This disclosure relates generally to a latch that can block a door of a vehicle from being removed when the vehicle is not in an upright position.
Some vehicles, especially vehicles designed for off-road usage, incorporate removable doors. Removing the doors from such vehicles can provide better access and visibility for the driver when off-roading and during other driving conditions.
Current vehicles with removable doors can incorporate fasteners on hinge pins of externally mounted hinges. The hinges couple the doors to a body of the vehicle. Removing such doors involves removing the fasteners from the hinge pins, withdrawing the hinge pins, and then removing the door from the vehicle. The fasteners add complexity. The fasteners could be misplaced when the doors are removed, which complicates reattachment of the doors.
A vehicle hinge assembly according to an exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure includes, among other things, a hinge pin that, when in an engaged position, rotatably couples a door portion of the hinge assembly to a body portion of the hinge assembly. The hinge assembly also includes a latch configured to transition from a locked position to an unlocked position when the hinge assembly is opened in a first orientation. The latch is further configured to stay in the locked position when the hinge assembly is opened in a second orientation different than the first orientation. The latch in the locked position blocks movement of the hinge pin from the engaged position.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of the foregoing assembly, the latch in the unlocked position permits relative movement of the hinge pin from the engaged position to a disengaged position so that the door portion and the vehicle portion can be decoupled from each other.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of any of the foregoing assemblies, when the hinge pin is in the engaged position, the door portion is rotatable with a door about the hinge pin between open and closed positions. When the door is fully closed and the hinge assembly is not inverted, a support feature on a door side of the hinge assembly supports and holds the latch in the locked position. Moving the door from the fully closed position to an open position moves the support feature away from the latch such that the latch can transition to the unlocked position.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of any of the foregoing assemblies, the latch includes an engagement portion and a handle portion. The engagement portion is received within a groove of the hinge pin when the latch is in the locked position to prevent withdrawal of the hinge pin from an aperture of a door portion of the hinge, an aperture of a body portion of the hinge, or both.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of any of the foregoing assemblies, the latch comprises a bearing that is disposed within a cavity on a door side or a body side the hinge. The bearing falls within the cavity when the latch is inverted to a position where the bearing is received with a groove of the hinge pin.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of any of the foregoing assemblies, the latch comprises a tab. When the hinge assembly is inverted, the tab rotates about a pivot to move from the unlocked position to the locked position.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of any of the foregoing assemblies, the latch comprises an eccentric member. When the hinge assembly is inverted, the latch pivots about a pivot to move from the unlocked position to the locked position.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of the foregoing assembly, the second orientation is inverted from the first orientation.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of the foregoing assembly, a vehicle includes the vehicle hinge assembly. The first orientation corresponds to an ordinary orientation of the vehicle during operation.
A securing method according to another exemplary aspect of the present disclosure includes, among other things, rotatably coupling a door to a vehicle body with a hinge assembly. When the hinge assembly is opened and not inverted, the method permits movement of a hinge pin of the hinge assembly from an engaged to a disengaged position. When the hinge assembly is opened and inverted, the method blocks movement of a hinge pin of the hinge assembly from the engaged position.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of the foregoing method, the door can be decoupled from the vehicle body when the hinge pin is in the disengaged position.
A further non-limiting embodiment of any of the foregoing methods includes blocking movement of the hinge pin to the disengaged position using a latch in a locked position. The latch is transitioned to an unlocked position to permit movement of the hinge pin to the disengaged position.
A further non-limiting embodiment of any of the foregoing methods includes positioning an engagement portion of the latch within a groove of the hinge pin when the latch is in the locked position to prevent withdrawal of the hinge pin from an aperture of a door portion of the hinge, an aperture of a body portion of the hinge, or both.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of the method, when the hinge assembly is not inverted, the method includes rotating a door portion of the hinge assembly with the door about the hinge pin from an open position to a closed position, and, during the rotating pressing a cam of the door portion against the latch to transition the latch from the unlocked position to the locked position.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of any of the foregoing methods, when the hinge assembly is inverted, gravity urges the latch to transition to the locked position and maintains the latch in the locked position.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of any of the foregoing methods, inverting the hinge assembly causes a bearing to fall within a cavity. The bearing, after falling, is at least partially received within a groove of the hinge pin to block movement of the hinge pin from the engaged position.
In a further non-limiting embodiment of any of the foregoing methods, inverting the hinge assembly causes a tab to rotate about a pivot to a locked position where the tab is at least partially received within a groove of the hinge pin to block movement of the hinge pin from the engaged position.
In further non-limiting embodiment of any of the foregoing methods, inverting the hinge assembly causes an eccentric member to rotate about a pivot to a locked position where the eccentric member is at least partially received within a groove of the hinge pin to block movement of the hinge pin from the engaged position.
In further non-limiting embodiment of any of the foregoing methods, the hinge pin in the engaged position is received within an aperture of a door portion of the hinge assembly and an aperture of a body portion of the hinge assembly. The hinge pin in the disengaged position is withdrawn from the aperture of the door portion, the aperture of the body portion, or both.
The various features and advantages of the disclosed examples will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the detailed description. The figures that accompany the detailed description can be briefly described as follows:
This disclosure relates generally to a hinge assembly that facilitates removal of a vehicle door.
The hinge assembly includes a latch that transitions between locked and unlocked positions. When the vehicle is at an orientation appropriate for removing the door, the latch is in an unlocked position to permit removal of the door. When the vehicle is in an orientation that is not appropriate for door removal, such as resting on its side or roof, the latch is transitioned to the locked position to block removal of the door. Gravity can cause the latch to transition between the locked position and the unlocked position.
Referring to
Referring to
As the door 4 associated with the hinge assembly 10 opens, the door portion 14 rotates relative to the vehicle body portion 18 in a direction R about a longitudinal axis A of the hinge pin 22. When the hinge pin 22 is in an engaged position, the door portion 14 is pivotably coupled to the vehicle body portion 18 via the hinge pin 22. When the hinge pin 22 is in a disengaged position, the door portion 14 is pivotably decoupled from the vehicle body portion 18. Generally, the hinge pin 22 is in a disengaged position when the hinge pin 22 has been withdrawn from an aperture 28A of the vehicle body portion 18, an aperture 28B of the door portion 14, or both.
When the hinge assembly 10 is in the position of
In the exemplary embodiment, a portion of the latch 26 fits within an annular groove 24 of the hinge pin 22 when the latch 26 is in the locked position (see
When the hinge assembly 10 is in the position of
Generally, the latch 26 includes an engagement portion 34 and a handle portion 38. The engagement portion 34 includes the portion of the latch 26 that fits within the annular groove 24 of the hinge pin 22 when the latch 26 is in the locked position. The portion of the latch 26 that fits within the annular groove 24 is part of a hemispherical section of the engagement portion 34 in this example.
The support ledge 30 supports the handle portion 38 when the latch 26 is in the locked position and in the position of
Referring now to
As the latch 26 rotates in the direction RL, the engagement portion 34 rotates within a bore 42 of the vehicle body portion 18. The rotation of latch 26 from the position of
To remove the door 4 (of
In some examples, contaminants, such as mud or dirt, could adhere to the hinge assembly 10 and prevent the latch 26 from transitioning from the locked position to the unlocked position when the hinge assembly 10 is open. In such examples, after opening the door 4, a user can press the handle portion 38 in the direction RL to sever the bond between the latch 26 and the contaminants and thereby cause the latch 26 to move to the unlocked position of
In some examples, with reference to
If the door 4 is opened and not removed, the user can return the door 4 to the fully closed position of
From time to time, the vehicle 2 may be in an orientation where removal of the doors 4 is not desired. For example, if the vehicle 2 flips such that the vehicle 2 rests on its roof rather than the wheels 8, removal of the doors 4 may not be desired.
In response to such orientations, the latch 26 of the exemplary embodiment automatically maintains to the locked position. Gravity, in the exemplary embodiment, prevents the handle portion 38 from rotating to a position where the engagement portion 34 is disengaged from the hinge pin 22. This blocks removal of the hinge pin 22 from the hinge assembly 10 by a user and blocks the hinge pin 22 from otherwise falling from the hinge assembly 10.
For example, with reference to
Inverted, for purposes of this disclosure, is not limited to situations where the orientation of the hinge assembly 10 has flipped 180 degrees as shown in
In this disclosure, like reference numerals designate like elements where appropriate, and reference numerals with the addition of one-hundred or multiples thereof designate modified elements. The modified elements incorporate the same features and benefits of the corresponding modified elements, expect where stated otherwise.
With reference now to
When the hinge assembly 110 is oriented as shown in
When the hinge assembly 110 is reoriented to the position of
With reference now to
When the hinge assembly 210 is oriented as shown in
When the hinge assembly 210 is reoriented to the position of
Referring now to
The eccentric member 78 can rotate within the cavity 82 about the pivot 86. A center of gravity CG of the eccentric member 78 is radially offset from the pivot 86. The center of gravity CG is circumferentially aligned with a notch 90 within the eccentric member 78. The center of gravity CG causes the eccentric member 78 to reorient around the rotational axis R as the hinge assembly 310 is reoriented with respect to ground.
The eccentric member 78 is configured such that, when the hinge assembly 310 is in the position of
When the hinge assembly 310 is reoriented to the position of
In another example, the eccentric member 78 and pivot 86 could be replaced with a pin that can slide within the cavity 82 in response to the hinge assembly 310 being reoriented.
Features of the disclosed examples include a latch that can move between a locked position that prevents the hinge pin of a hinge from being withdrawn to an unlocked position that permits withdrawal of the hinge pin. When the hinge pin is withdrawn, a door associated with the hinge can be removed from a vehicle. The latches are configured such that the latches maintain the locked position when the vehicle is oriented in a position where removing the door may be undesirable.
The preceding description is exemplary rather than limiting in nature. Variations and modifications to the disclosed examples may become apparent to those skilled in the art that do not necessarily depart from the essence of this disclosure. Thus, the scope of legal protection given to this disclosure can only be determined by studying the following claims.