The invention relates to a control device comprising at least one push-button, particularly for a motor vehicle remote control.
A remote control which, for example, controls the locking and unlocking of a motor vehicle, comprises one or more control push-buttons acting on a respective contactor mounted on an electronic circuit. The electronic circuit encodes the corresponding command and transmits it to the vehicle after the button has been pressed.
According to one example of the assembly of the button, a shell of the device comprises a housing for the button, which comprises two hooks passing through the shell via guiding holes. The hooks each have a nose which engages with the edge of the shell at the opening of the guiding hole. The contactor comprises elastic means which push the button back toward the outside of the shell. However, the noses engaged with the shell halt the travel of the button and prevent it from becoming disengaged from the housing.
The button is fitted onto the shell by snap fastening. The hooks in fact have a ramp which slides along the hole as the button is inserted into its housing. The ramps cause the hooks to flex so that the noses pass through the hole. When the noses reemerge on the other side of the hole, the hooks revert to their nonflexed position and the noses are engaged with the edge of the shell.
Such assembly requires that the hooks be of sufficient length so that the elastic limits of the material of which they are made is not reached. Such a construction therefore dictates a size of the device in terms of its thickness. Moreover, it is found that the durability of such an assembly is sometimes insufficient against the endurance requirements.
The invention seeks to provide a control device comprising at least one push-button which is slideably mounted and the thickness bulk of which can be reduced and the durability of which is improved.
With these objectives in sight, one subject of the invention is a control device comprising at least one push-button slideably mounted in a shell in a push-button direction substantially perpendicular to the shell, the device comprising elastic means that tend to cause the button to emerge from the shell and retaining means that limit the travel of the button against the action of the elastic means, characterized in that the retaining means comprise at least one hook of the button of which a nose projects perpendicular to the push-button direction, and a rod running parallel to the shell to form an end stop for the button in collaboration with the nose of the hook, the rod being mounted removably in the shell.
Because the rod is removable, it can be fitted after the shell and button have been assembled. Provision may also be made for the rod to be able to flex. It is therefore not necessary for the hook to flex and this means that the hook can be made very short. The thickness bulk of the device can thus be reduced. In addition, it is found that such an assembly performs well in durability testing. The rod is, for example, fitted by sliding it in its main direction in order to move it into position.
According to one embodiment, the rod is engaged with a plurality of aligned buttons. The same rod can be used for several buttons.
In particular, the rod comprises a curved end, the shell comprising a cleat against which the curved end comes to bear in order to limit the movement of the rod in its main direction. After the rod has slid into position, by pivoting it, the curved end is brought into engagement with the cleat. It is thus immobilized in its main direction and cannot come free.
According to one constructive arrangement, the button comprises two hooks, the device comprising two rods, each hook respectively collaborating with one of the rods. The buttons are thus better guided while being retained at two separate points.
According to an alternative form, the rods are made as a single piece by a U-shaped metal wire. The rods can thus be fitted in a single operation.
In particular, the hooks are symmetrical.
The shell may comprise a groove open in the push-button direction in the opposite sense to the action of the elastic means, and in which the rod is housed. Such a shape is easy to obtain by molding the shell. The noses of the hooks create an obstacle to the rod becoming disengaged via the open part of the groove. In particular, when the device comprises several buttons, these are not actuated simultaneously. Therefore, the rod is always kept pressed into the groove by at least one of the buttons via the hooks under the effect of the elastic means.
In a constructive arrangement, the shell comprises a guiding hole opening into the groove and accepting the hook of the button. The guiding hole in collaboration with the hook guides the sliding of the button. Likewise, it prevents the hook from disengaging from the rod when engaged with it.
Another subject of the invention is a method of assembling a device as described hereinabove, characterized in that the push-button is positioned on the shell acting against the action of the elastic means, the rod is placed on the shell, causing it to slide in its main direction so that the nose of the hook engages with the rod.
The invention will be better understood and other particulars and advantages will become apparent from reading the following description, the description making reference to the attached drawings among which:
A control device according to the invention is shown in particular in
The buttons 3 are slideably mounted in one of the shells 1 in a push-button direction P substantially perpendicular to the visible surface of the shell 1. They are separated from one another by ribs 10 of the shell 1 running perpendicular to the alignment of buttons 3.
With reference to
The control device comprises an electronic board 5 on which elastic means 50 are mounted opposite each of the buttons 3 (cf.
Each button 3 comprises two hooks 30 extending substantially parallel to the post 31 and also toward the inside of the device and through the guiding holes 12. The hooks 30 are fitted between parallel planes of the guiding holes 12 which are perpendicular to the alignment direction. Each hook 30 also has a nose 300 projecting into the groove 11. The nose 300 has a catching face 302 substantially perpendicular to the push-button direction P, and a ramp 301 oriented toward the inside of the device obliquely with respect to the push-button direction P. The noses 300 face one another such that the hooks 30 are symmetrical with respect to one another.
The device further comprises two rods 4 which respectively extend along each of the grooves 11. The rods 4 are held in the bottom of the grooves 11 by the buttons 3, via the catching faces 302 which press the rods toward the bottom of the groove 11. This thrust is applied via the elastic means 50.
The rods 4 and the hooks 30 thus form retaining means limiting the travel of the button 3 against the action of the elastic means 50.
Each rod 4 comprises a straight part 41 which extends along the groove 11 and a curved end 42 where it leaves this groove (cf.
To assemble the control device, the starting point is to position the push-buttons 3 on the shell 1 by introducing them from the outside of the shell 1 into the control holes 13 and the guiding holes 12 until they are in abutment. Next, the rods are positioned on the shell 1 by sliding them along the grooves 11 in their main direction, then by pivoting the curved end 42 to place it against the cleat 14. The rod 4 thus remains removable. Then the electronic board 5 is positioned in such a way that the elastic means 50 are in contact with their respective buttons 3. The device is closed by assembling the two shells 1, 2 and the buttons 3 are released so that the nose 300 of each hook 30 engages with its rod 4 under the action of the elastic means 50. In this way, the rods 4 form end stops for the buttons 3 by collaborating with the noses 300 of the hooks 30.
During use, the elastic means 50 keep the buttons 3 in a released position, as shown in
In an alternative form, the rods 4 are produced as a single piece as a U-shaped metal wire.
According to yet another alternative form, the groove 11 may be widened in places. The rod 4 can thus flex in the groove 11 as the button 3 is introduced into the guiding holes 12, by being pushed by the ramp 302 of the noses 300.
One improvement is to provide a boss on the hook 30 on the face that slides along the rod. In this way, the effort required to depress the button 3 is altered, creating a hard point where the hook moves away from the rod, followed by an easier travel.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1103467 | Nov 2011 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/004672 | 11/9/2012 | WO | 00 | 5/13/2014 |