1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates a new and improved door hold and release mechanism for use with conventional reciprocating pneumatic operated door checks or closers known in the art.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Door-checks or closers, as they are often referred to, such as the reciprocating pneumatic cylinder type used on storm, screen and similar type doors, automatically close the door after the door has been opened and then released. The door must be hand or mechanically held open while passing through or invariably the door will automatically return, possibly causing injury to the person passing through the doorway.
In order to hold a door open, while passing through a door equipped with the typical reciprocal door-check used on a majority of storm and screen door installations, it is necessary to first slide a “lock tab”, located on the door-check's piston rod, toward and into contact with the face of the door-check cylinder. This requires holding the door in an open position with one hand while sliding the lock-tab with the other, and then reversing the procedure to allow the door to close under action of the cylinder.
This two-fold operation is both clumsy and time consuming. Additionally, since sliding the lock-tab can only be done from inside the door, the prior art is only useful under circumstances where a person is leaving and then immediately returning through the door. Moreover, a dangerous scenario posed by the sliding lock-tab is that because of its operational difficulty, a person might decide not to use its hold-open function and proceed to pass through the door while the door is automatically returning to its closed position, resulting in injury. Further, in those cases where the door checks are installed on the lower portion of a door requiring bending down to operate the lock-tab, the operator is in a more precarious position for injury should the door check malfunction.
It is therefore a primary object of the invention to provide a door hold and release mechanism which is able to hold a door open, hands free, until the person opening the door has completely passed through the door and then subsequently release the hold on the door and allow it to close safely.
Another object of the invention is to provide a door hold and release mechanism which can restrain a door in an open position by the simple action of depressing a button, either by hand or foot, and releasing the restraint by a simple outward pressure on the door.
Still another object of the invention is to provide a door hold and release mechanism which is small and easily mounted onto a door check cylinder, which has a minimum number of moving parts and which is easily manufactured.
Yet another object of the invention is to provide a door hold and release mechanism which is adaptable to most, if not all, reciprocal pneumatic door-checks or closers of the type often used on conventional screen and storm doors.
According to the invention, there is provided an improved door hold and release mechanism for use with a door-check or closer of the type including a pneumatic cylinder and a reciprocating piston rod. The door hold and release mechanism of the invention includes a housing mounted onto the side wall of the pneumatic cylinder and a drop stop fitted over the piston rod close to one end of the cylinder. The piston rod passes through a hole in the drop stop which is of such size as to allow movement of the piston rod through the hole in a first position when the drop stop is substantially perpendicular to the piston rod but which restricts movement of the piston rod by friction in a second position when the drop stop is tilted at an angle other than perpendicular to the piston rod.
A cap button is mounted on top of the housing and is used to activate the door hold and release mechanism by depressing the button using a person's hand or foot, for example. An elongated shaft is disposed in the housing and is connected at one end to the cap button. A spring mounted inside the housing exerts a bias pressure on the shaft which opposes the external force applied to the shaft when cap button is depressed.
A draw bar is also mounted within the housing and has a forward end extending outwardly through the housing which is connected to the drop stop. A cam action linkage connects the other rearward end of the draw bar to the opposite end of the shaft. The linkage comprises an elongated cam slot formed within the opposite end of the shaft and a pin, which extends through both the slot and the rearward end of the draw bar. The slot is inclined at an angle with respect to the draw bar such that the draw bar is forced to move both laterally along with the shaft and in a rearward direction in response to the external forces applied to the shaft when the cap button is depressed. This in turn causes the drop stop to tilt from its first position perpendicular to the piston rod to its second position engaging the piston rod and holding the door open for passage of the operator.
In the accompanying drawings:
Referring now to the drawings and particularly to
Although the door hold and release mechanism of the invention is shown in the drawings as being mounted in a vertical position on top of the pneumatic cylinder 12, it will be understood that the mechanism may be mounted as well horizontally to one side of the cylinder, this arrangement being preferred in those cases where the mechanism is secured to the door mid-way between its top and bottom ends. In this particular arrangement, the mechanism can be more easily activated by the person's hand, arm or elbow when carrying a child or groceries, for example, as opposed to using a foot when the mechanism is mounted at the bottom of the door.
The door hold and release mechanism of the invention further includes a rectangular cap button 18 which loosely fits over the top open end of the housing 10. The door holding action is initiated by depressing the cap button 18 by hand or foot, for example, thereby compressing a tension spring 20 and forcing an elongated shaft 22 vertically downward through an opening in a shaft guide plate 24. The upper end of the shaft 22 is connected to the cap button 18 by a set screw 26 which passes through the button and is loosely secured to its underneath side by a cap retainer clip 28. The clip 28 allows the set screw 26 to turn independently of the cap button 18. The set screw 26 threads into the upper open end 30 of the shaft 22 and, by turning, varies the tension of the tension spring 20 positioned between the guide plate 24 and the cap button 18.
As shown in
The forward end of the draw bar 34 has a threaded opening 40 and extends outwardly through an exit hole 44 in the side wall of the housing 10. A drop stop 46 is slidably mounted onto the reciprocating piston rod 42 of the pneumatic cylinder 12. The drop stop 46 is secured to the forward end of the draw bar 34 by a bolt 50 and washer 56, the bolt passing through a hole 48 in the drop stop 46 and engaging the threaded opening 40 on the draw bar 34.
The piston rod 42 extends through a hole 52 in the lower end of the drop stop 46. The hole 52 is drilled slightly larger than the diameter of the piston rod 42 and is so designed as to slip over the end of the piston rod 42 when detached from its mounting hardware. The drop stop 46 extends from just above draw bar 34 to a point substantially even with the bottom edge or rim of the pneumatic cylinder 12 as best shown in FIG. 1. The lower end of the drop stop 46 is shaped to have a bend 54 of approximately 30 degrees from the vertical toward the bottom edge of the cylinder 12, beginning from a point just below the hole 52 for the piston rod 42.
When the door hold and release mechanism is in an inactive position as shown by the full lines in
To hold the door open, the cap button 18 is momentarily depressed forcing the shaft 22 vertically downward guided by the shaft guide 24. The cam slot 36 is slanted forward and exerts a rearward and downward pressure on the pin 32, drawing both the draw bar 34 and drop stop 46 into a rearward slanting position as shown by the phantom lines in FIG. 3. This action exerts a friction force between the hole 52 on the drop stop and the piston rod 42. The friction force is significantly increased by the action of the cylinder 12 applying pressure against the angled tip of the drop stop bend 54. The combined pressures hold the door in the open position.
The cap button 18 when released, partially returns to its starting position by the expansion of the tension spring 20 and the free travel distance in the cam slot 36. The remaining tension on the tension spring 20 is adjusted so as not to allow a release of the door unless the weight of the door is removed from the pneumatic cylinder 12. An outward motion of the door subsequently releases this tension and the friction hold of the drop stop 46 on the piston rod 42. The tension spring 20 fully expands and returns the cap button 18 and all connecting parts to their starting positions.
When the door is held in the open position, the set screw 26 is adjusted to a point slightly less than required for a full release of the door from the friction hold by the hole 52 on the drop stop 46. The tension on the tension spring 20 is variable and is dependent on several factors, namely, the weight of the door, the return capacity of the door-closer and the wear on both the hole 52 and the piston rod 42.
The door hold and release mechanism of the invention is effortlessly operated, eliminating many of the problems inherent with the prior art. When a person passing through a door is carrying packages, or perhaps an infant, and the sudden closing of the door might otherwise cause serious harm, one simply has to hold open the door with one hand and depress the cap button 18 with the foot, or if the hold and release mechanism is mounted near the center of the door, with the forearm or elbow and then pass through the door. Upon leaving the person only has to pull or nudge the door outward with the hand, knee or shoulder and the door will very conveniently close behind him. If necessary, the door can be left in the open position when repeated trips through the doorway must be made and later closed by applying an outward pressure on the door.
The simple hold and release actions of a door closer equipped with the instant mechanism are far superior and less complicated than operation of the prior art devices. The use of lock-tabs supplied with prior door checks is inconvenient and requires the tab to be hand located on the piston rod to hold the door open and relocated to its former position behind a crimped portion on the piston rod to allow the door to fully close. This requires a person to hold the door open with one hand and to manipulate the tab with the other hand.
Although the door hold and release mechanism of the invention has been described herein mainly as an add-on feature to new or installed door checks, it is of course entirely possible to employ the device as an integral part of a door check's original design and manufacture.
This application claims the benefit of Provisional Application No. 60/387,790 filed Jun. 11, 2002.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4194264 | Stoffregen | Mar 1980 | A |
4639969 | Obenshain | Feb 1987 | A |
4815163 | Simmons | Mar 1989 | A |
5048150 | Guerin | Sep 1991 | A |
D356938 | Duffy | Apr 1995 | S |
5529148 | O'Leary | Jun 1996 | A |
5592780 | Checkovich | Jan 1997 | A |
5659925 | Patterson | Aug 1997 | A |
5832562 | Luca | Nov 1998 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030226235 A1 | Dec 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60387790 | Jun 2002 | US |