Abstract
A domestic electrical appliance, for example a dishwasher, is disclosed, in which a door latch is installed in a profile strip of an appliance body. The door latch comprises a latch housing in which, in some embodiments, a rotary gripper and a leg-torsion spring serving as a closing spring are accommodated. In one embodiment, the door latch as a whole is displaceable in the profile strip in the strip longitudinal direction thereof in order to implement a self-healing function which allows the door to close even after the door latch has moved into a closed state without the door being closed. In another embodiment, a housing main part of the latch housing is mounted in a longitudinally fixed manner on the profile strip, but a housing cover of the latch housing is longitudinally displaceable relative to the housing main part, and the torsion spring and the rotary gripper are held on the housing cover.
Claims
1. A door latch for a domestic electrical appliance, comprising: a closing spring assembly, a gripper which is arranged so as to be movable between an open position and a closed position and which, in the open position, is urged by the closing spring assembly into supporting contact with an abutment structure, preventing relaxation of the closing spring assembly, wherein the gripper has a gripping mouth delimited by two jaws for holding captive a closing member which, on closing of the door, approaches the rotary gripper along a closing path, wherein, on closing of the door, the closing member, in the open position of the gripper, strikes a first of the jaws and in so doing initiates a movement of the gripper into the closed position, wherein the movement of the gripper comprises a first part-movement starting from the open position and a subsequent second part-movement into the closed position, wherein the first part-movement comprises a rotational movement of the gripper until the gripper loses supporting contact with the abutment structure, wherein, during the first part-movement, the second of the jaws engages behind the closing member and in so doing captures the closing member in the gripping mouth, wherein the second part-movement comprises a translational movement of the gripper along the closing path with relaxation of the closing spring assembly, characterised in that the gripper and the abutment structure, in the closed position of the gripper, are arranged for a joint, in particular linear, yielding movement into a yielding position transverse to the closing path in order to allow the door to be closed in the closed position.
2. The door latch according to claim 1, wherein the closing spring assembly is also arranged for the joint yielding movement with the gripper and the abutment structure.
3. The door latch according to claim 1, wherein the gripper and the abutment structure and if desired also the closing spring assembly are arranged on a common carrier which is movably arranged so as to carry out the yielding movement, and the door latch comprises a return spring, separate from the closing spring assembly, for returning the carrier from the yielding position.
4. The door latch according to claim 3, wherein a latch housing in which the gripper and the closing spring assembly are accommodated, wherein the latch housing comprises a housing main part and a cover part for closing the housing main part, wherein either the carrier is formed by the cover part and the cover part is arranged so as to be movable relative to the housing main part to carry out the yielding movement, or the carrier is formed by the housing main part and the latch housing is intended and configured to be movably arranged relative to a superordinate component in order to carry out the yielding movement.
5. The door latch according to claim 1, wherein the closing spring assembly comprises a torsion spring, which is formed by a spring wire coil with two spring legs protruding in particular tangentially therefrom, wherein the torsion spring is arranged with its coil axis substantially perpendicular to a rotational plane of the gripper, and one of the spring legs is coupled with the gripper.
6. The door latch according to claim 5, wherein in the closed position of the gripper, when seen perpendicular to the rotational plane thereof, the spring leg coupled with the gripper is oriented substantially perpendicular to the direction of the closing path.
7. The door latch according to claim 1, wherein the gripper is designed with an elongate hole into which a bearing member arranged stationarily relative to the abutment structure engages with play for movability in the hole longitudinal direction, wherein, in the closed position of the gripper, the elongate hole runs with its hole longitudinal direction substantially along the closing path.
8. A domestic electrical appliance, in particular a dishwasher, comprising a body having a working chamber formed therein, a door for closing the working chamber, which door is pivotably mounted on the body and carries a closing member, and a door latch installed in a body wall, in particular a roof wall, of the body, wherein the door latch comprises a closing spring assembly and a gripper which is arranged so as to be movable between an open position and a closed position, wherein the gripper has a gripping mouth delimited by two jaws for holding captive a closing member which, on closing of the door, approaches the rotary gripper along a closing path, wherein, on closing of the door, the closing member, in the open position of the gripper, strikes a first of the jaws and in so doing initiates a movement of the gripper into the closed position, wherein the movement of the gripper from the open position into the closed position comprises a rotational movement of the gripper in which the second of the jaws engages behind the closing member and in so doing captures the closing member in the gripping mouth, wherein the closing spring assembly, in the closed position of the gripper, acts against a return movement of the gripper in the direction towards the open position, wherein the door latch further comprises a latch housing in which the gripper and the closing spring assembly are accommodated, wherein the gripper and the closing spring assembly are arranged on a common carrier which is movably arranged so as to carry out a yielding movement, in particular a linear yielding movement, relative to the body wall, wherein the yielding movement of the carrier comprises a corresponding joint yielding movement of the gripper and of the closing spring assembly transverse to the closing path in order to allow the door to be closed when the gripper is in the closed position.
9. The domestic electrical appliance according to claim 8, wherein the body comprises in the body wall a profile strip which extends over part of the width of the body wall, in particular substantially over the entire width thereof, and is in particular U-shaped in cross-section, on which profile strip the door latch is mounted.
10. The domestic electrical appliance according to claim 9, wherein the latch housing comprises a housing part, in particular a housing main part, which is designed with mounting structures for mounting on the profile strip, wherein the common carrier for the gripper and the closing spring assembly is formed by the housing part, and wherein the housing part has play for movability in the strip longitudinal direction relative to the profile strip, which ensures the yielding movement.
11. The domestic electrical appliance according to claim 10, wherein there is formed in the profile strip at least one mounting channel in which the housing part is inserted with play for movability in the strip longitudinal direction, wherein there is provided on the profile strip a support structure for a return spring which is supported between the housing part and the profile strip.
12. The domestic electrical appliance according to claim 9, wherein the latch housing comprises a first housing part, in particular housing main part, which is designed with mounting structures for mounting on the profile strip, wherein the latch housing further comprises a second housing part which is formed separately from the first housing part, in particular which serves as the housing cover of the latch housing, wherein the common carrier for the gripper and the closing spring assembly is formed by the second housing part, and wherein the second housing part has play for movability in the strip longitudinal direction relative to the first housing part, which ensures the yielding movement.
13. The domestic electrical appliance according to claim 8, wherein the gripper is installed in the body wall with its plane of rotation parallel to the wall plane of the body wall.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0026] The invention will be explained further hereinbelow with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0027] FIG. 1 shows, schematically, a domestic dishwasher according to an exemplary embodiment,
[0028] FIG. 2 shows, in perspective, a door latch according to an exemplary embodiment which is installed in a profile strip and is suitable for use in the dishwasher of FIG. 1,
[0029] FIG. 3a shows the profile strip of FIG. 2 in a perspective view obliquely from beneath,
[0030] FIG. 3b shows the profile strip of FIG. 3a in the same perspective view but after the door latch of FIG. 2 has been installed in the profile strip and after the door latch has been displaced into a yielding position,
[0031] FIG. 4a shows an inside view of the door latch of FIG. 2 (after removal of a housing cover) in an open state, before a closing shackle mounted on the door enters the door latch,
[0032] FIG. 4b shows a view of the door latch of FIG. 4a in an intermediate state, after the closing shackle has entered the door latch but the door latch has not yet reached its final closed state,
[0033] FIG. 4c shows the door latch of FIG. 4b after it has reached the closed state,
[0034] FIG. 5a shows, in perspective, an inside view of the door latch of FIG. 2 in a first phase of a self-healing operation,
[0035] FIG. 5b shows a view corresponding to FIG. 5a but in a subsequent second phase of the self-healing operation,
[0036] FIG. 6 shows, in perspective, a door latch according to a further exemplary embodiment which is installed in a profile strip and is suitable for use in the dishwasher of FIG. 1,
[0037] FIG. 7a shows, in perspective, a housing cover of a latch housing of the door latch of FIG. 6, wherein the housing cover is the carrier for a rotary gripper and a closing spring of the door latch,
[0038] FIG. 7b shows, in perspective, a housing main part of the latch housing of the door latch of FIG. 6,
[0039] FIG. 8a shows, in perspective, the door latch of FIG. 6 in a rest position of the housing cover relative to the housing main part,
[0040] FIG. 8b shows a perspective view corresponding to FIG. 8a but wherein the housing cover has been displaced into a yielding position relative to the housing main part, and
[0041] FIG. 8c shows the door latch of FIG. 6 in the yielding position of the housing cover corresponding to FIG. 8b, but in a different perspective view.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0042] Reference will first be made to FIG. 1. The dishwasher shown therein, which is intended for use in a private household, is generally designated 10. It is an example of a domestic appliance in which a door latch 12 according to the invention can be used. The dishwasher 10 comprises a dishwashing container (body) 14 having a dishwashing chamber (working chamber) 16 formed therein, which is accessible for a user through a front access opening 18. The access opening can be closed by a door 20 which is mounted in the foot region of the dishwashing container 14 so as to be pivotable about a horizontal pivot axis (not shown in detail).
[0043] The door latch 12 is installed in the container roof (body roof), designated 22, of the dishwashing container 12. In the container roof 22 there is at the front, that is to say adjacent to the access opening 18, a profile strip or profile rail (generally: reinforcing strip) 24, which extends substantially over the entire front width of the container roof 22 and serves as a stiffening structural element of the container roof 22. There may also be a stiffening bar (not shown here) in the front wall region of each of the opposite side walls of the dishwashing container 14designated 26, 28 in FIG. 1. The horizontally extending profile strip 24 of the container roof 22, together with such lateral, vertically extending stiffening bars of the side walls 26, 28, can form a front reinforcing frame of the dishwashing container 14 or be part of such a reinforcing frame. In the example shown, the profile strip 24 is in the form of a U-shaped profile strip which is open at the top. Such a U-shaped form and such an installation position of the profile strip 24 are also taken as the starting point in the following figures. It will be appreciated, however, that other profile cross-sections of the profile strip 24 and also other installation positions are readily conceivable.
[0044] Arranged on the door 20 is a closing member 30 which, on closing of the door 20, enters the door latch 12 and is captured therein. When the door 20 is closed properly, the door latch 12 provides resistance, based on spring force, to opening of the door 20the so-called holding-closed force. This must be overcome by a user pulling on the door 20 in order to be able to open the door 20.
[0045] Reference will next be made to FIGS. 2, 3a and 3b. In the exemplary embodiment shown in these figures, the door latch 12 is inserted into the interior space, delimited between the two lateral strip wallsdesignated 32, 34of the U-shaped profile strip 24 and held on the strip basedesignated 36of the U-shaped profile strip 24. In the strip base 36, the profile strip 24 has at least one and in the example shown two mounting channels 38, which serve for attaching the door latch 12 to the profile strip 24. The mounting channels 38 serve to hold the door latch 12 so that it is longitudinally displaceable (i.e. displaceable in the strip longitudinal direction) and form openings in the strip material of the profile strip 24. They each have a narrower channel region 40 and, adjacent thereto in the strip longitudinal direction, a wider channel region 42. On the underside of the door latch 12 (based on its installed position in the dishwasher 10) there is formed, in association with each of the mounting channels 38, a mounting foot 44, which is guided on the opposite channel edges of the narrower channel region 40 so as to be displaceable in the strip longitudinal direction. Guiding the door latch 12 on the channel edges of the mounting channels 38 ensures a secure hold both in the vertical direction (i.e. orthogonal to the strip base 36) and in the horizontal-lateral direction (i.e. transverse to the strip longitudinal direction).
[0046] For mounting the door latch 12 on the profile strip 14, the mounting feet 44 are first inserted into the wider channel regions 42 of the mounting channels 38. The latch 12 is then displaced relative to the profile strip 14 in the strip longitudinal direction until the mounting feet 44 come into guiding engagement with the channel edges of the narrower channel regions 40. As the mounting feet 44 are pushed forward into the narrower channel regions 40, a resilient locking tab 46 formed on the door latch 12 snaps into the wider channel region 42 of one of the mounting channels 38 and prevents the mounting feet 44 from moving back into the wider channel regions 42. The latch 12 is thus held captively on the profile strip 24 despite having play for movability in the strip longitudinal direction.
[0047] FIG. 2 shows the latch 12 in a starting or rest position relative to the profile strip 24. The door latch 12 is biased into this position by a return spring 48, which bears on the one hand against a latch housing 50 of the door latch 12 and on the other hand against a support plate 52 which is arranged stationarily relative to the profile strip 24. In the rest position according to FIG. 2, the locking tab 46 is located directly in front of the rear channel edge of the wider channel region 42 of one of the mounting channels 38. In FIG. 3b, on the other hand, the door latch 12 is shown in a yielding position, in which the door latch 12 has been displaced relative to the profile strip 24 against the action of the return spring 48 in the direction towards the front channel end of the mounting channels 38; in the yielding position, the locking tab 46 is at a certain longitudinal distance from the rear channel edge of the mounting channel 38 in question. The yielding position according to FIG. 3b permits self-healing of the door latch 12, that is to say closing of the door 20 following a preceding (generally unintentional) change of the door latch 12 from an open state into a closed state without the door 20 hereby being closed.
[0048] The mounting channels 38 with their narrower and wider channel regions 40, 42 can be formed by separate plastics insert elements which are inserted into larger openings, produced, for example, by punching, in the metallic base material of the profile strip 24. One of these insert elements can additionally form the support plate 52. Alternatively, it is conceivable to omit such additional insert elements and instead form the channel edges of the mounting channels 38 and also the support plate 52 directly from the metal material of the profile strip 24.
[0049] A cutout 54 in the profile strip 24 additionally allows the closing shackle 30 to enter the interior of the profile strip 24 and thus the operative region of the door latch 12. In the example shown, the closing shackle 30 has a shackle crosspiece 56 which is oriented substantially vertically when the door 20 is upright and which, on closing of the door 20, is engaged from behind and held securely by a rotary gripper located in the door latch 12. As an alternative to the closing shackle 30 shown, it is conceivable that the door 20 carries a closing pin, which is correspondingly likewise oriented substantially vertically when the door 20 is upright. The precise configuration of the closing member attached to the door 20 (whether as a closing shackle 30, whether as a closing pin or whether as another design) is not important for the present invention. The only important factor is that a suitable closing member which, on closing of the door 20, can be gripped and held securely by the door latch 12 is arranged on the door 20.
[0050] For further details of the door latch 12, reference will now be made to FIGS. 4a to 4c. In those figures, the profile strip 24 has been omitted for the sake of clarity. FIG. 4a shows the door latch in the mentioned open state which it occupies as long as the door 20 has not yet been closed and as long as the door latch 12 has not been transferred by other, intentional or unintentional, manipulation into the closed state without closing the door 20. The inside view, visible in FIGS. 4a to 4c, of the door latch 12 results from the omission of a housing cover 56 (FIG. 2), which together with a housing main part 58 forms the latch housing 50 and can be fitted to and fastened on the housing main part 58 in order to close the latch housing 50. The housing main part 58 is designed with the mounting feet 44 and the locking tab 46 and forms a spring chamber 60 for accommodating the return spring 48.
[0051] Space is additionally provided in the housing main part 58 for accommodating and holding a rotary gripper 62 and a torsion spring 64, which serves as the closing spring and generates the holding-closed force which has been explained. The rotary gripper 62 has a gripping mouth 66, which is delimited by a front jaw 68 and a rear jaw 70 and in which, when the door 20 is closed, the shackle crosspiece 56 of the closing shackle 30 is captured. In the open state of the door latch 12 according to FIG. 4a, the rotary gripper 62 is in an open position, in which the shackle crosspiece 56 is able to enter the gripping mouth 66 on closing of the door 20. On closing of the door 20, the shackle crosspiece 56 strikes the rear jaw 70 and in so doing sets the rotary gripper 62 in rotation about a centre of rotation which is stationary relative to the latch housing 50, more specifically relative to the housing main part 58, and which is formed in the example shown by a bearing roller 72. The rotational axis of the rotary gripper 62 runs perpendicular to the container roof 22; in other words, the rotational plane of the rotary gripper 62 is parallel to the roof plane of the container roof 22. This makes for a small installation height of the door latch 12. In the course of the rotation of the rotary gripper 62, the front jaw 68 moves behind the shackle crosspiece 56, see FIG. 4b, whereby the shackle crosspiece 56 is captured in the gripping mouth 66.
[0052] The torsion spring 64 biases the rotary gripper 62 in the open position according to FIG. 4a against an abutment structure which is stationary relative to the housing main part 58 and which is formed in the example shown by an abutment roller 74. Both rollers, that is to say the bearing roller 72 and the abutment roller 74, can be mounted on anti-friction bearings for low rolling friction. In the open position according to FIG. 4a, the rotary gripper 62 bears with a region of its periphery located radially further outwards against the abutment roller 74. After rotation through an angular distance which is sufficient to move the front jaw 68 behind the shackle crosspiece 56 and thus capture the closing shackle 30, a radial recess, defined by a radial sliding edge 76, of the rotary gripper 62 reaches the region of the abutment roller 74. This situation is shown in FIG. 4b. The recess in the rotary gripper 62 allows the rotary gripper to perform, in the rotational plane, under the action of the torsion spring 64, a translational movement substantially along the closing path which the closing shackle 30 follows on entering the door latch 12. This closing path is indicated in FIG. 4a by an arrow 78. Although the door 20 is pivotably mounted on the dishwashing container 14, the path covered by the closing shackle 30, at least in the comparatively short section which it covers in the door latch 12, can be regarded in good approximation as a straight line. The mentioned translational movement of the rotary gripper 62 is made possible in the example shown by an elongate hole 80 formed in the rotary gripper 62 and has the effect of pulling the door 20 shut. At the end of the translational movement, the rotary gripper 62 reaches its closed position according to FIG. 4c (corresponding to the closed state of the door latch 12). The translation stroke is defined by the length of the elongate hole 80 or/and the radial depth of the radial recess formed by the sliding edge 76.
[0053] The torsion spring 64 is supported between the housing main part 58 and the rotary gripper 62. In the example shown, it is in the form of a leg spring with two spring legs 84, 86 protruding tangentially from a spring wire coil 82, of which one spring leg (here the spring leg 84) is coupled in a force-transmitting manner with the housing main part 58 and the other spring leg (here the spring leg 86) is coupled in a force-transmitting manner with the rotary gripper 62. In the example shown, the spring legs 84, 86 have a leg angle of more than 90 and less than 180. It will be appreciated that this leg angle is not limiting. The coil axis, indicated at 88 in FIG. 4c and running perpendicular to the plane of the drawing of FIG. 4c, of the spring wire coil 82 runs substantially parallel to the rotational axis of the rotary gripper 62 and consequently substantially orthogonal to the roof plane of the container roof 22.
[0054] It can be seen in FIG. 4c that, in the closed position of the gripper 62, the spring leg 86 coupled therewith is oriented approximately perpendicular to the direction of the closing path 78 and that therefore, in this state of the door latch 12 (i.e. the closed state), only a force directed substantially along the closing path 78 is exerted by the torsion spring 64 on the gripper 62. In the closed state, this force urges the gripper 62 against the abutment roller 74 or/and the bearing roller 72 and corresponds to the holding-closed force which must be overcome to open the door 20. By contrast, a force component perpendicular to the direction of the closing path 78 in the rotational plane of the rotary gripper 62if such a force acts on the rotary gripper 62 at all in the closed state of the door latch 12is at most very small. Therefore, the torsion spring 64 is not suitable in the relative installation position shown for exerting the return force required in a self-healing operation on the rotary gripper 62. The orientation of the spring leg 86 substantially perpendicular to the direction of the closing path 78 in the closed state of the latch is, on the other hand, advantageous for as great a pulling-shut force of the door latch 12 as possible.
[0055] In order nevertheless to make self-healing of the door latch 12 possible, the housing main part 58, together with the gripper 62 and the torsion spring 64, both of which are held and supported on the housing main part 58, are displaceable in the closed position of the rotary gripper 62, as a unit and without mutual relative movement, in the longitudinal direction of the profile strip 24 from the rest position according to FIG. 2 into the yielding position according to FIG. 3b. FIGS. 5a, 5b show such an operation of self-healing. Self-healing becomes necessary if the rotary gripper 62 changes from the open position according to FIG. 4a into the closed position according to FIG. 4c without the door 20 at the same time being closed. Self-healing means that, in the closed position of the rotary gripper 62, the door 20 can nevertheless be closed and the closing shackle can be brought into proper gripping engagement with the rotary gripper 62. This is possible in that, by suitable shaping of the front side of the front jaw 68, it is ensured that, when the closing shackle 30 meets that jaw front side (see FIG. 5a), a force component transverse to the direction of the closing path 78 is generated on the gripper 62. This force urges the totality consisting of the housing main part 58, the torsion spring 64 and the rotary gripper 62 from the rest position according to FIG. 5a into the yielding position according to FIG. 5b. In the yielding position, the shackle crosspiece 56 is able to move past the front jaw 68 and enter the gripping mouth 66. The return spring 48 effects a return movement of the totality consisting of the housing main part 58, the torsion spring 64 and the rotary gripper 62 into the rest position according to FIG. 5a.
[0056] Where it has been stated that the totality consisting of the housing main part 58, the torsion spring 64 and the rotary gripper 62 is displaceable without mutual relative movement from the rest position according to FIG. 5a into the yielding position according to FIG. 5b, this does not mean that no such relative movement must occur in a concrete self-healing operation in which the closing shackle 30 strikes the front jaw 68 of the rotary gripper 62. It is possible that, as a result of the closing shackle 30 striking the front jaw 68 of the rotary gripper 62, the rotary gripper may experience a certain, comparatively slight rotation, which is naturally accompanied by a relative movement of the rotary gripper 62 with respect to the torsion spring 64. However, the torsion spring 64 and the rotary gripper 62 are so arranged on the housing main part 58 that it is in principle possible to displace the housing main part 58 together with the torsion spring 64 and the rotary gripper 62 as a unit without necessarily a mutual relative movement of the components of this unit in the strip longitudinal direction.
[0057] Reference will now be made to the exemplary embodiment of FIGS. 6 to 8c. In those figures, elements which are the same or have the same effect are provided with the same reference numerals as in the preceding figures, but with the addition of a lowercase letter. Unless indicated otherwise hereinbelow, reference is made to the preceding comments for the explanation of such elements which are the same or have the same effect.
[0058] The fundamental difference in the door latch 12a of FIGS. 6 to 8c compared to the door latch 12 of FIGS. 2 to 5b is that, in the door latch 12a, the entire latch housing 50a including the housing main part 58a is not longitudinally displaceable in the profile strip 24a. Instead, in the door latch 12a, the housing main part 58a is fastened in a longitudinally fixed manner to the profile strip 24a, and only the housing cover 56a is held on the main housing part 58a with play for movability in the strip longitudinal direction relative thereto. At the same time, the housing cover 56a in the exemplary embodiment of FIGS. 6 to 8c serves as the carrier for the torsion spring 64a and the rotary gripper 62a; the latter two components are thus mounted not, as in the exemplary embodiment of FIGS. 2 to 5b, on the housing main part 58a but on the housing cover 56a.
[0059] For fastening the housing main part 58a to the profile strip 24a, fastening holes 90a (FIGS. 6, 8c) are provided in the housing main part 58a, which fastening holes serve to receive fastening bolts (not shown in detail) by means of which the housing main part 58a can be screwed to the profile strip 24a. In order to connect the housing main part 58a to the housing cover 56a in such a manner that it has play for movability but is captive, in the example shown there are provided on the housing main part 58a a plurality of resilient clamping hooks 92a by means of which the housing cover 56a can be clamped to the housing main part 58a. The clamping hooks 92a define a play path along which the housing cover 56a is displaceable in the strip longitudinal direction relative to the housing main part 58a. In the latch 12a, the return spring 48a is supported between the housing main part 58a and the housing cover 56a (the return spring 48a is depicted both in FIG. 7a and in FIG. 7b; this does not mean that it is present twice, it is simply shown in each of these two figures).
[0060] FIG. 8a shows the door latch 12a in a starting or rest state in which the housing cover 56a (together with the components held thereon, including the torsion spring 64a and the rotary gripper 62a) is urged by the return spring 48a into a rest position relative to the housing main part 58a. This corresponds to the normal state of the door latch 12a during proper opening and closing of the door of the dishwasher. FIG. 8b, on the other hand, shows the door latch 12a in a yielding state in which the housing cover 56a (together with the components held thereon) has been moved relative to the housing main part 58a and against the force of the return spring 48a into a yielding position. In this yielding position, the front jaw 68a of the rotary gripper 62a is in a position relative to the closing shackle corresponding to FIG. 5b, that is to say, in the yielding position of the housing cover 56a, the closing shackle is able to move with its shackle crosspiece past the front jaw 68a and enter the gripping mouth 66a.
[0061] As in the exemplary embodiment of FIGS. 2 to 5b, in the case of the door latch 12a of FIGS. 6 to 8c, the housing cover 56a together with the torsion spring 64a and the rotary gripper 62a as a unit and without necessary mutual relative movement can be displaced in the strip longitudinal direction relative to the profile strip 24a in order thereby to permit self-healing of the door latch 12a.