Carton box is a prefabricated industrial box, mainly used for packing goods and materials and can also be recycled. Specialists in the industry rarely use cardboard term because it does not indicate a specific material.
The term cardboard can refer to materials such as heavy paper, including, card stock, corrugated board, or paperboard. The meaning of the term may depend on local, content, construction, and personal choice.
Video Cardboard box
Terminology
Beberapa jenis kontainer terkadang disebut kotak kardus :
In business and industry, material producers, container manufacturers, packaging engineers, and standard organizations, try to use more specific terminology. Still incomplete and uniform use. Often the term "cardboard" is avoided because it does not define a particular material.
The broad distribution of paper-based packaging materials is:
- Paper is a thin material primarily used for writing on, printing on, or for packaging. It is produced by pressing together moist fibers, usually pulp cellulose derived from wood, rags, or grass, and drying it into a flexible sheet.
- The carton, sometimes known as cardboard, is generally thicker (usually more than 0.25 mm or 10 points) than paper. According to ISO standards, cardboard paper is a paper with a base weight (gramatur) above 224 g/mÃ,ò, but there are exceptions. The carton can be single or multi-layered.
- The corrugated fiberboard is sometimes known as corrugated board or corrugated cardboard, is a combination of paper-based material consisting of fluted corrugated media and one or two flat liner boards.
There are also several names for the containers:
- Delivery containers made of corrugated fiberboard are sometimes called "cardboard boxes," "cartons," or "boxes." There are many options for corrugated box design.
- Cartons made of cardboard are sometimes called "cardboard boxes".
- The setup box is made of non-resilient cardboard and is sometimes called a "cardboard box".
- Beverage boxes made of cardboard laminates, sometimes called "cardboard boxes", "boxes", or "boxes".
Maps Cardboard box
History
The first commercial carton box (not wavy) is sometimes credited to M. Treverton & amp; Son in England in 1817. The cardboard box packaging was made in the same year in Germany.
Scottish-born Robert Gair invented a cardboard box or pre-cut cardboard paper in 1890 - large pieces produced in large quantities folded into boxes. Gair's discovery came about as a result of an accident: he was a papermaker and a Brooklyn paper bag during the 1870s, and one day, while he was printing a seed bag order, the metal ruler usually used to fold the bag slid in position and cut it. Gair discovers that by cutting and folding in one operation, he can make a carton box that has been made. Applying this idea to corrugated boardboard is a direct development when material becomes available around the turn of the twentieth century.
The appearance of light flaked cereals increases the use of cardboard. The first to use cardboard as a cereal carton is the Kellogg Company.
The patent was issued to Albert Jones of New York City for corrugated boards single-face. Jones uses corrugated boards to wrap bottles and chimney glass lanterns. The first machine to produce large corrugated boards was built in 1874 by G. Smyth, and in the same year Oliver Long improved Jones's design by creating corrugated boards with liner sheets on both sides. This is a corrugated carton as we know it today.
The first corrugated carton box was manufactured in the US in 1895. In the early 1900s, crates and boxes were replaced by corrugated paper delivery cartons.
In 1908, the terms "corrugated paper board" and "corrugated cardboard" were both used in paper trade.
The cardboard box has been used there since 1840 to transport Bombyx mori and egg mori from Japan to Europe by silk producers, and for more than a century cardboard making is a major industry in the area.
Crafts and entertainment
Cartons and other paper-based materials (paperboard, corrugated board, etc.) Can have a major post-life life as a cheap material for the construction of projects, including science experiments, children's toys, costumes, or insulative coatings.. Some children enjoy playing in the box.
A common cliche is that, when presented with a large new toy and expensive, a child will quickly get bored with toys and play with the box. Although this is usually said kidding a bit, the kids certainly enjoy playing with the boxes, using their imagination to describe the box as an infinite variety of objects. One example of this in popular culture is from the comic strips of Calvin and Hobbes, whose protagonist Calvin often imagines cardboard boxes as "transmogrifiers," "duplicators," or time machines.
So common is the cardboard cardboard reputation as a toy that in 2005 a cardboard box was added to the National Toy Hall of Fame in the US, one of very few non-branded toys that should be honored with inclusions. As a result, the "home" toys (actually a wooden cottage) made of large cardboard boxes were added to the Hall, housed in the National Museum of Strong Play in Rochester, New York.
The Metal Gear video series of hidden video games has a joke involving a cardboard box as an in-game item, which can be used by players to try to sneak through places without being caught by the enemy guard.
Housing and furniture
Living in a cardboard box is stereotypically linked to homelessness. However, in 2005, the architect of Melbourne Peter Ryan designed a house consisting mostly of cardboard boxes. More common is a small seat or a small table made of corrugated cardboard. Displaying cardboard merchandise is often found in supermarkets.
Bearing with crush
The mass and viscosity of the enclosed air helps along with the limited stiffness of the box to absorb the energy of the incoming object. In 2012, British stuntman Gary Connery safely lands through a wingsuit without deploying his parachute, landing on a 3.6 meter (12 feet) crusable ground "(landing zone) built with thousands of boxes.
See also
- Carton Box Adventure (Sherlock Holmes story)
- Corrugated fiberboard
Further reading
- Amanda Formaro. "Carton Box Costume". Generous Save . Obtained 2005-10-26 . Ã, - some Halloween costumes that can be made with cardboard and paint
- Lauren Guerriero. "What Can You Do With The Ordinary Carton Box?". Parents.com . Archived from the original on January 7, 2008 . Obtained 2005-10-26 . Ã, - six projects using cardboard boxes as children's games
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia