An acid carboy consisting of a generally cylindrical stainless steel tank having elastomeric skirts at the ends thereof characterized by a novel cross-sectional configuration whereby the carboy can be handled in a variety of ways without substantial damage.
A container for liquids having a substantially cylindrical stainless steel hollow body and a protective chime of rigid or semi-rigid resilient plastics material at at least one end of the body, characterised in that the body has a rib adjacent the said one end of the body, the chime extends over the rib and to lock the chime to the body a portion of the chime has been deformed behind the rib by a hot moulding process.
Stackable plastic bottle having a bulging base which is resistant to high internal pressure and which are able for packaging sparkling drinks comprising a base wall and a neck wall provided with an orifice in which the base wall and the neck wall each possess a central zone which, by virtue of a shoulder, projects relative to the peripheral zones of these walls.
A blow molded barrel having its peripheral top and bottom walls formed unitarily from thermoplastic synthetic resin has at least a lifting and transport ring formed at its upper edge at the junction of the top wall and the peripheral wall and welded to the barrel body. The ring has a trapezoidal head which is at least limitedly elastic and is connected to the weld flange by an intermediate region which is also at least limitedly elastic to reduce the transmission of shock and thereby improve the life of the well junction between the ring and the barrel body.
An improved cask assembly for forming a cask that is adapted to transport radioactive materials of a particular activity is disclosed herein. The cask assembly comprises an outer container having an opening leading to its interior, and a plurality of inner shield inserts, each of which includes an inner wall whose shape is substantially complementary to the shape of the interior of the outer container and which is insertable therein to form a cask. The exterior walls of the inner shield inserts are formed from different shielding compositions, such as depleted uranium or lead, and are also of different thicknesses. The particular shield inserted within the interior of the outer container is chosen to match the intensity and type of radiation emitted by the waste to be transported so that the assembled cask hold a maximum amount of the particular material to be transported without exceeding a surface radiation of 200 millirems at any point. To facilitate the insertion and removal of the shield inserts, the closure opening is at least as wide as the width of its interior. Either a screw-type closure means of a breech-lock closure means is used to seal the container opening.