Packing box
US-2018215499-A1 · Aug 2, 2018 · US
US10633141B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10633141-B2 |
| Application number | US-201515739494-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jul 24, 2015 |
| Priority date | Jul 24, 2015 |
| Publication date | Apr 28, 2020 |
| Grant date | Apr 28, 2020 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A paperboard carton is formed by folding and interconnecting an even number of body pieces to establish at least a bottom wall, first and second spaced main face walls, opposing side walls and a top wall, which collectively define an interior cavity for containing edible products, with the first and second main face walls and the opposing side walls being spaced by each of the bottom wall and the top wall, each of said body pieces being formed of paperboard, and at least two of the body pieces having predominate fiber orientations which are directionally distinct from one another, thereby establishing a compression strength for each carton which enables similarly configured cartons to be directly stacked upon each other for shipping purposes.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A carton comprising an even number of body pieces which are folded and interconnected to establish at least a bottom wall, first and second spaced main face walls, opposing side walls and a top wall, which collectively define an interior cavity for containing an edible product to be sold to a consumer, with the first and second main face walls, as well as the opposing side walls, being spaced by each of the bottom wall and the top wall, each of said body pieces being formed of paperboard, wherein at least two of the body pieces have predominate fiber orientations which are directionally distinct from one another and the carton exhibits a compression strength which enables similarly configured cartons to be directly stacked upon each other for shipping purposes while resting on their respective bottom walls, wherein the predominate fiber orientations include at least one of the first and second main face walls having a first predominate fiber orientation which extends directionally between the opposing side walls while each of the opposing side walls includes a second predominate fiber orientation which extends directionally between the top and bottom walls, wherein each of the bottom and top walls is smaller in area than any one of the opposing side walls or first or second spaced main face walls, and each of the first and second spaced main face walls is larger in area than any one of the bottom, top or opposing side walls. 2. The carton of claim 1 , wherein each of the first and second main face walls has the first predominate fiber orientation which extends directionally between the opposing side walls. 3. The carton of claim 2 , wherein a caliper of at least one of the body pieces differs from a caliper of another of the body pieces. 4. The carton of claim 2 , wherein the opposing side walls are made from a different grade of paperboard than the main face walls. 5. The carton of claim 1 , wherein the body pieces are constituted by only first, second, third and fourth body pieces, with the first body piece establishing the first main face wall, the second body piece establishing the second main face wall, the third body piece establishing a first one of the opposing side walls and the fourth body piece establishing a second one of the opposing side walls, wherein the predominate fiber orientation of the first and second body pieces are directionally the same but different from the predominate fiber orientation of each of the third and fourth body pieces. 6. The carton of claim 5 , wherein the predominate fiber orientations of the third and fourth body pieces are directionally the same. 7. The carton of claim 6 , wherein each of the first and second main face walls has the first predominate fiber orientation which extends directionally between the opposing side walls. 8. The carton of claim 7 , wherein a caliper of at least one of the body pieces differs from a caliper of another of the body pieces. 9. The carton of claim 8 , wherein each of the opposing side walls has a caliper which is greater than a caliper of either of the first and second face walls. 10. The carton of claim 1 , wherein the carton constitutes a cereal carton. 11. The carton of claim 1 , wherein each opposing side wall is only a single layer of paperboard. 12. The carton of claim 1 , wherein the first and second spaced main face walls are defined by separate ones of the even number of body pieces. 13. A plurality of cartons which are stacked in an exposed array on a pallet for shipping purposes, wherein at least one of the plurality of cartons is the carton of claim 1 . 14. The plurality of cartons of claim 13 , wherein said plurality of cartons are wrapped together to form a unit for shipping purposes. 15. A method of packaging edible food products comprising: erecting a carton from an even number of body pieces which are folded and interconnected to establish at least a bottom wall, first and second spaced main face walls, opposing side walls and a top wall, which collectively define an interior cavity for containing the edible products, with the first and second main face walls, as well as the opposing side walls, being spaced by each of the bottom wall and the top wall, each of said body pieces being formed of paperboard, and at least one of the first and second main face walls has a predominate fiber orientation which extends directionally between the opposing side walls while each of the opposing side walls includes a predominate fiber orientation which extends directionally between the top and bottom walls, wherein each of the bottom and top walls is smaller in area than any one of the opposing side walls or first or second spaced main face walls, and each of the first and second spaced main face walls is larger in area than any one of the bottom, top or opposing side walls; and directly stacking a plurality of similarly constructed ones of the cartons upon each other, while resting on their respective bottom walls, for shipping purposes. 16. The method of claim 15 , further comprising: stacking the plurality of cartons in an exposed array on a pallet for shipping purposes. 17. The method of claim 16 , further comprising: wrapping the plurality of cartons together for shipping purposes.
stackable · CPC title
Integral reinforcements, e.g. folds, flaps (double walls B65D5/02) · CPC title
having bodies formed by folding and interconnecting two or more blanks (specially constructed to allow collapsing and re-erecting without disengagement of side or bottom connections B65D5/36) · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.