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Jay R. Brooks on Beer

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Patent No. 3225510A: Article Cartoning Machine

December 28, 2015 By Jay Brooks

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Today in 1965, US Patent 3225510 A was issued, an invention of Robert J. Weichhand and Wickliffe Jones, for their “Article Cartoning Machine.” There’s no Abstract, although in the description it includes this summary:

This invention relates to article packaging and more particularly to a machine for packing beer bottles in conventional six-pack or eight-pack cartons.

More specifically, the machine of this invention is intended for packaging beer bottles in cartons which are formed of paperboard material and which are furnished in a fiat collapsed condition. The collapsed cartons are loaded in stacked formation into a magazine, which includes mechanism for withdrawing the collapsed cartons individually from the lower portion of the magazine subsequently to be erected and loaded. In order to obtain the high loading rate, as indicated above, the bottles, which are fed in a continuous stream, are segregated into groups and the groups advanced into the erected carton from opposite ends. After being loaded with the bottles, liquid adhesive is applied to the flaps of the cartons, then the flaps are folded to a closed position and sealed before the loaded cartons are discharged from the machine.

To perfect a cartoning machine which will handle 600 to 1,200 or more bottles per minute and package them in an automatic manner, the bottles must flow in a substantially straight line continuous movement without any stopping or starting. At the rate of movement of this machine, the inertia of stopping the bottle and starting it again or of jerky acceleration and deceleration would break the bottle or at least scar and tear the paper label. It has thus been an object of this invention to provide a bottle cartoning machine which utilizes smooth acceleration and deceleration substantially straight line continuous flow of the bottles to be packaged and which eliminates abrupt impact reciprocating or oscillating elements which might break the bottle or at least scar the labels upon the bottles. It should be understood that while this machine has been described with reference to packaging bottles, it is equally adaptable to packaging other articles. Of course a machine operable to handle fragile glass is capable of handling metal containers such as beer cans.

The machine includes a series of continuous motion conveyor systems for advancing and erecting cartons after they have been withdrawn individually from the magazine. Thus, the first conveyor apparatus receives the carton blank as it is withdrawn from the bottom of the magazine and includes means for handling the flaps which project outwardly from the opposite open ends of the advancing blank. A first stage conveyor apparatus advances the blank toward a main carton transport conveyor and concurrently partially erects the carton. The partially erected carton is then transferred to a main carton conveyor and during transfer is completely erected by con- Patented Dec. 28, 1965 ice tinuously advancing spacer lugs on the main carton transport conveyor. These lugs coact with the first stage conveyor apparatus to completely erect the carton. The spacer lugs of the main carton conveyor confine the carton firmly in its erected condition and advance it toward the bottle loading zone with the several carton flaps extending outwardly to an open position to avoid any interference of the bottles as they are advanced into the open end of the erected carton.

As the erected carton advances to the loading zone, six cans (or eight cans in the case of an eight-pack) are fed laterally from a pair of parallel bottle conveyors into the opposite ends of the carton by stationary converging guide rails. The bottles are segregated into groups of three each (or four in the case of an eight-pack) and fed into the carton. The segregating mechanism consists of restraining fingers which enter in front of every third bottle. These restraining fingers move at a slower rate than the bottle conveyors so that the restraining fingers slow the movement of the bottles. The down stream finger then releases a group of three which move away from the finger or move downstream at a rate determined by the bottle conveyor which is moving faster than the restrained bottles. As soon as the group of three bottles have moved downstream so as to establish a gap between the restrained bottles and the unrestrained ones, spacer fingers enter the gap so as to maintain the spacing between the now grouped bottles. Guide rails then force the group of bottles across a continuously moving bucket conveyor which maintains the spacing of the groups and into the open sides of the cartons. After the bottles are loaded into the carton, liquid adhesive is supplied to the flaps and the flaps are folded to a closed position and sealed as the carton advances toward the discharge end of the machine.

A further objective of the invention has been to provide an improved segregating mechanism for forming articles into groups while advancing the articles toward a packaging zone where the segregated groups are fed transversely into the open end of an advancing carton.

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Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Just For Fun, Politics & Law, Related Pleasures Tagged With: Bottles, Brewing Equipment, History, Law, Packaging, Patent, Science of Brewing

Beer In Ads #1772: Season’s Greetings From Two Breweries

December 27, 2015 By Jay Brooks


Sunday’s holiday ad is for two breweries — Griesedieck Bros. Brewing Co. and Utica Club. I think it’s from the 1950s and appears to be a stock photo, probably meant to be used by newspapers to advertise either one of the brands, and it was simply cheaper to produce one photo. Happily, you rarely see white wreaths these days.

GRIESEDIECK-BROS-Utica-Club-xmas

Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, History

Patent No. 2492327A: Beer Pouring Device

December 27, 2015 By Jay Brooks

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Today in 1949, US Patent 2492327 A was issued, an invention of Butler Sheldon Jr., for his “Beer Pouring Device.” There’s no Abstract, although in the description it includes this summary:

This invention relates to improvements in a beer pouring device. Broadly, it is an object of my invention to provide a beer pouring device which may be applied to the neck of the standard bottles when the beer is sold.

More specifically, it is an object of my invention to provide a device which has a series of screens at the pouring end thereof, so that when the device is applied to the neck of the bottle and the beer poured through it, a finer head is obtained on the beer which is more like a head obtained from draft beer.

A further object of my invention is to provide an inexpensive device which can be applied to standard bottle necks, which enhances the taste of the beer after it is poured through said device.

A further object of my invention is to provide a device which reduces the size of the gas bubbles after the beer is poured through it in order to give a more creamy quality to the beer.

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Filed Under: Beers, Just For Fun, Politics & Law, Related Pleasures Tagged With: History, Kegs, Law, Patent

Patent No. 2728344A: Hop Vine Cutter And Picker

December 27, 2015 By Jay Brooks

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Today in 1955, US Patent 2728344 A was issued, an invention of Florian F. Dauenhauer, for his “Hop Vine Cutter and Picker.” There’s no Abstract, although in the description it includes this summary:

An object of my invention is to provide a hop picking machine which differs from the invention shown in my co-pending application on an apparatus for picking hops from hop branches and clusters and for separating leaves and stems therefrom, filed August 16, 1950, Ser. No. 179,724 (now Patent No. 2,681,066, dated June 15, 1954). In the co–pending case I disclose a branch picker for removing hops from hop branches and hop clusters. The hop branch picker severs the hops from any vine portion or hop clusters. A liXed breaker fork cooperating with a rotary feeder fork acts on the vines to spread them over the combined picker and endless conveyor. A branch or arm picker then acts upon the vines and intermittently stops or retards the movement of the vines along the conveyor. During the temporary holding of the vines, the picking fingers on the conveyor, act to strip the hops from the vines and from the hop clusters.

In the present invention a vine cutter takes the place of the liXed breaker fork and rotary feeder fork shown in the co-pending case and the cutter tends to spread the hop vines more uniformly over a combined conveyor and hop picker as well as reduce the lengths of the vines by cutting them and thus permit the more ready handling of them during the removal of hops therefrom. The branch or arm picker disclosed in the co-pending case is also altered in its structure and operation so that the combined endless conveyor and hop picker can have its upper reach movable in a flat plane through this portion of the machine rather than be caused to move at right angles to the plane at a plurality of spaced points, these points being arranged at a like number of stations where the hop vines are temporarily arrested in their movement through the machine.

The present invention makes use of a plurality of vine holding combs and these are positioned above a portion of the upper reach of the endless conveyor and are arranged in two groups. Every other comb is connected to a common comb swinging means and constitutes one group while the remaining alternate combs are connected to a second common comb swinging means and constitute the other group. The combs when in normal position, extend at right angles to the plane of the conveyor portion over which they are positioned and the tines of the combs will hold the vines from movement and permit the hop picking fingers on the conveyor to remove hops from the vines during this holding period.

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Filed Under: Beers, Just For Fun, Politics & Law, Related Pleasures Tagged With: History, Law, Patent

Beer In Ads #1771: Mac’s Bottle Santa

December 26, 2015 By Jay Brooks


Saturday’s holiday ad is for Mac’s, from New Zealand. The ad is a fairly recent one, from 2014. Originally known as McCashins Brewery, for founder Terry McCashin, it was New Zealand’s first craft brewery when it opened in 1981. But almost everybody called it Mac’s, and that’s the name it goes by today, and for most of its existence. But the ad is pure genius, taking Mac’s distinctive bottle and having look like a dead beer ringer for the man in red. It almost makes me wish I had some in the cooler.

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Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, Christmas, Holidays, New Zealand

Patent No. 1013057A: Keg-Rinsing Machine

December 26, 2015 By Jay Brooks

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Today in 1911, US Patent 1013057 A was issued, an invention of George Denison Prentice, for his “Keg-Rinsing Machine.” There’s no Abstract, although in the description it includes this summary:

My invention is a machine for rinsing or washing out casks, kegs, or other receptacles, the same being caused to operate automatically by the weight of a cask or keg placed in due position on the ,machine, and requiring no attention or manipulation. Water is discharged into a cask or keg when placed on a depressible support and over a perforated nozzle. When the keg-support is depressed it opens a water-discharge valve and raises a weighted piston in a cylinder or dash-pot, and the time required for descent .of the piston to its original position determines the time of discharge of water into the keg. I thus provide for automatic discharge of water into a keg for rinsing the same and for automatic regulation of the time during which said discharge shall continue.

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Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Just For Fun, Politics & Law, Related Pleasures Tagged With: Brewing Equipment, History, Kegs, Law, Patent

Beer In Ads #1770: Season’s Greetings, A Holiday Toast To You …

December 25, 2015 By Jay Brooks


Friday’s holiday ad is for Miller High Life, from 1949. One of my favorite Christmas ads, featuring a version of Miller’s “Girl in the Moon,” with a wreath around the moon as she offers “Season’s Greetings” and “A Holiday toast to you from the National Champion of Quality … Miller High Life.”

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Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, Christmas, History, Holidays, Miller Brewing

Patent No. 531314A: Process Of And Apparatus For Preparing Beer

December 25, 2015 By Jay Brooks

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Today in 1894, US Patent 531314 A was issued, an invention of A.M. Hofmann, for his “Process of and Apparatus for Preparing Beer.” There’s no Abstract, although in the description it includes this summary:

It may be stated at the outset that I have primarily designed my improvement for the particular application to beer in barrels or kegs orin bottles, and I therefore, and for the sake of convenience, hereinafter confine the description of my invention in its application to racking, carbonating and bunging beer, though it is also applicable to, and I desire to be understood as intending it for, any and all liquids or beverages requiring similar treatment to prepare them in receptacles for the market.

A known manner of carbonating a beverage to prepare it for the market is to introduce into the holder containing it a liquid (preferably of the same kind) in small quantity proportionately to the quantity contained in the holder, but so highly charged with the gas, for which -,it affords a vehicle and a mixing or incorporating medium, as to supply the contents of the receptacle,and thoroughly impregnate them, with a charge of gas adequate for all requirements in the beverage.

I find that where the carbonating procedure referred to is employed on beer, the diffusion of the gas through the beer in the receptacle, however thoroughly it may be produced, is not lasting where the receptacle is not completely, or at least approximately, filled with the beer to be charged, which it rarely is; since the space left on filled affords, as it were, a pocket, in which the gas tends to accumulate, and whence it quickly escapes on opening or venting the receptacle, leaving the beer, when poured or drawn for consumption, insufficiently carbonated. Incomplete filling of the receptacles is, perhaps, as likely of occurrence where the receptacles are glass bottles as where they are barrels or kegs, notwithstanding that the transparent nature of the former renders the matter of completely filling them readily accomplishable.

My process consists in withdrawing from a .receptacle after filling it with beer (taken by preference directly from the cask) a suitably small proportion of its contents, and replacing the quantity thus withdrawn with an equal, or approximately equal, quantity of liquid highly charged with gas, thereby, practically, withdrawing the desired quantity from the receptacle, then charging it excessively with gas, and returning to the receptacle the same liquid, charged, that was withdrawn from it. Thus, after a receptacle has been completely filled, or substantially so, with the beer to be carbonated, (and complete filling of a barrel or keg is a matter as simple as filling a bottle) by withdrawing ascertain quantity to make room or the charge, and replacing it with an equal or substantially equal quantity of the supercharged carbonating liquid, the desirably full condition of the receptacles is attained.

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Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Just For Fun, Politics & Law, Related Pleasures Tagged With: Brewing Equipment, History, Law, Patent, Science of Brewing

Patent No. 664824A: Cold Air Pressure Apparatus For Beer

December 25, 2015 By Jay Brooks

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Today in 1900, US Patent 664824 A was issued, an invention of Gottlieb Schmidt, for his “Cold Air Pressure Apparatus For Beer or Other Fluids.” There’s no Abstract, although in the description it includes this summary:

My invention relates to an apparatus involving an air-chamber and a refrigerator adapted more particularly for cooling beer or other fluid, wherein cold air will be directed under pressure to said fluid where it is to be dispensed, the construction and operation of the parts thereof being hereinafter set forth, and the novel features thereof pointed out in the claims.

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And here are the original drawings filed with the application:
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Filed Under: Beers, Breweries, Just For Fun, Politics & Law, Related Pleasures Tagged With: Brewing Equipment, History, Law, Patent, Science of Brewing

Beer In Ads #1769: May The Christmas Season Be A Merry One

December 24, 2015 By Jay Brooks


Thursday’s holiday ad is for Acme, from 1948. San Francsico’s Acme Breweries got famed pin-up artist Alberto Varga to create the artwork for their annual Christmas card, this one, of course, for 1948 as they also wish everyone a great next year. “May the Christmas Season be a Merry One … and ’49 a Golden Year for You!” I guess she must be Mrs. Claus? Have a happy and hoppy holiday!

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Filed Under: Art & Beer, Beers Tagged With: Advertising, Christmas, History, Holidays

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