Plant item packaging
11794941 · 2023-10-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65D5/2052
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D21/0212
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D5/003
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B65D5/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D21/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B65D5/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A packaging assembly includes a packaging enclosure with a bottom closure that folds into a flap with a latch that locks into an opening on a face of the packaging enclosure. Upper faces of the packaging enclosure allow for juxtaposing and superposing a plurality of the packaging enclosures and providing space for air to circulate between them.
Claims
1. A packaging assembly comprising: a plurality of boxes, each of said boxes comprising an upper part and a lower part, said upper part comprising four vertical sides made of two pairs of flat panels that are parallel to each other, and two horizontal shoulders extending from upper edges of the four vertical sides, each of said horizontal shoulders having a length extending between short edges of said horizontal should and a width extending between inner and out long edges of said horizontal shoulder, wherein for each of said horizontal shoulders, said outer long edge extends from one of the upper edges of the four vertical sides and an inner vertical face extends vertically downwards from said inner long edge, and said upper part is open between said inner vertical faces of said horizontal shoulders and between upper edges of the pair of flat panels that are along said short edges of said horizontal shoulders, wherein each of the vertical sides that is perpendicular to said inner vertical faces comprises two upper shoulder-abutting edges coupled to the width of said horizontal shoulder and an intermediate upper edge which is vertically lower than said upper shoulder-abutting edges; wherein a tab protrudes upwards from each of said horizontal shoulders, said tab being positioned along the outer long edge of said horizontal shoulder; and wherein said lower part comprises four sides, each of which extends from a lower edge of one of said vertical sides, each of said four sides of said lower part being slanted inwards from an upper edge to a lower edge thereof, and wherein on the side of the box that has the intermediate upper edge, a horizontal flap extends outwards from the lower edge of said side of said lower part and a notch is formed in said horizontal flap; wherein when an upper one of said boxes is stacked on a lower one of said boxes, said tabs of said lower one of said boxes are received in said notches of said upper one of said boxes.
2. The packaging assembly according to claim 1, wherein for each of said boxes, crease lines are formed between said upper and lower parts.
3. The packaging assembly according to claim 1, wherein when the upper one of said boxes is stacked on the lower one of said boxes, portions of said upper part of the lower one of said boxes remain open.
4. The packaging assembly according to claim 1, wherein when said boxes are placed next to and abutting each other, a triangular space is between said lower parts of said boxes through which air can circulate freely.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present invention will be understood and appreciated more fully from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the appended drawings in which the figures illustrate embodiments of the new packing method according to the present invention.
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DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(22) Illustrative embodiments of the invention are described below. In the interest of clarity, not all features/components of an actual implementation are necessarily described.
(23) It is a particular object of the present invention to provide a packaging method which is especially adapted and advantageous for shipping fresh herbs, such as but not limited to, basil, rosemary, mint or sage and allow better cooling of the packed herbs.
(24) The box is made with foldable material such as cardboard, corrugated board, corrugated PE or similar.
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(26) The box has two top shoulders 1 and 2, each having a lock 13. Crease lines 4 divide the box in an upper part 5 and lower part 6. Part 5 consists of two parallel walls 3 and two parallel walls 3a. Lower part 6 consists of two flat walls 7 and 7a opposed to each other and two walls 8 and 8a, each divided into three facets.
(27) The box has a bottom closure 9 that folds into a flap 10 equipped with a lock 11 that locks into opening 12 on face 7. The bottom closure 9 has two notches 14 that fit on locks 13 when the boxes are superposed.
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(33) The herbs, usually contained in a modified atmosphere package bag 18 are inserted with their stems side up into the box. This is important as some of the cultivars are geotropic and must be shipped vertically with the leaves facing up, as seen in
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(35) Bottom closure 9 is then closed and locked in place by pushing the lock 11 into the opening 12. Since the length of the bottom closure 9 is shorter than the length of the face 3, a contraction occurs along the two diagonal creases 19 on face 8 which forces the faces 7 and 7a into an angled position. The box is now closed and turned upside down and placed on the pallet as described in
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(38) A prior art practice of bundling boxes is by using a lateral strap to keep several boxes together. In this method, most of the tension of this strap is concentrated at the four corners of the bundle. Any other box within such a bundle is kept in place with the pressure applied by the adjacent boxes in the bundle. This condition is usually not reliable and often results in boxes slipping when the bundles are moved, for example to build a layered skid. This method is also limited to a small number of boxes.
(39) Instead of using a strap, the boxes can be packed in a master carton but this further increases the heating problem, adds to the cost of packaging, airfreighting and volume.
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(41) The box has on both faces 3a two notches 20 in which the flaps forming the shoulders 1 and 2 snap into and lock. A connector made of plastic or any other rigid material having a general shape such as the one shown 21, is inserted in the notches 20 of two adjacent boxes as indicated by the arrows. The connector now connects two boxes along one continuous edge.
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(48) The master carton bundles several pairs of boxes, typically, but not necessarily, ten, as shown in
(49) The master carton may be placed flat on a working surface. The boxes may be placed at the center of the carton and the flap 26 may be folded toward the center space between the two lines of boxes 27, as shown in
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(51) In addition, the same concept can be used to pack two or more layers and can be adapted to a plurality of combinations.
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