Door latch for an electrical domestic appliance

11434662 · 2022-09-06

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

A door latch for an electrical domestic appliance includes a rotary member arranged to be rotationally movable between a closing rotational position and a release rotational position and is spring-biased in the direction towards the release rotational position, a movably arranged catch that is in an arresting engagement with the rotary member when the rotary member is in the closing rotational position, and a locking assembly that includes a movable locking member movable between an unlocking position and a locking position. The arresting engagement is releasable by an overlifting rotational movement of the rotary member. The rotary member is rotationally movable between a closing rotational position and a release rotational position and is spring-biased in the direction towards the release rotational position. The locking member, when transferred from the unlocking position into the opening position, causes the arresting engagement of the catch with the rotary member to be released.

Claims

1. A door latch for an electrical domestic appliance, in particular a laundry treatment, the door latch comprising: a rotary member which is arranged to be rotationally movable between a closing rotational position and a release rotational position and is spring-biased in the direction towards the release rotational position and which, in the closing rotational position, holds a closure member in order to keep a door of the domestic appliance closed and, in the release rotational position, releases the closure member in order for the door to open; a movably arranged catch for arresting engagement, which is releasable by an overlifting rotational movement of the rotary member, with the rotary member in the closing rotational position thereof; and a locking assembly having a locking member which is arranged to be movable, when the door is closed, between an unlocking position and a locking position and which blocks at least one movable component of the door latch in the locking position and releases that component in the unlocking position, wherein the locking member is movable, starting from the locking position, beyond the unlocking position into an opening position, wherein, when moved into the opening position, the locking member causes the arresting engagement of the catch with the rotary member to be released by lifting the catch out of contact with the rotary member to thereby render the rotary member free to rotate from the closing rotational position into the release rotational position.

2. The door latch according to claim 1, wherein the locking member is stably movable into the opening position.

3. The door latch according to claim 2, wherein the locking assembly comprises an electric drive motor for driving the locking member.

4. The door latch according to claim 1, wherein the locking member, for stable movement into the unlocking position, performs a forced pass through the opening position, starting from the locking position.

5. The door latch according to claim 4, wherein the locking assembly comprises an electromagnetic drive unit for driving the locking member, the locking member having an associated sliding guide defining the unlocking position, the locking position and the opening position.

6. The door latch according to claim 1, wherein the locking member cooperates directly with the catch.

7. The door latch according to claim 1, comprising a release structure, which cooperates with the catch and is movable into the opening position independently of a movement of the locking member, for releasing the arresting engagement of the catch with the rotary member by means of a sloped-surface engagement between the release structure and the catch.

8. The door latch according to claim 1, further comprising a release structure that cooperates with the catch and is movable into the opening position for releasing the arresting engagement of the catch with the rotary member by a sloped-surface engagement between the release structure and the catch, wherein the release structure is formed on the locking member or on a release member which is separate from the locking member and the movement of which is controlled by the locking member.

9. The door latch according to claim 1, wherein the locking member, in the locking position, blocks the rotary member against rotation into the release rotational position and/or blocks the catch in at least one movement direction.

10. A door latch for an electrical domestic appliance, the door latch comprising: a rotary member which is arranged to be rotationally movable between a closing rotational position and a release rotational position and is spring-biased in the direction towards the release rotational position and which, in the closing rotational position, holds a closure member in order to keep a door of the domestic appliance closed and, in the release rotational position, releases the closure member in order for the door to open; a movably arranged catch for arresting engagement, which is releasable by an overlifting rotational movement of the rotary member, with an arresting edge of the rotary member in the closing rotational position thereof to thereby prevent the rotary member from rotating back in the direction towards the release rotational position; and a locking assembly having a locking member which is arranged to be movable, when the door is closed, between an unlocking position and a locking position and which blocks at least one movable component of the door latch in the locking position and releases that component in the unlocking position, wherein the locking member is movable, starting from the locking position, beyond the unlocking position into an opening position, wherein, when moved into the opening position, the locking member causes the arresting engagement of the catch with the arresting edge of the rotary member to be released by lifting the catch out of contact with the arresting edge of the rotary member to thereby render the rotary member free to rotate from the closing rotational position into the release rotational position.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

(1) FIGS. 1a and 1b are two views of a door latch according to a first embodiment in an open state with the door open.

(2) FIGS. 2a and 2b are two views of the door latch according to the first embodiment corresponding to the views of FIGS. 1a, 1b in a closed but unlocked state.

(3) FIGS. 3a and 3b are two views of the door latch of the first embodiment corresponding to the views of FIGS. 1a, 1b in a closed and locked state.

(4) FIGS. 4a and 4b are two views of the door latch of the first embodiment corresponding to the views of FIGS. 1a, 1b in a state in the case of forced opening of the latch.

(5) FIGS. 5a, 5b and 5c are views which illustrate different positions of a locking member of the door latch of the first embodiment.

(6) FIG. 6a shows a door latch according to a second embodiment.

(7) FIG. 6b shows a detail of the door latch of the second embodiment in a perspective view.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

(8) The first embodiment, which is shown in FIGS. 1a to 5c, will be explained first. The door latch 10 shown therein is generally designated 10. It comprises a latch housing, which is not shown in detail in the figures, in which a carrier lever 12 and a locking assembly 14 are accommodated. The door latch 10 is provided for fitting into a domestic washing machine, for example, whereby the mentioned latch housing is to be fixed, for example, to a machine wall of a machine main body, in which a washing vessel (drum or barrel) is rotatably mounted. A closure member 16 (see e.g. FIGS. 2a and 2b) is attached to a door, which is pivotably mounted on the machine main body and serves to close an access opening to the washing vessel, which closure member enters an insertion opening formed in the latch housing when the door is closed and cooperates with a rotary member 18, which can be also be referred to as a gripper, arranged on the carrier lever 12. It will be appreciated that a reverse assembly pattern can be chosen as an alternative, that is to say the closure member 16 can be mounted on the machine main body and the latch housing with the components accommodated therein can be fixed to the door.

(9) The carrier lever 12 is mounted on the mentioned latch housing to be pivotable about a pivot axis 20 and is biased into a rest position by a spring arrangement formed in the example shown by two helical compression springs 22. The rotary member 18 is mounted on the carrier lever 12 to be rotatable about a rotation axis 24 which is parallel to the pivot axis 20. When the door is open, the rotary member 18 assumes a release rotational position which is visible in FIG. 1b, in which it is ready for a transverse stirrup 26 of the closure member 16 to enter a gripping mouth 32, delimited by two jaws 28, 30, of the rotary member 18. The closure member 16 thereby first comes into contact with its transverse stirrup 26 with the jaw 30 and thereby initiates a rotation of the rotary member 18 about the rotation axis 24 against the force of a biasing spring 34, which is formed in the example shown by a leg spring and which biases the rotary member 18 into the release rotational position. As the rotary member 18 rotates, the jaw 28 moves behind the transverse stirrup 26 of the closure member 16. As soon as the rotary member 18 reaches a closing rotational position shown in FIG. 2b, a catch 36 pivotably held on the carrier lever 12 engages by means of a nose 38 behind an arresting edge 40 formed on a peripheral surface of the rotary member 18 and thus prevents the rotary member 18 from rotating back in the direction towards the release rotary position.

(10) The arresting edge 40 is part of a sliding guide which is formed on the peripheral surface of the rotary member 18 and which allows the door latch 10 to be opened by an overlift (renewed pushing against the door of the washing machine from outside). If, starting from the closed state according to FIGS. 2a, 2b, the user pushes against the door, this causes the rotary member 18 to rotate beyond the closing rotational position (overlifting rotational movement). The sliding guide is in such a form that, in the case of such an overlifting rotational movement of the rotary member 18, the nose 38 of the catch 36 springs away from the arresting edge 40 sideways, under the action of a biasing spring 42 acting on the catch 36. The nose 38 which springs away is urged by the biasing spring 42 onto a portion of the sliding guide that does not offer any possibility of arresting the rotary member 18. If the user then removes the pressure from the door, the rotary member 18 rotates under the action of its biasing spring 34 back in the direction towards the release rotational position. Because the nose 36 of the catch 38 thereby no longer has an arresting hold on the peripheral surface of the rotary member 18, the rotary member 18 rotates beyond the closing rotational position into the release rotational position according to FIGS. 1a, 1b. For further details of the sliding guide formed on the outer periphery of the rotary member 18, reference is made by way of example to DE 39 19 458 A1, in particular as regards the explanations in relation to FIGS. 3 to 5 therein.

(11) The locking assembly 14 allows the door latch to be locked in the closed state. In the locked state, the latch cannot be opened by overlifting. Even if the user pushes against the door from outside when the door is locked, the door remains closed.

(12) The locking assembly 14 comprises a locking member 44 which in the example shown is in the form of a linearly movable locking slider which is arranged to be displaceable linearly in a sliding direction parallel to the rotation axis 24 of the rotary member 18. For driving the locking slider 44, the locking slider has an associated locking actuator which, in the first embodiment according to FIGS. 1a to 5c, comprises an electric drive motor 46 (e.g. a step motor). In the example shown, the locking slider 44 has a toothed portion 48, with which a drive shaft 50 of the drive motor 46 is in interlocking engagement. A plurality of structures, the function of which is to lock and force-open the latch 10, is formed on the locking slider 44. Specifically, in the example shown, those structures include a first blocking structure (blocking arrangement) 52, a second blocking structure 54 and a release structure 56. The first blocking structure 52 serves to block the rotary member 18 in its closing rotational position against rotation back into the release rotational position. In the locked state according to FIGS. 3a, 3b, the first blocking structure 52 has accordingly moved into the rotation path of the rotary member 18 (see FIG. 3b), so that, even if the arresting engagement of the nose 38 of the catch 36 with the rotary member 18 is lost (e.g. as a result of vibrations), the rotary member 18 is blocked by the first blocking structure 52 against rotation into the release rotational position. In the unlocked state, on the other hand, the first blocking structure 52 has moved out of the rotation path of the rotary member 18 and does not prevent the rotary member 18 from rotating from the closing rotational position into the release rotational position.

(13) The second blocking structure 54 serves to block the catch 36 against lateral pivoting in the case of attempted overlifting opening. In the locked state, the second blocking structure 54 specifically prevents such lateral pivoting of the catch 36, by means of which the nose 38 would pivot onto a portion of the sliding guide of the rotary member 18 on which the catch 36 is no longer able to arrest the rotary member 18 in its closing rotational position. If, in the locked state of the door latch 10, the user pushes against the door, this leads to an overlifting rotational movement of the rotary member 18 but, because the catch 36 is blocked against lateral pivoting by the second blocking structure 54, the nose 38 of the catch 36 comes into arresting engagement with the arresting edge 40 of the rotary member 18 again when the user removes the pressure against the door. In the unlocked state of the door latch 10, the second blocking structure 54 is out of range of the catch 16 and does not stand in the way of lateral pivoting thereof, as is required for a normal overlifting opening operation.

(14) The release structure 56 does not have a locking function but a release function (opening function). It allows forced-opening of the door latch 10 to be effected by displacement of the locking slider 44 into an opening position which, when seen from the locking position, lies beyond the unlocking position. For this purpose, the release structure 56 has a release ramp 58 which forms a ramp surface which slopes upwards at an angle to the sliding direction of the locking slider 44. When the locking member 44 is moved out of the unlocking position into the mentioned opening position, the release ramp cooperates with a tongue 60 formed on the catch 36, in the manner of a sloped-surface engagement. Because of the upward slope of the release ramp 58, the catch 36 is lifted out of engagement with the rotary member 18 as soon as the release ramp 58, when the locking slider 44 is transferred into the opening position, strikes the tongue 60, so that the nose 38 of the catch 36 comes out of engagement with the sliding guide of the rotary member 18. As a result of this lifting of the catch 36, the rotary member 18 is free to rotate into the release rotational position.

(15) FIGS. 5a to 5c show the mentioned positions of the locking slider 44 (unlocking position, locking position, opening position). FIG. 5a shows the unlocked state with the door closed. The first blocking structure 52 and the second blocking structure 54 are inoperative; the release ramp 58 is also out of engagement with the tongue 60 of the catch 36. On locking, the locking slider 44 is moved to the right in the representation of FIG. 5a relative to the carrier lever 12 and the components rotary member 18 and catch 36 arranged thereon, into the locking position. FIG. 5b shows the locked state of the door latch 10. In this state, the second blocking structure 54 has moved towards the catch 36 and blocks it against lateral pivoting. The first blocking structure 52 blocks the rotary member 18 against rotation back into the release rotational position. The release structure 56 having the release ramp 58 is even further away from the tongue 60 of the catch 36 than in the unlocking position of the locking slider 44.

(16) After completion of a wash program of the washing machine, a control unit, which is not shown in detail in the drawings, controls the drive motor 46 for displacement of the locking slider 44 in such a manner that the door latch 10 is not only unlocked but additionally force-opened. For that purpose, the locking slider 44 is displaced to the left relative to the carrier lever 12 in the representation of FIG. 5b, beyond the unlocking position according to FIG. 5a, until the release ramp 58 meets the tongue 60 of the catch 36 and, because of the sloped-surface engagement between the release ramp 58 and the tongue 60, the catch 36 is lifted out of engagement with the rotary member 18. This situation is shown in FIG. 5c and corresponds to the opening position of the locking slider 44.

(17) After the forced-opening of the door latch 10, the mentioned control unit controls the locking slider 44 into its unlocking position according to FIG. 5a again, by corresponding actuation of the drive motor 46, so that the latch 10 is ready again for closing of the door.

(18) The release structure 56, in addition to the release ramp 58, forms a release stop 62 which, in the unlocking position of the locking slider 44, is in an active position beneath the tongue 60 of the catch 36. The release stop 62 serves for the emergency opening of the door latch 10 when the door is closed but unlocked, by pressing against the door from inside. The carrier lever 12 is thereby pivoted out of the rest position against the force of the springs 22. The rotary member 18 held on the carrier lever 12 moves with the carrier lever 12 as it is pivoted. Because the catch 36 is biased by the biasing spring 42 into engagement with the outer periphery of the rotary member 18, the catch 36 also moves until the tongue 60 meets the release stop 62. With continued pivoting of the carrier lever 12, the catch 36, as a result of the tongue 60 meeting the release stop 62, is lifted out of arresting engagement with the rotary member, so that the rotary member 18 is able to rotate out of the closing rotational position back into the release rotational position and the door latch 10 is opened. In the locking position of the locking slider 44, on the other hand, the release stop 62 is out of reach of the tongue 60 (see FIG. 5b), so that the emergency opening function of the door latch 10 is not available in the locked state.

(19) Reference will now be made to the second embodiment according to FIGS. 6a, 6b. In those figures, elements which are the same or have the same effect are provided with the same reference numerals as in FIGS. 1a to 5c, but with the addition of a lowercase letter. Unless indicated otherwise hereinbelow, reference is made for the explanation of such elements to the preceding remarks relating to the first embodiment.

(20) The second embodiment differs from the first embodiment substantially by in the form of the locking assembly 14a. Instead of an electromotive drive unit, an electromagnetic drive unit 64a is provided in the second embodiment, which electromagnetic drive unit comprises a magnetic coil, of which only a coil body 66a is shown in FIG. 6a, and an armature plunger 68a. The armature plunger is coupled with the locking slider 44a in a shear- and tensile-force-transmitting manner, for example by means of an interlocking connection. The magnetic coil is controlled by the control unit of the washing machine in a pulsed manner, that is to say a first control pulse (corresponding to a short-time excitation of the magnetic coil) serves to transfer the locking slider 44a from its unlocking position into the locking position and a subsequent second control pulse (again corresponding to a short-time excitation of the magnetic coil) serves to return the locking slide 44a from the locking position into the unlocking position. During this return movement, the locking slider 44a passes through its opening position, so that the door latch 10a is force-opened in the course of unlocking.

(21) Unlike in the first embodiment, in which the locking slider 44 can also be held stably in it's opening position by stopping the drive motor 46, the locking slider 44a in the second embodiment passes through the opening position only transitorily and cannot be stably moved into the opening position (with pulsed operation of the electromagnetic drive unit 64a). A sliding guide 70a, in conjunction with a biasing spring 72a, ensures that the locking slider 44a switches between the unlocking position and the locking position on successive control pulses for the electromagnetic drive unit 64a. The sliding guide 70a comprises a sliding guide path 74a and a path follower 76a, which in the example shown is formed by a piece of wire and moves around a central island 78a in the sliding guide path 74a. In the example shown, the sliding guide path 74a is formed on the locking slider 44a, the path follower 76a being supported in a manner not shown in detail on a housing component of a latch housing of the door latch 10a. Alternatively, the path follower 76a can be supported on the locking slider 44a and the sliding guide path 74a can be formed on such a housing component.

(22) By stable abutment of the path follower 76a on the central island 78a, one of the two positions of the locking slider 44a: locking position and unlocking position, is defined, and by stable abutment of the path follower 76a on a path end portion 80a of the sliding guide path 74a, the other of those two positions is defined. The biasing spring 72a exerts a bias on the locking slider 44a such that it can be moved out of both positions (locking position, unlocking position) in each case only against the spring force exerted by the biasing spring 72a. In the example shown, the central island 78a defines the unlocking position of the locking slider 44a. If the electromagnetic drive unit 64a is excited in a pulsed manner, it pulls the armature plunger 68a into the magnetic coil. The path follower 76a thereby reaches a first path portion 82a as a result of a suitable form of the inner and outer delimiting surfaces of the sliding guide 74a. At the end of the control pulse, the biasing spring 72a pushes the locking slider 44a to the right in the representation of FIG. 6a, the path follower 76a in the first path portion 82a sliding past the central island 78a as far as the path end portion 80a. Abutment of the path follower 76a against the path end portion 80a stops the movement of the locking slider 44a; it has then reached its locking position.

(23) A subsequent second control pulse for the electromagnetic drive unit 64a causes the armature plunger 68a to be pulled into the magnetic coil again and—associated therewith—the locking slider 44a to move to the left in the representation of FIG. 6a. The path follower 76a thereby reaches a second path portion 84a, which passes the central island 78a on the opposite side—relative to the first path portion 82a. The second path portion 84a is longer than the first path portion 82a; it has a path extension 86a into which the path follower 76a moves in the case of the movement stroke of the locking slider 44a effected by the second control pulse. The locking slider 44a thereby moves sufficiently far to the left (in the representation of FIG. 6a) that the release structure 56a (more precisely the release ramp formed by the release structure 56a but not visible in FIG. 6a) meets the tongue 60a of the catch 36a and thus causes forced-opening of the door latch 10a. After the end of the second control pulse, the locking slider 44a moves to the right (in the representation of FIG. 6a) again under the force of the biasing spring 72a, the path follower 76a moving out of the extension 86a again and coming into stable abutment on the central island 78a.

(24) The temporary movement of the path follower 76a into the extension 86a corresponds to a transitory pass through the opening position of the locking slider 44a. The first path portion 82a does not have an extension corresponding to the extension 86a, that is to say it is shorter than the second path portion 84a. In this manner it is ensured that, upon locking, that is to say when the locking slider 44a is transferred out of the unlocking position into the locking position, the locking slider 44a does not also pass through its opening position during its movement and thus effect unintentional forced-opening of the door latch 10a.

(25) Although the preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described herein, the above description is merely illustrative. Further modification of the invention herein disclosed will occur to those skilled in the respective arts and all such modifications are deemed to be within the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.