze the trigger to lift the detent member out of its slot and then has to rotate the planar safety closure for about 180° to a spray position. In this position, the trigger sprayer is ready to work.
The Wesner et al U.S. Patent 4,346,821 also teaches a child resistant closure for a container mounted spray dispenser and teaches two types of child resistant closures. The first type of child resistant closure is with respect to the nozzle. Here Wesner teaches a rotatable overcap which has a tab extending downwardly therefrom having an inwardly extending detent. The detent is received in an opening at the top of a trigger. With this structure one has to squeeze the trigger a small amount so that the detent number is out of a slot, whereby the tab can be rotated to rotate the overcap to a spray position. In this way Wesner et al provides a child resistant nozzle assembly.
Then, with reference to Figs. 15-18 in Wesner et al, Wesner et al provides a child resistant bottle cap/bottle neck assembly. This assembly includes a screwing cap and a closure member, which is located radially outwardly from the screwing cap and is integral therewith. The closure member has two diametrically opposed longitudinally extending ribs, which are adapted to engage a lug extending outwardly from a bottle neck, as best shown in FIGS. 15 & 16. with this arrangement, one has to squeeze the bottle cap in an area which is, rotationally, 90° away from the ribs, so as to cause the wall portions of the closing member to form an elongate or oval shape and move the ribs radially outwardly and away from the lugs so that the unitary closure member and screwing cap can be unscrewed from the bottle neck.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION According to the present invention there is provided a child resistant trigger sprayer bottle cap/bottle neck assembly comprising: a trigger sprayer having a body including a cylindrical base; first non-thread coupling structure incorporated into the cylindrical base for coupling to a bottle neck; a bottle neck; second non-thread coupling structure on the bottle neck adapted to engage and couple with the first coupling structure; and a locking ring received over the cylindrical base and the cylindrical neck for maintaining the first and second coupling structure in a coupled locked position.
Also according to the present invention there is provided a method for locking a trigger sprayer to a bottle neck of a liquid storage container, said method comprising the steps of: providing at the lower end of a trigger sprayer a cylindrical base including a cylindrical wall; providing in the cylindrical wall first coupling structure for coupling with a bottle neck; providing on the bottle neck second coupling structure for coupling and locking with the first coupling structure; molding with the cylindrical base a locking ring which is detachably connected at a lower edge to the cylindrical base; breaking the locking ring away from the cylindrical base and moving it upwardly on the cylindrical base; pushing the cylindrical base downwardly over the bottle neck until the first coupling structure couples and locks with the second coupling structure; and, pushing the locking ring downwardly over the cylindrical base and the coupled and locked first and second coupling structure.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a trigger sprayer constructed according to the teachings of the present invention. FIG. 2 is an exploded perspective view of the trigge sprayer shown in FIG. 1 and shows a locking ring prior to it detachment from a cylindrical base of the sprayer body.
FIG. 3 is a vertical sectional view of the trigger spraye in its at rest position where a spring between a trigger an the sprayer body biases the trigger and a piston rod couple thereto to the most outward position.
FIG. 4 is a vertical sectional view of the trigger spraye similar to the view shown in FIG. 3 but showing the trigge fully depressed. FIG. 5 is perspective view of a non-metal trigger spraye spring assembly of the trigger sprayer shown in FIG. 1.
FIG. 6 is a side view of the spring assembly shown in FIG. 5.
FIG. 7 is a top plan view of the spring assembly shown i FIG. 5.
FIG. 8 is a top plan view of another embodiment of th spring assembly constructed according to the teachings of th present invention.
FIG. 9 is a side view of the spring assembly shown in FIG 8.
FIG. 10 is a bottom plan view of the spring assembly show in FIG. 8.
FIG. 11 is a vertical sectional view of the trigger an the piston connected to each other in the home or at res position.
FIG. 12 is a vertical sectional view of the trigger an the piston of FIG. 11 in a fully depressed position.
FIG. 13 is a side elevated view of the piston shown i FIG. 4. FIG. 14 is a top view of the piston shown in FIG. 13 an is taken along line 14-14 of FIG. 13.
FIG. 15 is a vertical sectional view of the piston show in FIG. 14 and is taken along line 15-15 of FIG. 14.
FIG. 16 is a vertical sectional view of the trigger alone FIG. 17 is a vertical elevational view of the trigger shown in FIG. 16 and is taken along line 11-11 of FIG. 16.
FIG. 18 is a front elevational view of the front end of the sprayer body and a nose bushing that extends from the front end of the body of the trigger sprayer shown in FIG. 2, but without a pull-away piece mounted at the end of the body.
FIG. 19 is a back elevational view of the nozzle cap of a nozzle assembly shown in FIG. 2.
FIG. 20 is an exploded view in longitudinal vertical section of the nozzle cap and nose bushing shown of the nozzle assembly shown in FIG. 2 with portions broken away.
FIG. 21 is a longitudinal, generally vertically sectional view of the nozzle cap and nose bushing coupled together as shown in FIG. 1, with portions broken away. FIG. 22 is a vertical sectional view through the nozzle assembly shown in FIG. 1 after a pull-away piece is removed and is taken along line 22-22 of FIG. 21.
FIG. 23 is a vertical sectional view through the nozzle assembly, similar to the view shown in FIG. 22, but showing the side walls of the sprayer body squeezed in to move two legs or prongs extending from the body out of blocking position relative to two lugs on the inner wall of the nozzle cap.
FIG. 24 is a front end elevational view of the sprayer body and the nose bushing that extends from the front end of the body of the trigger sprayer shown in FIG. 2, similar to
FIG. 18, but with a pull-away piece mounted at the front end of the body.
FIG. 25 is a perspective view of the pull-away piece mounted at the front end of the body and constructed according to the teachings of the present invention.
FIG. 26 is a side elevational view of the pull-away piece shown in FIG. 25.
FIG. 27 is a vertical sectional back view of the pull-away piece and is taken along line 27-27 of FIG. 26. FIG. 28 is an exploded side elevational view of the trigger sprayer bottle cap/bottle neck assembly of the present invention including a quick-locking bottle cap assembly of the present invention positioned over a mating bottle neck.
FIG. 29 is a horizontal sectional view through the bottle neck and is taken along line 29-29 of FIG. 28.
FIG. 30 is a perspective view of the locking ring.
FIG. 31 is a fragmentary rear elevational view of the bottle cap/bottle neck assembly with portions broken away to show the bottle cap/bottle neck assembly in vertical section.
FIG. 32 is a transverse vertical sectional view through the trigger sprayer bottle cap/bottle neck assembly.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT(S)
Referring now to the drawings in greater detail, there is illustrated in FIG. 1 a perspective view of an all synthetic/plastic trigger sprayer 10 coupled to a bottle 12. An exploded perspective view of the parts of the trigger sprayer 10 is shown in more detail in FIG. 2.
The trigger sprayer 10 includes a body 14, a nose bushing 16 at a discharge end 18 of the body 14, a nozzle tamper proof pull away piece 20, a top portion 22 and a hand gripping formation 24 extending rearwardly from the top portion 22 of the body 14 and then downwardly to a cylindrical base 26 of the body 14. The base 26 is held by a locking ring 28 to a neck 30 of the bottle 12.
A trigger 32 having a front side 31 is pivotally mounted to the body 14 by having two cylindrical pins 34, molded on the top end of two opposed side walls 36 of the trigger 32, inserted into two corresponding holes 38 in the body 14 of the trigger sprayer 10.
As shown in FIG. 2, a plastic spring assembly 40 is placed between the body 14 and the trigger 32 to urge the trigger 32 always back into its home position. Coupled to the trigger 32 is a piston 42 having an outer piston rod 44 which connects with the trigger 32 and an inner cylindrical end 46 which is received in a cylindrical opening 48 in the body 14 for the purpose of varying the volume in a pumping chamber defined in the opening 48.
The trigger 32, the spring assembly 40, the piston 42 and the cylindrical opening 48 form and define primary components of a pumping mechanism 49. A valve intake stem 50 is received into the bottom of the cylindrical base 26 and has a dip tube 52 releasably fixed thereto and depending therefrom for insertion into the bottle 12.
A safe and child resistant sprayer/bottle connection is provided and includes locking tabs 53 with lug receiving openings 54 formed in the cylindrical side wall of the cylindrical base 26 and locking lugs on the bottle neck 30 and locked in place by the locking ring 28.
When the molded sprayer body is removed from a mold, the locking ring 28, connected to the cylindrical base 26 of the body 14 by six links, points, fillets or webs 57 which are necessary for molding the locking ring 28 together with the body 14, is broken away from the cylindrical base 26 by breaking the fillets 57 and moved upwardly on the base 26. During assembly of the parts of the trigger sprayer 10, the locking ring 28 is moved downwardly over the cylindrical base 26.
A nozzle assembly 58 is provided and includes a rotatable nozzle cap 60 having a forwardly extending cylindrical extension 62. The nozzle cap 60 is mounted on the nose bushing 16 extending from a cylindrical portion 64 of the body 14 and includes an annular band 66 for holding the nozzle cap 60.
Three different positions of the nozzle cap 60, a STO position, a SPRAY position, and a STREAM position are provided.
When the nozzle assembly 58 is mounted to the body 14, mounting block 67 of the piece 20 is snap fittingly receive through an opening 68 in the top portion 22. At the same time, fork arms 69 of the piece 20 extend through notches 70 in th top portion 22 and/or notches 71 in the top wall of the cap 6 between one of two flexible locking legs or prongs 72 and th cylindrical portion 64 for securing the nozzle cap 60 in it STOP position, thereby ensuring a tamper proof and chil resistant locking of the trigger sprayer nozzle assembly 58 t the body 14.
The nozzle assembly 58 is mounted on the discharge end 1 of trigger sprayer 10, as described above. The top portion 2 of the body 14 extends rearwardly to a rear end 73 of the han gripping formation 24 and then slants forwardly and downwardl from the rear end 73 to the cylindrical base 26.
The six contact fillets or webs 57 are uniforml distributed around the lower end of the cylindrical base 26 an are initially integral with the locking ring 28. During th molding process, the contact fillets or webs 57 are broken an the locking ring 28 is moved upwardly relative to th cylindrical base 26. Later, when the locking ring 28 is move downwardly on the base 26, an annular groove 74 within th locking ring 28 snap-fittingly mates with an annular rib 75 o the base 26. The upper position of the locking ring 28 is th pre-application-to-a-bottle position and the locking ring 28 is held in this position by frictional engagement of the inner wall of the locking ring 28 with the rib segments 76 provided on the outer cylindrical wall of the cylindrical base 26. The upper, partially annular rib segments 76 on the outer cylindrical wall of the cylindrical base 26 locate and to some extent limit upward movement of the locking ring 28.
As shown in FIG. 3, molded within the cylindrical base 26 to a top wall 314 of the cylindrical base 26 is a small diameter seal ring 316. The seal ring 316 is designed to seal against the inner diameter of the bottle neck 30. The seal ring 316 has a bevelled end 318 at its lower side to facilitate insertion of the bottle neck 30 into the base 26 and around the seal ring 316. Within the inner area of seal ring 316 is an opening 320, having a shape according to the shape of the intake stem 50 which is generally oval in cross-section. The intake stem 50 is press-fitted into the opening 320 until ridges 322 on the intake stem 50 snap into mating mounting grooves on the inner surface of the wall of the opening 320. In this way, an air tight seal is provided. The diptube 52 is releasably fixed in the center of the intake stem 50. The length of the diptube 52 depends on the size of the bottle 12. However, it is recommended that the diptube 52 should extend to the bottom of the bottle 12 but shouldn't touch it.
The cylindrical opening 48 is located inside the body 14 of the trigger sprayer 10. The piston cylindrical end 46 fits tightly into the cylindrical opening 48 to create a pumping chamber 324 having a variable volume between a fixed back wall 326 of the cylindrical opening 48 and a rearwardly facing wall 328 of the piston cylindrical end 46. The fixed wall 326 of the pumping chamber 324 has an inlet flap valve 330 situated in the lower part thereof and an opening 332 in the upper part thereof. An orifice 334 through a wall of the intake stem 50 is located to mate or register with the inlet flap valve 330 and to establish an inlet passageway. The inlet passageway is provided by the hollow diptube 52, the intake stem 50 and the orifice 334.
The opening 332 is located to mate or register with an outlet flap valve 336 on the top side of intake stem 50. Inlet flap valve 330 and outlet flap valve 336 control the fluid flow into and out of pumping chamber 324.
The trigger 32 is pivotally mounted on the body 14 of the trigger sprayer 10 by inserting the two laterally extending pins 34 on the upper part of the trigger 32 into the two corresponding holes 38 in the body 14.
As shown in FIG. 4, the plastic spring assembly 40 has a flat tapered end 410 press-fitted into a recess 412 in the body 14 located underneath an inner end of the cylindrical portion 64 of the body 14. Another end 414 of the plastic spring assembly 40 is placed in a trough-like space 416 in the back side of the trigger 32 against a back wall 415. The plastic spring assembly 40 is bent and remains under stress to urge the trigger 32 always back into its home position.
FIG. 4 shows the trigger sprayer 10 with the trigger 32 pressed in by the operator. The pressure in the pumping chamber 324 opens outlet flap valve 336 so that the fluid can leave pumping chamber 324. At the same time, the plastic spring assembly 40 is bent and stressed even more, but it is not stretched above its Hook limit, and the operator needs a maximum force to keep the trigger 32 pressed in.
After the operator stops pressing trigger 32, the plastic spring assembly 40 urges the trigger 32 together with piston 42 back into their home positions. While the piston 42 moves back, a vacuum arises inside the pumping chamber 324. This vacuum opens inlet flap valve 330 and sucks in fluid from the bottle 12.
When the fluid is sucked out of the bottle 12, and because the bottle 12 and the trigger sprayer 10 connection is air tight, a vacuum arises within the bottle 12. To avoid a vacuum within the bottle 12, a venting system is provided. The venting system includes a vent hole 344 in the top wall 314 of the cylindrical base 26. This part of the top wall 314 defines a wall area between the lower side of the cylindrical opening 48 inside body 14 of trigger sprayer 10 and a cylindrical cavity 346 within cylindrical base 26. When the trigger 32 is fully pressed in, vent hole 344 is opened and a fluid connection between the inside of the bottle 12 and the atmosphere is established so that air is able to get into the bottle 12. When the trigger 32 is not pressed in, e.g. when it is in its home position, the vent hole 344 is covered by the cylindrical end 46 of the piston 42 to close the vent hole 344 thereby preventing fluid from coming out of the bottle 12.
The pumping chamber 324 is designed so that, the "dead volume", i.e. the minimum volume of the pumping chamber 324, is very small, 1/20 to 1/4 the full volume of pumping chamber 324. With a small dead volume, only a very little amount of the fluid or air is left in the pumping chamber 324, after the trigger 32 is fully pressed in. This construction minimizes the size of compressible air space inside the pumping chamber 324 and allows the trigger sprayer 10 to build higher compression against the flap valve 330 during the priming of the trigger sprayer 10. This minimized "dead volume" provides for quicker priming of the trigger sprayer 10 and higher vacuum and high compression during the intake and ejection strokes.
Another effect of the small "dead volume" is that the pumping chamber 324 is filled up with fluid very quickly therefore reducing the number of initial strokes required to prime the trigger sprayer 10.
An outer end 510 of the piston rod 44 has a transversely located cylinder 512. The cylinder 512 is located transversely to the longitudinal axis of the piston rod 44 between legs 513 and has an axially extending V in cross section slot 514 in the middle thereof for receiving a pivot edge 516 at the vertex of a V in-cross-section outer end of a hook member 517 extending between the sides 36 of the trigger 32. The hook member 517 is part of a bearing formation 518 which is provided on the backside of trigger 32 between the sides 36 and which has an opening 519 through which the outer end 510 is received. The cylinder 512 engages in the bearing formation 518 of the trigger 32 and the sides of the V shaped slot 514 act as (or form) stops to limit the rotational freedom of the connected parts. The arc subtended by or the angle at the vertex of the "V" of the V shaped slot 514 is substantially greater than the arc subtended by or the angle at the vertex of the "V" of the V in- cross-section outer end of the hook member 517 to permit the V- shaped fulcrum end portion to rotate on the V-shaped pivot seat during movement of the trigger from its home position to its fully squeezed in position.
The bearing formation 518. in combination with the V shaped slot 514, establish a movable trigger 32 - piston 42 connection with limited, but sufficient, rotational freedom. This enables the piston 42 to be moved within the pumping chamber 324 while being pivotally connected to trigger 32 in a simple and efficient manner.
The bearing formation 518 includes two rounded bearing seating surfaces 520 adjacent the inner side of each side 36 of the trigger 32 and between one side 36 of the trigger 32 and the hook member 517 at the top of the opening 519 and between one side 36 and a slot 521 on the bottom of the opening 519. The cylindrical ends of the cylinder 512 seat and rotate on these bearing surfaces 520.
Referring now to FIGS. 5, 6 and 7, the spring assembly 40 includes two leaf springs 610 and 612 which are connected together at each end by a webbing 614 or 616. As shown in FIG. 6 the two springs 610, 612 are bowed slightly to form an upper bowed spring 610 and a lower bowed spring 612. Each of these elongate springs 610, 612 are molded integral to each other and then a separation or split 618 between them is formed by a splitting process or cutting process. Alternatively, the spring assembly 40 can be a one piece molding comprising two blade springs connected together at each end. Further, as shown, each spring 610 and 612 is beveled at its ends as indicated by reference numerals 620 and 621 for spring 610 adjacent to the respective webbing 614 or 616. Likewise the lower elongate leaf spring 612 is beveled at 622 and 623 to the hinge or webbing 614 or 616 as shown.
Also, as best shown in FIG. 7, the end portions of eac spring 610, 612 are tapered toward the webbing 614 or 616 an each spring 610, 612, is wider in a middle portion indicated b reference numeral 625.
The lower elongate leaf spring 612 has a notch 626, 627 formed at each end thereof to define a shoulder 628 or 629.
The spring assembly 40 with the ends of the springs 61 and 612 formed in the manner described above define the mirror image ends 410 and 414, each of which is configured to fit into the recess 412 with the shoulder 628 or 629 being adapted to engage or hook with a shoulder adjacent the lower outer end of the recess 412 as shown in FIGS. 3 and 4. The leaf springs 610, 612 are made of glass fiber reinforced plastic material such as a mixture of polypropylene and polyamide (nylon) plus 30% by weight glass fibers.
Another embodiment of a spring assembly 640 constructed according to the teachings of the present invention is shown in FIGS. 8, 9 and 10. The spring assembly 640 has opposite ends 642 and 644, only one of which, the end 642 is adapted to be received in the recess 412. The spring assembly 640 includes an upper or elongate blade or leaf spring 646 and a lower elongate blade or leaf spring 648. The ends 642 and 644 of the leaf springs 646 and 648 of the spring assembly 640 are beveled and tapered as in the spring assembly 40 shown in FIGS. 5-7. At the end 642, which is received in the recess 412,.a hinge or web connection 650 is provided between the leaf springs 646 and 648. However, at the other end 644 the leaf springs 646 and 648 are connected by a cylindrical loop 652. The loop 652 is compressed when the trigger 32 is pushed against the outer surface of the blade leaf spring 646 adjacent the end 644 of the spring assembly 640. As best shown in FIGS. 9 and 10, the lower leaf spring 648 has only one notch 654 on the outer surface thereof adjacent the end 642. Also, spaced inwardly of the notch and extending downwardly from the outer surface of the blade 648 is a small post 656 which serves to limit inward movement of the spring assembly into the recess 412 and to limit downward movement of the spring assembly 640 in use.
As shown in FIGS. 3 and 4, the spring assembly 40 or 640 is received between the bearing formation 518 and the back side 415 of the front wall 31 of the trigger 32 with the end 410 or 642 received in the recess 412 and the outer surface of the upper blade 610 or 646 bearing against the inner wall surface 415 of the front wall 31 of the trigger 32 in the trough area 416.
In use, the spring action is obtained by positioning the end 410 or 642 in the recess 412, by positioning the spring assembly 40 or 640 in the trough area 416 and between the bearing formation 518 and the back side 415 of the front wall 31 of the trigger 32, and by the sliding action of the outer surface of the blade 610 or 646 adjacent end 414 or 644 against the back side 415 of the front wall 31 of the trigger 32.
Referring now to FIG. 18, which is a front elevational view of the nose bushing 16, it will be apparent that the nose bushing 16 includes a cylindrical extension 702 having an inner cylindrical cavity 704. The cylindrical extension has a first slot 706 through the cylindrical wall thereof which is a so- called tangential slot for directing liquid tangentially into the cylindrical cavity 704 and has a second, so-called radial, slot 708 for directing liquid radially into the cylindrical cavity 704.
The cylindrical extension 702 is small-in-diameter and is located coaxially with an outer cylinder 710 having a larger diameter. In the embodiment shown in FIG. 18, the smaller cylindrical extension 702 extends outwardly from a web 712 of material which fixes the cylindrical extension 702 in the position shown and defines between, an inner wall 714 of the outer cylinder 710, two waterways 720 and 722 which communicate liquid to be sprayed in a SPRAY or STREAM to the tangential slot 706 or to the radial slot 708. Also, it will be apparent from FIG. 18 that the top of th body 14 between the slots 70 has a tab extension 726 whic extends partially into a locating slot 728 in the bac underside of a top side wall 730 of the nozzle cap 60 as show in FIG. 19. With reference to FIG. 19, it will be seen that the nozzl cap 60 has a generally square configuration with the top sid wall 730 having STOP indicating indicia. A left side wall 734 has SPRAY indicating indicia thereon and a right side wall 73 which has STREAM indicating indicia. Also, the nozzle cap 60 has a bottom wall 742, as shown i FIG. 19.
Within the envelope of the forward portions of the wall 730, 734, 738 and 742 and extending rearwardly from a fron wall 744 of the nozzle cap 60 is a first outer cylinder 74 which is adapted to receive therein the outer cylinder 710 of the nose bushing 16. Then, also extending rearwardly from the front wall 744 within the outer cylinder 746 is a smaller-in- diameter cylinder 748 having a slot 750 extending radially therethrough which is adapted, upon selective rotation of the nozzle cap 60, to mate with either the tangential slot 706 or the radial slot 708 in the cylindrical extension 702. The small r-in-diameter cylinder 748 is adapted to be received over the cylindrical extension 702. In a manner which is conventional in the art, when the nozzle cap 60 is rotated counterclockwise 90° from the STOP position to the SPRAY position, liquid in the waterway 720 will pass through the slot 750 and through the mating slot 706 into the cylindrical cavity 704 and in a swirl forwardly to an outlet orifice 752 in the front wall 744 of the nozzle cap 60.
In a similar manner, when the nozzle cap 60 is rotated clockwise 90° from the STOP position to the STREAM position, the slot 750 in the wall of. the cylinder 748 will mate or register with the radial slot 708 whereby liquid can flow from the waterway 722 through the slot 750 and through the slot 708 radially into the cylindrical cavity 704 and then axially forwardly and out of the orifice 752.
In this way, in a manner similar to previously proposed nozzle assemblies, liquid can be directed through the waterways 720 and 722 to selectively aligned, axially extending or radially extending, slots for communicating liquid in a swirl or in an axial path to the orifice 752 for effecting a desired discharge of liquid in either a conical spray or mist-like discharge or in a substantially axial STREAM type discharge. Also, it will be understood that different formations can be utilized for effecting the mating of one or more tangential slots through a radial slot to a waterway or one or more radial slots to a radial or longitudinal slot and thence to a waterway, as disclosed in the Quinn et al U.S. Patent No. 4,234,128 or the Dobbs et al U.S. Patent No. 4,706,888, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Also in FIG. 19, there is illustrated a first formation 754 in the lower area on the inside of the side wall 734. This formation 754 defines a lug, boss or detent 754 that extends angularly upwardly and inwardly from the wall 734 inside the nozzle cap 60 to an edge or catch 755. In like manner, a lug, boss or detent 756 in the lower area of the wall 738 extends inwardly from the wall 738 inside the nozzle cap 60 to an edge or catch 757.
As will be described in greater detail hereinafter,' the lugs 754 and 756 normally are positioned in the nozzle assembly 58 beneath the legs or prongs 72.
The blocking engagement of the legs or prongs 72 relative to the lugs or projections 754 and 756 normally prevents rotation of the nozzle cap 60 of the nozzle assembly 58 until the pull-away piece 20 is pulled away to remove the fork arms 69 from the locking position of each fork arm 69 between the cylindrical portion 64 and a leg or prong 72, and unless and until a user squeezes the side walls of the body 14 in the side wall areas 780 and 782 at the same time the user rotates the nozzle cap 60.
The blocking position of the prongs 72 is shown in FIG. 22. Then, as shown in FIG. 23, when the wall areas 780 and 782 of the body 14 are squeezed or pushed inwardly to move the legs or prongs 72 toward the cylindrical portion 64 and out of blocking or catching engagement with the lugs 754 and 756, the nozzle cap 60 can be rotated clockwise or counterclockwise, as shown in phantom in FIG. 23. As shown in FIG. 23, after the wall areas 780 and 782 are squeezed to move the legs 72 out of blocking engagement with respect to the lugs 754 and 756, particularly the lug 754, the nozzle cap 60 can be rotated counterclockwise 90° to the SPRAY position. In this position, the waterways 720 and 722 communicate through the slot 750 and the slot 706 to the cylindrical cavity 704 for effecting a swirl of liquid to the outlet orifice 752 in the front wall 744 of the nozzle cap 60 thereby to effec the SPRAY , mist or fog-like discharge of liquid from th nozzle cap 60.
When the nozzle cap 60 is rotated clockwise 90° after th prongs or legs 72 have been squeezed inwardly, the lug o projection 756 then can move past the leg 72.
Each lug 754, 756 has an upper surface 760 extending to surface 762 that is close to parallel to the plane of the side wall 734 or 738, the intersection of these surfaces 760, 762 being the edge or catch 755 or 757.
It will be noted that the extension tab 726 having inclined side edges 784 and 786 is adapted to engage on one side or the other the lug 754 or the lug 756 to prevent further rotation of the nozzle cap 60, counterclockwise or clockwise thereby to ensure that the nozzle cap 60 can only be moved from the STOP position to the SPRAY position or from the STOP position to the STREAM position.
With reference to FIGS. 2 and 24, it will be understood that the mounting block 67 of the pull-away piece 20 has a generally rectangular planar body 801 and is pressed downwardly after placement over the top portion 22 to snap-fittingly lock the mounting block 67 in the opening 68 in the top portion 22 of the body 14. At the same time, the fork arms 69, each having a curved inner surface 802, are received through the spaced apart slots or notches 70 in the top portion 22 at the front end thereof and through the slots or notches 71 in the rear edge of the top wall 730 of the nozzle cap 60, with the curved surfaces 802 being received around the cylindrical portion 64 of the body 14 and having lower ends 804 received between the cylindrical portion 64 and the spaced apart legs or prongs 72. With the lower ends 804 of the fork arms 69 positioned in this manner, inward movement of the legs or prongs 72 when the wall areas 780 and 782 of the body 14 are squeezed is prevented.
As a result, if one tried to rotate the nozzle cap 60, such rotation is prevented, on the one hand by the fork arms 69 extending through the mating slots or notches 70 and 71 in the top wall portion 22 of the body 14 and the top wall 730 of the nozzle cap 60 and, on the other hand, by the blocking position of the fork arms 69 which prevent inward movement of the prongs 72 to enable the lugs 754 and 756 to be moved past the prongs 72 upon either clockwise or counterclockwise attempted rotation of the nozzle cap 60.
As best shown in FIG. 25, the pull-away piece 20 has at the front end thereof a rectangular recess 806 which is adapted to be received over the extension tab 726. The curved surfaces 802 extend downwardly and laterally on the inner side of the fork arms 69 from the edges of the rectangular recess 806.
A top rear portion or pull tab 808 of the pull-away piece 20 has PULL indicia 810 thereon.
Further, to facilitate pulling of the pull-away piece 20, the rear underside of the pull tab 808 is beveled upwardly at 812 as shown in FIG. 26.
The mounting block 67 is positioned below the planar bod 801 of the pull-away piece 20 beneath a recess 815 in th planar body 801 and is connected to front and back edges 816,
817 of this recess 815 by three webs or fillets 818, as bes shown in FIG. 27.
The mounting block 67 has a curved lower surface 820 wit a central longitudinally extending slot 822 separating th mounting block 67 into left and right prong portions 824 an 826. Each prong portion 824 and 826 has an inclined surfac 828, 830 which inclines upwardly and laterally outwardly fro the curved surface 820 to a shoulder 832, 834, as best shown i FIG. 27.
It will be understood that when the mounting block 67 i pushed downwardly through the opening 68, the inclined surface 828 and 830 engage the sides of the opening 68 and the slot 82 allows the prong portions 824 and 826 to be deflected inwardl until the shoulders 832 and 834 are moved past lower side edge 835 and 836 of the opening 68 and snap into a locking positio beneath the top wall portion 22 of the body 14 adjacent th side edges 835, 836 of the opening 68. The curved surface 82 will then rest upon the upper surface of the cylindrica portion 64 perhaps with a slight interference fit between th cylindrical portion 64 and the underside of the top wal surface 22.
As shown in FIG. 26, the planar body 801 has a transvers groove 840 in a lower surface 842 thereof to facilitate bendin of the pull tab 808.
The pull-away piece 20 provides tamper evident structur for the nozzle assembly 58. In this respect, if the pull-awa piece 20 is broken or missing, that is evidence that the nozzl assembly of the trigger sprayer has been tampered with. In use, a user will grip the pull tab 808 at the rear end of the break away piece 20 and pull upwardly, with the bevel 812 facilitating gripping of the pull tab 808 and the transverse groove 840 facilitating bending of the pull tab 808 upwardly. As the pull tab 808 is pulled upwardly, first the webs or fillets 818 at the back edge 817 of the recess 815 are broken followed by breaking of the webs or fillets 818 at the front edge 816 of the recess 815. After the webs or fillets 818 are broken, the pull-away piece 20 can be easily removed from the sprayer body to remove the fork arms 69 from the mating slots or notches 70 and 71 and to remove the lower ends 804 of the fork arms 69 from a blocking position between the cylindrical portion 64 and the legs or prongs 72 to enable a user to use the trigger sprayer 10. Referring now to FIG. 28, there is illustrated therein the locking ring 28 before it is detached from the cylindrical base 26 by breaking the fillets 57. The cylindrical base 26 and the locking ring 28 form a bottle cap assembly 902 constructed according to the teachings of the present invention which together with a tubular portion 904 of the bottle neck 30 form a bottle cap/bottle neck assembly 906.
The locking ring 28 is broken away by twisting same relative to the cylindrical base 26 and then is moved upwardly as indicated by the arrows and as shown in phantom frictionally engaging the locating rib segments 76. In this position, the cylindrical base 26 and the locking ring 28 are ready for being pressed downwardly upon the bottle neck 904 and the locking ring 28 temporarily is held in place by its frictional engagement with the rib segments 76. As shown, the cylindrical base 26 has a cylindrical wall portion 908 having a pair of spaced apart upwardly extending slots 911 and 912 formed therein on each side of the sprayer body 14 so as to define therebetween two of the locking tabs 53. At the upper end of each locking tab 53 is a line area of reduced thickness 914 to provide a hinge 914 whereby each locking tab 53 can be flexed inwardly or outwardly relative to the cylindrical wall 908 of the cylindrical base 26.
The lug receiving opening 54 in each tab 53 is generally rectangular as shown. There is provided beneath the opening 54 on each locking tab 53 an outwardly extending flange 916 having an inclined lower surface 917 which inclines upwardly and outwardly from the bottom of the tab 53 to an outer surface 918. A top surface or shoulder 919 extends horizontally radially outwardly from the tab 53 to the outer surface 918 and faces upwardly.
The bottle neck 904 is generally tubular in shape and has an outer cylindrical surface 920 and an annular top edge 922. A conventional thread 924 is provided on the cylindrical outer surface 920.
Beneath the thread 924 on the outer cylindrical surface 920 is an annular rib 926 having, on diametrically opposite sides of the outer cylindrical surface 920, locking lugs 928 which are generally rectangular in shape with a lower horizontally extending shoulder 930 and an upper incline surface 932 which inclines downwardly from the oute cylindrical surface 920. Each of the lugs 928 is generall rectangular in shape and located circumferentially to the sid of and on each side of each lug 928 is a stop post 934 whic serve to locate the locking tabs 53 when they are pushed dow over the locking lugs 928.
As shown in FIG. 30, the locking ring 28 has the annula groove 74 formed on the inner cylindrical surface 940 thereof. The groove 74 is adapted to receive the annular rib 75 in snap-fitting manner when the locking ring 28 is moved down ove the cylindrical base 26.
As shown in FIG. 31, the cylindrical wall 908 of the bas 26 has an inner cylindrical surface 942 which is received ove the tubular portion 904 and which is typically unthreaded, a shown.
The cylindrical wall 908 extends to a top wall 944 of th cylindrical base 26. Inwardly of the cylindrical surface 94 is a sealing ring 948 which has a lower outer beveled edge 95 and which extends downwardly from the top wall 944 and i adapted to be received frictionally within tubular inne surface 954 of the tubular portion 904 of the bottle neck 30 as shown in FIG. 31.
Also as shown in FIG. 31, the locking ring 28 has a lowe beveled or recessed inner surface 960 which is received ove any protruding portion of the flanges 916 when the locking ring 28 is positioned over the tabs 53.
As shown in FIG. 31, the cylindrical base 26 with the locking ring 28 held in a raised position (FIG. 28) is pressed downwardly over the tubular portion 904 of the bottle neck 30 to press the sealing ring 948 within the inner surface 954 and at the same time push the tabs 53 downwardly over the inclined surface 932 of each of the locking lugs 928 until each locking lug 928 snaps into one of the openings 54 in one of the locking tabs 53. Then, the locking ring 28 is moved downwardly with the inner surface 940 thereof frictionally engaging the ribs 76 until the rib 75 is snap fittingly received in the annular groove 74 where the locking ring 28 is detachably locked in place against vertical movement of the locking ring 28 with the rib segments 76 being located adjacent the upper annular edge of the locking ring 28. This locking relationship is shown in FIG. 31.
The bottle neck/bottle cap assembly 906 shown in FIG. 31 and 10 provides a quick, push on, coupling of the bottle cap assembly 902 onto the bottle neck 30 and the engagement of the locking lugs 928 with the openings 54 in the locking tabs 53 prevents vertical movement of the cylindrical base 26 off of the bottle neck 30, locates the trigger sprayer 10 in a desired relationship with the bottle 12 and prevents relative rotational movement between the cylindrical base 26 and the bottle neck 30.

Claims

CLAIMSWE CLAIM:
1. A child resistant trigger sprayer bottle cap/bottle neck assembly comprising: a trigger sprayer having a body including a cylindrical base; first non-thread coupling means incorporated into said cylindrical base for coupling to a bottle neck; a bottle neck; second non-thread coupling means on said bottle neck adapted to engage and couple with said first coupling means; and, a locking ring received over said cylindrical base and said cylindrical neck for maintaining said first and second coupling means in a coupled locked position.
2. The assembly of claim 1 wherein said first coupling means comprises at least one locking tab formed in said cylindrical base and having means for locking with said second coupling means on said bottle neck.
3. The assembly of claim 2 wherein said cylindrical base includes a cylindrical wall having at least two spaced apart axially extending slots therein with the tab being defined between said slots.
4. The assembly of claim 3 wherein the top of said at least one tab is defined by a line of reduced thickness material in said cylindrical wall forming a hinge for said tab.
5. The assembly of claim 3 wherein said at least one tab has an opening therein and said second coupling means on sai bottle neck is defined by at least one locking lug that extend outwardly from said bottle neck for being received in sai opening in said at least one locking tab.
6. The assembly of claim 5 wherein said at least on locking lug has an upper surface that extends downwardly fro the bottle neck forming a ramp surface past which said tab ca be pushed until said locking lug is snap fittingly received i said opening in said locking tab.
7. The assembly of claim 6 wherein said locking tab has radially outwardly extending flange at a lower side thereo beneath said opening, said flange being received under an locking with said at least one locking lug.
8. The assembly of claim 7 wherein said locking ring has a lower inner beveled surface which is received over said flange on said at least one tab.
9. The assembly of claim 1 wherein said cylindrical base has an annular rib on an outer cylindrical surface thereof and said locking ring has an annular groove therein which is adapted to receive said annular rib in a snap-fitting manner when said locking ring is moved down over said cylindrical base to detachably lock said locking ring on said cylindrical base and over said first and second coupling means thereby detachably locking the locking ring against axial movement relative to said cylindrical base.
10. The assembly of claim 1 wherein said first coupling means includes an opening in a deflectable portion of said cylindrical base and said second coupling means includes a locking lug extending outwardly from said bottle neck and adapted to be received in said opening.
11. The assembly of claim 10 wherein said bottle neck has on either side of and spaced from said locking lug a locating post on the periphery of said bottle neck.
12. The assembly of claim 1 wherein said bottle neck has a thread formation on the outer surface thereof above said second coupling means whereby said bottle neck is adapted to receive a conventional screw thread bottle cap.
13. The assembly of claim 1 wherein said cylindrical base has an outer cylindrical surface with at least two rib segments thereon past which the locking ring can be pushed axially upwardly while frictionally engaging said rib segments and after said cylindrical base is pressed downwardly over said bottle neck said locking ring can be moved downwardly past said rib segments and over said coupled and locked first and second coupling means to a position just beneath said locating rib segments.
14. The assembly of claim 1 wherein said cylindrical base includes a cylindrical wall and a top wall and wherein a sealing ring having a lower outer bevelled edge extends downwardly from said top wall and is adapted to be received within the inner surface of said bottle neck.
15. The assembly of claim 1 wherein said cylindrical base includes a cylindrical wall and said first coupling means includes first and second diametrically opposed locking tabs formed in said cylindrical wall and having bottle neck engaging means thereon and said coupling means on said bottle neck comprises first and second diametrically opposed locking lugs on said bottle neck adapted to couple and lock with said engaging means on said locking tabs.
16. A trigger sprayer adapted to be coulped to a bottle neck of a liquid storage container, said trigger sprayer comprising a body including a cylindrical base having a cylindrical wall, coupling means incorporated into said cylindrical wall for coupling to a bottle neck, and a locking ring which is molded with said cylindrical base and which is detachably connected to said cylindrical base at a lower edge of said cylindrical wall of said cylindrical base.
17. A method for locking a trigger sprayer to a bottle neck of a liquid storage container, said method comprising the steps of: providing at the lower end of a trigger sprayer a cylindrical base including a cylindrical wall; providing in said cylindrical wall first coupling means for coupling with a bottle neck; providing on the bottle neck second coupling means for coupling and locking with the first coupling means; molding with the cylindrical base a locking ring which is detachably connected to the cylindrical base at a lower edge of the cylindrical wall of the cylindrical base; breaking the locking ring away from the cylindrical base and moving it upwardly on the cylindrical base; pushing the cylindrical base downwardly over the bottle neck until the first coupling means couples and locks with the second coupling means; and, pushing the locking ring downwardly over the cylindrical base and the coupled and locked first and second coupling means.
PCT/US1993/002071 1992-02-24 1993-02-23 Quick-locking child resistant cap assembly WO1993016919A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US07/840,759 1992-02-24
US07/840,784 1992-02-24
US07/840,759 US5297701A (en) 1992-02-24 1992-02-24 All plastic trigger sprayer
US07/840,784 US5238152A (en) 1992-02-24 1992-02-24 Quick-locking child resistant bottle cap assembly

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1993016919A1 true WO1993016919A1 (en) 1993-09-02

Family

ID=27126206

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1993/002071 WO1993016919A1 (en) 1992-02-24 1993-02-23 Quick-locking child resistant cap assembly

Country Status (4)

Country Link
AU (1) AU3795693A (en)
IL (1) IL104786A (en)
MX (1) MX9301009A (en)
WO (1) WO1993016919A1 (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0598237A2 (en) * 1992-10-21 1994-05-25 Contico International, Incorporated Trigger sprayer
WO1996032343A1 (en) * 1995-04-12 1996-10-17 Smithkline Beecham Plc Dispenser

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3693820A (en) * 1971-06-03 1972-09-26 Robert P Linkletter Safety closure cap
US3737077A (en) * 1971-02-10 1973-06-05 R Bruce Means for attaching a dispensing valve to a pressurized dispenser with a lock ring
US4073398A (en) * 1977-01-28 1978-02-14 The Risdon Manufacturing Company Snap-lock device for securing a dispensing mechanism to a container
US4366921A (en) * 1981-09-28 1983-01-04 Ethyl Products Company Child-resistant closure device
US4538745A (en) * 1983-05-19 1985-09-03 The Clorox Company Trigger sprayer

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3737077A (en) * 1971-02-10 1973-06-05 R Bruce Means for attaching a dispensing valve to a pressurized dispenser with a lock ring
US3693820A (en) * 1971-06-03 1972-09-26 Robert P Linkletter Safety closure cap
US4073398A (en) * 1977-01-28 1978-02-14 The Risdon Manufacturing Company Snap-lock device for securing a dispensing mechanism to a container
US4366921A (en) * 1981-09-28 1983-01-04 Ethyl Products Company Child-resistant closure device
US4538745A (en) * 1983-05-19 1985-09-03 The Clorox Company Trigger sprayer

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0598237A2 (en) * 1992-10-21 1994-05-25 Contico International, Incorporated Trigger sprayer
EP0598237A3 (en) * 1992-10-21 1994-09-21 Contico Int Inc Trigger sprayer.
WO1996032343A1 (en) * 1995-04-12 1996-10-17 Smithkline Beecham Plc Dispenser

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU3795693A (en) 1993-09-13
IL104786A0 (en) 1993-06-10
MX9301009A (en) 1994-07-29
IL104786A (en) 1996-07-23

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5297701A (en) All plastic trigger sprayer
US5238152A (en) Quick-locking child resistant bottle cap assembly
US5169032A (en) Tamper evident sprayer/nozzle assembly
US5228600A (en) Child resistant nozzle for trigger sprayer
US6196423B1 (en) Child resistant overcap with safety collar and containing a child resistant slip collar for screw-on pump sprayers
US5228602A (en) Plastic spring assembly for trigger sprayer
US5318206A (en) Trigger-piston connection
US4434917A (en) Trigger-actuated atomizer
CA1201096A (en) Dispenser device for liquids
US6695171B2 (en) Pump dispenser
EP0401965B1 (en) Manually actuated dispensing pump sprayer having a removable nozzle locking element
JP4051412B2 (en) Mixed dispenser
US6817488B2 (en) Spray dispensing device with nozzle closure
EP0643630B1 (en) Dispenser pumps
AU3795393A (en) Flap valve assembly for trigger sprayer
US20060113329A1 (en) Dispenser with lock
JP2003230854A (en) Discharge pump apparatus, discharge valve apparatus and trigger type discharger
US5040702A (en) Manually actuated dispensing pump sprayer having a removable nozzle locking element
US6923343B1 (en) Child resistant slip collar for screw-on pump sprayer
US5040701A (en) Manually actuated dispensing pump sprayer having a removable nozzle locking element
WO1993016919A1 (en) Quick-locking child resistant cap assembly
AU3795593A (en) Child resistant nozzle for trigger sprayer
EP1277518B1 (en) Child-resistant nozzle assembly for fluid dispenser
AU666361B2 (en) Plastic spring assembly
US7036689B1 (en) Child-resistant trigger sprayer

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AT AU BG BR CA CH DE DK ES FI GB HU JP KR LU NL NO NZ PL PT RO RU SE UA US

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AT BE CH DE DK ES FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE

DFPE Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101)
122 Ep: pct application non-entry in european phase
NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: CA