The present invention relates to a drawer safety latch. More particularly, it relates to a drawer safety latch which can be installed very easily and operates simply. There are many known types of drawer safety latches, but they usually are difficult to install, difficult to operate, and typically only operate in one direction, to prevent a child from opening the drawer. In many cases, the latch permits the child to open the drawer enough to get his fingers into the drawer, and then permits the child to close the drawer on his fingers, which can result in injury to the child.
The safety latch of the present invention may be placed so that the drawer opens just far enough for the user to be able to disengage the safety latch, but not enough to gain access to the contents of the drawer until the safety latch is disengaged. Once the drawer is opened far enough to engage the safety latch, the safety latch prevents the accidental closure of the drawer. In order to close the drawer, the user must intentionally disengage it. This prevents a child from closing the drawer on his fingers.
A preferred embodiment of the safety latch is very easy to install. It includes an adhesive strip and can be mounted quickly and easily to the drawer without the need for drilling or screws.
The engaging arm 20 has a top surface including front and rear ramps 26, 28, which are collinear, and a trough 30 between the two ramps 26, 28. The trough 30 has substantially straight front and rear walls and defines an upward opening. Both of the ramps 26, 28 terminate short of that upward opening in a vertical plane, leaving the upward opening free to receive the front face of the cabinet, so the trough receives and abuts the front face of the cabinet and stops the travel of the drawer both when the drawer is opening and when the drawer is closing. As is explained in more detail later, the trough 30 has a depth which permits it to engage the front face of the cabinet 34 (see
The vertical leg 12 has an inside face 14, a flat outside face 16, and a top surface 18. In this embodiment 10, there is an adhesive strip adhered to the outside face 16, including a peel-off protective sheet 24, which covers the adhesive strip until the user is ready to install the safety latch 10 in the drawer 22, at which time he peels off the protective sheet 24 to expose the adhesive surface in order to adhere the vertical leg 12 to the side of the drawer 22.
The engaging arm 20 is cantilevered from the horizontal leg 36, and pivots upwardly and downwardly parallel to the vertical leg 12 by means of flexing of the latch material between the engaging arm 20 and the horizontal leg 36. The engaging arm 20 may be deflected by pushing it down until the apex 38 of the second ramp 28 is below the cross bar 32, allowing the drawer to open. The engaging arm 20 is naturally biased to spring back up when it is not being deflected downwardly.
As seen in
The safety latch 10 is mounted inside of the drawer 22 such that the outside face 16 of the vertical leg 12 of the safety latch 10 lies against the inside surface 42 of the left side 23 of the drawer 22. The protective sheet 24 has been peeled off of the outside face 16, allowing the vertical leg 12 to be adhered to the side 23 of the drawer 22. To facilitate the installation, the safety latch 10 is mounted such that the upper surface 18 of the vertical leg 12 is parallel to, and flush with, the upper edge 44 of the side 23 of the drawer 22.
As seen in
In order to open or close the drawer 22 from the position shown in
If the drawer 22 is opened, so that the entire latch 10 is forward of the cross bar 32, then, as the drawer 22 is pushed closed, the cross bar 32 bears down on the rear ramp 28, again causing the engaging arm 20 to flex downwardly. Again, as soon as the drawer 22 is closed enough that the trough 30 reaches the cross bar 32 (as seen in
In this preferred embodiment 10, the safety latch 10 is made as a single piece from a strong and flexible material, such as plastic, such that the engaging arm 20 may be readily deflected downwardly when acted upon by either the cross bar 32 or by the user, and such that it also will snap back upwardly when it is released.
The safety latch 10 may typically be installed as close as possible to the front face of the drawer 22 such that the drawer 22 opens just far enough for the user to be able to push down on the front ramp 26 of the safety latch 10 to disengage the engaging arm 20, but not far enough for a hand to reach into the drawer 22 and grab or pull out any of its contents. The distance between the front face of the drawer and the front face of the cabinet when the latch is latched, as shown in
The embodiment described above shows a simple and effective arrangement for providing a safety latch for a drawer which prevents a child from getting access to the contents of the drawer and prevents the child from pinching his fingers in the drawer. It will be obvious to those skilled in the art that modifications may be made to the embodiment described above without departing from the scope of the present invention.
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