Curved tear guide on tubular packagings

Flexible bags – Bag having means to facilitate opening it by severing bag...

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C426S112000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06637940

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a flexible tubular package, which is more particularly suitable for foodstuffs in the form of lumps or portions and contains the respective product in a welded flexible plastic tube.
Flexible tubular packages are conventional in many fields for the packaging of foodstuffs and the like. This more particularly applies for foodstuffs in a lump form or in the form of small portions, which are intended to be consumed in portions, be it as a staple foodstuff as an ingredient for the preparation of meals or as a snack for immediate consumption. Flexible tubular packages are simple to produce and to fill, are readily stored and handled, offer effective protection for the packaged foodstuff and make it possible to label the foodstuff either directly on the flexible tubular material or using adhesive labels.
Requirements as regards hygiene are fulfilled to their full extent.
Flexible, tubular packages as a rule comprise a tubular foil, whose two ends are sealed by bonding or by welding. The packaged material is then protected against the effects of the surroundings in an optimum manner. For removal of the contents it is necessary for the package to be ripped or cut open. If scissors are not to hand, ripping open is the only possibility, which generally starts at one of the welded sides. Frequently, aids to ripping open are provided, as for instance in the form of a rip thread incorporated in the material, or a notch which serves for starting the ripping operation. However, even with a notch the ripping action may get out of control so that the flexible tubular package is torn open to a greater length than really intended. It is possible to assume that in many or even in the majority of cases, the tearing open operation does not result in an opening which has the desired size.
The consequences can be inconvenient, more particularly in the case of liquid contents of the package.
Designs with a sort of ruler incorporated in the package have been suggested for plastic bags. However there is then no control of the opening operation and frequently the tear goes astray.
If contents of the package are intended for immediate consumption, then there are relatively few problems. Problems do occur when only part of the package contents are to be removed and consumed whereas the remainder is to be kept and stored in the package. In this case a relatively small opening is desirable whose size is set by the size of one piece or lump of the contents of the package. Such an opening with a set size is also desirable for hygiene reasons. On the contrary however for reasons of handling the opening must not be too small.
SUMMARY
One object of the invention is accordingly the creation of a flexible tubular package rendering possible the provision of an opening of a predetermined size in line with the size of the foodstuff packed in the package. The opening is to be able to be made without external means by ripping open by hand in a reliable manner while leaving the container intact so that storage of the remaining contents is readily possible.
This aim is to be attained with a package of the type initially mentioned which adjacent to a welded seam possesses a rip open means and is provided with a stick on means, whose edge adjacent to the welded seam is in the form of a curved tear off edge, which is able to control a tear, which extends from the tear open means, and to direct it to the edge of the package.
The flexible tubular package of the invention is more particularly suitable for foodstuffs, which are intended as provisions on a journey. These will include for instance bars of chocolate, muesli, vegetable substances or fruits, which are intended as snacks while under way, as a school break or also as “energy ration” for examinations, discussions or quite generally as a snack between meals during work. Here conventional snacks such as nuts, peanuts, potato chips, flips, cookies, sweets or the like, come into question as well which are intended to be eaten in small portions or in a small number, while the remains in the already opened package. Finally, the tear open means is also suitable for packages with liquid or non-food articles. It is certainly not limited to the food sector.
The package in accordance with the invention is more especially suitable for use in conjunction with the package in accordance with the German patent publication (utility model) 29,715,892, which is intended to be stapled, together with an attachment means, on or in some object.
In the case of the flexible tubular package in accordance with the invention it is a question of a specially designed conventional package, whose two ends of the tube are sealed by a bonded or welded seam. In the case of such a flexible tubular package a stick-on sheet is provided, which on one of its edges adjacent to the welded seam has a curved rip edge. It will be clear that the stick-on sheet will consist of a suitably tear-proof material and more particularly paper or plastic. In order to ensure that the rip edge can perform its intended function, adjacent to the welded seam on the package there is, in a zone directly contiguous to, and running toward the rip edge a tear open means, as for instance in the form of a notch or a cut. This tear open means naturally does not extend as far as the interior of the package and in fact terminates in the welded zone. Many flexible tubular packages are toothed or ridged at their sealing weld seam which may be readily utilized as a tear open means. In this case it is convenient to mark the point where the tear is to be started in color.
The tear open means is, when the package is held upright—with the weld seam at the top end—above the curved rip edge of the stick-on sheet. The stick-on sheet is accordingly arranged at a comparatively small distance from the welded seam, for instance at a distance of 0.2 to 5 cm. The distance is in this respect dependent on the size of the package and of the stick-on sheet and furthermore on the size of the opening to be produced in the package.
The rip edge assumes a curved in the form of and is suitable for a tear starting at the tear open means and directing such tear to the edge of the package. More especially the curved form in this case ensures that the rip edge and the direction of the tear are always at a convenient acute angle to one another. Straying of the tear from the desired course will not occur.
In accordance with a preferred development of the invention the stick-on sheet may be trained around the edge of the package, it being in this case expedient for it to extend on the rear side in alignment with the front side. The modification of the design is more particularly convenient in the case of packages with lateral gussets.
A stick-on sheet trained around the edge of the flexible tubular package, and more particularly in the form of a strip, makes a substantial contribution to stabilizing the opening part of the package. This renders possible the use of thinner foils or, respectively, of foils of other, less tear resistant materials.
It is convenient for the rip edge to have an S-like and more particularly a sinusoidal course, the curve drawing close to the edge of the stick-on sheet in the top part, that is to say in the part adjacent to seam, it running toward a lateral edge of the stick-on sheet at the other end.
The amplitude of the rip edge with such a sinusoidal form will then conveniently amount to 10 to 20% of the length of the curve. The curve will more particularly extend about an axis, which intersects the sides of the stick-on sheet at an angle of 120 to 1500 and more particularly 135°. An angle of intersection of with the two edges of the stick-on sheet will then, as related to the triangle formed by the axis and the missing limbs of the stick-on sheet, an isosceles triangle.
More particularly in the case of stick-on sheets in the form of labels it is particularly convenient for the S-like curve, which draws close to the top edge and, respectively, the side adjacent to th

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