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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. In an individual case for discrete miscellaneous articles composed of a
thin molded synthetic material, the case having a substantially
rectangular body, and a substantially rectangular lid hingedly jointed to
said rectangular body, wherein the improvement comprises:
first and second flush joints formed by cooperating elements in the body
and the lid, each flush joint consisting of a male member and a female
member, wherein said first joint is formed on the four rectilinear edges
of the case and said second joint is formed in a shape encircling the
outer periphery of the miscellaneous article,
whereby said first and second flush joints allow for tight closure between
the case body and the case lid and simultaneously stiffens the edges of
the case body and the case lid to provide a very rigid case for better
protection of the miscellaneous article.
2. In an individual case for phonograph records composed of a thin molded
synthetic material and having an aperture in the center thereof and an
annular recessed portion to receive the grooved portion of the record, the
case having a substantially rectangular body, and a substantially
rectangular lid hingedly jointed to said rectangular body at one edge,
wherein the improvement comprises:
first and second flush joints formed by cooperating elements in the body
and the lid, each flush joint consisting of a male member and a female
member, wherein said first joint is formed on the four rectilinear edges
of the case and said second joint is circular and encircles the outer
periphery of the record, with said male member of said second joint
determining the position of the space occupied by the record and also
pre-centering the record in the body of the case;
whereby said first and second flush joints allow for a tight closure
between the case body and the case lid and simultaneously stiffens the
edges of the case body and the case lid to provide a very rigid case for
better protection of the record.
3. A case according to claim 2, wherein a portion of said body of the case
forms said male elements of said first and second joints, and said female
elements of said first and second flush joints are formed by a portion of
said lid.
4. A case according to claim 2, wherein said record has a spindle hole and
said centering pin for the record passes through said spindle hole in the
record and extends up to the lid to keep the record in place, and once the
case has been closed, the centering pin abuts said case lid, thus
preventing, in cooperation with said two flush joints, the record from
being crushed.
5. A case according to claim 4, wherein said centering pin is conical to
exercise a slight wedging effect against the inner edge of said spindle
hole in the record.
6. A case in accordance with claim 5, wherein said male element of said
first joint is interrupted at the four corners of said case body, to
facilitate opening and closure thereof, while said female element of said
first joint is continuous on the lid periphery thereby insuring rigidity
of said first joint.
7. A case according to claim 2, wherein said male element of said second
joint contains a notch to facilitate lifting the record from its space.
8. A case according to claim 2, wherein a portion of said body and of said
lid each form two plane circular bearing zones for support of the record,
corresponding respectively to the record center label and the record
ungrooved periphery, another portion of said body and of said lid form an
annular recess corresponding to the grooved part of the record such that
the grooves stand free of said body and said lid of the case, said recess
also contributing by the circular edges thereof to stiffening said body
and said lid of the case.
9. A case according to claim 2, wherein tabs facilitating opening of the
case are formed respectively on one edge of said lid and of said body,
said tabs also being usable as filing markers.
10. A case according to claim 2, wherein the case is made wholly of
plastic, the lid, and if desired, the body being printed or embossed to
show any desirable inscription.
11. A case according to claim 2 further including at least one stiffener
member between said female members of said first and second joints.
12. A case according to claim 2 further including at least one stiffener
member between said male members of said first and second flush joints. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Considerable progress has been made in improving the fidelity of phonograph
records. High-fidelity systems have attained a remarkable degree of
perfection. Searching studies have been made of listening areas
themselves.
It is curious to note that no parallel effort has been made to improve the
holding and storage of records, while the slightest scratch on their
grooves or the tiniest dust deposit causes spurious noise which decreases
with the fidelity of the reproduction. From their earliest days, records
have been slipped into jackets. The inevitable friction between the jacket
and the record causes damage to the grooves and electrostatic charges
which attract dust. Moreover, to remove a record from its jacket one must
grasp its edge with at least two fingers in the area of the outer grooves.
Finally, records are often stored vertically, and their entire weight bears
on the point where the record rests on its support. This can cause general
warping of the record, causing listening imperfections which become more
striking as reproduction improves.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The object of the present invention is an individual case for phonograph
records, eliminating all the drawbacks inherent in the jackets presently
used and able to shelter the record from all harmful factors to which it
hitherto has been exposed: mechanical friction, eletrostatic charges,
humidity and dust. The case made according to the present invention lends
itself both to flat stacking and vertical storage of records. It enables
them to be easily identified and selected, and moreover is an attractive
and effective presentation display. Finally, it does not wear out, is easy
to manufacture and is low in cost.
According to the essential characteristic of the invention, this case, made
in thin molded synthetic material and with a square body and lid joined at
one edge, is distinguished by the fact that its body and lid form the
cooperating elements of two flush joints, keeping the case sealed and
rigid and enabling the record contained therein to be centered.
Moreover, according to the invention, the body of the case forms the male
elements of these two joints; the female elements are formed by the lid.
It is advantageous for the first joint, formed on the four rectilinear
edges of the case, to stiffen the edges of its body and its lid, while the
second joint, which is circular, determines the position of the record by
its male part such as to pre-center it in the body of the case.
Another important characteristic of the invention consists of the fact that
it includes a centering pin for the record, extending as far as the lid to
keep it in place when the case is closed, and resisting its being crushed,
in cooperation with the two flush joints.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Other features of the invention will be apparent from the description
hereinbelow of a preferred embodiment of the invention schematically
represented without consideration of scale or proportions in the attached
drawings, wherein:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of the open case of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a front vertical section of the case of FIG. 1 when shut and
containing a record;
FIG. 3 is a front vertical section of the case of FIG. 1 showing the case
open.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
As shown in FIG. 1, the body of the case, generally indicated at 20, whose
lid generally indicated at 2, is hingedly jointed to one edge thereof
generally indicated at 21. This case is obtained by any appropriate
process for molding plastic, for example, the hot-stamping process for
polyvinyl chloride. One can see that its body 1 and lid 2 form the
cooperating elements of two flush joints, respectively generally
designated at 3 and 4; the male elements 5 and 6 of these two joints being
formed in the body 1 of the case 20, the corresponding female elements 7
and 8 being formed on the lid 2. FIG. 1 clearly shows that the first joint
3 comprising the four rectilinear edges of the case, constitutes a ridge
which stiffens the edges of the case, while second circular joint 4
constitutes a second stiffening ridge for the case 20. The male part 6 of
the second circular joint 4 determines the space 9 for the record D placed
therein.
Moreover, according to the present invention, a centering pin 10 is formed
in the body 1 of the case 20. FIG. 2 clearly shows that this pin 10
extends upward after engaging the center hole of record D to the wall of
lid 2 which it supports at its center, thus resisting crushing of the case
when several such cases are stacked. This reinforcement to prevent
crushing of the case is also effected by the two flush joints 3 and 4.
It may be seen that pin 10 is conical, and that it bears against the edge
of the center spindle hole of record D placed in the case to exercise a
slight holding pressure. The male part 6 of circular joint 4 constitutes a
means of pre-centering the record, facilitating its placement in the case,
and engagement of pin 10 in the hole thereof. Thus, it is in fact the pin
which immobilizes the record from lateral movement within space 9.
To remove the record D from the case 20, a notch 11 is provided in the male
part 6 of joint 4, preferably opposite one of the corners of the case 20.
To prevent air pressure from hindering opening of the case, whose surface
is very large in relation to its thickness, at least one venting hole can
be pierced at any point thereof. This venting hole is preferably placed at
the top of pin 10 itself or the corresponding part of lid 2, as indicated
at 12a and 12b.
It is known that it is often difficult to open plastic airtight boxes with
a peripheral flush joint, for example, rectangular utility boxes. To
remedy this disadvantage, and still according to the invention, the male
part 5 of the first joint 3 is made discontinuous at the corners of the
case 20, which facilitates the easy mating of the elements of this male
part 5 with the corresponding female parts 7 of the lid 2 and the opening
of lid 2.
However, it is important for the closed case to be quite rigid and, for
this purpose, the female part 7 of the first joint 3 is preferably made
continuous around the entire periphery of the case.
It is essential that the grooved area G of the record be protected from all
contact and all friction. According to the present invention, this result
is obtained by arranging, both in the body 1 of the case 20 and the lid 2,
annular bearing zones 13 and 14 in the body 1 of the case 20, and 15 and
16 in the lid 2, these zones being the only ones in which the record
contacts the case. These zones are spaced to engage the sides of record D
in the portion of the surface at the beginning of the record containing no
reproducible sounds, i.e., in the ungrooved periphery, and at the center
of the record in the region corresponding to the printed label. This
ensures that the grooved area G containing the recorded sounds to be
reproduced from the record remains untouched. It will be observed that the
circular ridges in the case thus created constitute additional stiffening
elements for the case as a whole.
Opening will be facilitated by tabs 17 and 18 arranged respectively in the
molding on the case 20 body 1 and on the lid 2, said tabs coinciding when
the case is closed. They can also be used as thumb-tabs or filing markers.
The case in question can be made of transparent, opaque or colored
material. In the first case the whole of the record it contains will be
visible when the case is closed, and its circular central label will then
be clearly legible.
However, it is also possible, for advertising or other purposes, to provide
a circular label with a diameter equal to that of the record lodged in the
annular recess made on lid 2 between supports 15 and 16 which will
efficaciously center the label.
If, on the other hand, the case is made of opaque plastic, this annular
zone of the lid 2 and possibly matching angular zone of the case's body 1
can both be embossed, engraved or printed with any inscriptions and
markings. For this purpose it will be easy to provide an interchangeable
central part in the mold in which it is cast, corresponding to the zone in
question.
Experience has shown that a plastic satisfactory for forming the case
itself does not always lend itself to making the hinged joint 21 between
the body 1 of the case 20 and its lid 2. Forming the hinges themselves
would make the case exorbitantly expensive. This is why, according to
another advantageous embodiment of the invention, the joint between body 1
and lid 2 of the case 20 is provided by a simple band 19 straddling the
body 1 and the lid 2, and made of an appropriate material able to
withstand repeated folding. This band 19 is applied either by cementing
with a suitable adhesive or by high-frequency electric welding.
It appears clearly from the description hereinabove that the protection
provided for the record inside the case in question is perfect, whether
the cases are stacked or on end. In the first case, the combined action of
first and second joints 3 and 4, center pin 10 and supports 13, 14, 15 and
16 prevents the case from being crushed in any way. In the second case,
the record never rests upon its edge. It is, in fact, suspended on center
pin 10 when case 20 is not lying flat.
Moreover, the labyrinth composed of two successive joints 3 and 4,
effectively prevents dust and moisture from reaching the record.
It is always easy to open the case due to the presence of tabs 16 and 17
and venting hole 12.
Of course many detailed modifications could be made to the various elements
comprising the phonograph record case, a preferred embodiment thereof is
represented here, without thereby departing from the framework of the
invention. For example, in at least one of the angular zones of lid 2
between joint elements 7 and 8 an inflated part could be provided, formed
in one piece with the lid, acting as an additional stiffener and able to
constitute a pocket containing, for example, a record-cleaning cloth.
Finally, although the present specification relates especially to a
phonograph record case, the invention also applies to construction of
cases intended for packing and displaying other objects with the same main
features as record cases (except, in certain cases, elimination of the
center pin). Among such objects one may cite, for example, magnetic
recording tape reels and movie film reels; articles of clothing such as
neckties, shirts, scarves, and hose; miscellaneous objects such as
eyeglasses, etc.
In these types of applications the case is also composed of a body and a
lid engaging one another by a set of flush joints, the male elements of
which are located on the case body and the female elements on the lid; the
first joint is formed on all or part of the periphery of the case while
the second is formed on the surface of the case and its shape can be
adapted to the object to be enclosed, for example, circular (in the case
of recording tape or film reels) or elliptical (in the case of neckties).
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Description  |
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