This invention is a device for preventing unauthorized opening of the doors of a cargo container of the type used on truck trailers or on storage or construction containers. Such containers customarily have two doors hinged to laterally opposite sides of the rear of the container on vertical axes and the doors are latched in their closed position by vertical stanchions mounted on the outside of the doors. The stanchions have latching fingers at their tops and bottoms which engage keeper pockets at the top and bottom of the rear of the container when the stanchions are pivoted about their axes. The trailer bodies or containers are also designed such that the left door is typically closed and secured first and opened last. The right door is designed with a seal around the periphery of the door and its size is such that when closed, the right door retains the left door in a secure position. Consequently, the right door is typically the first door opened and the last closed. Although various locking devices have been proposed for the handles provided for rotating the stanchions, thieves using bolt cutters, power hack saws and sledgehammers are all too frequently destroying the locking devices.
The security device of this invention locks the vertical stanchion of the right door and utilizes the container's inherent infrastructure to retain the left door in a secured position, thus preventing the doors of the cargo container or trailer from being opened. This security device is portable; that is, it is not permanently secured to the doors or their stanchions. The security device has a housing and a hook with vertically spaced claws that slide under the right door's inner vertical stanchion and above and below the latterly extending brackets on the stanchion to which its operating handle is pivoted. The housing has a cavity for a puck lock and the back wall of the cavity has a tab with an opening for reception of the locking bar of a puck lock. The hook includes a flat projection or palm, which fits in a guideway in the housing and includes an arm with an opening that is engaged by the locking bar of a puck lock. The housing includes a cross bar which covers the handle pivot brackets on the stanchion when the device is installed, thereby preventing rotation of the stanchion, and maintaining the stanchion in a locked position. When the device is locked to the stanchion, the shackleless puck lock is protected by the housing walls defining a cavity in which the lock rests.
One embodiment of the invention is illustrated in the drawings in which:
Referring also to
The locking bar as shown by broken lines 49 in
The herein disclosed security device 11 is portable, is easy to install and is a relatively inexpensive deterrent to thieves. When the security device is installed the claws 61, 62 are positioned on vertically opposite sides of the pivot brackets 63, 64 and the cross bar 42 extends in front of the stanchion rod 13 and between the ends of the claws 61, 62, thereby keeping the cross bar 42 in front of the bracket 64 and preventing the stanchion rod 13 from pivoting clockwise as viewed in
Features of this invention are disclosed in U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/587,912 filed Jul. 14, 2004, for a Security Device for Container Door Stanchions for which benefit under 35 U.S.C. 120 is claimed.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060012188 A1 | Jan 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60587912 | Jul 2004 | US |