Plastic tube designed for pressing out a liquid to pasty mass

US10214309B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-10214309-B2
Application numberUS-201415512172-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateSep 24, 2014
Priority dateSep 24, 2014
Publication dateFeb 26, 2019
Grant dateFeb 26, 2019

How to read this patent

A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.

  1. Title

    What the patent document calls the invention.

  2. Abstract

    A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.

  3. Assignees and inventors

    Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.

  4. Key dates

    Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.

  5. First independent claim

    The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.

  6. CPC / IPC classifications

    Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.

  7. Citations and related patents

    Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.

Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

A plastic tube designed for pressing out a liquid to pasty mass has a discharge opening, a supply space designed to be compressed, and a tube neck, which connects the supply space to the discharge opening, wherein a mass line having a line cross-section through which mass can flow extends through the tube neck, which cannot be used to press out the mass by means of a manual force of a user. The tube neck is designed, with regard to a free space that can be filled with mass as mass is pressed out, in such a way that a volume of the mass located in the tube neck during the pressing out corresponds to a third or less of a volume that is given by the dimensions of the tube neck.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

The invention claimed is: 1. A plastic tube ( 1 ) designed for pressing out a liquid to pasty mass ( 2 ), comprising a discharge opening ( 6 ), a reservoir ( 3 ) designed for being compressed and a tube neck ( 4 ) connecting the reservoir ( 3 ) to the discharge opening ( 6 ), wherein a mass line ( 19 ) with a line cross section, through which the mass ( 2 ) can flow, extends through the tube neck ( 4 ), which cannot be used for pressing out the mass ( 2 ) by means of manual force of a user, wherein the tube neck ( 4 ) features a free space (F), which extends in a direction of a longitudinal axis (x) and is not infiltrated by the mass ( 2 ), and wherein the mass line is disposed radially outside of the free space (F). 2. The plastic tube according to claim 1 , wherein the tube neck ( 4 ) is with respect to a free space, which can be filled with the mass ( 2 ) while the mass is pressed out, designed such that a volume of the mass ( 2 ) located in the tube neck ( 4 ) while the mass is pressed out corresponds to one-third or less of the volume defined by the dimensions of the tube neck ( 4 ). 3. The plastic tube according to claim 1 , wherein the discharge opening ( 6 ) features one or more dispensing apertures ( 11 ). 4. The plastic tube according to claim 1 , wherein the tube neck ( 4 ) can be assembled of multiple parts. 5. The plastic tube according to claim 1 , wherein the reservoir ( 3 ) has a longitudinal center axis (y), and wherein the longitudinal center axis (y) of the reservoir ( 3 ) and the longitudinal axis (x) of the tube neck ( 4 ) coincide. 6. The plastic tube according to claim 1 , wherein the tube neck ( 4 ) has a greater wall thickness than the reservoir ( 3 ). 7. A plastic tube ( 1 ) designed for pressing out a liquid to pasty mass ( 2 ), comprising a discharge opening ( 6 ), a reservoir ( 3 ) designed for being compressed and a tube neck ( 4 ) connecting the reservoir ( 3 ) to the discharge opening ( 6 ), wherein multiple mass lines ( 19 ) are provided, each mass line having a line cross section, through which the mass ( 2 ) can flow, the mass lines extending through the tube neck ( 4 ), which cannot be used for pressing out the mass ( 2 ) by means of manual force of a user, and wherein the tube neck ( 4 ) features a free space (F), which extends in a direction of a longitudinal axis (x) and is not infiltrated by the mass ( 2 ). 8. The plastic tube according to claim 7 , wherein the mass lines ( 19 ) are arranged in an annular surface viewed in a cross section. 9. A plastic tube ( 1 ) designed for pressing out a liquid to pasty mass ( 2 ), comprising a discharge opening ( 6 ), a reservoir ( 3 ) designed for being compressed and a tube neck ( 4 ) connecting the reservoir ( 3 ) to the discharge opening ( 6 ), wherein a mass line ( 19 ) with a line cross section, through which the mass ( 2 ) can flow, extends through the tube neck ( 4 ), which cannot be used for pressing out the mass ( 2 ) by means of manual force of a user, wherein the tube neck ( 4 ) features a free space (F), which extends in a direction of a longitudinal axis (x) and is not infiltrated by the mass ( 2 ), and wherein a mounting projection ( 10 ) extending in a mass transport direction (r) is formed in the tube neck ( 4 ). 10. The plastic tube according to claim 9 , wherein the mounting projection ( 10 ) is arranged on a side of the discharge opening. 11. The plastic tube according to claim 9 , wherein the mounting projection ( 10 ) is realized integrally with and consists of a same material as the tube neck ( 4 ). 12. The plastic tube according to claim 9 , wherein an insert part ( 12 ) is arranged in the tube neck ( 4 ) in order to form the mass line ( 19 ). 13. The plastic tube according to claim 11 , wherein the insert part ( 12 ) is mounted on the mounting projection ( 10 ) on the side of the discharge opening. 14. The plastic tube according to claim 11 , wherein the insert part ( 12 ) features a second mounting projection ( 13 ) on a side of the insert facing the reservoir. 15. The plastic tube according to claim 14 , wherein the second mounting projection ( 13 ) is designed for a clamp mounting in the tube neck ( 4 ). 16. The plastic tube according to claim 11 , wherein the insert part ( 12 ) is realized integrally with the tube neck ( 4 ). 17. The plastic tube according to claim 11 , wherein the insert part ( 12 ) is connected to the tube neck ( 4 ) on the side of the discharge opening. 18. The plastic tube according to claim 12 , wherein the insert part ( 12 ) extends within the tube neck ( 4 ) only. 19. The plastic tube according to claim 11 , wherein the insert part ( 12 ) extends within the tube neck ( 4 ), as well as within the reservoir ( 3 ). 20. The plastic tube according to claim 5 , wherein a length of the tube neck ( 4 ) in the direction of the longitudinal axis (x) is equal to or greater than a length of the reservoir ( 3 ) in a direction of the longitudinal center axis (y).

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • with flexible parts · CPC title

  • between tubular parts · CPC title

  • from plastics material · CPC title

  • B65B69/005Primary

    by expelling contents, e.g. by squeezing the container · CPC title

  • B65D35/38Primary

    Nozzles · CPC title

Patent family

Related publications grouped by family.

External sources

Frequently asked questions

Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.

What does patent US10214309B2 cover?
A plastic tube designed for pressing out a liquid to pasty mass has a discharge opening, a supply space designed to be compressed, and a tube neck, which connects the supply space to the discharge opening, wherein a mass line having a line cross-section through which mass can flow extends through the tube neck, which cannot be used to press out the mass by means of a manual force of a user. The…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Rpc Bramlage Gmbh
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification B65B69/005. Mapped technology areas include Operations & Transport.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Feb 26 2019 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 8 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).