SYSTEM FOR DENSE PACKING OF READY-TO-ASSEMBLE ARTICLES OF FURNITURE
20240041218 ยท 2024-02-08
Inventors
Cpc classification
A47C4/028
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A47C17/04
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A47C1/031
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A47C17/04
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A47C1/031
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A system for constructing and shipping full-sized (or larger) RTA articles of furniture in a smaller volume, resulting in more efficient and dense packing of multiple articles on standard international cube shipping containers. Each full-sized or larger RTA article of furniture is constructed so that it in a partially assembled state it can be arranged and packed in a shipping box or container of 26.5 inches or less in height and 30.6 inches or less in width. Lengths may vary, but common lengths are 45 inches, 66 inches, and 90 inches. The system thus results in a substantial increase (approximately 33%) in the number of articles of furniture that can be shipped in a single standard international cube shipping container, thereby greatly reducing the shipping cost per article of furniture.
Claims
1. A Ready-To-Assemble furniture system, comprising: a plurality of ready-to-assemble furniture items, each with an assembled configuration and an shipping configuration, wherein in the assembled configuration the respective furniture item is full-size or larger, and in shipping configuration the respective furniture item has been partially disassembled into one or more components with said components arranged and packed into a single shipping carton approximately 26.5 inches or less in height and approximately 30.6 inches or less in width.
2. The furniture system of claim 1, wherein the shipping carton has a length of approximately 45 inches.
3. The furniture system of claim 1, wherein the shipping carton has a length of approximately 66 inches.
4. The furniture system of claim 1, wherein the shipping carton has a length of approximately 90 inches.
5. The furniture system of claim 1, wherein the shipping carton is 26.5 inches in height, 30.5 inches in width, and 45 inches in length.
6. The furniture system of claim 1, wherein the shipping carton is 26.5 inches in height, 30.5 inches in width, and 23 inches in length.
7. The furniture system of claim 1, wherein the furniture item comprises a base assembly, a back assembly, and a seat assembly, wherein the base assembly, back assembly, and seat assembly are connected by snap-fit connectors in said assembled configuration.
8. The furniture system of claim 1, further comprising at least one foam insert with one or more slots or holes configured to securely receive one or more elements of said one or more components in said shipping configuration.
9. The furniture system of claim 1, wherein said shipping carton further comprises a closable and sealable access door in a side of the shipping carton, configured to allow access to a control element connect port in a component of the article of furniture in the shipping configuration while in the shipping container.
10. The furniture system of claim 1, wherein said articles of furniture comprise one or more of the following: sofas, recliner-sofas, loveseats, recliner-loveseats, chairs, recliner-chairs, sectional pieces, ottomans, rockers, rocker-recliners, gliders, glider-recliners, swivels, swivel rocker, swivel-recliners, and sleeper-sofas.
11. The furniture system of claim 1, wherein said article of furniture is a recliner with a back assembly with a cushion side and right and left wing cushions, a seat assembly a right arm with a cushion and a left arm with a cushion, said seat assembly further comprising a cushion side and a base side, and a base assembly with a top side; further wherein the shipping configuration for said recliner when placed in the shipping carton comprises, from the bottom of the shipping carton: (1) the back assembly with cushion side up; (2) the seat assembly with cushion side down, with the right arm and left arm aligned with the right and left wing cushions; (3) at least one foam insert with one or more slots or holes; (4) the base assembly with top side down and rotated 90 degrees with respect to the seat assembly when in the assembled configuration.
12. The furniture system of claim 1, wherein the arrangement of components in the shipping configuration is inverted.
13. The furniture system of claim 1, wherein one of said articles of furniture comprise one or more arm components, wherein said arm components are hollow and configured to receive one or more pillows or cushions from the article of furniture when in the shipping configuration.
14. A method of packing a plurality of ready-to-assemble furniture items as described in claim 1 in a standard-sized intermodal shipping container with internal width of 92 inches and internal height of 106 inches. comprising: packing each of a plurality of ready-to-assemble furniture items in a shipping configuration in a single shipping carton approximately 26.5 inches or less in height and approximately 30.6 inches or less in width; and stacking a plurality of said shipping cartons in a dense packing arrangement within said intermodal shipping container so that packing efficiency exceeds 95.5% internal space used.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS
[0015] In various embodiments, the present invention comprises a system for constructing and shipping full-sized (or larger) RTA articles of furniture in a smaller volume, resulting in more efficient and dense packing of multiple articles on standard international cube shipping containers. As described below, each full-sized or larger RTA article of furniture is constructed so that it in a partially assembled state it can be arranged and packed in a shipping box or container of 26.5 inches or less in height and 30.6 inches or less in width. Lengths may vary, but common lengths are 45 inches, 66 inches, and 90 inches. The shipping boxes or containers further are designed to be efficiently and densely packed in the standard intermodal shipping container regardless of orientation or configuration. The present invention thus results in a substantial increase (approximately 33%) in the number of articles of furniture that can be shipped in a single standard international intermodal cube shipping container, thereby greatly reducing the shipping cost per article of furniture.
[0016] An intermodal container is a large, standardized shipping container, designed for intermodal freight transport, where goods are stored and transported across different modes of transport (e.g., ship, rail, truck) without unloading or reloading of the cargo. The great majority of global intermodal containers are referred to as dry freight or general purpose steel or metal containers, that come in either nominal 20 or 40 feet standard lengths, with internal width of 92 inches and internal height of 106 inches.
[0017]
[0018] Recliner
[0019]
[0020]
[0021] While this order of packing can be reversed/inverted, so that the back assembly is at the top of the box, this arrangement (i.e., back assembly in the bottom) allows the shipping box to be opened and various base assembles to be removed and added (as described in U.S. Patent Application No. 62/380,933, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by specific reference for all purposes) without removing the seat assembly and back assembly from the shipping box.
[0022] Sofa
[0023]
[0024]
[0025] The above RTA construction and packing methodology also can be applied to a 3-over-3 full-sized RTA sofa.
[0026] Modular Pieces
[0027] In several embodiments, the article of furniture may be wholly or partially modular. Modular pieces can be individually and separately disassembled and packaged, as shown in
[0028] Access Door
[0029] As seen in
[0030] Container Loading
[0031] Examples of various shipping box or container dimensions, and how they can be densely packed on a single standard international cube shipping container, are shown in
[0032] As seen in
[0033] Another compatible shipping box or carton size is 23 inches in length (same 26.25 inches in height and 30.5 inches in width; while the length of this carton is the shortest dimension, the reference terminology is the same to emphasize that the height and width dimensions match those of the other cartons). A half-size version of this shipping box or carton is 23 inches in length, 30.5 inches in width, but 13 inches in height.
[0034] The present invention thus provides for more furniture units to be packed, with greater efficiency, into a single 40 foot long intermodal shipping container. For example, a prior art furniture system can load 19 sofas, 19 loveseats, and 19 recliners (in partially assembled, packed form) on such an intermodal shipping container, while the present invention can load 28 sofas, 28 loveseats, and 28 recliners in the same container, with the assembled furniture being at least as large as the assembled furniture in the prior art furniture system. The packing efficiency, as seen in
[0035] The present system is suitable for all furniture, reclining or non-reclining, where connection is desired, such as, but not limited to, sofas, recliner-sofas, loveseats, recliner-loveseats, chairs, recliner-chairs, sectional pieces, ottomans, rockers, rocker-recliners, gliders, glider-recliners. swivels, swivel rocker, swivel-recliners, and sleeper-sofas, and the like, each with their respective seat boxes and bases.
[0036] While the invention has been described in its preferred form or embodiment with some degree of particularity, it is understood that this description has been given only by way of example and that numerous changes in the details of construction, fabrication, and use, including the combination and arrangement of parts, may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Thus, it should be understood that the embodiments and examples described herein have been chosen and described in order to best illustrate the principles of the invention and its practical applications to thereby enable one of ordinary skill in the art to best utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited for particular uses contemplated. Even though specific embodiments of this invention have been described, they are not to be taken as exhaustive. There are several variations that will be apparent to those skilled in the art.