The present invention relates to a combination lock and more specifically to a combination dial lock with a programmable electronic interface.
Combination locks are used in commercial, residential, and institutional environments to provide lockable access to personal items and/or enclosures. The combination lock may be a separate device, such as a combination padlock, which may be shackled to a door, bracket, cable, or other item to restrict access. Alternatively, the combination lock may be integral to an enclosure, such as a safe or a storage locker. One such exemplary application is a combination lock used to secure a school locker.
The locking mechanism of a prior art combination lock 1, as illustrated in
While the use of a combination lock, as compared to a key based lock, may eliminate the risk of lost, stolen, or copied keys, the use of combination locks in many institutional settings, such as school buildings, may present some drawbacks. Since the lock, over time, will be used by more than one person (for example, a school locker is conventionally used by a different student each school year), the access combination may need to be changed to prevent unauthorized access to the locker by a prior occupant. An authorized access combination of a conventional combination lock may be changed by offsetting the position of the dial and cam assembly with respect to the latch, such that the notches of the cams align with the latch at different numerical or incremental dial positions. A conventional combination lock typically has five available offset positions, thereby producing five different authorized combinations. The limited number of authorized combinations may present security concerns. Also, the time consuming nature of mechanically changing the combinations may be magnified in an institutional setting, such as a school, in which hundreds of locker combinations may need to be changed on a regular basis.
In accordance with one inventive aspect of the present application, a combination lock may be provided with an electronic user interface to identify a relative position of a combination dial when turning the dial to unlock the combination lock. The interface may be adapted to detect incremental movement of the dial, such as with an incremental encoder, or absolute rotational position of the dial, such as with an absolute encoder. The interface may further be programmable to alter an electronic display provided by the interface. By providing an adaptable electronic interface, access to the locked item or structure may be controlled without altering a mechanical combination lock mechanism, such as, for example, by disabling or “turning off” a visible aspect of the interface, by changing a displayed position identification associated with a relative position of the combination dial.
Accordingly, in one exemplary embodiment, a combination lock includes a mechanical locking mechanism, a dial, and an electronic interface. The mechanical locking mechanism includes a locking member movable between a locked condition and an unlocked condition. The dial is assembled with the locking mechanism such that successive rotation of the dial to a series of one or more predetermined rotational positions causes the locking mechanism to move the locking member from the locked condition to the unlocked condition. The electronic interface is configured to translate incremental rotational positions of the dial to corresponding electrical signals and to process the electrical signals and display corresponding incremental positional indicators.
Further features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description made with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The present application relates to combination lock arrangements that may be used with many different types of locks, such as, for example, combination padlocks, safe locks, and integral locks for lockers, mailboxes, storage sheds, or other such structures and enclosures. While the embodiments described in the present application refer to a locker-type lock (such as a school locker) having a single combination dial, the inventive aspects described herein may be applied to any type of lock incorporating any number of combination dials. This Detailed Description merely describes exemplary embodiments and is not intended to limit the scope of the claims in any way. Indeed, the invention as described is broader than and unlimited by the described embodiments, and the terms used have their full ordinary meaning.
According to one aspect of the present application, a combination lock utilizing a mechanical locking mechanism, such as, for example, a conventional rotating cam or “wheel-pack” mechanism, may be provided with an electronic user interface configured to display a visual indicator corresponding to a rotational position of the combination dial. An encoder, such as, for example, an optical, magnetic, or mechanical switch encoder, may be used to translate a rotational position of the dial to one or more electrical signals that may be delivered to the interface. The interface may include a processor or microcontroller that processes the electrical signals to display a positional indicator on the interface, such as, for example, a visual display on an LCD or LED panel. While the indicator may be an incremental number, consistent with the numbers on a conventional combination lock dial, any indicator may be used to identify the rotational position of the dial, such as, for example, other visual indicators, such as letters, symbols, colors, and varying sizes or quantities of “dots” or other icons, audible indicators, such as beeps or spoken numerical positions, or tactile indicators, such as raised bumps or other protrusions caused to extend from a panel. In one such embodiment, the combination dial may be free of markings, such as the numbers or incremental hash marks used on conventional combination lock dials, such that a user must rely on the indicators provided by the interface to determine the rotational position of the dial.
Referring now to the drawings,
As shown in the block diagram of
As indicated above, many different types of visual indicators may be displayed by the interface 340. Some examples of possible visual position indicators are listed below in Table I:
In one exemplary embodiment, as partially shown in column 1 of Table I, a set of incremental indicators (for example, numbers ranging from zero (0) to thirty-nine (39)) may be selectively provided to identify incremental rotational positions of the dial 320. As such, the dial may be provided with a visually indicated zero position corresponding with a set of rotational position, at which the incrementally increasing (or decreasing) numerical display is reset. This numbering may be consistent with the numbered dial markings of a conventional combination lock, with the zero position corresponding with the zero position of a mechanical locking mechanism, as identified by a zero detector 355, such as, for example, an encoder, within the electronic interface 340. As another example, as partially shown in column 2, the same numbering may be used with the zero position offset from the zero position of the mechanical locking mechanism. In another example, as partially shown in column 3, the incremental numbers may be rearranged in virtually any order to provide a greater number of possible visual position indicator combinations corresponding with the successive rotational positions for unlocking the combination lock 300. In other examples, positional units may include other characters or symbols, such as, for example, letters (as shown in column 4 of Table I) or symbols, such as pictures or shapes. In still another example, as partially shown in column 5, the resolution of the position indicators may be changed, thereby changing the number of increments in a full rotation of the dial, such as, for example, from 40 increments to 80 increments.
According to another aspect of the present application, additional information may be provided by an electronic interface. Examples of such information include, for example, identification of the number of times or the most recent time the lock or locker has been accessed, identification of an incorrect or failed attempts to open the lock, a count of the current rotations of the dial (especially for lock mechanisms that require multiple rotations of the dial, for example, to align stacked cams), or identification of previous rotational positions (such as positions where direction of rotation changed; e.g. identification of most recent position, two most recent positions, etc.) during operation of the combination dial.
According to the present application, an exemplary electronic interface 340 of a lock may provide other outputs that are not directly perceptible on the electronic interface. The lock may provide electronic data signals, such as through wireless communication (such as radio frequency or infrared communication) or a wired connection (such as a serial or USB port) to which a monitoring device (such as a PDA) may be connected (not shown). Through this output, the lock 300 may provide information, such as the times or frequency at which the lock was accessed, or the identification of unsuccessful attempts to unlock the lock.
In addition to the data signal and position indicating outputs of the electronic interface, the lock may be adapted to receive data signal inputs by a user or administrator of the lock. The data input capability may be provided by the same electronic interface that provides the position indicator, or the input capability may be provided by a different interface mechanism or assembly. Many different mechanisms may be used to provide data signal input to the electronic interface 340 of the lock 300, such as, for example, a mechanical key override, dial or push-button entry (which may be limited to instances when the lock has been opened), infrared (IR) communication, and radio frequency (RF) communication (not shown). Current technologies for infrared communication (such as Infrared Data Association, or IrDA, standards) or RF communication (such as Bluetooth® or Zigbee®, an IEEE 802.15 transmission medium) may provide for secure remote wireless access to communicate with the lock's electronic interface.
Many different types of instructions may be communicated to the electronic lock 300, including for example; information for storage on and/or display by the lock, or instruction to disable or alter the operation of the lock. The microcontroller 360 may be provided with sufficient memory 365 to store this information. The electronic interface 340 may be configured to receive input signals, such as through an administrative interface 368 for controlling a position indicator displayed by the electronic interface 340, for example, to control access to the lock 300. In one embodiment, the position indicators may be disabled or “turned off” to temporarily prevent the lock 300 from being unlocked, without having to physically disable the locking mechanism. In other embodiments, an input signal may be used to change a standard numerically incremented dial position, for example, ranging from 0-39, to a new range of incremental position indicators, such as those shown in Table I above, while leaving the actual rotational positions of the authorized dialing combination unchanged, thereby resulting in different visual position indicators corresponding with the authorized successive rotational positions of the lock dial. By allowing for the above alterations, a combination lock with a mechanical locking mechanism, such as a stacked cam or wheel-pack mechanism, may be adaptable to accept one of hundreds of different authorized combinations without modifying the mechanical locking mechanism. If the mechanical locking mechanism is also modified (such as by changing between any of the five lock settings typical of a conventional combination locker), even more authorized combinations may be available.
Even more lock access options may be available if an electronic interface 340 as described in this application is provided with a combination lock having an electro-mechanical locking mechanism 330. In addition to the above example alterations, an input signal to the electronic interface 340 of an electro-mechanical combination lock may, for example: alter the rotational dial positions required to unlock the lock (as opposed to the numerical position indicators associated with the rotational positions); alter the number and/or direction of successive rotations necessary to unlock the lock; provide for quick (e.g., single input) administrator or “master” access to the lock; or provide for electronic disabling of the locking mechanism itself.
According to another aspect of the present application, the lock may include a real time clock 363 in communication with the microcontroller 360. The clock 363 would allow a user or administrator to control access to the lock during certain time periods. For example, in an institutional setting, such as with school lockers, access to a locker may be altered during summer vacation, weekends and holidays, after school hours, or periods of locker use by different students or other users. These time-related functions may be controlled by software or firmware internal to the lock and in communication with the clock 363, or by programming the lock 300 through the input of data signals to the electronic interface 340, as described above.
The lock 300 may be provided with an internal power supply 380 such as, for example, a battery or an embedded power generator, such as a solar power cell. The lock 300 may alternatively or additionally be powered by an external power supply, particularly in applications where the lock will not be transported, such as with a school locker. To preserve power, the lock's microcontroller 360 may include a wake-up switch that signals the microcontroller and other electronics to initiate out of a sleep mode when an event occurs, such as for example, when the dial 320 is rotated.
Referring now to an encoder portion of the combination lock (350 in
The clear encoder disk 454 includes a number of radially positioned markings or bars (not shown), corresponding to incremental rotational movement of the dial 420, which block the transmission of light to or from the encoders when one of the bars is aligned with the corresponding aperture in the aperture plate. By counting the number of times that light is alternately blocked by and transmitted through the encoder disk 454 during rotation of the dial 420, the microcontroller can identify the incremental rotation of the dial and translate the electronic signal to a position indicator corresponding to the resulting rotational position. Different incremental resolutions may be provided for by using encoder disks with different numbers of radial bars. In one example, for a lock having 50 incremental rotational positions, an encoder disk with 50 bars may be used. Additionally, one of the optical encoders 458a, 458b, 458c may function as a zero detector to identify a mechanical zero position for the mechanical locking mechanism, to provide a point of reference for all other rotational positions of the dial. Further, one of the optical encoders 458a, 458b, 458c may be used to signal the microcontroller to wake from a sleep mode after a period of non-use, for example, to conserve power. In one example, an optical encoder may be configured to “wake up” the microcontroller when the dial has been rotated not more than 180°. As indicated above, other types of encoder arrangements may be used, such as, for example, absolute encoders. Also, other types of incremental encoders may be used, such as, for example, magnetic or mechanical switch encoders.
While various inventive aspects, concepts and features of the inventions may be described and illustrated herein as embodied in combination in the exemplary embodiments, these various aspects, concepts and features may be used in many alternative embodiments, either individually or in various combinations and sub-combinations thereof. Unless expressly excluded herein all such combinations and sub-combinations are intended to be within the scope of the present inventions. Still further, while various alternative embodiments as to the various aspects, concepts and features of the inventions—such as alternative materials, structures, configurations, methods, circuits, devices and components, software, hardware, control logic, alternatives as to form, fit and function, and so on—may be described herein, such descriptions are not intended to be a complete or exhaustive list of available alternative embodiments, whether presently known or later developed. Those skilled in the art may readily adopt one or more of the inventive aspects, concepts or features into additional embodiments and uses within the scope of the present inventions even if such embodiments are not expressly disclosed herein. Additionally, even though some features, concepts or aspects of the inventions may be described herein as being a preferred arrangement or method, such description is not intended to suggest that such feature is required or necessary unless expressly so stated. Still further, exemplary or representative indicators and ranges may be included to assist in understanding the present disclosure; however, such indicators and ranges are not to be construed in a limiting sense and are intended to be critical indicators or ranges only if so expressly stated. Moreover, while various aspects, features and concepts may be expressly identified herein as being inventive or forming part of an invention, such identification is not intended to be exclusive, but rather there may be inventive aspects, concepts and features that are fully described herein without being expressly identified as such or as part of a specific invention, the inventions instead being set forth in the appended claims. Descriptions of exemplary methods or processes are not limited to inclusion of all steps as being required in all cases, nor is the order that the steps are presented to be construed as required or necessary unless expressly so stated.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/716,414, filed Sep. 13, 2005, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60716414 | Sep 2005 | US |