Retractable handle for a door or the like
10280658 ยท 2019-05-07
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y10T292/57
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
E05B81/76
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E05B85/107
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
E05B3/00
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Abstract
A retractable handle arrangement comprises a handle movable between stowed, deployed and operative states. That movement is controlled by a mechanism having first and second links each connected to a supporting structure and to the handle. At least one of those links is connected to the supporting structure by a joint defining a pivot axis that is movable is response to movement of the handle between the deployed state and the operative state. That movement of the pivot axis is used to unlatch a door or other closure associated with the handle, for example via a crank acting on a Bowden cable.
Claims
1. A handle arrangement for a vehicle door, the arrangement comprising a strap handle and a linkage mechanism arranged to couple the handle to the door for movement between a first position in which an outer surface of the handle lies substantially flush with and substantially continuous with an outer surface of the door surrounding the handle arrangement and a second position in which the handle protrudes from the outer surface of the door, wherein the strap handle comprises a hand grip that forms part of a loop, the hand grip being disposed between respective first and second ends of the handle, the outer surface of the handle defining a plane which lies substantially parallel to the plane of the outer surface of the door surrounding the handle when the handle is in the second position, and wherein the first end of the handle is spaced axially apart and separated from the second end of the handle along a longitudinal axis of the handle that extends along the length of the handle and is parallel to the plane of the outer surface of the door surrounding the handle when the handle is in the first position, wherein the linkage mechanism is arranged to permit the handle to linearly translate from the first position to the second position, and to permit the handle in the second position to rotate about a pivot point to a third position thereby to disengage a door latch or the like, wherein the linkage mechanism is coupled to only one of the first and second ends of the handle and movement of the linkage mechanism on rotation of the handle to the third position causes disengagement of the door latch or the like, and wherein the handle arrangement further comprises an actuator to drive movement of the linkage mechanism to move the handle at least from the first position to the second position.
2. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein the handle is movable between stowed, deployed and operative states, that movement being controlled by the linkage mechanism, the linkage mechanism having first and second links each connected to a supporting structure and to the handle; wherein the second link is connected to the supporting structure by a joint defining a pivot axis that is movable is response to movement of the handle between the deployed state and the operative state, that movement of the pivot axis being used to unlatch a door or other closure associated with the handle.
3. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein movement of the pivot axis is restrained as the handle moves between the stowed and deployed states.
4. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein movement of the pivot axis is controlled by a guide defining a guide path, the second link having a follower that follows the guide path as the handle moves.
5. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 4, wherein the guide path comprises a first portion that restrains movement of the pivot axis as the handle moves between the stowed and deployed states, and a second portion adjoining and communicating with the first portion that enables movement of the pivot axis as the handle moves between the deployed and operative states.
6. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein the movable pivot axis is movable around a further pivot axis.
7. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 6, wherein the movable pivot axis is defined by a pivot on a crank arm that is pivotable about the further pivot axis.
8. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein the handle is pivotally attached to the first link and pivots about that link when moving from the deployed state to the operative state.
9. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein the first link moves within a hollow part of the handle as the handle moves between the stowed and deployed states.
10. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein the actuator acts on at least one of the links to drive movement of the link between the stowed and deployed states.
11. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 10, wherein the actuator and the link are cooperable to lock the link in at least one of the stowed and deployed states.
12. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein the second link comprises spaced elements and the first link is disposed between those elements.
13. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein the links define a four-bar linkage as the handle moves between the stowed and deployed states.
14. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 13, wherein one of the links is decoupled from the four-bar linkage when the handle moves between the deployed and operative states.
15. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein substantially all of the mechanism, other than the parts of the links connecting to the handle, is disposed to an end or side of the handle.
16. A vehicle, a door or other closure, or a structure adapted to receive a door or other closure, fitted with a handle arrangement as defined in claim 1.
17. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein: when in the first position, the handle is disposed within a slot in the vehicle door and lies substantially flush with an outer surface of the door such that the loop of the handle is concealed; and when in the second position, the handle protrudes from the outer surface of the door such that the loop of the handle is revealed.
18. A handle arrangement for a vehicle door, the arrangement comprising a strap handle and a linkage mechanism arranged to couple the handle to the door for movement between a first position in which an outer surface of the handle lies substantially flush with and substantially continuous with an outer surface of the door surrounding the handle arrangement and a second position in which the handle protrudes from the outer surface of the door, wherein the strap handle comprises a hand grip, the hand grip being disposed between respective first and second ends of the handle, the outer surface of the handle defining a plane which lies substantially parallel to the plane of the outer surface of the door surrounding the handle when the handle is in the second position, and wherein the first end of the handle is spaced axially apart and separated from the second end of the handle along a longitudinal axis of the handle that extends along the length of the handle and is parallel to the plane of the outer surface of the door surrounding the handle when the handle is in the first position, wherein the linkage mechanism comprises: a first link being a primary link that is hinged at one end about a primary link pivot axis and that terminates at the other end in an outer pivot axis about which the primary link is hinged to the strap handle; an actuator rod acting on the primary link that moves the primary link to drive the strap handle between the first and second positions; and a second link being a control arm that is hinged at one end about a floating control arm pivot axis and that terminates at the other end in an inner pivot axis about which the control arm is hinged to the handle, inboard of the outer pivot axis; wherein the linkage mechanism is arranged to permit the handle to linearly translate from the first position to the second position, and to permit the handle in the second position to rotate about the outer pivot axis to a third position thereby to disengage a door latch or the like, and wherein the linkage mechanism comprises a slotted guide that restrains floating movement of the control arm pivot axis as the strap handle moves between the first and second positions, such that the door latch or the like does not disengage during linear translation from the first to the second position, but then allows floating movement of the control arm pivot axis as the strap handle is moved between the second and third positions.
19. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 18, wherein the guide path comprises a first portion that restrains movement of the pivot axis as the handle moves between the first and second positions, and a second portion adjoining and communicating with the first portion that enables movement of the pivot axis as the handle moves between the second and first positions.
20. A handle arrangement as claimed in claim 18, wherein the first link moves within a hollow part of the handle as the handle moves between the first and second positions.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENT(S)
(8) Referring firstly to the exterior views in
(9) The door skin 12 is penetrated by a horizontally-extending slot 14 that receives the handle 10 as a close fit. The outer surface 16 of the handle 10 is shaped to match the slot 14 and lies flush with the surrounding door skin 12 when the handle 10 is stowed as shown in
(10) Whilst shown in a contrasting tone for clarity in the drawings, at least the outer surface 16 of the handle 10, and possibly the entire handle 10, is preferably painted in the same colour as the vehicle body. Other finishes may, of course, be chosen instead, again for aesthetic reasons.
(11) In
(12) Both end-pieces 20, 22 are hollow and one end-piece 22 is substantially wider than the other end-piece 20 in the longitudinal direction of the handle 10. This is to accommodate and conceal a primary link 26 of the door handle mechanism 28 that is apparent in
(13) The handle 10 may be driven from its stowed state to its deployed state in response to various events. For example, this movement may be in response to an unlocking signal from a key authorised to unlock the vehicle or from a presence sensor that detects the presence of an authorised key in the immediate vicinity of the vehicle. Conversely the handle may be driven from its deployed state to its stowed state in response to a locking signal from a key authorised to lock the vehicle or from a presence sensor that determines that the authorised key has left the immediate vicinity of the vehicle. The handle may also toggle between the stowed and deployed states in response to a further action from the user, for example pressing a switch (not shown) on the vehicle door.
(14) Comparison of the corresponding plan views of
(15) Once in the deployed state, the handle 10 can then be pulled to open the door. This involves the user pivoting the handle 10 outwardly against spring bias to the operative state shown in
(16) When grasping the handgrip 18 to pull the handle, the user's fingers and possibly also the thumb can extend into the loop between the handgrip 18 and the inner member 24 The loop is open to the top and bottom and so allows a user to grasp the handgrip 18 using an overhand or underhand grip, whichever may be easier and more comfortable for the user.
(17) In being moved from the deployed state to the operative state, the handle 10 may unlatch the door mechanically or electrically. In the door handle mechanism 28 that will now be described in detail, unlatching is performed mechanically when pulling the handle 10 causes the mechanism to pull a Bowden cable to act on the door latch in well-known manner. However, unlatching could be performed electrically instead.
(18) The door handle mechanism 28 of the invention is apparent in
(19) The mechanism 28 has to meet various requirements in addition to manoeuvring the handle 10 into and out of the deployed state. It must fit into the slim space available between the window glass path and the door skin, whilst maintaining ergonomic size, shape and access in use, and without infringing regulations on exterior projections.
(20) The mechanism 28 is attached to the door structure inside the door skin 12, beside one end of the slot 14. The various pivot axes of the mechanism 28 lie substantially parallel to each other. References to fixed or floating features such as pivot axes in the following description are with respect to the door structure to which the mechanism 28 is attached.
(21) In overview, the mechanism comprises: a first link being a primary link 26 that is hinged at one end about a primary link pivot axis 32 and that terminates at the other end in an outer pivot axis 30 about which the primary link 26 is hinged to the handle 10; an actuator rod 34 acting on the primary link 26 that moves the primary link 26 to drive the handle 10 between the stowed and deployed states; a second link being a control arm 36 that is hinged at one end about a floating control arm pivot axis 38 and that terminates at the other end in an inner pivot axis 40 about which the control arm 36 is hinged to the handle 10, inboard of the outer pivot axis 30; a guide 42 that restrains floating movement of the control arm pivot axis 38 as the handle 10 moves between the stowed and deployed states, but then allows floating movement of the control arm pivot axis 38 as the handle 10 is moved between the deployed and operative states; and a crank 44 having swinging arms 46, 48 opposed about a fixed crank pivot axis 50, one arm 46 carrying a control arm pivot to define the floating control arm pivot axis 38 and an opposed arm 48 acting on the Bowden cable (not shown) to unlatch the door as the control arm pivot axis 38 moves in response to the handle 10 being pulled from the deployed state to the operative state.
(22) The primary link 26 and the control arm 36 are connected to one end of the handle 10 at the outer and inner pivot axes 30, 40 respectively, thereby creating a compact four-bar linkage that carries the handle 10 with respect to the door structure. The inner pivot axis 40 is positioned slightly beyond the outer pivot axis 30 in the longitudinal direction of the handle 10, namely a direction transverse to the pivot axes of the mechanism 28, generally parallel to the door skin 12.
(23) Comparison of
(24) During deployment travel of the handle 10, the guide 42 restricts the mechanism 28 to behave as a four-bar linkage with two stationary pivots 32, 38. By restraining movement of the control arm pivot axis 38, the guide 42 inhibits movement of the crank 44 so that the door cannot unlatch at this stage.
(25) More specifically, the guide 42 is defined by a track, being a slot in a guide member 52. The slot has a first track portion 54a defining an arcuate path for a follower, being a pin 56 fixed to the control arm 36. The centre of curvature of that path defines a fixed position for the floating control arm pivot axis 38, hence locking the crank 44 while the pin 56 remains in the first track portion 54a. The respective ends of the first track portion 54a correspond to the stowed and deployed states of the handle 10.
(26) At the end of the first track portion 54a that corresponds to the deployed state of the handle 10, the slot deviates sharply into a second track portion 54b. It is this second track portion 54b that allows the handle 10 to be pivoted from the deployed state into the operative state as a user pulls the deployed handle 10. During that movement, the pin 56 moves along the second track portion 54b until it reaches the end of the second track portion 54b when the handle 10 reaches its limit of pivoting travel in the operative state. In so doing, the floating control arm pivot axis 38 defined by the control arm pivot on one arm 46 of the crank 44 is pulled about the crank pivot axis 50. That movement causes the other arm 48 of the crank 44 to pull the Bowden cable to unlatch the door.
(27) Having described broadly how the mechanism works, further details of the illustrated embodiment will now be described for completeness. Most of those details will be appreciated best in the enlarged perspective views of the mechanism in
(28) In the illustrated embodiment, the control arm 36 is a forked member comprising spaced elements in the form of two parallel prongs, each prong terminating in a respective pivot part with those pivot parts together defining the inner pivot axis 40. Similarly the guide member 52 comprises two pillars spaced from but aligned with each other, each pillar having a respective slot to define the track portions 54a, 54b cooperating with a pin 56 of a respective one of the prongs of the control arm 36.
(29) A bridge comprising uprights 58 joined by a spindle 60 defines the crank pivot axis 50. The crank 44 is at one end of the spindle 60 and has an arm 46 pivotally supporting one side of the control arm 36. A secondary arm 62 disposed at the other end of the spindle 60 pivotally supports the other side of the control arm 36. Between them, the arm 46 of the crank 44 and the secondary arm 62 define the control arm pivot axis 38, that axis 38 thereby being able to floatwhen permitted by the guide 42around the spindle 60 of the bridge that defines the crank pivot axis 50.
(30) A coil spring 64 around the spindle 60 of the bridge biases the crank 44, the pivots defining the floating control arm pivot axis 38, and hence the control arm 36, to pull the handle 10 back to the deployed state from the operative state when the user releases it.
(31) The actuator rod 34 is movable reciprocally along a channel extending through a fixed bearing member 66, in which the rod 34 is a sliding fit. A proximal end of the rod 34 is driven by suitable drive means such as a solenoid, which is well known and not shown. A distal end of the rod 34 has a serpentine slot defining a drive track to drive a follower, the follower being a primary link pin 68 projecting laterally from the primary link 26. The primary link pin 68 is located near the primary link pivot axis 32 to maximise movement of the primary link 26 in response to movement of the actuator rod 34.
(32) The drive track of the actuator rod 34 has a ramped central cam portion 70a that transforms linear movement of the actuator rod 34 into pivotal movement of the primary link 26. This cam action drives movement of the primary link 26 and hence also of the handle 10 in both directions between the stowed and proximal states.
(33) Detent positions are provided at each end of the central cam portion 70a of the drive track 68. One is a stowed lock detent 70b in which the primary link pin 68 lies when the actuator rod 34 is at the proximal end of its movement, to lock the primary link 26 and hence the handle 10 in the stowed state. The other is a deployed lock detent 70c in which the primary link pin 68 lies when the actuator rod 34 is at the distal end of its movement, to lock the primary link 26 and hence the handle 10 in the deployed state.
(34) This facility to lock the primary link 26 in the stowed or deployed states ensures a clean disconnect between the two separate functions of the mechanism 28. Thus, when the pin 56 of the control arm 36 is in the second track portion 54b and the handle 10 is therefore free to move between the deployed and operative states, the primary link 26 is locked so that the outer pivot axis 30 about which the handle 10 pivots cannot move.
(35) The primary link 26 is disposed compactly between the prongs of the control arm 36 and whilst functionally a U-link is actually shaped like a numeral 7. The foot of the 7 is at the primary link pivot axis 32. The top arm of the 7 is nearly perpendicular to the door skin 12 in the stowed state and swings out with the handle 10 beyond the door skin 12 as the handle 10 moves into the deployed state. In so doing, the top arm of the 7 is accommodated within, and concealed by, the enlarged hollow end piece 22 of the handle 10 as mentioned already above.
(36) Many variations are possible without departing from the inventive concept. For example, a cam of rotary, linear or helical configuration may replace the actuator rod 34. Also, it may be possible to release the latch using movement of the control arm directly, without recourse to a crank arrangement. A telescoping or otherwise extending control arm may be used for this purpose.
(37) Thus, the invention provides a mechanism for a deploying door handle that separates the motions of deploying the handle and releasing the door. The handle starts from a position flush with the door skin and when deployed it reveals a strap-type configuration, which is used to release the door latch and to manipulate the door to an open position in the normal way of a strap-type handle. The motion of deployment cannot release the door from a latched state and is separate and independent from the motion of latch release.
(38) The mechanism uses a four-bar linkage to move the handle from the stowed to the deployed states and back again, and locks the handle in either of those two static states after that transition. Once the handle is in the deployed state, the mechanism ceases to behave as a four-bar linkage when part of that linkage is released to allow the same mechanism to release the door latch.