This invention relates to locks and seals for containers, in particular those including an automatic self-checking and warning system against tampering.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,262,284 discloses self-monitoring seals having fiber optic bundle loops with ends mounted in stressed tamper resistant containers, the seal being formed as a padlock with a shackle and display. A battery operates microelectronics to send coded light pulse sequences through the optic loop and to show a predetermined sequence on the display. Tampering with the container or interrupting or changing the light transmission through the fiber optic bundle disrupts the predetermined display sequence.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,322,721 discloses a self-checking warning or alarm installation containing an optical conductor or guide (optical fiber) as a signal line. The optical conductor together with an electronic monitoring circuit forms a free-running opto-electronic oscillator which comes to standstill when the oscillating optical signal is interrupted. An alarm or warning circuit associated with the monitoring circuit generates an alarm signal when this happens. The signal line may be of two parts, with light converter between them. The two parts may have aligned end faces such that the optical signal is interrupted upon misalignment.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,420,971 describes an electronic seal comprising a housing and a loop of optical fiber in an elongated closure member connectable at both of its ends to the housing. A sensor assembly is provided for sensing integrity of the optical fiber. Hence tampering with the seal can be detected. The optical path may include an air gap between the fiber end and the sensor so that opening of the seal may be also detected.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,546,345 discloses a lock with steel wire cable having an optical fiber (loop) inside the cable, which detects breaking of the cable (of the optical loop) and sounds an alarm when the cable is broken.
In accordance with the present invention, there is provided a lock for locking a closure on a container, comprising a first member and a second member movable relative to one another, the two members being of strong construction, the lock having a closed state with the two members engaged with each other, and an open state with the two members disengaged, wherein the lock further comprises:
Preferably, the lock members are made of steel and the channel is machined therein. Preferably, the channel passes close to the outer edges of the lock members.
The control module further comprises a wireless transmitter and is adapted to transmit a warning signal to an external receiver when the IR receiver fails to receive the IR pulse emitted by the IR emitter. The IR pulse is preferably automatically emitted at predetermined intervals of time, more preferably with frequency of at least 2 Hz. The IR pulse may be modulated and encoded.
The lock further comprises a movable bolt adapted to assume a locking position where the bolt engages simultaneously the first and the second members in the closed state of the lock. Thereby the bolt prevents disengagement of the first and the second members. This state of the lock is defined as a locked state.
Preferably, the lock further comprises a movable blocking element adapted to assume a blocking position such that the bolt cannot be removed from its locking position without destruction.
In one embodiment of the lock, it further comprises a controllable drive adapted to move the blocking element to and from the blocking position. The drive may be a bi-stable solenoid.
In another embodiment of the lock (seal), the bolt comprises a breakable portion. The blocking element is adapted to assume the blocking position automatically after the bolt assumes its locking position such that the bolt can be removed from the locking position only by breaking the breakable portion.
Preferably, the blocking element comprises a portion of the IR waveguide formed such that the IR pulse can pass through the waveguide only in the blocked state of the lock.
The lock may further comprise a third member movably engaged to the first member and mounted to an element of the container. This element assumes a closed position when the closure is locked and an open position allowing opening of the closure. The IR waveguide and the third member of the lock are configured so that when the element is moved from its closed position towards its open position, with the lock still in its closed state, the third member moves with the element and obstructs the IR waveguide preventing passing of the IR pulse.
In yet another embodiment, the lock is formed as a padlock, wherein the first member is a U-shaped shackle with cylindrical ends. The shackle has an axial channel therealong with exits at the cylindrical ends, the channel constituting a part of the IR waveguide. The second member is a lock body accommodating the control module and the rest of the IR waveguide. The lock body has two recesses adapted to receive the cylindrical ends. The body and the cylindrical ends are formed so that when the ends are inserted in the recesses, the lock automatically assumes the closed state and the shackle may be released from the body only after being cut or broken into two separate parts.
The cylindrical ends have taper or bevel, and each end has a notch at the inner side of the U-shape. The body has a bore intersecting the recesses and two bolts sliding therein. The bolts are biased by a spring element towards the recesses, such that when the cylindrical ends enter the recesses, the taper or bevel pushes the bolt against the spring element into the bore to allow movement of the ends into the recesses. When the notches align with the bore, the bolts jump into the notches irreversibly locking the shackle to the body.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a seal for sealing a closure on a container, comprising a U-shaped shackle with cylindrical ends and a seal body having two recesses adapted to receive the cylindrical ends. The body and the cylindrical ends are formed so that when the ends are inserted in the recesses, the seal assumes an irreversibly closed state such that the shackle may be released from the body only after being cut or broken into two separate parts. The cylindrical ends have taper or bevel and a flat segment notch at the inner side of the U-shape. The body has a bore intersecting the recesses and two bolts sliding in said bore. The bolts are biased by a spring element towards the recesses, such that when the cylindrical ends enter the recesses, the taper or bevel pushes the bolt back into the bore to allow movement of the ends into the recesses. When the notches align with the bore, the bolts engage the notches, irreversibly locking said shackle to the body. As above, only when the shackle is broken into two separate parts, each part can be rotated to disengage the cylindrical end from the bolt so that the broken part may be pulled out of the body.
Preferably, the U-shaped shackle has a signal conducting means disposed along the U-shape and exiting at the cylindrical ends, and the seal body has an electronic control module with an emitter and a receiver of a signal, the control module being adapted, when the seal is in its closed state, to check periodically the integrity of the seal by emitting and receiving the signal through the signal conducting means.
The control module may further comprise a wireless transmitter adapted to transmit a warning signal to an external receiver when the signal receiver fails to receive the signal emitted by the signal emitter.
The signal conducting means may be an insulated electric wire, an optical fiber or an air channel conductive of IR light.
Preferably, the U-shaped shackle and the body are of strong construction, for example made of steel, such as steel tube. More preferably, the U-shaped shackle further comprises a plastic or rubber tube inserted in the steel tube.
Within the frame of this application, “strong construction” of a lock (seal) generally means that the lock is resistant to breaking/cutting at least as much as the closure or container on which the lock is used. If the lock (seal) is formed as a padlock, then “strong construction” would mean strength of a metal body and steel shackle.
In order to understand the invention and to see how it may be carried out in practice, embodiments will now be described, by way of non-limiting examples only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
With reference to
With reference also to
With reference also to
The lock 10 further comprises a latch 30 mounted for sliding under the shoulder of the head 22 and coupled to a bi-stable solenoid 32. The latch 30 has a recess accommodating the stem 20. The solenoid 32 is adapted to toggle the latch between a blocking position engaging the head 22 such that the bolt 16 cannot be removed from its locking position without destruction (
The lock 10 further comprises an electronic control module 40 with an IR emitter 42, IR receiver 44, a wireless (RF) transmitter 46, a coded-signal receiver 48, other electronic circuitry, battery, etc. (not shown). An IR waveguide 50, 52, 54 is formed as a loop starting at the IR emitter 42 and ending at the IR receiver 44. One part 50 of the waveguide passes through the arm 12 while another part 52 passes through the arm 14 and a third part 54 passes through the latch 30. The waveguide has the form of a channel notched in the back surface of the arms 12 and 14, and in the latch 30. It is closed by a cover 56, 58 at the back of each arm 12, 14. The waveguide is interrupted by air gaps 62, 64 between the arms 12 and 14, air gap 65 between the latch 30 and the arm 14, and recesses 66, 68. In such places, the neighboring parts of the waveguide are aligned with each other and the channel of the waveguide approaches the arm surface at right angle so that an IR signal could pass across the air gap. Thus, when the lock 10 is in the closed state and the latch 30 is in the blocking position, an IR pulse emitted by the IR emitter 42 can pass through the waveguide 50, 52, 54 and be received by the IR receiver 44.
The operation of the lock of the present invention is as follows. Assume that initially the container 1 is with open doors 2 and 3, the arms 12, 14 of the lock 10 are disengaged, the latch 30 is toggled into the unblocking position and the bolt 16 is withdrawn (
An operator closes the doors 2 and 3, and secures the rods 5 in the braces 6 by rotating the handles 7 to an outward position. Now the operator rotates the arms 12 and 14 towards each other to align them as shown in
Now the operator uses a coded-signal transmitter (not shown) to send an access code for locking to the coded-signal receiver 48. The coded-signal communication may be in RF, IR, visible light, by electric contact, etc., or by vibration, as for example described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,411,195 to the same inventor. The control module 40 identifies the coded signal and operates the bi-stable solenoid 32 to toggle the latch 30 into its blocking position, as shown in
With the lock 10 in the closed state and the latch 30 in the blocking position, the waveguide parts 50, 52 and 54 are aligned with each other and the IR pulses are detected by the IR receiver 44. This is the normal state of the lock.
If for some reason IR pulses are not detected, the control module 40 activates the wireless transmitter 46 and sends an alert signal to a remote receiver (not shown). The remote receiver may be at the ship bridge, at a store house management room, police station, etc.
One condition for missing IR pulses is an open waveguide. This may happen when the lock is broken or the arms 12 and 14 are misaligned (the lock is not in closed state);
Another condition may be an interrupted waveguide. This may occur when the latch 30 is not in blocking position (see
Thus the lock detects and reports abnormal conditions indicative of attempts to break into the container, to tamper with the lock, or failure to lock the container properly.
When the container must be opened, the operator uses a coded-signal transmitter to send an access code for unlocking to the coded-signal receiver 38. The control module 30 operates the bi-stable solenoid 32 to toggle the latch 30 into unblocking position. The operator can now pull the knob 18 to withdraw the head 22 from the recess 24. Thus the arms 12 and 14 are disengaged. The handles 7 may be rotated inwards to release the rods 5 from the braces 6 and the doors 2 and 3 may be opened.
The coded-signal receiver 48 and the wireless transmitter 46, in the general case, are different devices and use different media for communication. For example, the coded-signal receiver may be even a keypad or a touch pad. However, in some applications they may be integrated, for example, in a single RF transmitter-receiver.
The waveguide may be formed so that other attempts to manipulate elements of the container can be detected. With reference to
Preferably, the lock arms are of strong construction, for example pressed or machined from steel, and the waveguide channel is also machined therein. The channel is preferably disposed close to external edges of the lock arms so that an attempt to break or cut the arms would first interrupt the channel.
Another embodiment of the present invention is a sealing lock 100 shown in
The sealing lock operates in the following way. The seal 116 is inserted into the bore 19 of the arm 14 before aligning with the arm 12, with the tail 118 forward, until the position of
The flat part 123 of the seal 116 is now locked in the notch 120 and the seal cannot be rotated. Thus, the position of
The mounting of the arms 12 and 14 on the rods 5 is shown in detail in
The rotary joint of the arms 12 and 14 with the cams 76 is assembled in the following way. An arm, for example the arm 12, is hanged on the rod 5 above or under the cam 76 and is rotated to 180° of its closed position so that the tooth 78 is axially aligned with the gap between the jaws 72 and 74. The arm 12 is moved along the rod axis until the tooth 78 is aligned with the channel 80. The arm 12 is now rotated to its closed position. The tooth 78 engages the channel 80 and prevents sliding of the arm along the rod 5. In order to avoid accidental rotation of the arm to the position where the tooth 78 may fall into the gap between the jaws 72 and 74, a bolt 88 is screwed into the jaw 72 so that its tip abuts the tooth 78.
With reference to
The shackle 214 has two ends 216 with taper or bevel 218 and notches 220 at the inner side of the U-shape. Furthermore, the shackle has a central channel (waveguide) 222 extending along the U-shape and exiting at the faces of the ends 216.
The body 212 has two cylindrical bores 224 for accommodating the ends 216, and a transverse cylindrical bore 226 with two bolts 228 sliding therein and biased outwards by a spring 230. The bolts 228 have notches 232 engaged with stoppers (not shown) protruding inside the bore 226 so as to limit the axial travel of the bolts 228 either way. An electronic control module 40 similar to the one described with reference to
The operation of the seal 210 is as follows. The shackle 214 is first passed through suitable openings in a container cover, a door or any enclosure that has to be sealed. The ends 216 of the shackle 214 are then inserted in the bores 224 of the seal body 212. With reference to
The locked state of the seal is irreversible, e.g. the seal cannot be opened without being broken, as the spring 230 does not allow bolts 228 to leave the notches 220 and release the shackle 214. In this state, the exits of the waveguide 222 are aligned with the IR emitter 42 and the IR receiver 44 so that the integrity of the seal may be checked by sending and detecting IR pulses as described above.
When the locked enclosure has to be legitimately opened, a powerful cutting tool 234 is used to cut or break the shackle 214 into two separate parts. Now each part can be rotated in its cylindrical bore 224. As shown in
With reference to
The seal 210 may be used not only with IR light but may be built with an optical fiber, electric wire or other type of conductor.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IL2005/001025 | 9/26/2005 | WO | 00 | 1/18/2008 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60613512 | Sep 2004 | US |