Not Applicable.
Not Applicable.
This invention relates in general to appliances for doors and more particularly to a device that displays messages on a door and further affords observations through the door.
In many states the regulations that govern the operation of hotels and motels require that the doors to guest rooms have viewers so that the occupants of such rooms can view through the doors to observe individuals and activities beyond such doors. Each viewer extends through a hole in the door to which it is fitted. Also, hotels and motels commonly provide door cards that are configured to hang from the door handles of guest room doors so as to convey a message such as “Do Not Disturb.” Basically, each card has the capacity to convey only two messages—one for each side of the card.
Apart from that, the typical door card is easily dislodged from the handle over which it is placed, particularly when the door is opened or closed. Indeed, the occupant of the room must open the room door to place the card on the handle for the door. Moreover, the card is subject to tampering when displayed at the outside face of the door, or simply becoming lost.
Referring now to the drawings (
The interior unit 12 includes (
The interior unit 12 also includes a cover 32 that along its periphery snaps into the peripheral lip 24 of the back plate 24. The remainder of the cover 32 lies beyond, yet for the most part parallel to the back plate 22. The cover 32 together with the back plate 22 form a housing that encloses the operating components of the interior unit 12. The cover 32 also has a center hole 34 that is large enough to accommodate the viewer 18, but not the operating shaft 16. Along its peripheral wall the cover 32 has an arcuate slot 36 that extends slightly over 90°. Finally, the cover 32 has an arcuate window 38 that lies between the center hole 34 and the peripheral wall of the cover 32, and it occupies about 90° on the face of the cover 32. The window 38 contains a lens 40 formed from a suitable transparent material.
Among the operating components of the interior unit 12 is a driven disk 44 that lies along the back plate 22 with its peripheral edge located immediately inwardly from the stud 30 that projects from the back plate 22. The driven disk 44 has a center hole 46 that receives the operating shaft 16 and indeed is keyed to the operating shaft 16, so that the driven disk 44 and shaft 16 will rotate in unison. The driven disk 44 also has small apertures 48 arranged at 90° intervals near its periphery. For every 90° of rotation for the driven disk 44, two of its apertures 48 will align with the two detents 28 in the back plate 22, so that at every 90° of rotation for the driven disk 44 the detents 28 stabilized the driven disk 44 in the sense that they impede its rotation. The operating components of the interior unit 12 also include an indexing plate 52 of semicircular configuration. It lies immediately over the driven disk 44 and has a bushing 54 that receives the operating shaft 16. The bushing 54 rotates freely on the operating shaft 16 about the axis X. The semicircular edge of the indexing plate 52 lies inside the stud 30 on the back plate 22, but the indexing plate 52 has an operating lever 56 that projects beyond that edge and through the arcuate slot 36 in the peripheral wall of the cover 32. The indexing plate 52 contains a drive tab 58 that bears against the driven disk 44, and owing to the resiliency of the material from which the indexing plate 52 is formed, the tab 58 at its free end is urged against the disk 44. The free end of the drive tab 58 lies at the same radius as the apertures 48 on the driven disk 44, so that the free end will align with and engage the driven disk 44 at the apertures 48, one at a time, depending on angular disposition of the driven disk 44. Finally, the indexing plate 52 has a stud 60 that projects axially from it. That stud 60 and the stud 30 on the back plate 22 are connected by a tension spring 62 that urges the indexing plate 52 in one direction of rotation and in so doing normally holds the operating lever 56 against one end of the arcuate slot 36 in the cover 32.
Thus, when lever 56 is rotated away from that end of the arcuate slot 36 toward the other end of the arcuate slot 36, against the force of the spring 62, the drive tab 58, being engaged with driven disk 44 at one of the apertures 48 in the driven disk 44, will rotate the driven disk 44 90°. In so doing, two of the remaining apertures 48 will advance with respect to the detents 28 in the back plate 22. The detents 28 hold the driven disk 44 in the new position—indeed, in each position to which it is rotated with an actuation of the operating lever 56. Thus, four actuations of the operating lever 56 will advance the driven disk 44 a full rotation. Of course, with each angular advance of the driven disk 44, the operating shaft 16 rotates a like amount.
In addition to the driven disk 44 and the indexing plate 52, the operating components of the interior unit 12 include a message wheel 66, which despite serving a different function, may be same as the driven disk 44. It too is keyed to and rotates with the operating shaft 16. The message wheel 66 carries a label 68 that has four messages printed on it at 90° intervals, each occupying an arc no greater than the arc occupied by the window 38 in the cover 32. With each 90° rotation of the message wheel 66 a different message comes into view within the window 38. Those messages may include “Do Not Disturb,” “Occupied,” a call for house keeping, and the like.
The exterior unit 14 is much the same as the interior unit 12, except that it does not include the driven disk 44 or the indexing plate 52. It has (
The operating shaft 16 extends (
Although the shaft 16 may have a unitary construction—in essence a single tube—preferably it possesses two segments 82 and 84, each of which is hollow. The segment 84 may be captured within the exterior unit 14, whereas the segment 82 should fit into, yet be removable from the interior unit 12. The two segments 82 and 84 align and at their opposing ends have axially directed dogs 86 and notches 88, all configured and arranged such that the notches 88 receive the dogs 86. This enables the two segments 82 and 84 to remain engaged and to rotate in unison and yet accommodate variances in the spacing between the interior and exterior assemblies 12 and 14. The axially directed keyway 80 in the shaft 16 enables the shaft 16 to rotate with the driven disk 44 and message wheel 66 of the interior unit 12 and with the message wheel 76 of the exterior unit 14, each of which has a small key or tab that projects into the keyway 80.
The viewer 18 may be conventional. As such, it has (
For a door D of having thickness too great for the threads of the two sections 92 and 94 to engage within the door D, the viewer 18 may be provided with an extender 98 (
The covers 32 and 74 of the interior and exterior units 12 and 14 may carry information such as the number of the room to which the door D controls access, both in Arabic numerals and Braille dots.
To install the door appliance A on the door D, the hole 6 is first drilled completely through the door D at a suitable location, it being large enough in diameter to loosely receive the operating shaft 16. Then the section 82 of the operating shaft 16 is installed into the interior unit 12 by inserting it through the center hole 26 in the back plate 22, through the center hole 46 in the driven disk 44, through the bushing 54 of the indexing plate 52, and finally through the center hole 46 in the message wheel 66. The driven disk 44 and message wheel 66 engage the segment 82 at its keyway 80. The end of the segment 82 bottoms out against the cover 32 of the unit 12. Then the interior unit 12, with the shaft segment 82 projecting from its back plate 22 is brought to the door D and the segment 82 is measured to ensure that it will properly engage the shaft segment 84 when the exterior unit 14 is against the outside face 4 of the door D. If the segment 82 is too long, it is cut off and again installed in the interior unit 12 with the proper length.
Thereupon, the interior unit 12 is placed against the inside face 2 of the door D with its shaft segment 82 projecting into the hole 6 in the door D—indeed, almost for the full thickness of the door D. Next, the exterior unit 14 is brought against the outside face 4 of the door D and maneuvered such that the notches 88 received the dogs 86 on the shaft segments 82 and 84. At this juncture, the messages exposed through the windows 38 of the two units 12 and 14 should be the same.
With the two units 12 and 14 now held manually against the door D, the outside section 94 of the viewer 18 is inserted through the center hole 34 in the cover 74 of the exterior unit 14, whereas the inside section 92 is inserted through the center hole 34 in the cover 32 of the interior unit 12. The two sections 92 and 94 project into the hollow interior of the shaft 16 where their ends encounter each other, whereupon, the one section is rotated relative to the other, so that the two sections 92 and 94 thread together within the shaft 16. This brings flange 96 of the inside section 92 against the cover 32 of the interior unit 12 and the flange 96 of the outer section 94 against the cover 74 of the exterior unit 14. Indeed, the viewer 18 clamps the interior unit 12 against the inside face 2 of the door D and the exterior unit 14 against the outside face 4 of the door D.
The appliance A enables an individual standing at the inside face 2 of the door D, when the door D is closed, to observe individuals and activities immediately beyond the outside face 4 of the door D simply by looking through the viewer 18. If the individual desires to display at the outside face 4 of the door D any one of the messages that are on the two message wheels 66 and 76, the individual moves the operating lever 56 of the indexing plate 52 for the interior unit 12 through the arcuate slot 36 in the cover 32 of that unit 12. The drive tab 58 on the indexing plate 52, being engaged with the driven disk 44 of the interior unit 12 at one of apertures 48 in the driven disk 44, rotates the driven disk 44 for 90° and likewise rotates the message wheel 66 of the interior unit 12 and the message wheel 76 of the exterior unit 14, since the driven disk 44 and the two message wheels 66 and 76 are all engaged with the operating shaft 16 and therefore all will rotate in unison. The rotation brings a new message into the windows 38 of the cover 32 for the interior unit 12 and the cover 74 for the exterior unit 14. Once the operating lever 56 is released, the spring 62 brings the indexing plate 52 back to its initial position and the drive tab 58 on it again engages the driven disk 44, but this time at the following aperture 48 in the driven disk 44. With each advancement of the operating lever 56 through the arcuate slot 36 in the cover 32 of the interior unit 12, the appliance A displays a different message in the windows 38 of the two covers 32 and 74.
The appliance A has the capability of displaying anyone of multiple messages—messages that are not subject to tampering, or dislodgement from the door D, or simply loss. Moreover, the occupant of the room can change the message displayed without leaving the room or even opening the door D.
An alternative interior unit 100 (
By changing the size of the window 38 in the covers 32 and 74 of the interior and exterior units 12 and 14 as well as the location and spacing of the detents 28 on the back plate 22 of the interior unit 12 and the location and spacing of the apertures 48 in the driven disk 44, more or less messages may be displayed on the message wheels 66, 76, and 102. Also, a machine screw or other clamping element may be substituted for the viewer 18 to hold the interior unit 12 or 100 against the inside face 2 of the door D and the exterior unit 14 against the outside face 4 should one desire to use the appliance A simply for displaying messages without making observations through the door D.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
380652 | Gartside | Apr 1888 | A |
1255909 | Monasch | Feb 1918 | A |
2098471 | Starks | Nov 1937 | A |
2902784 | Sukul | Sep 1959 | A |
3672081 | Bergeron | Jun 1972 | A |
4130728 | Grauel | Dec 1978 | A |
4269474 | Kamimura | May 1981 | A |
4854061 | Khoshkish | Aug 1989 | A |
4881335 | Khoshkish | Nov 1989 | A |
5718513 | Booth et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
4420090 | May 1995 | DE |