Locking mechanism
09926723 ยท 2018-03-27
Inventors
Cpc classification
E05B47/0047
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Y10T292/699
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
E05C19/009
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Y10T292/696
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
International classification
E05C19/00
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E05B47/00
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E05B15/02
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Abstract
A locking mechanism including a plunger, a plurality of locking elements, a cage including apertures in which the locking elements are housed, and a sleeve, with the sleeve moveable with respect to the cage between an unlocked position and a locked position, and when the sleeve is in the locked position, the sleeve maintains the locking elements in engagement with a recess on the plunger to restrict movement of the plunger.
Claims
1. An electric strike, comprising: a housing; a rotary motor positioned in the housing, the rotary motor having an output shaft; a sleeve comprising a plurality of recesses, wherein the sleeve is structured to move between a locked position and an unlocked position in response to rotation of the output shaft; a cage seated in the sleeve, the cage comprising a plurality of apertures; a plurality of locking elements, wherein each of the locking elements is movably seated in a corresponding one of the apertures; a plunger movably seated in the cage, the plunger comprising a recessed portion and a ramp, the plunger having an extended position in which the recessed portion is aligned with the plurality of apertures and is operable to receive the plurality of locking elements, and a retracted position in which the recessed portion is misaligned with the plurality of apertures, wherein the ramp is structured to urge the locking elements radially outward in response to movement of the plunger from the extended position toward the retracted position; a keeper pivotally mounted to the housing, the keeper having a closed position and an open position, wherein the keeper comprises a formation structured to urge the plunger from the extended position toward the retracted position in response to pivoting of the keeper from the closed position toward the open position; wherein, with the sleeve in the locked position, the recesses are misaligned with the apertures and the sleeve prevents radially outward movement of the locking elements, thereby preventing movement of the plunger from the extended position to the retracted position, thereby preventing the movement of the keeper from the closed position to the open position; and wherein, with the sleeve in the unlocked position, the recesses are aligned with the apertures and the recesses enable radially outward movement of the locking elements, thereby enabling movement of the plunger from the extended position to the retracted position, thereby enabling movement of the keeper from the closed position to the open position.
2. The electric strike of claim 1, wherein the output shaft is rotationally engaged with the sleeve, and the sleeve is structured to rotate between the locked position and the unlocked position in response to rotation of the output shaft.
3. The electric strike of claim 1, wherein the movement of the sleeve between the locked position and the unlocked position in response to rotation of the output shaft is rotational movement.
4. The electric strike of claim 3, wherein the sleeve further comprises a dog, wherein a protrusion extends from the cage and into the dog, and wherein engagement between the dog and the protrusion limit rotation of the sleeve with respect to the cage.
5. The electric strike of claim 1, wherein the rotary motor is operable to receive power from an external power source, wherein the electric strike further comprises an energy storage device, and wherein the energy storage device is structured to supply energy to the rotary motor in response to failure of the external power source.
6. The electric strike of claim 1, wherein each of the locking elements comprises a ball.
7. The electric strike of claim 1, further comprising a spring, wherein the plunger is biased toward the extended position by the spring.
8. The electric strike of claim 1, wherein the formation of the keeper comprises a tapered recess, and the plunger further comprises a tapered nose operable to engage the tapered recess.
9. An electric strike, comprising: a housing; a keeper pivotally mounted in the housing, the keeper having a closed position and an open position; a plunger comprising a nose operable to engage a formation on the keeper, and a stem including a recessed portion; a cage having a plurality of apertures, wherein the plunger is movably seated in the cage and has an extended position in which the recessed portion is aligned with the plurality of apertures and a retracted position in which the recessed portion is misaligned with the plurality of apertures; a plurality of locking elements, wherein each of the locking elements is movably seated in a corresponding one of the apertures and is operable to engage the recessed portion of the stem when the plunger is in the extended position; a sleeve comprising a plurality of recesses, the sleeve having an unlocked position in which the recesses are aligned with the apertures and the locking elements, and a locked position in which the recesses are misaligned with the apertures; and an actuator operable to move the sleeve between the locked position and the unlocked position; wherein the nose of the plunger and the formation of the keeper are structured to urge the plunger from the extended position toward the retracted position in response to movement of the keeper from the closed position toward the open position; wherein, in the locked position, the sleeve maintains the locking elements in engagement with the recess on the plunger, thereby preventing movement of the plunger, and thereby preventing movement of the keeper from the closed position to the open position; wherein, in the unlocked position, the sleeve releases the engagement of the locking elements with the recess on the plunger, thereby allowing movement of the plunger, and thereby allowing the keeper to move from the closed position to the open position.
10. The electric strike of claim 9, wherein the actuator comprises an electric motor, and wherein the electric motor is operable to rotate the sleeve between the locked position and the unlocked position.
11. The electric strike of claim 10, wherein the actuator further comprises a gearbox connected between the electric motor and the sleeve.
12. The electric strike of claim 9, wherein the cage includes a flange engaged with the housing, and wherein engagement of the flange and the housing restricts movement of the cage with respect to the housing.
13. An electric strike, comprising: a housing; a keeper pivotally mounted in the housing, the keeper having a closed position and an open position; a plunger cooperating with a formation on the keeper, the plunger having an extended position and a retracted position, wherein the plunger comprises a recess, and wherein movement of the keeper from the closed position to the open position causes movement of the plunger from the extended position to the retracted position through the cooperation of the plunger with the formation on the keeper; a cage having a plurality of apertures, wherein the recess is aligned with the apertures when the plunger is in the extended position, and wherein the recess is misaligned with the apertures when the plunger is in the retracted position; a plurality of locking elements movably seated in the apertures; a sleeve at least partially surrounding the cage, wherein the sleeve has a locking position in which the sleeve maintains the locking elements in engagement with the recess on the plunger, thereby maintaining the plunger in the extended position and preventing movement of the keeper from the closed position to the open position, and wherein the sleeve has an unlocking position in which the sleeve releases the engagement of the locking elements with the recess on the plunger, thereby allowing movement of the plunger to the retracted position and allowing the keeper to move from the closed position to the open position; a motor structured to move the sleeve from the locking position to the unlocking position in response to an unlocking signal and to move the sleeve from the unlocking position to the locking position in response to a locking signal; and a controller in communication with the motor, wherein the controller includes an onboard power source and is structured for connection to an external power source, wherein the controller, in response to failure of the external power source, uses power from the onboard power source to provide the motor with one of the locking signal and the unlocking signal.
14. The electric strike of claim 13, wherein the controller is selectively operable in each of a fail secure mode.
15. The electric strike of claim 14, further comprising a dip switch in communication with the controller, wherein the controller is configured to operate in the fail secure mode in response to a first position of the dip switch and to operate in the fail safe mode in response to a second position of the dip switch.
16. The electric strike of claim 14, wherein the onboard power source comprises a capacitor.
17. The electric strike of claim 13, wherein the motor is structured to rotate the sleeve in a first direction in response to the unlocking signal and to rotate the sleeve in an opposite second direction in response to the locking signal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) An embodiment of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(10) Referring to
(11) Referring to
(12) Referring to
(13) A motor 46 and gearbox 48 arrangement is used to rotate sleeve 24. The output shaft of gearbox 48 carries a second dog 50 which engages with dog 38 of sleeve 24. The dogs 50, 38 are arranged in a sliding fit with one another. As will be seen, dog 50 remains in a laterally fixed position within the housing 14 on the end of the output shaft of gearbox 48, whereas sleeve 24 moves linearly to the left and to the right as sleeve 24 rotates by interaction of screw threads 30 and 31. The dogs 50, 38 accommodate the linear movement of the sleeve to maintain rotational control of sleeve 24 by the motor 46 and gearbox 48 combination.
(14) Referring to
(15) As can be seen from
(16) Operation of the strike to move from the locked condition to the unlocked condition is illustrated by the sequence shown in
(17) Referring to
(18) Strike includes an on-board controller board or onboard power source 45 which provides power to the motor 46 to control the motor. The polarity of the power applied to the motor dictates whether the motor moves in a clockwise or anti-clockwise direction. The controller board senses when the sleeve is in the locked position by way of microswitch 13 which is actuated by the sleeve acting on pushrod 15. In other embodiments, the controller board may detect that the motor has reached the end of its stroke by the fact that, when unable to move further, the motor draws more current. This increase in current can be used to assume that the sleeve has reached a desired position. In other embodiments optical sensors or Hall effect sensors are used to sense the position of the sleeve.
(19) Lock 10 can operate in two modes, Fail Safe and Fail Secure. In the Fail Secure mode, in the event of a power cut to the lock, the lock remains in the locked position. In the Fail Safe mode, if power to the lock is cut, then the lock moves to the unlocked position (
(20) An alternative embodiment of a locking mechanism 116 and electric strike 110 will be described with reference to
(21) Referring to
(22) Referring to
(23) To move to the locked position, sleeve 124 is rotated by 45 degrees. As best seen in section D-D, balls 22 are now prevented from moving outwardly, but are retained by sleeve 124 in engagement with recess 140 of plunger 120. In this position, plunger 120 cannot be pushed inwards.
(24) Referring to
(25) Sleeve 124 is arranged to be rotated by way of a motor 146 and gearbox 148 combination which engages with sleeve 124 by way of dog 150.
(26) A ramp 154 provided on the end of sleeve 124 actuates pushrod 15 to depress microswitch 13, thus enabling remote monitoring of whether the strike 110 is in a locked condition.
(27) The sequence of operation of the strike 110 moving from the locked to the unlocked and open conditions is shown in
(28) In
(29) In
(30) It has been found that locking mechanisms according to embodiments of the invention have excellent operating characteristics under pre-load conditions. That is, the sleeve of the locking mechanism can be moved with respect to the cage even whilst a considerable force is simultaneously being applied to the plunger of the mechanism.
(31) Whilst the above described embodiment utilizes a motor and gearbox to drive the lock mechanism, in other embodiments, a motor could be used without a gearbox. As a further alternative, the mechanism can be driven by a solenoid.
(32) Whilst the locking mechanism has been described with reference to use in a locking device in the form of an electric strike, it can similarly be used in locks of other types including gate locks, drop bolts and electric mortise locks.
(33) It can be seen that embodiments of the invention have at least one of the following advantages.
(34) The locking mechanism has excellent pre-load characteristics.
(35) In the event of loss of power, the lock can be moved to its unlocked condition using on board power supply.
(36) Any reference to prior art contained herein is not to be taken as an admission that the information is common general knowledge, unless otherwise indicated.
(37) Finally, it is to be appreciated that various alterations or additions may be made to the parts previously described without departing from the spirit or ambit of the present invention.