BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION:
The present invention relates to handle bags (known also as T-shirt
bags) made of thin high strength plastic film. A handle bag of the type referred
to comprises an upper end defining the bag mouth, a lower end defining the bag
bottom, two opposite vertical folded side portions presenting each four superposed
layers of film, an intermediate portion, between the said-folded portions, presenting
two layers of superposed film, and two handles formed in the said folded side
portions at their upper ends. Said handle bags are supplied (for example) at store
checkout counters, from suitable dispensing apparatuses which may also comprise
opening means for opening the bag and holding it in a vertical position for receiving
the goods which are dropped inside same. Usually, a supply of handle bags is stored,
inside the said dispensing and opening apparatuses, in the form of a continuous
ribbon of pre-formed bags, connected in end-to-end relationship at regions which
have been weakened, for example by means of perforations, so that they can be
separated from each other by a simple tear-off action.
The object of the invention is to provide a handle bag of the above
mentioned type suitable to be supplied from said dispensing apparatuses and adapted
to solve the following problems:
- 1) the continuous ribbon formed of handle bags must be rolled up about a central
core, possibly without any side holding flanges, so as to form a roll which is
structurally firm and without any creases;
- 2) when a roll of pre-formed bags is near to depletion, the trailing end of
said roll must be connected to the leading end of a new roll so as to ensure the
continuous supply to the dispensing apparatus;
- 3) the bags must be adapted to be handled with no troubles by the apparatus
which dispenses them, which suitably positions them for filling, and which opens
them.
According to the invention, a bag of the above mentioned type is
characterized by the fact that each one of its vertical folded side portions has
a width which is not smaller than one third of the total width of the bag in its
flattened condition.
Still according to the invention, the handles of the bag present
a height which is equal to, or slightly different from, half the length of the
portion of the mouth of the bag which is included between the two inner points
at which each handle is connected to said mouth.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS:
The features of the handle bag according to the invention and the
advantages resulting therefrom will appear from the following description of some
preferred embodiments, shown merely by way of example in the attached drawings,
in which:
Figure 1 is a plan view of a handle bag according to the invention,
in its closed flattened condition;
Figure 2 is a perspective view of a roll made of a continuous ribbon
of handle bags according to the invention;
Figure 3 is an enlarged plan view of one of the connection areas
between two bags according to the invention;
Figure 4 is a perspective view of one of the adhesive bands provided
at the ends of the continuous ribbon of pre-formed bags, for the purpose of ensuring
a continuous supply of said bags to the dispensing and opening apparatus;
Figure 5 shows diagrammatically a different type of package inside
which the continuous ribbon of pre-formed bags can be gathered;
Figures 6, 7 and 8 are plan views of the ribbon of bags according
to three modified embodiments;
Figures 9, 10, 11 are cross sectional views of the bag on the line
IX-IX of Figure 1 and during successive steps of its opening operation;
Figures 9a, 10a and 11a are perspective views, complete or partial,
of the bag during the same steps of the opening operation of Figures 9, 10 and
11.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS:
Figures 1 and 9, to which reference is made first, show a handle
bag C (also called "T-shirt bag") made of thin high strength plastic film. The
bag is obtained (as it is known in the prior art) either from a continuous tube
or from a plurality of continuous sheets of suitable heat-sealable plastic film
which by means of one or more longitudinal seals are connected to each other so
as to form a continuous tube. The tube is provided with opposite and equal longitudinal
folds S1-S2 and is then provided at constant intervals P (for example of the length
of about 500-650 mm) with transverse seals 10 which close the bottom of each bag.
At a short distance from each seal 10 and at a central position, each bag-forming
portion is provided with a cutout opening 2 which gives origin to the handles M1-M2
of the bag itself, closed at the top by seals 3-103 which are aligned with each
other and parallel to said seal 10. The areas connecting the handles M1-M2 of each
bag to the bottom of the successive bag are provided with weakening slits or perforations
4-104 (to be discussed below), whereby upon subjecting the bag to a longitudinal
traction effort, said bag is torn off from the continuous ribbon.
By providing a continuous ribbon of handle bags having the sizes
of the plastics bags commonly known in the prior art, and by rolling-up said ribbon
on a central core, it was found that the resulting roll was scarcely stable. At
its lateral regions, the handle bag comprises four layers of material, while at
its intermediate region it comprises only two layers. According to the known prior
art, the typical width dimensions of a usual handle bag are as follows:
- Width of each lateral region (4 layers): 60 mm;
- Width of the intermediate region (2 layers): 170 mm.
By rolling up a ribbon of bags presenting the said dimensions according
to the prior art, the resulting roll appeared as having lateral thickenings at
the folded regions and, in contrast, it had an intermediate region, wider than
the double of said lateral regions, which created a wide recessed portion (cavity)
between said lateral thickenings. The presence of this wide recessed portion and,
first of all, the limited support of the lateral layers, caused said prominent
lateral layers to tend to collapse inwardly onto the intermediate layer, whereby
both the rolling up and successive unrolling of the roll could not be effected
with the desired uniformity to achieve a proper operation of the dispensing and
opening apparatus for which the continuous ribbon of bags was intended.
The best manner to obviate the disadvantage of the structural instability
of a roll would be the ideal condition wherein the inner sides 1-101 of the folds
S1-S2 would contact each other at the centerline of the bag. However, the bottom
of the bag would be formed completely by corresponding lower portions of the folds
and would have a funnel configuration with a lowermost central spot of very low
strength and, therefore, liable to be torn easily due to the weight of the articles
packed in a so-shaped bag.
According to the invention, it was found that it is possible to produce
a bag having a bottom of good mechanical strength, by forming the folded portions
with a total width up to the order of about 75% of the width of the flattened
bag as from Figures 1 and 2. According to a preferred embodiment, the bag according
to the invention has a width L (when flattened as in Figures 1 and 2) of 290 mm.
the folds S1-S2 each have a width L2 of 110 mm, while the central portion between
the folds has a width L3 of 70 mm. This dimensioning of the bag ensures the required
structural stability of the roll B formed by the continuous ribbon of pre-formed
bags, enables the construction of bags having good capacity and good mechanical
strength, while the width of said roll has been reduced to minimize the plan view
dimensions of the parts designed to accommodate the roll, and to mount two rolls
in proximity of each other for the purpose of feeding respective bag-dispensing
and opening apparatuses arranged close to each other.
In the manufacture and use of a continuous ribbon of pre-formed bags
as described above, it has been found that the regions provided with the weakening
perforations 4-104 (see also Figure 3) must have such a tensile strength as to
permit the roll to be properly unrolled and, at the same time, such as to permit
a leading bag to be cyclically torn apart from the following ones. For this purpose,
it has been found that the whole of weakening perforations 4-104 should not interest
more than 50% of the material connecting the handles (top) of a bag to the bottom
of the successive bag.
With reference to Figures 2 and 4, it will be noted that the handles
of the leading bag of each roll have affixed thereto adhesive bands 5 which protrude
from each handle with a suitable portion 105, also coated with adhesive and covered
with a protective tab 6, for example of silicone-coated paper. The portion 105
of the band is connected to the portion 5 by means of a weakened area 204 similar
to the area 4-104 described above. When a roll of bags is about to be exhausted,
the adhesive portions 105 of the leading bag of the new roll are deprived of the
protective tab 6 and are caused to adhere to the rear end of the last bag of the
exhausted roll, thus ensuring the required continuous feeding to the bag-dispensing
and opening apparatus. The portion 105 remains secured to the last bag of the
exhausted roll, while the portion 5 remains secured to the leading bag of the new
roll when said bags are torn apart from each other the perforation lines 204.
A further problem which has been solved by the invention is the appropriate
opening of a bag by the dispensing and opening apparatus. To achieve this object,
the handles have been dimensioned with the following ratio with respect to the
bag as specified above. The handles M1-M2 have a width L3 of about 60-65 mm and
height H of about 160 mm. With reference to Figures 9-10-11 and 9a-10a-11a, it
will be noted that the bag is opened by parallelly spacing apart the portions
X of the top mouth between the opposite handles M1-M2, as indicated by the arrows
F. The distance between the opposite ends of the portions X, along the inner side
Y of the handles M1-M2 is the double of the height of said handles, i.e. 160x2=
320 mm. The distance between the same opposite ends of the portions X, along the
length of the mouth of the bag included between the ends of each handle, is equal
to the sum of the width of the handle (60-65 mm), plus the width of two creases
of a fold S1 or S2 (110x2 = 220 mm) and plus a further width of the handle (60-65
mm), thus amounting to a total of:
(60-65) + 220 + (60-65) = from 340 to 350 mm.
It follows from the above that during the opening step of a bag,
as illustrated in sequence of Figures referred to above, the inner side of the
handles (320 mm) is tensioned in advance of the mouth portion of the bag, included
between the ends of each handle (340 mm), whereby the handles tend to be maintained
on the outer side of the mouth of the bag or anyway to arrange themselves always
in a pre-established and not random position with respect to the mouth of the
bag, as clearly shown in the sequence of Figures 9a-10a-11a. This condition facilitates
the opening of the bag and may be summarized by the following proposition: "the
height of the handles must be either equal to or slightly different from half
the distance existing along the portion of the mouth of the bag included between
the inner sides Y of each handle".
In order to give to the roll B a better structural stability (see
Figure 6), the pre-formed bags may not present the cutout openings 2 and only the
longitudinal opposite cuts 102-202 may be provided, said cuts terminating at their
lower end with a small rounded portion 7 to avoid the formation of zones of limited
strength where tearing of a filled bag could take place. In this case, the two
weakened zones presenting the perforations 4-104 would be replaced by a single
weakened zone 304 extending throughout the width of the bag, so that when the handle
bag will be torn off along said single weakened zone 304, two flaps 8 are formed
at the top thereof, which can serve to close the mouth of the filled bag.
According to the modification of Figure 7, intended to achieve the
same advantage of the embodiment of Figure 6, it may be contemplated to provide,
in addition to the side cuts 102-202, a transverse cut 302 whereby, during the
separation of a bag, the latter will have flaps 8 attached to its bottom, which
flaps may be removed successively by a tear-off action along the perforation 304.
The cuts 102-202-302 might be incomplete, so that said flaps remain connected
to the continuous ribbon of pre-formed bags only at easily tearable points, which
is merely to prevent said flaps from being of hindrance during the unrolling and
conveying of the ribbon of bags to the dispensing and opening apparatus. According
to the further modification of Figure 8, the line of perforations 304 might be
replaced by the partial perforations 4-104 so that the flaps 8 will remain connected
to the bottom of the bags, for example, to display an advertising message.
It is to be understood that the handle bag described above is intended
to be protected even if the continuous ribbon comprising a plurality of bags is
arranged, in the form of a "concertina" G with a zigzag configuration, inside
a carton D, as shown in the modification of Figure 5, in which each broken line
C represents a handle bag.