Guangzhou carton manufacturer tells you the interesting things about cartons boxes
Guangzhou carton manufacturer tells you the interesting things about cartons boxes
1. In 1856, the British brothers Edward invented corrugated paper under pressure. The purpose of this invention was to make it as the lining of a hat to improve the ability of air permeability and sweat absorption. In 1871, Albert Jones, an American, applied it to cardboard and invented single-side corrugated paper board, which was used for packaging fragile items such as glass lampshades and obtained the first patent right in the United States. Between the two world wars, the proportion of corrugated boxes in shipping packages increased rapidly from 20% to 80%.
2. Do you think the drier the cardboard is, the less likely it is to be damaged? The answer is clearly not. When the moisture content of the cardboard is 5% ~ 6%, the breakage value is the largest, and when the moisture content of the cardboard changes in the range of 8% ~ 14%, the breakage value changes not more than 5%. But when the moisture content reaches 18%, the breakage value will decrease by 10%, so for carton production factories, it is very important to control the moisture of cardboard.
3. How big is the biggest delivery box you've ever seen? A TV, refrigerator or washing machine? European users previously snapped photos of a giant Amazon cardboard box that needed to be carried in an Optimus Prime vehicle. This is based on a 2013 collaboration between Amazon and Nissan, and inside the carton is actually an 85,600 yuan Nissan Versa Note.
4. The cutest cardboard box in history is definitely carton man Alen. Although the carton man is from the Japanese Miura Hayasaka manga series "Four Leaf Sister", Amazon launched a customized version of the carton man with its LOGO, which really made Alen popular.
5. Aside from carton factory owners, the only person on the planet who is currently obsessed with cardboard boxes may be a cute 23-year-old Japanese girl. Nanami Ohno, a graduate of Osaka University of the Arts in Japan, has been trying to make a variety of things out of her discarded cardboard boxes since she majored in three-dimensional animation in her sophomore year: tanks, machine guns, gundams, robots and even shoes. Her tank is 1/20 the size of a real one, complete with everything from tracks to exhaust pipes to fingertip sized screws. This year she plans to spend a full year as a full-size "person." But when asked why she clung to Amazon cartons, Ms. Ohno explained that they were of moderate thickness, did not strain her hands, and kept the color of the materials consistent.