The present invention relates to a door viewport, commonly called a peephole, with a cross door locking bar which is adapted to prohibit a swing out door from being opened when the cross door locking bar is deployed laterally across both the door and the door frame. The term “cross door” is synonymous with “cross-door.”
Although viewport peepholes are well known and cross-door bars are also well known, no one has effectively combined these two distinct elements together.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,669,641 to Jeansonne discloses a door securing device that includes a telescoping crossbar that is positionable across the door to be secured and securable at either end to the building structure adjacent the door. Jeansonne '641 does not disclose a peep-hole or view port disposed at a central location on a cross-bar which secures the door. In more detail, Jeansonne '641 includes a pivot anchor having a threaded pivot anchor securing portion at a first pivot anchor end and a positioning tab extending radially outward from a second pivot anchor end, a latch anchor having a threaded latch anchor securing portion at a first latch anchor end, a partial spherical latch ball secured to a second latch anchor end in a manner such that a longitudinal axis of said latch anchor passes through said center of said latch ball. A latching shoulder extending radially outward from a side of said latch anchor at a location a first distance away from said latch ball. A telescoping cross-bar has a pivot section having a first outer diameter, a circular cross-section, and a tubular latch section said tubular latch section having a first internal diameter sized to slidingly and rotatably receive therein at least a portion of said pivot section. The pivot section includes a pivot hub at one end thereof having a hub channel formed that is sized to captively receive a section of said pivot anchor therein including said positioning tab, said positioning tab being insertable into said hub channel through a tab access slot formed through a first hub channel end. The pivot hub has a first storage slot formed through a second end thereof that is angularly offset from said tab access slot, said first storage slot being sized to receive therein said positioning tab. The latch section includes a circular latch ball receiving aperture formed through a sidewall thereof at a first latch section end and a latch anchor receiving slot formed in connection with said latch ball receiving aperture along a portion of a circumference of said first latch section end, said latch ball having a diameter greater than said latch anchor receiving slot and less than said latch ball receiving aperture. An adjustable door assembly includes a contact securing mechanism, securable to and positionable along at least a portion of said latch section and a user positionable bumper plate that is positionable and securable at a plurality of user selected positions with respect to said latch section.
U.S. Pat. No. 2,222,691 to Taigman discloses a lock including a casing provided with means for mounting it on one side of a door, a face plate provided with means for mounting the same on the opposite side of the door and provided with a key actuated cylinder, an eye-piece mounted for rotary movement in the casing and providing an exposed handle, and a barrel secured to the face plate with its bore forming a continuation of the bore of the eye piece and coacting therewith to provide a sight opening extending through the lock casing in offset relation to its lock actuating mechanism. Taigman '691 does not show a cross-bar lock.
U.S. Pat. No. 795,712 to Kupsch discloses a key retaining and locking device for doors provided with an independent key-operated lock comprising a locking bar adapted to be inserted through the key, the bar having a movably-mounted casing on one end and a rigidly-mounted casing on the other end. Kupsch '712 does not show a viewport at a central location on a cross-bar door lock.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,057,274 to Van Gompel discloses a cross-door door brace and security apparatus comprising a cylindrical locking means slidably engaging a retaining member in an aperture in the door and detachable spring-loaded locking pins. Van Gompel '274 does not show a central viewport.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,073,335 to Lampers discloses a conventional viewport or peephole through a door with an interior door hanger. The method supports an object on the exterior of a door equipped with a flanged peep hole fixture comprising the peep hole barrel passing through the hanger piece hole.
U.S. Pat. No. 1,965,725 to Smith et al discloses a peephole and a rod pivotally attached to a shutter, over an opening to look through, and a secondary latch of a lock plate.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,741,033 to Everett discloses a crossbar door lock system extending across a door and over a door jamb and pivoting on said door at one point and providing a positive, nonfrictional latch at another point and received through a ring collar and latching to a doorknob. Everett does not disclose a peephole at a central location on a cross-bar door lock. Accordingly, there is a need for a peephole having a structure to grasp or co-act a midsection of the crossbar and to utilize simple and easy to release door frame mounts disposed at the terminal ends of the cross door locking bar.
The door viewport peephole has a cross-door locking bar adapted to be deployed on an interior-side of a swing-out door and door frame. The viewport-peephole with a cross-door locking bar includes a cross-door locking bar adapted to laterally span the door frame and the door. The peephole viewport is adapted to be mounted in a pass-through aperture of the door. The viewport has an exterior facing lip adapted to be adjacent and adjoining an exterior surface of the door. The viewport also has an interior face plate adapted to be adjacent or near an interior surface of the door. The interior face plate forms part of the mid-bar capture channel. The mid-bar capture channel holds the cross-door locking bar and mechanically captures a generally mid-region of the cross-door bar. The system includes a pair of cross-bar mounts to be mounted on the door frame, at opposite sides of the door and the frame. Each cross-bar mount coacts with the door frame at a terminal end region of the cross-door locking bar.
In a first locked position, the cross-door bar is disposed in the mid-bar capture channel and the terminal ends of the cross-door bar are disposed in the cross-bar mounts on opposite sides of the door frame. In an unlocked position, the cross-door bar is withdrawn from the mid-bar capture channel and the terminal end regions of the cross-door bar are withdrawn from corresponding cross-bar mounts. In both positions, the peephole viewport is adapted to permit interior-to-exterior views through the door in both the first and the second positions. Generally, the user removes the cross-door bar by loosening the cross-bar mounts near the door frame, withdrawing the cross-bar from the mid-bar capture channel and placing the bar aside, thereby permitting the user to swing open the door, outside the frame and adjacent home or building structure.
Further enhancements to the viewport-peephole with a cross-door bar include a two-piece viewport with a first piece defining the exterior facing lip and a second piece defining the interior face plate. The first and second pieces are threaded together to form the peephole viewport which is mounted in the pass-through aperture of the door.
The second piece of the peephole viewport may include a door lip adapted to coact on the interior surface of the door (that is, adjoining the door) such that when the first and second pieces are threaded together, the exterior facing lip is mounted on the exterior surface of the door and the door lip on the second piece is mounted on the interior surface of the door. These lips grip the door.
As for the cross-bar mounts, one type of mount is an L-shaped bracket attached to the door frame. Another type of mount is a screw-down mount. Rather than a screw down mount, the transverse extension rod may be a spring loaded jack (similar to a force grip plier or jack system) or a grooved rod with a spring loaded lock lever. The lever tooth mates with the grooved rod to lock the transverse extension rod against the door frame.
The cross-bar mount may include a door frame plate adapted to be forced against the door frame by a controllable transverse extension member having, at its terminal end, the door frame plate. The transverse extension member is movably mounted to the corresponding terminal end region of the cross-door locking bar and has a user-controlled extension means for forcing the cross-door locking bar away from the door frame plate. By transversely moving the cross bar a way from the door frame the viewport pull the mid-region of the door inboard, thereby prohibiting the door to swing outward or outboard. The controllable transverse extension member may further includes a user-actuated tactile member to rotate the threaded rod relative to the threaded element.
To facilitate cross-door bar removal, the transverse extension member may include a laterally disposed cross-bar passage therethrough to movably retain the cross-bar therein such that the transverse extension member is adapted to move laterally over the cross-bar. Motion “laterally” refers to left and right movement with respect to the vertically mounted door in the door frame. “Transverse” movement refers to movement towards or away from the interior or inside surface of the door. However, lateral movement may also refer to a diagonally positioned cross-bar over the door. In other words, “lateral” is not exclusively horizontal in nature.
A further feature is cross-bar lock at the cross-bar passage. The cross-bar lock grips the cross-bar in or near the cross-bar passage such that in a cross-bar locked condition, lateral movement of the cross-bar in the cross-bar passage is prohibited.
It should be noted that one cross-bar mount may be an L-shaped bracket and the other cross-bar mount can be the controllable transverse extension member having at its terminal end the door frame plate.
Another embodiment of the invention is a dual cross-bar system and a mid-bar complementary viewport/cross-bar locking system.
Further objects and advantages of the present invention can be found in the detailed description of the embodiments went taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The present invention relates to a door viewport, commonly called a peephole, with a cross door locking bar which is adapted to prohibit a swing out door from being opened when the cross door locking bar is deployed laterally across both the door and the door frame.
In
Viewport peephole 12 includes an exterior facing lip 16 which is adjacent and adjoining the exterior surface of door 10. In the illustrated embodiment, viewport 12 is a two-piece viewport with one piece defining the exterior facing lip 16 and a second piece defining an interior door lip 14 and interior faceplate 34. Interior faceplate 34 defines a mid-bar capture channel 30. Cross door bar 40 is shown in
The two-piece viewport peephole 12 is threaded together such that a viewing passageway is formed by passageway segments 15, 17. The two-piece viewport 12 also includes a door lip 14 formed on the second piece of viewport peephole 12. In this manner, when the viewport peephole 12 is mounted in the pass-through aperture of the door, the exterior facing lip 16 grips the exterior surface of door 10 and door lip 22 is mounted to and adjoining the interior surface of door 10, thereby securely mounting the viewport peephole 12 on door 10.
Although a round, cylindrical pass-through is shown in the drawings, the pass-through may be configured in any manner with any shape. Further, viewport peephole 12 may include optical lenses to improve the view through the peephole from the inside to the outside. As is commonly known, a user would stand inside the door, shown as inside 6 in
The terminal end regions 50a, 50b, of cross door bar 40 are removably mounted to door frames 2a, 2b by L-shaped brackets 50. These L-shaped brackets are mounted via screws, nails or other mounting means using apertures 51 in the L-shaped bracket 50.
In
Since the lateral span of any particular door or doorframe may be different, there is a need to have controllable transverse extension member 77 at variable lateral locations on and about crossbar 40.
In
Further, in
In
The claims appended hereto are meant to cover modifications and changes within the scope and spirit of the present invention.
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20200291698 A1 | Sep 2020 | US |