The invention relates to a door closer mechanism having a receptacle, countersunk in the door frame, for the deadbolt of a device, countersunk in the door, for controlling the deadbolt from the closing position to the opening position by means of a manually controllable actuation member.
One such door closer mechanism is known in which the manually adjustable actuation member is embodied as a door handle. When the door handle is turned, the deadbolt is moved out of the receptacle in the door frame, so that the door can be opened. For locking the door in the closing position, a lock that is locked with a key is integrated into the door closer mechanism. This makes the door closer mechanism complicated and makes it manufacture more expensive.
It is the object of the invention to further develop a door closer mechanism of the type mentioned at the outset in such a way that without an additional key-actuated lock, its closing position is locked and fixed in the closing position, yet this does not make its easy adjustment into the opening position more difficult.
The stated object is attained by the features of claim 1.
This is attained in that the actuation member of the device countersunk in the door is embodied as a recessed handle, which in the closing position controls a slide via a supported angled control piece; the slide, via a rotatably supported lever, secures the deadbolt in the receptacle in the door frame, and upon actuation of the handle recess in the door, the deadbolt can be adjusted, via the angled control piece and the slide, into the opening position of the door, and the door is enabled to open.
When the handle recess is not actuated, the door closer mechanism is always fixed in its closing position and can be put into the opening position and the door opened by actuating the handle recess; opening the door does not require any additional means in the door closer mechanism. Such a door closer mechanism is especially well suited as a toilet door, which in a simple way makes an adjustment of the opening position of the door also possible.
The handle recess is preferably let flush into a frame in the device in the door and can be moved out of the frame in such a way that in the process it adjusts the angled control piece, the slide and the lever such that the deadbolt moves all the way out of the receptacle in the door frame. The device with the recessed handle is integrated into the door in such a way that it assumes four different positions, which are each rotated 90° from one another; the recessed handle can be moved out of the frame that is joined to the door either toward the bottom, to the left, toward the top, or to the right. In this way, the structure can always be adapted to the most-favorable position for use.
The recessed handle, except for a handle opening, extends beyond the frame and thus makes it easier to grasp the recessed handle to actuate the door closer mechanism.
The recessed handle is coupled to the angled control piece in such a way that when the recessed handle is moved out, the control lever is turned and the slide can be adjusted parallel to the deadbolt; the adjustable slide rotates the lever far enough, and the slide can be adjusted parallel to the deadbolt so far, that the deadbolt has completely moved out of the receptacle in the door frame.
The deadbolt is guided in a plate that is connectable to the front side of the door. This plate is connected to a plate vertically to it, which has the locator pins for the rotational support of the lever and for the adjustment of the slide; the lever is rotatably supported on the locator pin, and the slide, provided with guide receptacles, is displaceable on the locator pin.
The lever, the slide, and the deadbolt are covered by a plate that is parallel to the plate having the locator pins.
The angled control piece is rotatably supported in the frame around the handle recess.
The deadbolt can also have one or more permanent magnets. The angled control piece, made of electromagnetically conductive material, can be adjusted into the vicinity of these permanent magnets upon actuation of the handle recess. In the process, the deadbolt is adjusted into the opening position, and in the closing position of the handle recess, a spring restores the deadbolt into its closing position back into the receptacle in the door frame.
The invention will be described in further detail in an exemplary embodiment in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. They show:
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Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2016/061328 | 5/19/2016 | WO | 00 |