The present invention relates to latches for drawers, cabinet doors and the like, and, more particularly, to “child-proof” latches that include features which make them difficult to be actuated by small children.
Drawers are commonly used in daily life in kitchens, bedrooms, offices, etc. to store a wide range of articles, some of which may be harmful to children. Small children may also attempt to climb on, or even in, drawers and cabinets in an effort to hide. Drawers and cabinets may house many types of materials which may be potentially hazardous to children such as medicines, household cleaners, knives, tools, paint, etc.
To prevent young children from accessing these storage areas, numerous items have been patented and sold, most of a multi-piece assembly. Generally, some sort of a longitudinal member with a hook portion is attached to the inside surface of a drawer or door to limit the amount the drawer or door may be opened. The hook portion may engage with a stop installed on a frame portion of the cabinet as the drawer or door is withdrawn. Only a small space may then remain for an adult to insert their finger to depress the longitudinal member such that the hook may clear the stop on the frame of the enclosure.
While the disengagement of the latch is relatively easy for an adult, the latches are intended to be difficult to manipulate by a child. However, since the actuation may be easily learned by an attentive child, the latch may soon prove inadequate.
In many cases, these latches require at least two components, which need alignment during installation or adjustment after installation. These components generally include a stop portion, or catch, attached to the enclosure and a hook portion attached to the inside of the drawer. This mechanism may further require a biasing member (springs, etc.) to bias the hook member against the stop member.
Other latch designs have included complex assemblies which challenge the manual dexterity of children and which may require the broad hand span of an adult to actuate. However, children may defeat these by using two hands.
Some of the current latches may require attachment to the exterior of the enclosure and look unsightly or attract unwanted attention.
Examples of previously disclosed latches are described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,139,249 to Hillman; U.S. Pat. No. 3,397,001 to Freidman; U.S. Pat. No. 3,889,992 to Shelton; U.S. Pat. No. 5,823,649 to Hinrichs; U.S. Pat. No. 4,505,526 to Leck; U.S. Pat. No. 3,850,463 to Hawkins; U.S. Pat. No. 5,626,372 to Vogt; U.S. Pat. No. 5,645,304 to Richardson, et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 5,795,044 to Trewlulla, Jr. et al.; U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,759,782; 3,519,299 and 4,286,809 to Goodwin; U.S. Pat. No. 4,191,411 to Rodgers; U.S. Pat. No. 4,378,949 to Chrones; U.S. Pat. No. 4,416,477 to Bialobrziski, et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 4,632,438 to McKinney; U.S. Pat. No. 4,717,184 to Boyce; U.S. Pat. No. 5,445,451 to Harmony; U.S. Pat. No. 5,647,618 to Lambreth; U.S. Pat. No. 5,769,517 to Carde; U.S. Pat. No. 6,250,730 to Roth, et al.; U.S. Pat. No. 6,942,257 to Wong, et al. and U.S. Pat. No. 6,955,380 to Barr.
What is needed is a one-piece “child-proof” safety latch that is easy to install on the inside surface of a drawer, or door, and which includes more than one feature which must be actuated to release the latch. Thus, a drawer, or cabinet door, may only be partially opened and its contents kept secure from children. Upon actuation of the more than one feature by an adult, the contents may become accessible.
It is thus an object of the present invention to provide a one-piece latch which may preferably be molded of plastic to provide a low cost safety latch.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a childproof safety latch which may be easily installed on the interior of a drawer or door without the need for power tools or taking measurements.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a safety latch which requires at least two cooperating efforts, a deflection of a sidewall prior to the depressing of a resilient member to allow a hook portion to clear an engaging surface.
In an exemplary embodiment, a childproof latch is provided for attachment to a closure panel, the closure panel being moveable relative to a frame, the latch comprising a generally C-shaped member having a base portion, the base portion configured for attachment to the closure member, an first portion, disposed longitudinally, and extending forward from the base portion, the first portion further including a hook portion for engagement with a cabinet frame, and a second portion disposed opposite at least a portion of the first portion that may extend forward from the base portion. In an application for a drawer, the first portion may be disposed above the second portion, while for a cabinet door; the first portion may be disposed beside the second portion. The latch further may comprise a buttressing wall section extending inwardly from each of the first portion and the second portion and at least one opening located between the first and the second portions, wherein at least one of the buttressing sections may be deflected away from alignment with the opposite buttressing section and allow the hook section of the first portion to clear any interference with the frame.
In a second exemplary embodiment, a safety latch in combination with a closure for a cabinet for preventing access to the cabinet by preventing full opening of the closure is provided, the latch comprising a generally C-shaped member having a base portion, the base portion configured for attachment to the closure member, a first portion disposed longitudinally that may extend forward from the base portion, of the first portion further including a hook portion for engagement with a cabinet frame, and a second portion disposed opposite at least a portion of the first portion and extending forward from the base portion. In an application for a drawer, the first portion may be disposed above the second portion, while for a cabinet door; the first portion may be disposed beside the second portion. The latch may further comprise a buttressing wall section extending inwardly from each of the first portion and the second portion and at least one opening located between the first and the second portions, wherein at least one of the buttressing sections may be deflected away from alignment with the opposite buttressing section and allow the hook section of the first portion to clear any interference with the frame.
In method form the present invention provides a means of temporarily latching a closure member to a frame member, the method comprising the steps of:
The method may further include providing a pin extending from the hook portion, which engages a hole in the frame during step (e), the pin having a length and wherein the closure member must be moved towards the frame by a distance greater than the length of the pin before step (g) takes place.
In accordance with the present invention, a childproof latch is provided that may be difficult for a child to physically actuate as it provides more than one feature which must be actuated, or overcome, in order to gain access to a drawer or cabinet. Thus, the childproof latch in accordance with the present invention, may comprise a substantially C-shaped, preferably molded, plastic article having a base portion for attachment to the inside of a drawer or cabinet door, a first longitudinal portion that may extend forward from the base portion for engagement with a cabinet frame, and a second portion that may extend forward from the base portion opposite the first portion, the portions being at least partially separated by an opening. The first longitudinal section may be disposed substantially horizontally and may include a hook portion to engage a cabinet frame, which may be adjacent the drawer or door. By being disposed horizontally, the latch of the present invention may be preferably installed with its long axis disposed normal to the face of the door or drawer it is intended to latch. The opening may allow the first portion to be pivoted towards the second portion to clear the interference of the hook portion with the cabinet frame. Buttressing wall sections may extend inwardly toward each other from the first and second portions, respectively, and may frame the aforementioned opening. The buttressing wall sections may substantially interfere with one another to prevent deflection of the hook portion of the first portion and prevent more than limited opening of the drawer or door. One of the buttressing sections may be deflected sideways, that is laterally from the longitudinal axis of the latch, to be offset from the other and allow the first portion of the latch to be deflected sufficiently to clear the interference of the hook with the frame. Thus, the opening in the latch provides an area around which buttressing walls may pivot. In addition, a section of the first portion longitudinal member, adjacent the hook portion, may preferably be thinned or weakened to provide a pivot point to reduce the force required to move the hook portion past the enclosure frame when the drawer is being closed. The one-piece latch is preferably molded of a somewhat resilient plastic to provide the bias of the hook portion against the enclosure frame. The base portion further may include an outer perimeter which is wider than the thickness of the buttressing sections to provide room for the buttressing section to be deflected laterally and provide a substantial thickness for attachment to the drawer or door inner surface.
The latch may be mounted on the inside surface of a drawer or cabinet door such that the drawer or door may only be opened a desired amount as dictated by the positioning of the latch.
An adult may be able to reach into the open space provided by the latch of the present invention and deflect the first buttressing wall section laterally from alignment with the second buttressing wall section, and then depress the first longitudinal portion such that the hook member may clear the frame of the enclosure and the drawer may be fully opened.
These and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon reference to the following written description and accompanying drawings in which:
The present invention is described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which preferred embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention, may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art.
For elements common to the various embodiments of the invention, the numerical reference character between the embodiments is held constant, but distinguished by the addition of an alphanumeric character to the existing numerical reference character. In other words, for example, an element referenced at 10 in the first embodiment is correspondingly referenced as 10A, 10B, and so forth in subsequent embodiments. Thus, where an embodiment description uses a reference character to refer to an element, the reference character applies equally, as distinguished by alphanumeric character, to the other embodiments where the element is common.
Referring now to
As part of the essentially C-shaped design of the latch 10, an opening 26 may lie between the first 16 and second 14 portions to provide an area around which the first portion 16 may pivot relative to the base 12. A section 18 of the first portion 16 may be thinned or otherwise weakened to provide an additional pivot point to assist in moving the hook portion 20 past the frame of the enclosure that the drawer slides in, when closing the drawer. The first member 16 may be thinned about 20%-80% of its full thickness to provide the desired flexing action. Preferably, the latch 10 may also flex around any other radii formed in the opening 26 of the latch to make it easy to deflect the latch first portion 16 downward during closing of the drawer. Thus, upon closing the drawer or door from a fully open position, the frame of the enclosure may encounter first portion 16 and ride along it deflecting the hook portion 20 away from the frame by flexing the first portion around the thinned or weakened area 18, or other radius points. Once the drawer is sufficiently closed to clear the hook portion, the hook portion 20 may recover to its as-molded position due to the resilient nature of the plastic from which it was molded. The hook portion may then be in an interference position to allow the drawer to only be opened a small amount, as the hook portion 20 will interfere with the frame 54 (see
It is also contemplated that the latch of the present invention may be formed without a slot 28 and that that section of the latch 10 might be formed by a thin web of material, preferably flexible, that might extend or bend and allow the walls to be offset one from the other.
Turning to
While any of the embodiments of the childproof latch, according to the present invention, may find use on other closures means than a drawer, for instance on a cabinet door, or dishwasher door or oven door,
As shown in
Further, the locating extension 34G may include a downstanding leg, which may fit over the edge of a drawer front to locate the latch 10G in both a horizontal and vertical position. Preferably for all of the embodiments of the latch according to the present invention, the extension portion 34 (34G, etc.) may substantially lie flush with the top of the side of the drawer to which it is mounted.
Thus, a childproof latch is provided which may be easily installed on the inside of a closure member without power tools or the need to measure. The latch may allow partial opening of the closure member but requires a combination of actions to be carried out so that the enclosure which the member closes may be freely accessed.
It should be understood that although specific embodiments of the present invention have been described herein in detail, such descriptions are for purposes of illustration only and modifications may be made thereto within the scope of the invention.
The description and drawings illustratively set forth the presently preferred invention embodiment. We intend the description and drawings to describe this embodiment and not to limit the scope of the invention. Obviously, it is possible to modify these embodiments while remaining within the scope of the following claims. Therefore, within the scope of the claims one may practice the invention otherwise than as the description and drawings specifically show and describe.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/993,121 filed on Sep. 10, 2007, the teachings of which are incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090066203 A1 | Mar 2009 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60993121 | Sep 2007 | US |