[0001] The present invention relates to a container for loose foodstuffs, particularly eggs.
[0002] In the present description by "egg containers" those containers are meant for packaging
normal size eggs, usually, as is known, six eggs, for the commercialization of the
eggs themselves. They provide a traylet having a series of housings, one for each
egg, the housings being separated by diaphragms that avoid the reciprocal collision
of the eggs. In the usual commercial egg containers for six eggs two rows are dealt
with put side by side, each one with three egg places. On the traylet a lid goes to
close itself, hinged by a long side of its rectangular perimeter. The girdle line
of the egg container, that is the rim of the traylet whereagainst the lid goes to
abut when closing itself, finds itself at half the height of the eggs, arranged vertically
with their tips turned upwards.
[0003] The types most commonly used and representative of the state of the art are the one
in plastics and the one in wood pulp.
[0004] In the plastics type the closing of the egg container is deputed to a system represented
by protuberances of the plastics layer on the rim of the traylet that go to snappingly
engage themselves in corresponding recesses of the plastics layer on the rim of the
lid.
[0005] In the wood pulp type the wall of the traylet presents hooking assemblies intended
to engage themselves in corresponding cuts on the wall of the lid when this one closes
itself onto the traylet itself.
[0006] A critical feature of egg containers is their aptitude to be stacked - or, more generally,
to support loads of a certain magnitude anyhow applied on their lid - without damage.
[0007] In this connection, for instance, a type of egg container presents cone frustum protuberances
of the bottom of the traylet up to the level of the closing of the upper flat bottom
of the lid, here making up a reaction constraint element to the loads that go to burden
thereupon.
[0008] The present invention takes the steps from the consideration that no one of the presently
known egg containers turns out to be satisfying in connection with the closing system
and with the resistance to the loads impressed on the lid.
[0009] The egg containers of the state of the art are not so satisfying neither from the
viewpoint of the packaging of eggs, nor of their performance during transportation,
distribution and storing.
[0010] In the automated packaging lines the egg containers not always close themselves well,
owing both to the closing system which is inherently unreliable, and to direction
errors (wrong side inclination) of the lid towards the traylet by the automatic machine.
[0011] In the stacking, for transportation and storing of the product, the packages do not
bear the load of the packages arranged thereon and many eggs are so destroyed.
[0012] Therefore, it is largely felt the exigency of an egg container that presents a reliable
closing system, that does not suffer from the direction errors of the lid onto the
traylet in the automatic egg packaging stage, and that withstands the loads it is
intended to bear in its lifetime.
[0013] The object of the present invention is to satisfy such an exigency.
[0014] Such an end is achieved according to the teaching of the present invention by providing
the formation of partition septa among the egg places in the traylet. The profile
of such septa is brought to occupy all the inner encumbrance of the lid in the closed
position thereof on the traylet. Moreover, such septa are provided with a deviation
of the profile thereof on the portion that is turned onto the sides of the egg container
whereupon the lid is not hinged, but goes, on the contrary, to close itself, from
rectilinearity into a sawtooth recess making up a unidirectional hooking means turned
toward the traylet, that is to say such as to be engaged by a complementary means
in the closing sense of the lid onto the traylet and to offer resistance to the disengagement
in the opposite sense, of the opening of the lid. The lid is endowed with corresponding
reliefs so shaped as to be fit for hookingly engaging themselves with said recesses.
[0015] So, such septa perform the double function of a closing system and of a reaction
constraint means against the loads on the lid during the lifetime of the package.
[0016] The closing system made up of the hooking means offered by the recesses of the septa
and the reliefs of the lid is simple and reliable: the resistance to the closing is
very low, and on the contrary the resistance is considerable to the opening by the
forces tangential to the side wall of the egg container that can be encountered by
the egg container itself during its lifetime. The resistance to the opening will be,
however, a minimum against forces applied perpendicularly or almost perpendicularly
to the wall of the egg container, whereby it will be very easy for the end consumer
to open the same without effort.
[0017] Moreover, the egg container according to the present invention is not responsive
to the direction errors of the closing of the lid by an automatic machine, because
the septa make up a structure that inherently guides the lid in its closing onto the
traylet according to a correct movement.
[0018] Therefore, the subject of the present invention is a container for loose foodstuffs,
particularly eggs, comprising a traylet fit for containing eggs in an ordered rectangular
arrangement of as many respective containing places, and a concave lid, intended in
its closing onto the traylet, to turn its concavity towards the latter, wherein said
ordered rectangular arrangement of egg places is defined by partition septa crossed
with each other, the profile whereof extends to occupy all the inner encumbrance of
said concavity of said lid in the closed position of the same onto the traylet.
[0019] It is also the subject of the present invention such a container, wherein further
the profile part of some of or all said septa that is turned onto the sides of the
container itself is endowed with recesses fit for defining hooking means that let
themselves to be engaged in the closing sense of the lid and offer reasistance to
disengagement in the opening sense of the same by corresponding complementary hooking
means arranged on the inner, concave surface of the lid.
[0020] The present invention will be best understood based on the following detailed disclosure
of its preferred embodiment, only given as a matter of example, absolutely not of
restriction, with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
- FIGURE 1 is a median transverse section view of a 2x3 egg container according to the
present invention, in the open condition;
- FIGURE 2 is a median transverse section view of the same, in the closed position,
and
- FIGURE 3 is a schematic top view of the traylet of the egg container according to
the present invention.
[0021] As illustrated in the FIGURES, the egg container of the present invention comprises
a traylet 1 for containing eggs, and a lid 2, hinged on a long side of the traylet.
It is here exemplified the usual case od a traylet for six eggs, with a matrix, or
ordered rectangular arrangement, of 2x3 places for as many respective eggs, 4, 4a,
4b, 4c, 4d, 4e.
[0022] According to the present invention, such places are separated by three crossed partition
septa, one longitudinal, two transversal, that individuate the rectangular matrix
of places, which crossing with each other mutually partition themselves in flaps 3,
3a and 3b, 3c for the transverse septa and 5, 5a, 5b for the longitudinal septum,
individuating and partitioning contiguous places.
[0023] As cab be seen in FIGURE 1, the lid 2 presents a deep concavity turned towards the
traylet. The septa above extend to occupy all the inner encumbrance of such a concavity
with the lid closed, as shown in FIGURE 2.
[0024] According to a modification, said septa are upperly endowed with unloading recesses,
arriving upwards up to the inner level of the lid, in the closed position thereof,
only in correspondence with the side parts and of the central part of their profile.
[0025] On the flaps turned onto the sides of the traylet not interested by the hinging of
the lid, i.e. on flaps 4, 4D; 3a, 3c and on the profile part that is turned to the
sides of the traylets, sawtooth cuts or recesses are provided, one of which, 3c',
visible in FIGURES 1 and 2, intended to engage themselves with as many respective
corresponding reliefs on the inner (concave) profile of the lid, one of which, 2",
visible in FIGURES 1 and 2. Recesses and reliefs are of such shapes as to cooperate
in mutual hooking, easily (with a low force) hookingly engaging with each other in
the closing sense of the lid onto the traylet and offering resistance to the disengagement
in the opposite, opening sense.
[0026] The present invention has been disclosed with reference to a specific embodiment
thereof, but it is to be expressely understood that additions, variations and/or omissions
can be made thereto, without so departing from the relevant scope of protection, which
remains only defined by the appended claims.
1. A container for loose foodstuffs, particularly eggs, comprising a traylet fit for
containing eggs in an ordered rectangular arrangement of as many respective containing
places, and a concave lid, intended in its closing onto the traylet, to turn its concavity
towards the latter, wherein said ordered rectangular arrangement of egg places is
defined by partition septa crossed with each other, the profile whereof extends to
occupy all the inner encumbrance of said concavity of said lid in the closed position
of the same onto the traylet.
2. The container for loose foodstuffs according to claim 1, wherein said partition septa
are upperly endowed with unloading recesses, by arriving upwards up to the inner level
of the lid, in the closed position of the latter, only in correspondence with the
side parts and the central part of their profile.
3. The container for loose foodstuffs according to claim 1 or 2, further characterized
in that the profile part of some of or all said septa that is turned onto the sides
of the container itself is endowed with recesses fit for defining hooking means that
let themselves to be engaged in the closing sense of the lid and offer reasistance
to disengagement in the opening sense of the same by corresponding complementary hooking
means arranged on the inner, concave surface of the lid.