Electric strike installation tool and method
11634930 · 2023-04-25
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B21D28/34
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E05B47/0046
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E05B17/06
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
B21D28/34
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A lock jamb punching tool includes a face member having a die aperture, a rabbet member protruding normal to the face member, a jamb area between the rabbet member and the face member, and a punch in the jamb area, the punch being slidable into the die aperture along a punch path, and an actuator to move the punch along the punch path.
Claims
1. A lock jamb punching tool for cutting an electric strike aperture in a lock jamb of a metal door frame, the lock jamb having a rabbet having a depth extending from a face to a stop, and a strike plate aperture defined transversally across the rabbet, the tool comprising a face member having a die aperture, a rabbet member protruding normal to the face member, a jamb area between the rabbet member and the face member, and a punch in the jamb area, the punch being slidable into the die aperture along a punch path, and an actuator to move the punch along the punch path, wherein during use, the jamb can be positioned into the jamb area of the tool by inserting the punch through the strike plate aperture, with the rabbet member in abutment with the rabbet and the face member in abutment with the face, and the actuator can be actuated to pull the punch into the die aperture, thereby cutting the electric strike aperture in the face of the lock jamb, and further wherein the rabbet member includes at least one shim plate receiver configured for selectively receiving a varying number of shim plates between the rabbet member and an abutment member configured to abut against the rabbet, said variation in the number of shim plates changing the thickness between the abutment member and the rabbet member.
2. The lock jamb punching tool of claim 1 wherein the strike plate aperture having a top threaded aperture and a bottom threaded aperture defined through corresponding flanges, the rabbet member having attachment screws configured for engaging with the threaded apertures to hold the jamb in the jamb area.
3. The lock jamb punching tool of claim 2 wherein the flanges are recessed, and the threaded apertures are spaced apart in accordance with the ANSI standard for strike plate apertures.
4. The lock jamb punching tool of claim 3 including guiding shafts, the guiding shafts slidingly extending across sliding bores of the face member and secured to the punch.
5. The lock jamb punching tool of claim 3 wherein the punch is slidingly engaged with a face of the rabbet member, the face of the rabbet member allowing the punch to slide along the punch path while preventing the punch from rotating.
6. The lock jamb punching tool of claim 3 wherein the rabbet member includes a recess, the recess forming a keypath, the punch including protruding features slidingly engaged with the keypath, the protruding features sliding along the keypath when the punch moves along the punch path.
7. The lock jamb punching tool of claim 1 wherein the actuator is an actuator screw, the actuator screw extending across the face member into engagement with a threaded actuation bore in the punch, wherein a rotation of the actuator screw pulls the punch along the punch path.
8. A lock jamb punching tool for cutting an electric strike aperture in a lock jamb of a metal door frame, the lock jamb having a rabbet having a depth extending from a face to a stop, and a strike plate aperture defined transversally across the rabbet, the tool comprising a face member having a die aperture, a rabbet member protruding normal to the face member, a jamb area between the rabbet member and the face member, and a punch in the jamb area, the punch being slidable into the die aperture along a punch path, and an actuator to move the punch along the punch path, wherein during use, the jamb can be positioned into the jamb area of the tool by inserting the punch through the strike plate aperture, with the rabbet member in abutment with the rabbet and the face member in abutment with the face, and the actuator can be actuated to pull the punch into the die aperture, thereby cutting the electric strike aperture in the face of the lock jamb, and further wherein the rabbet member is formed as a C-shape, a upper member and a lower member of the rabbet member slidingly engaged with an upper face and a lower face of the face member, for sliding normal to the face member, the rabbet member being securable to the face member to selectively block or allow said sliding.
9. The lock jamb punching tool of claim 8 wherein the strike plate aperture having a top threaded aperture and a bottom threaded aperture defined through corresponding flanges, the rabbet member having attachment screws configured for engaging with the threaded apertures to hold the jamb in the jamb area.
10. The lock jamb punching tool of claim 9 wherein the flanges are recessed, and the threaded apertures are spaced apart in accordance with the ANSI standard for strike plate apertures.
11. The lock jamb punching tool of claim 10 including guiding shafts, the guiding shafts slidingly extending across sliding bores of the face member and secured to the punch.
12. The lock jamb punching tool of claim 10 wherein the punch is slidingly engaged with a face of the rabbet member, the face of the rabbet member allowing the punch to slide along the punch path while preventing the punch from rotating.
13. The lock jamb punching tool of claim 10 wherein the rabbet member includes a recess, the recess forming a keypath, the punch including protruding features slidingly engaged with the keypath, the protruding features sliding along the keypath when the punch moves along the punch path.
14. The lock jamb punching tool of claim 8 wherein the actuator is an actuator screw, the actuator screw extending across the face member into engagement with a threaded actuation bore in the punch, wherein a rotation of the actuator screw pulls the punch along the punch path.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1) In the figures,
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7)
(8) More specifically,
(9) The actuator used to pull the punch 214 across the corresponding portion 106 of the door frame 100 can vary from one embodiment to another. In this embodiment, it is provided in the form of a suitable mechanical screw, referred to herein as an actuator screw 217. As better shown in
(10) In one embodiment, the guiding mechanism can be based on a punch which can simply have a slide edge which is very close to the inner face of the rabbet member, for instance, and the die can only have three edges. In the illustrated embodiment, however, it was preferred to provide a die 210 having four edges 211, and for the guiding mechanism to be relatively precise, and to this end, two guiding shafts 222 were used, one above the actuator screw 217, and one below, with corresponding bores 224 formed through the face member 204, in a manner that as the actuator screw 217 pulls the punch 214 into the die 210, the guiding shafts 222 slide snugly though the corresponding bores 224. Moreover, in this specific example, an additional guiding mechanism was provided in the form of corresponding, mating shapes defined in the lateral edge of the punch, and in the rabbet member 202. More specifically, a recess 226 is formed in the inner face 206 of the rabbet member 202, and this recess 226 is formed with an upper groove and a lower groove. The upper groove and the lower groove form keypaths into which corresponding upper and lower protruding features 228 of the punch 214 are engaged, such that when the punch 214 is pulled along the punch path 216, the protruding features 228 slide along the keypaths. Various alternate embodiments are possible. In one embodiment, for instance, the guiding shafts can be used without keypaths, whereas in another, the keypaths can be used without the guiding shafts, to name another example.
(11) Referring back to
(12) With the tool 200, including the punch 214, in the operation position such as shown in
(13) The tool can be adapted to different types of metal door frames. Many metal door frames, such as the ones shown in
(14) When adapting the tool 200 to metal door frames having standard ANSI strike plate apertures 112, using corresponding attachment screws 301 to secure the tool 200 in its operation position, with the attachment screws 301 engaged into the standard strike plate threaded apertures 124 across the rabbet member 102, can be a very suitable, efficient, and highly precise way of holding the tool 200 in its operation position. It will be understood, however, that other means of securing the tool 200 to its operation position may be preferred in alternate embodiments, such as to adapt the tool 200 to metal door frames which do not have standard ANSI strike plate apertures 112.
(15) Even in the case of door frames having standard ANSI strike plate apertures 112, the depth of the rabbet 102 can vary from one model to another. To accommodate this, it may be useful to provide the tool 200 with a mechanism to allow extending or retracting the rabbet member 202 relative to the internal face of the face member 208. Moreover, various models of electric strikes 108 exist, and some may have keepers 125 which are thicker than others. To accommodate this, it may be useful to provide the tool 200 with a mechanism to allow extending or retracting the die 210 relative to the internal face of the rabbet member 206. In this embodiment, both such features were provided. Firstly, the rabbet member 202 was generally formed as a C, with upper and lower sliding members 228 designed to slidingly engage an upper face 230 and a lower face 232 of the face member 204, respectively. Adjustment screws 234 can be unfastened to release the sliding movement of the rabbet member 202 normal to the face member 204, and fastened to lock the rabbet member 202 in a desired extension configuration. Secondly, the inner face 206 of the rabbet member 202 was designed with a shim plate receiver in a manner to allow selectively fastening a varying number of shim plates 236, such that the portion of the rabbet member 202 which forms the abutment with the rabbet 102, at the top of the shim plates 236, can see its relative position varied by changing the number of shims 236. This can be done in a manner for a cut mark 238, provided here on the top face 230 of the face member 204, to align with a desired depth mark made on the face 104 of the lock jamb 110, for instance. In alternate embodiments, the face member 204 can be provided with shims and with a sliding C-shape instead of the rabbet member 202, for instance, the tool 200 can be provided with alternate means of adjusting depth and width, and/or omit one or both ways of adjusting depth and width.
(16) More detail about one possible implementation is presented in
(17) As can be understood, the examples described above and illustrated are intended to be exemplary only. The scope is indicated by the appended claims.