[go: up one dir, main page]

US2775483A - Aerosol bomb filling and dispensing valve - Google Patents

Aerosol bomb filling and dispensing valve Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2775483A
US2775483A US483114A US48311455A US2775483A US 2775483 A US2775483 A US 2775483A US 483114 A US483114 A US 483114A US 48311455 A US48311455 A US 48311455A US 2775483 A US2775483 A US 2775483A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
valve
casing
container
cap
tubular
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US483114A
Inventor
Jr Richard E Treharne
Adolph J Wegmann
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Scovill Inc
Original Assignee
Scovill Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Scovill Inc filed Critical Scovill Inc
Priority to US483114A priority Critical patent/US2775483A/en
Priority to GB1717/56A priority patent/GB792781A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2775483A publication Critical patent/US2775483A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65DCONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
    • B65D83/00Containers or packages with special means for dispensing contents
    • B65D83/14Containers for dispensing liquid or semi-liquid contents by internal gaseous pressure, i.e. aerosol containers comprising propellant
    • B65D83/42Filling or charging means
    • B65D83/425Delivery valves permitting filling or charging

Definitions

  • aerosol bombs are now extensively. used to discharge in the form. of, an aerosol spray, insecticides, fungicides, deodorants andthelike; andalso .-to discharge in .the form of a viscous. foam, shaving cream and the like;
  • aerosol bombs usually consist of. a non-refillable container having therein a solution or a suspension of the substance, tor be discharged. together with apropellant, which isgaseous-atroom temperature, andi a valve assembly for controlling the discharge of thesubstancewith the. propellant from the container.
  • the primary object of the present. invention is to overcome the drawbacks aforementioned.
  • a further object! is to provide a filling and dispensing valve which will enable aerosol bombs to be rapidly charged with both the active substance and the propellant withoutrecourse to, refrigeration.
  • a still, further object of the invention is to provide a relatively simple valve assembly. for aerosol bombs which is made substantially of thermoplastic material.
  • Figure 1 shows an embodiment of the invention, whereinthe container is shown indiametrical section and. the valve assembly in elevation; the combination of thecontainer and the valve assembly being hereinafter referred to as a bomb.
  • Fig. 2 shows a diametrical sectional view of the valve assembly.
  • Fig. 3 shows a sectional view taken along the line 33 of Fig. 2.
  • bomb may be said to consist of acontainer 10, the open top of which is closed by a closure'member; 11. having mounted therein a valve assembly 12.
  • The-container 10 may be of any preferred construction and is adapted to. contain a solution or a suspension of the substance to be discharged, which substance, independently of the propellant, may. be introduced into the container either prior to or subsequent to the closure member 11 being bead-seamed tothe container, as shown at 13.
  • Thevalve assembly.12 as shown in detail in Fig. 2, consists essentially of a two-part tubular casing 14, 15, suitablyheld in assembled relation by the closure member 11 as. hereinafter described, said casing having a valve chamber16 within which is mounted a check valve 17 adapted to be held against a valve seat by a helical coil-spring 18, the check. valve having a valve stem 19 and the casing being intended to have telescopically mounted thereon a cap member 20.
  • the upper member 14 ofthe, two-part casing is of tubular form, the bore therethrough being formed with different diameters 21, 22 and 23, the diameter 21 being slightly smaller than the diameter 22, and forming therewith an overhanging shoulder 24, the bore 22 being larger than-the bore 23 and forming therewith a shoulder 25 and the bore, 23 tapering axially inwardly from the shoulder 25 to its'lower end.
  • the upper end of the tubular casing'part 14 is chamfered or relieved, as shown at. 26,;and said casing part intermediate its ends is formed with anoutwardly extending radial flange 27.
  • the casing part 14 is preferably formed of deformableelastic material such as polyethylene and the inner end surface 28 of said member serves asthefvalve seat for the check valve 17.
  • the second or lower part 15 of the two-part casing at its upper end is formed with an outwardly-extending radial flange 29 seating against the flange 27 andthe seating face of the flange 29 is formed with an annular, sharp, axially-extending tooth or rib 30 biting into and providing a fluid-tight seal between the casing parts 14 and 15.
  • Theflanges 27 and 29 are held in assembled fluid-tight contacting relation by a central tubular portion 31 on the closure 11, said portion 31 being formed by a.reentrant flange 32 and a clamping flange 33.
  • the casingpart. 15 at itslower end is formed with a tubular extension 34. adapted to frictionally receive and hold a tube 35 which extends to the bottom of the container.
  • valve chamber 16 are a plurality of circumferentially spaced, axially-extending, ribs 36, the tops '37 of said ribs providing a stop shoulder for limiting the inwardmovement of the valve 17 while not impairing the passage of fluid through the valve chamber during the filling or charging of the container with a propellant.
  • the casing, part 15 is formed of harder and more rigid material than the casing part 14 and is preferably formed of nylon.
  • the valve stem 19, as herein shown, is of generally chamfered rectangular form in transverse cross-section and of a cross-sectionalarea to loosely move within the bore 23 in the valve casing member 14, and adjacent the Patented Dec. 25,, 1956 check'valve 17 whereat the stem is enlarged, as shown at--38,-the stem is of cylindrical form, and of an axial length to extend into the bore 23 with a relatively small amount of clearance.
  • the length of the cylindrical enlargement 38 is such thatwhen the check valve 17 is unseated to rest upon the tops 37 of the ribs 36, the enlargement will have been moved below the valve seat 28 and the valve will be fully opened.
  • valve stem 19 When the valve is closed, the valve stem 19 will protrude through the top of the upper part of the casing 14 a substantial amount.
  • the check valve 17 and valve stem 19 is formed of harder and more rigid material than the casing part 14 and its valve seat 28 and is preferably formed of nylon.
  • the closure cap member 20 which is adapted to telescopically engage over the upper portion of the two-part valve casing is formed with a central, inwardly-extending, hollow projection 39 providing an annular groove 40.
  • the exterior wall of the projection 39 is formed with a normal diameter slightly larger than the diameter of the bore 22 in the casing part 14, and rearwardly adjacent its face end is slightly out back or reduced in diameter to provide a shoulder 41.
  • the closure cap 20 is of a length such that when the valve stem 19 engages the base of the socket in the central projection 39, the lower end of the cap will be spaced from the flange 33 an axial distance which is substantially less than the axial length of the cylindrical enlargement 38 on the valve stem so that, when the cap is pressed downwardly to unseat the valve 17, the enlargement 38 will still remain within thetbore 23 and thus limit the area of clearance between the enlargement 38 and the bore 23 and hence the outflow of fluid through the valve assembly.
  • a portion of the outer wall of the closure cap is flattened, as shown at 42, and, extending inwardly from said flattened portion near its top, is formed with an opening having different diameters 43, 44, 45 and 46, communicating with the opening in the central projection 39.
  • Force-fitted into the bores 43, 44 and 45 is a. nozzle 47 having a bore therethrough communicating with the bore portion 46.
  • the closure cap 20 is also preferably formed of deformable elastic material such as polyethylene, as is also the nozzle 47,
  • the valve assembly 12 minus the closure cap 20 is assembled by disposing the valve 17 and spring 18 within the casing part 15, after which the casing part 14 is inserted into the casing 15 to bring the flanges 27 and 29 into overlying relation; the assembly then mounted within the central tubular portion 31 of the closure member 11 to seat the flange 29 on the flange 32, whereupon the flange 33 is swaged over the flange 27 to cause the annular tooth 30 to bite into the flange 27 and provide a leak-tight seal therewith.
  • the container may be then charged the desirable quantity of solution or suspension of the substance to be discharged from the bomb when completed or said substance may be charged into the container after the valve assembly has been mounted in the container.
  • valve assembly together with the closure member 11, are mounted in the container and the closure member bead-seamed to the container, as shown at 13.
  • a desirable propellant such as Freon under sufficient superatmospheric pressure to maintain it in the liquid state is then charged into the container through the valve assembly, a suitable chuck being employed which will form a fluid-tight seal with the exterior of the valve casing and preferably'unseat the valve to its maximum extent.
  • the valve when thus unseated will have the enlargement 38 of the valve stem located wholly within the valve chamber 16 and will thus not impair the rate of flow through the valve in the filling direction.
  • the chuck When the desired amount of propellant has been charged into the container, the chuck is withdrawn, whereupon the valve will seat owing to the combined force of the closure spring 18 and the pressure of the propellant within the container.
  • the closure cap member 20 is then applied by forcing the central projection 39 through the bore 21, which action will be readily accomplished because of the deformability of the central projection and the casing member.
  • the hooked end 41 on the central projection After the hooked end 41 on the central projection has passed beyond the shoulder 24, the inner end of said projection will seek to assume its normal diameter and provide a frictional, leak-tight sliding seal with the bore portions 21 and 22.
  • the bomb thus provided may be discharged by pressing downwardly upon the cap member 20, which movement will be limited by engagement of the lower end of the cap with the flange 33 and will alsorestrict the opening through the bore 23 to the difference in diameters betweenthe cylindrical portion 38 on the valve stem and the diameter of the bore at the valve seat 28.
  • the aerosol after passing through the restricted passage, will expand upon reaching the bore 23 and bore 22, then will be again restricted by the passage around the valve stem within the central projection 39 and again expand in passing through the nozzle 47, thus providing a very effective atomized spray of the aerosol.
  • the flattened surface 42 on the cap will serve, by the sense of feeling, to apprise the user as to the location of the nozzle and the point of discharge of the spray.
  • the invention provides an aerosol bomb which eliminates the necessity for the use of refrigeration machinery and for the filling of the bomb under refrigeration, and the further testing of the bomb by re-heating, and thereby provide a substantial saving in the cost of filling aerosol bombs.
  • a valve assembly comprising a tubular casing having therein, a valve chamber, a tubular valve seat defining one end of the valve chamber and a check valve in said chamber movable into and out of engagement with said valve seat, said valve having a valve stem extending through said valve seat and having an enlargement adjacent the check valve adapted to substantially fill the end of the passage in the valve seat adjacent the check valve when the valve is seated and to provide a restricted opening through the valve seat when the valve is moved away from said seat a predetermined distance, and to substantially enlarge said passage in the valve seat when the valve is moved away from said seat an axial distance greater than the axial dimension of the enlargement on the valve stem, a cap member telescopically mounted on the casing adapted to engage the valve stem to unseat the valve to the predetermined distance throughout which limit of movement the enlargement on the valve stem will provide the restricted opening through the valve seat and cooperating parts on the cap and casing for providing a fluid-tight seal between said casing and said cap and for
  • a valve assembly comprising a tubular casing formed of two tubular parts, each having an axial bore therethrough and a peripheral flange, with the flanges disposed in abutting facial contact and the bores in axial alignment, one of the tubular casing parts being formed of elastomeric, readily deformable, material which provides the valve seat, the other tubular casing part being formed of tough, dimensionally stable, material having an axially extending rib on the abutting face of the flange, a carrier having a central tubular part the end portions of which are flanged over the peripheral portions of the flanges on the tubular casing parts for holding said tubular casing parts in fluid-tight engagement with the annular rib in biting engagement with the flange on the other tubular part, said tubular casing parts providing the casing with a valve seat and a valve chamber, and a check valve mounted in the Valve chamber for engaging the valve seat.
  • valve assembly comprising a casing formed of two tubular parts each having an axial bore therethrough and a peripheral flange with the flanges disposed and held in abutting facial fluidtight contact and with the bores in axial alinement, one of said tubular parts extending outwardly of the container and being formed of elastomeric deformable material, a check valve within said casing having a valve stem eX- tending through the elastomeric tubular part, a cap member formed of elastomeric deformable material telescopically mounted on the elastomeric tubular part adapted to engage the valve stem to unseat the check valve, a discharge opening in the valve cap and cooperating parts on the valve cap and the elastomeric tubular part providing a fiuidtight seal between said cap and tubular part as the cap is telescopically moved relatively to said tubular tubular

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Dispersion Chemistry (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Containers And Packaging Bodies Having A Special Means To Remove Contents (AREA)

Description

R. E. TREHARNE, JR., ETAL 2,775,483
AEROSOL BOMB FILLING AND DISPENSING VALVE Dec. 25, 1956 Filed Jan. 20, 1955 Mimi.
By idol 9k J. Wymann W MW mlfi ig United States Patent f AEROSOL BOMB FILLING A-ND DISPENSING VALVE Richard E. Treharne, Jr., Lindenhurst, and Adolph J. Wegmann, Glen Cove, N. Y., assignors to Scovill Manufacturing Company, Waterbury, Conn., a corpo ration of Connecticut Application January 20, 1955, SerialNo. 483,114 3 Claims. c1; 299-95 The. present invention relates to aerosol bombs and the like and-more particularly to a fillingand dispensing valve assembly for suchbombs.
So-called aerosol bombs are now extensively. used to discharge in the form. of, an aerosol spray, insecticides, fungicides, deodorants andthelike; andalso .-to discharge in .the form of a viscous. foam, shaving cream and the like; Present day aerosol bombs usually consist of. a non-refillable container having therein a solution or a suspension of the substance, tor be discharged. together with apropellant, which isgaseous-atroom temperature, andi a valve assembly for controlling the discharge of thesubstancewith the. propellant from the container.
Filling of the containers through the. dispensing valve has heretofore been found to be too slow and costly, wherefore the conventional practice is to fill thecontainer with both the substance to be discharged and. the propellant beforev the; closure provided with the control valve is securedon the container. To dothis, refrigeration. is employed to transformvthe propellant from its normally gaseous state to' theliquid state and the container is filled with the desired substance and the propellant through the open top of the: container, after. which the closure and valve assembly is secured to the container. The operations of filling the container and securing the closure and. valve assembly is carried out in a refrigerated atmosphere and, although said operations are rapidly performed, they present several drawbacks, to wit:
(a): The required refrigeration machinery is costly and expensive to operate;
(b) Condensed moisture may getinto the container and render the dispenser inoperative becauseof ice formation. at the valve;
,(c); The filled containers, with the valve assembly secured.- thereto, must be tested at 130 F. for leakage, which means that the previously chilled and filled containers must be heated on a hot water bathor its equivalent; and
(d): Foam products cannot be handled by this method. 1
The primary object of the present. invention is to overcome the drawbacks aforementioned.
A further object! is to provide a filling and dispensing valve which will enable aerosol bombs to be rapidly charged with both the active substance and the propellant withoutrecourse to, refrigeration. 1
A still, further object of the invention is to provide a relatively simple valve assembly. for aerosol bombs which is made substantially of thermoplastic material.
The foregoing and other objects of the invention, not specifically enumerated are accomplished by providing a novel filling and dispensing valve assembly through which the flow rate of fluid. in the filling direction. is much faster than the flow rate in the discharge direction, and charging the propellant into the container under sufiicient super-atmospheric pressure to maintain the propellant in the liquid state. construction and arrangement of parts will be readily The invention and the novel 1 lee 2. understood from the detailed description whichfollows, when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Figure 1 shows an embodiment of the invention, whereinthe container is shown indiametrical section and. the valve assembly in elevation; the combination of thecontainer and the valve assembly being hereinafter referred to as a bomb.
Fig. 2 shows a diametrical sectional view of the valve assembly.
Fig. 3, shows a sectional view taken along the line 33 of Fig. 2.
Referring first to Fig l of the drawings, the aerosol;
bomb may be said to consist of acontainer 10, the open top of which is closed by a closure'member; 11. having mounted therein a valve assembly 12. The-container 10 may be of any preferred construction and is adapted to. contain a solution or a suspension of the substance to be discharged, which substance, independently of the propellant, may. be introduced into the container either prior to or subsequent to the closure member 11 being bead-seamed tothe container, as shown at 13.
Thevalve assembly.12, as shown in detail in Fig. 2, consists essentially of a two-part tubular casing 14, 15, suitablyheld in assembled relation by the closure member 11 as. hereinafter described, said casing having a valve chamber16 within which is mounted a check valve 17 adapted to be held against a valve seat by a helical coil-spring 18, the check. valve having a valve stem 19 and the casing being intended to have telescopically mounted thereon a cap member 20.
The upper member 14 ofthe, two-part casing is of tubular form, the bore therethrough being formed with different diameters 21, 22 and 23, the diameter 21 being slightly smaller than the diameter 22, and forming therewith an overhanging shoulder 24, the bore 22 being larger than-the bore 23 and forming therewith a shoulder 25 and the bore, 23 tapering axially inwardly from the shoulder 25 to its'lower end. The upper end of the tubular casing'part 14 is chamfered or relieved, as shown at. 26,;and said casing part intermediate its ends is formed with anoutwardly extending radial flange 27. The casing part 14 is preferably formed of deformableelastic material such as polyethylene and the inner end surface 28 of said member serves asthefvalve seat for the check valve 17.
The second or lower part 15 of the two-part casing at its upper end is formed with an outwardly-extending radial flange 29 seating against the flange 27 andthe seating face of the flange 29 is formed with an annular, sharp, axially-extending tooth or rib 30 biting into and providing a fluid-tight seal between the casing parts 14 and 15. Theflanges 27 and 29 are held in assembled fluid-tight contacting relation by a central tubular portion 31 on the closure 11, said portion 31 being formed by a.reentrant flange 32 and a clamping flange 33. The casingpart. 15 at itslower end is formed with a tubular extension 34. adapted to frictionally receive and hold a tube 35 which extends to the bottom of the container. Formedin the valve chamber 16 are a plurality of circumferentially spaced, axially-extending, ribs 36, the tops '37 of said ribs providing a stop shoulder for limiting the inwardmovement of the valve 17 while not impairing the passage of fluid through the valve chamber during the filling or charging of the container with a propellant. The casing, part 15 is formed of harder and more rigid material than the casing part 14 and is preferably formed of nylon.
The valve stem 19, as herein shown, is of generally chamfered rectangular form in transverse cross-section and of a cross-sectionalarea to loosely move within the bore 23 in the valve casing member 14, and adjacent the Patented Dec. 25,, 1956 check'valve 17 whereat the stem is enlarged, as shown at--38,-the stem is of cylindrical form, and of an axial length to extend into the bore 23 with a relatively small amount of clearance. The length of the cylindrical enlargement 38 is such thatwhen the check valve 17 is unseated to rest upon the tops 37 of the ribs 36, the enlargement will have been moved below the valve seat 28 and the valve will be fully opened. When the valve is closed, the valve stem 19 will protrude through the top of the upper part of the casing 14 a substantial amount. The check valve 17 and valve stem 19 is formed of harder and more rigid material than the casing part 14 and its valve seat 28 and is preferably formed of nylon.
The closure cap member 20 which is adapted to telescopically engage over the upper portion of the two-part valve casing is formed with a central, inwardly-extending, hollow projection 39 providing an annular groove 40. The exterior wall of the projection 39 is formed with a normal diameter slightly larger than the diameter of the bore 22 in the casing part 14, and rearwardly adjacent its face end is slightly out back or reduced in diameter to provide a shoulder 41. The closure cap 20 is of a length such that when the valve stem 19 engages the base of the socket in the central projection 39, the lower end of the cap will be spaced from the flange 33 an axial distance which is substantially less than the axial length of the cylindrical enlargement 38 on the valve stem so that, when the cap is pressed downwardly to unseat the valve 17, the enlargement 38 will still remain within thetbore 23 and thus limit the area of clearance between the enlargement 38 and the bore 23 and hence the outflow of fluid through the valve assembly. A portion of the outer wall of the closure cap is flattened, as shown at 42, and, extending inwardly from said flattened portion near its top, is formed with an opening having different diameters 43, 44, 45 and 46, communicating with the opening in the central projection 39. Force-fitted into the bores 43, 44 and 45 is a. nozzle 47 having a bore therethrough communicating with the bore portion 46. The closure cap 20 is also preferably formed of deformable elastic material such as polyethylene, as is also the nozzle 47,
The valve assembly 12 minus the closure cap 20, is assembled by disposing the valve 17 and spring 18 within the casing part 15, after which the casing part 14 is inserted into the casing 15 to bring the flanges 27 and 29 into overlying relation; the assembly then mounted within the central tubular portion 31 of the closure member 11 to seat the flange 29 on the flange 32, whereupon the flange 33 is swaged over the flange 27 to cause the annular tooth 30 to bite into the flange 27 and provide a leak-tight seal therewith. The container may be then charged the desirable quantity of solution or suspension of the substance to be discharged from the bomb when completed or said substance may be charged into the container after the valve assembly has been mounted in the container. The valve assembly, together with the closure member 11, are mounted in the container and the closure member bead-seamed to the container, as shown at 13. A desirable propellant such as Freon under sufficient superatmospheric pressure to maintain it in the liquid state is then charged into the container through the valve assembly, a suitable chuck being employed which will form a fluid-tight seal with the exterior of the valve casing and preferably'unseat the valve to its maximum extent. The valve when thus unseated will have the enlargement 38 of the valve stem located wholly within the valve chamber 16 and will thus not impair the rate of flow through the valve in the filling direction. When the desired amount of propellant has been charged into the container, the chuck is withdrawn, whereupon the valve will seat owing to the combined force of the closure spring 18 and the pressure of the propellant within the container. The closure cap member 20 is then applied by forcing the central projection 39 through the bore 21, which action will be readily accomplished because of the deformability of the central projection and the casing member. After the hooked end 41 on the central projection has passed beyond the shoulder 24, the inner end of said projection will seek to assume its normal diameter and provide a frictional, leak-tight sliding seal with the bore portions 21 and 22. The bomb thus provided may be discharged by pressing downwardly upon the cap member 20, which movement will be limited by engagement of the lower end of the cap with the flange 33 and will alsorestrict the opening through the bore 23 to the difference in diameters betweenthe cylindrical portion 38 on the valve stem and the diameter of the bore at the valve seat 28. In the act of discharging the bomb contents, the aerosol, after passing through the restricted passage, will expand upon reaching the bore 23 and bore 22, then will be again restricted by the passage around the valve stem within the central projection 39 and again expand in passing through the nozzle 47, thus providing a very effective atomized spray of the aerosol. The flattened surface 42 on the cap will serve, by the sense of feeling, to apprise the user as to the location of the nozzle and the point of discharge of the spray.
It will thus be seen that the invention provides an aerosol bomb which eliminates the necessity for the use of refrigeration machinery and for the filling of the bomb under refrigeration, and the further testing of the bomb by re-heating, and thereby provide a substantial saving in the cost of filling aerosol bombs.
While there has been shown and described a preferred embodiment of the invention, it is to be understood that the invention is to be construed in the light of the appended claims, wherefore changes in details of construction may be resorted to without departing from the spirit of the invention.
What we claim is:
V l. A valve assembly comprising a tubular casing having therein, a valve chamber, a tubular valve seat defining one end of the valve chamber and a check valve in said chamber movable into and out of engagement with said valve seat, said valve having a valve stem extending through said valve seat and having an enlargement adjacent the check valve adapted to substantially fill the end of the passage in the valve seat adjacent the check valve when the valve is seated and to provide a restricted opening through the valve seat when the valve is moved away from said seat a predetermined distance, and to substantially enlarge said passage in the valve seat when the valve is moved away from said seat an axial distance greater than the axial dimension of the enlargement on the valve stem, a cap member telescopically mounted on the casing adapted to engage the valve stem to unseat the valve to the predetermined distance throughout which limit of movement the enlargement on the valve stem will provide the restricted opening through the valve seat and cooperating parts on the cap and casing for providing a fluid-tight seal between said casing and said cap and for limiting the telescopic movement of the cap.
2. A valve assembly comprising a tubular casing formed of two tubular parts, each having an axial bore therethrough and a peripheral flange, with the flanges disposed in abutting facial contact and the bores in axial alignment, one of the tubular casing parts being formed of elastomeric, readily deformable, material which provides the valve seat, the other tubular casing part being formed of tough, dimensionally stable, material having an axially extending rib on the abutting face of the flange, a carrier having a central tubular part the end portions of which are flanged over the peripheral portions of the flanges on the tubular casing parts for holding said tubular casing parts in fluid-tight engagement with the annular rib in biting engagement with the flange on the other tubular part, said tubular casing parts providing the casing with a valve seat and a valve chamber, and a check valve mounted in the Valve chamber for engaging the valve seat.
3. In an aerosol bomb consisting of a container having a valve assembly mounted in one end thereof and a cap closure for said valve assembly, a valve assembly comprising a casing formed of two tubular parts each having an axial bore therethrough and a peripheral flange with the flanges disposed and held in abutting facial fluidtight contact and with the bores in axial alinement, one of said tubular parts extending outwardly of the container and being formed of elastomeric deformable material, a check valve within said casing having a valve stem eX- tending through the elastomeric tubular part, a cap member formed of elastomeric deformable material telescopically mounted on the elastomeric tubular part adapted to engage the valve stem to unseat the check valve, a discharge opening in the valve cap and cooperating parts on the valve cap and the elastomeric tubular part providing a fiuidtight seal between said cap and tubular part as the cap is telescopically moved relatively to said tubular part and for limiting the telescopic movement of the cap.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS
US483114A 1955-01-20 1955-01-20 Aerosol bomb filling and dispensing valve Expired - Lifetime US2775483A (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US483114A US2775483A (en) 1955-01-20 1955-01-20 Aerosol bomb filling and dispensing valve
GB1717/56A GB792781A (en) 1955-01-20 1956-01-18 Aerosol bomb filling and dispensing valve

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US483114A US2775483A (en) 1955-01-20 1955-01-20 Aerosol bomb filling and dispensing valve

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2775483A true US2775483A (en) 1956-12-25

Family

ID=23918717

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US483114A Expired - Lifetime US2775483A (en) 1955-01-20 1955-01-20 Aerosol bomb filling and dispensing valve

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US2775483A (en)
GB (1) GB792781A (en)

Cited By (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1075055B (en) * 1960-02-04 Mannheim Wilhelm Waldherr Spray valve
US2965271A (en) * 1956-12-27 1960-12-20 Dev Res Inc Valve body incorporating mounting cup mask and gasket
US2995278A (en) * 1959-05-22 1961-08-08 Western Filling Corp Packaged self-propelling liquid compositions
US3008654A (en) * 1956-10-10 1961-11-14 Precision Valve Corp Valve buttons for pressurized dispensers and dies for making the same
US3074601A (en) * 1956-11-20 1963-01-22 Aerosol Res Company Aerosol valve assembly
US3138304A (en) * 1962-06-12 1964-06-23 Uniplast Dr Raehs Kg Fa Valve assembly for aerosol containers
US3174692A (en) * 1963-06-10 1965-03-23 Edward H Green Atomizer head for use with lowexpansion gaseous propellants
US3176887A (en) * 1961-08-14 1965-04-06 Potapenko Gennady Pressurized dispenser
US3176890A (en) * 1961-08-14 1965-04-06 Potapenko Gennady Pressurized dispenser with integral container seal
US3349974A (en) * 1964-11-07 1967-10-31 Uniplast Dr Raehs Kg Fa Valve assembly for aerosol containers
US3387702A (en) * 1965-03-15 1968-06-11 Reynolds Metals Co Package construction and method of making the same or the like
US3450314A (en) * 1967-05-31 1969-06-17 Clayton Corp Dispensing valve having rubber-like dispensing head
US4801093A (en) * 1983-06-24 1989-01-31 Etablissements Valois Push-nipple for medical sprayer
US5215209A (en) * 1992-10-02 1993-06-01 Precision Valve Corporation Mounting cup for pressure filling
US6003739A (en) * 1998-02-27 1999-12-21 Bartlett; Louie E. Aerosol spray actuator bar
CN104718140A (en) * 2012-10-12 2015-06-17 娜敏芮维皮利业有限责任公司 Metering valve for dispensing an aerosol
CN104736455A (en) * 2012-10-12 2015-06-24 娜敏芮维皮利业有限责任公司 Metering valve for dispensing an aerosol
US11172787B2 (en) 2020-03-04 2021-11-16 Summit Packaging Systems, Inc. Food product dispenser valve normally biased into closed position
US11273972B2 (en) * 2018-05-28 2022-03-15 Lindal France Sas Valve body to be mounted on a cup
US20220274770A1 (en) * 2019-07-24 2022-09-01 Lindal France Sas Valve for pressurized container
US20220289468A1 (en) * 2019-07-24 2022-09-15 Lindal France Sas Valve cup for pressurized container

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3546557C2 (en) * 1984-03-16 1989-06-15 Gat Grubenausbau Gmbh, 5840 Schwerte, De Pressure relief valve

Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2324648A (en) * 1940-06-04 1943-07-20 Paul F Roeder Cream whipping apparatus
US2372392A (en) * 1940-05-28 1945-03-27 Harry Kornreich Charged liquid dispensing device
US2565954A (en) * 1946-02-23 1951-08-28 Gaspray Corp Valved closure for vessel with fluid under pressure, having manually operated valve actuator
US2587040A (en) * 1949-10-26 1952-02-26 Edward H Green Spray nozzle
USRE23487E (en) * 1952-04-29 Fill and discharge valve for lique
US2610940A (en) * 1946-02-23 1952-09-16 Gaspray Corp Low pressure propelled insecticidal aerosol composition
US2684805A (en) * 1950-08-09 1954-07-27 Carter Prod Inc Method for charging liquid products and volatile propellants into pressure-tight containers
US2708347A (en) * 1954-01-07 1955-05-17 Boyle Midway Inc Filling valve mechanism

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
USRE23487E (en) * 1952-04-29 Fill and discharge valve for lique
US2372392A (en) * 1940-05-28 1945-03-27 Harry Kornreich Charged liquid dispensing device
US2324648A (en) * 1940-06-04 1943-07-20 Paul F Roeder Cream whipping apparatus
US2565954A (en) * 1946-02-23 1951-08-28 Gaspray Corp Valved closure for vessel with fluid under pressure, having manually operated valve actuator
US2610940A (en) * 1946-02-23 1952-09-16 Gaspray Corp Low pressure propelled insecticidal aerosol composition
US2587040A (en) * 1949-10-26 1952-02-26 Edward H Green Spray nozzle
US2684805A (en) * 1950-08-09 1954-07-27 Carter Prod Inc Method for charging liquid products and volatile propellants into pressure-tight containers
US2708347A (en) * 1954-01-07 1955-05-17 Boyle Midway Inc Filling valve mechanism

Cited By (26)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1075055B (en) * 1960-02-04 Mannheim Wilhelm Waldherr Spray valve
US3008654A (en) * 1956-10-10 1961-11-14 Precision Valve Corp Valve buttons for pressurized dispensers and dies for making the same
US3074601A (en) * 1956-11-20 1963-01-22 Aerosol Res Company Aerosol valve assembly
US2965271A (en) * 1956-12-27 1960-12-20 Dev Res Inc Valve body incorporating mounting cup mask and gasket
US2995278A (en) * 1959-05-22 1961-08-08 Western Filling Corp Packaged self-propelling liquid compositions
US3176887A (en) * 1961-08-14 1965-04-06 Potapenko Gennady Pressurized dispenser
US3176890A (en) * 1961-08-14 1965-04-06 Potapenko Gennady Pressurized dispenser with integral container seal
US3176889A (en) * 1961-08-14 1965-04-06 Potapenko Gennady Pressurized dispenser with integral stem seal
US3138304A (en) * 1962-06-12 1964-06-23 Uniplast Dr Raehs Kg Fa Valve assembly for aerosol containers
US3174692A (en) * 1963-06-10 1965-03-23 Edward H Green Atomizer head for use with lowexpansion gaseous propellants
US3349974A (en) * 1964-11-07 1967-10-31 Uniplast Dr Raehs Kg Fa Valve assembly for aerosol containers
US3387702A (en) * 1965-03-15 1968-06-11 Reynolds Metals Co Package construction and method of making the same or the like
US3450314A (en) * 1967-05-31 1969-06-17 Clayton Corp Dispensing valve having rubber-like dispensing head
US4801093A (en) * 1983-06-24 1989-01-31 Etablissements Valois Push-nipple for medical sprayer
US5215209A (en) * 1992-10-02 1993-06-01 Precision Valve Corporation Mounting cup for pressure filling
WO1994007751A1 (en) * 1992-10-02 1994-04-14 Precision Valve Corporation Improved mounting cup for pressure filling
CN1043868C (en) * 1992-10-02 1999-06-30 精密阀门公司 Improved mounting cup for pressure filling
US6003739A (en) * 1998-02-27 1999-12-21 Bartlett; Louie E. Aerosol spray actuator bar
CN104736455A (en) * 2012-10-12 2015-06-24 娜敏芮维皮利业有限责任公司 Metering valve for dispensing an aerosol
CN104718140A (en) * 2012-10-12 2015-06-17 娜敏芮维皮利业有限责任公司 Metering valve for dispensing an aerosol
US9469466B2 (en) 2012-10-12 2016-10-18 Nemera La Verpillière S.A.S Metering valve for dispensing an aerosol
US9469467B2 (en) 2012-10-12 2016-10-18 Nemera La Verpillière S.A.S. Metering valve for dispensing an aerosol
US11273972B2 (en) * 2018-05-28 2022-03-15 Lindal France Sas Valve body to be mounted on a cup
US20220274770A1 (en) * 2019-07-24 2022-09-01 Lindal France Sas Valve for pressurized container
US20220289468A1 (en) * 2019-07-24 2022-09-15 Lindal France Sas Valve cup for pressurized container
US11172787B2 (en) 2020-03-04 2021-11-16 Summit Packaging Systems, Inc. Food product dispenser valve normally biased into closed position

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB792781A (en) 1958-04-02

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2775483A (en) Aerosol bomb filling and dispensing valve
US2863699A (en) Resilient valve mounting assembly
EP0467900B1 (en) Metering valve for dispensing aerosols
US3180374A (en) Combined filling and dispensing valve for containers for compressed fluids
US2631814A (en) Valve mechanism for dispensing gases and liquids under pressure
US3169670A (en) Portable dispensing units
US2721010A (en) Aerosol containers and valves therefor
US3333744A (en) Valve and nozzle construction for aerosol whipped cream dispenser
US2877936A (en) Valve and dispensing apparatus for pressure containers and the like
US3158298A (en) Aerosol valve-fast pressure fill type
US4597512A (en) Aerosol valves
KR0157607B1 (en) Pressure regulator
US2582262A (en) Dispensing apparatus
US2701163A (en) Metering aerosol bottle
US3451596A (en) Integral plug valve assembly for dispenser of products in the fluid state
JP2995510B2 (en) Control valves for containers containing fluids under gas pressure and containers equipped with such valves
US2707968A (en) Protected dispensing valve assembly
US2914224A (en) Valve assembly for pressure containers and the like
US2869764A (en) Self-closing valve construction for a pressurized container
EP2190758A1 (en) Valve for use in a container which employs pressure to dispense product
US3682355A (en) Pressure actuated valve
US2621973A (en) Spray dispenser
US4441634A (en) Dispenser adapted for fast pressure filling
US3054536A (en) Valve and closure construction for aerosol devices
US2973123A (en) Fluid dispensing means