1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to electrified cylindrical locks and more particularly to an electrified cylindrical lock having a reversible solenoid.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Solenoids are commonly used for electric control of locks. Circumstances such as building codes and user preferences dictate whether the locks are required to operate as fail safe (electrically locked) or as fail secure (electrically unlocked). Therefore, to provide full coverage a lock manufacturer must supply the locks in both fail safe and fail secure versions. Of course, this can be accomplished with two different solenoids, one for active push operation and the other for active pull operation. However, this doubles the manufacturer's overhead costs for forecasting, purchasing, inventorying and maintaining two solenoids instead of one. From a user's point-of-view, the two solenoid approach has a disadvantage that he cannot change between fail safe and fail secure without reordering.
There is a need for an electrified cylindrical lock having a solenoid that can be reversed to switch over between active push and active pull operation.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an electrified cylindrical lock having a reversible solenoid that can be easily changed over between active push and active pull.
Briefly, in a preferred embodiment, the solenoid includes a coil, an armature, and a case that may be assembled for either active push or active pull of a latch member. The coil has a front end and a rear end. The front end always faces toward the latch member and the rear end always faces away from the latch member. The armature includes a magnetic slug. The slug is disposed at the rear coil end for the active push mode or disposed at the front coil end for the active pull mode. Energizing the coil draws the slug toward the front coil end for pushing the latch member away from the coil for the active push mode and draws the slug toward the rear coil end for pulling the latch member toward the coil for the active pull mode without reversing the coil with respect to the latch member or to a device such as a lock that uses the latch member.
These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after having read the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments which are illustrated in the various figures.
FIGS. 1A–B and 2A–B show a reversible solenoid of the present invention referred to by a reference number 10. The solenoid 10 can be assembled for operation in an active push mode for pushing an object 12 along an axis 14 away from the solenoid 10 or an active pull mode for pulling the object 12 along the axis 14 toward the solenoid 10 when the solenoid 10 is energized. In an exemplary embodiment, the object 12 may be a latch member 16 (
The solenoid 10 includes a coil 20 and an armature 22 on the axis 14. The coil 20 has a rear coil end 24 and a front coil end 26. Wires 28 for carrying electrical current for energizing the coil 20 enter the coil 20 at a wire entry point 30 at the front coil end 26. The coil 20 is always disposed so the front coil end 26 is closer to the object 12 and the rear coil end 24 is farther from the object 12.
The armature 22 includes an armature shaft 32 connected to the object 12, a magnetic armature slug 34 disposed on the armature shaft 32, and a spring 36 coiled about the armature shaft 32 for biasing the slug 34. Preferably, the slug 34 is made of a magnetic material such as iron or steel that reacts to an external magnetic field but does not hold the field to become a permanent magnet.
For the active push mode, the armature 22 responds to a magnetic field from the coil 20 when the coil 20 is energized to actively push the object 12 away from the coil 20 and responds to the bias of the spring 36 when the coil 20 is de-energized to passively pull the object 12 toward the coil 20. For the active pull mode, the armature 22 responds to the magnetic field from the coil 20 when the coil 20 is energized to actively pull the object 12 toward the coil 20 and responds to the bias of the spring 36 when the coil 20 is de-energized to passively push the object 12 away from the coil 20.
The solenoid 10 also includes a ring spacer 40, a seat 42, a case 44, a coil retainer clip 46, and a case retainer clip 48. The ring spacer 40 has a through hole 52 on the axis 14. The slug 34 has an inner end 54 and an outer end 56. The inner end 54 always remains within the coil 20. For improved magnetic efficiency, the inner end 54 is chamfered. A cavity 58 in the inner end 54 encloses and retains one end of the spring 36. The slug 34 is end-for-end reversed on the axis 14 when the solenoid 10 is switched between the active push mode and the active pull mode so that the inner end 54 faces toward the object 12 for the active push mode and away from the object 12 for the active pull mode.
For the active push mode, the slug 34 is threaded to a location on the armature shaft 32 that is proximate to the rear coil end 24. When the coil 20 is at rest (not-energized), the slug 34 is urged by the spring 36 so that the outer end 56 is pushed into the through hole 52, thereby passively pulling the object 12 toward the solenoid 10. In a preferred embodiment, for a coil 20 having a length between the rear coil end 24 and the front coil end 26 of about one inch, the outer end 56 protrudes about 0.150 inches through the rear coil end 24 into the through hole 52. When the coil 20 is energized, the slug 34 is drawn further into the coil 20 so that the outer end 56 is about flush with the rear coil end 24 or protrudes less than about 0.15 inches, thereby actively pushing the object 12 away from the solenoid 10.
For the active pull mode, the slug 34 is threaded to a location on the armature shaft 32 that is proximate to the front coil end 26. When the coil 20 is at rest (de-energized), the slug 34 is urged by the spring 36 so that the outer end 56 protrudes through the front coil end 26, thereby passively pushing the object 12 away from the solenoid 10. In a preferred embodiment, for a coil 20 having a length between the rear coil end 24 and the front coil end 26 of about one inch, the outer end 56 protrudes about 0.150 inches through front coil end 26. When the coil 20 is energized, the slug 34 is drawn further into the coil 20 so that the outer end 56 is about flush with the front coil end 26 or protrudes less than about 0.20 inches, thereby actively pulling the object 12 toward the solenoid 10.
The seat 42 has an inner cylindrical section 62 having a seat end 66 and an outer cylindrical section 64. The inner section 62 has an outside diameter less than the inside diameter of the coil 20 and always remains within the coil 20. The seat end 66 has a concave reverse chamfer that approximately matches the chamfer of the inner end 54 of the slug 34. A cavity in the seat end 66 encloses and retains one end of the spring 36. The seat end 66 always faces the inner end 54 of the slug 34. The seat 42 is end-for-end reversed on the axis 14 when the solenoid 10 is switched between the active push mode and the active pull mode so that the seat end 66 faces away from the object 12 for the active push mode and toward the object 12 for the active pull mode. For the active push mode, the seat 42 is located proximate to the front coil end 26. For the active pull mode, the seat 42 is located proximate to the rear coil end 24.
The case 44 has a closed rear end 72 and an open front end 74 having a notch 76. The inside diameter of the case 44 approximately matches the outside diameters of the coil 20, the ring spacer 40, and the outer section of the seat 42. The coil retainer clip 46 is sprung into a front annular groove 82 near the front end 74 on the inside of the case 44.
For the active pull mode, the slug 34 is threaded to a location on the armature shaft 32 that is proximate to the front coil end 26. When the coil 20 is at rest (de-energized), the slug 34 is urged by the spring 36 so that the outer end 56 protrudes through the front coil end 26, thereby passively pushing the object 12 away from the solenoid 10. In a preferred embodiment, for a coil 20 having a length between the rear coil end 24 and the front coil end 26 of about one inch, the outer end 56 protrudes about 0.150 inches through front coil end 26. When the coil 20 is energized, the slug 34 is drawn further into the coil 20 so that the outer end 56 is about flush with the front coil end 26 or protrudes less than about 0.15 inches, thereby actively pulling the object 12 toward the solenoid 10.
The coil retainer clip 46 includes a horse shoe shaped spring section 86, handles 88 attached to and in the same plane as the spring section 86, and an L-shaped flange 90 attached to the spring section 86. The handles 88 enables an assembler to compress the spring section 86 in order to engage and fit into the annular groove 82. The flange 90 retains the armature slug 34 in the solenoid 10 when the solenoid 10 is assembled for the active pull mode. Typically, after the solenoid 10 has been installed into the chassis 18 (
The case 44 also includes a rear annular groove 94. The case retainer clip 48 is sprung into the groove 94 for fixing and retaining the solenoid 10 within the chassis 18 (
The outer section 64 of the seat 42 has an outside diameter about equal to the outside diameter of the coil 20 and a length between inner and outer sides along the axis 14 of less than about 1/10 the length of the coil 20 (less than about 0.100 inches for a preferred embodiment) and preferably about 1/20 the length of the coil 20 (less than about 0.050 inches for a preferred embodiment). It may be noted that the wire entry point 30 moves away from the coil retainer clip 46 by the length of the outer section 64 of the seat 42 when the solenoid 10 is switched between the active push and pull modes.
Importantly, the length of the outer section 64 must be small enough that so wires 28 are not stretched when the solenoid 10 is converted between active push and pull modes for the same chassis 18 (
The solenoid 10 may be assembled without tools from a solenoid kit for operation either as active push or active pull. Because the coil 20 is a small portion of the total cost of the kit, the kit may include both 12 volt and 24 volt versions of the coil 20. A single kit of parts may be ordered and inventoried by a supplier, inventoried and shipped, and ordered, inventoried, assembled and if necessary reassembled by a receiver for four versions of the solenoid 10: active push 12 volt, active push 24 volt, active pull 12 volt and active pull 24 volt, thereby reducing handling costs.
The armature 22 in a preferred embodiment includes a swivel 96. The swivel 96 is pinned into the latch 16 to enable the solenoid 10 and the latch member 16 to have a few degrees of pivoting freedom to prevent binding.
The chassis 18 includes a strengthening fire block member 98, a first frame 102, a first spindle 104, a second spindle 106, the latch member 16, the solenoid 10 with the wires 28 and the case retainer clip 48, a third spindle 108, a second frame 112 and a housing 116 assembled along the axis 14, and a slide and roller assembly 122 including springs 124 and spring seat 126 orthogonal to the axis 14. The slide and roller assembly 122 accepts the latch member 16 for providing the locked and unlocked states of the chassis 18. In various embodiments the chassis 18 can be constructed as actively electrically locked (fail safe) and actively electrically unlocked (fail secure). In the exemplary chassis 10, the fail safe is active pull and the fail secure is active push.
Parts and information for the chassis 18 and the lock 19 (except for the solenoid 10) are available for 80 series locks from Schlage Commercial Lock Division of Ingersoll-Rand having administrative offices in Colorado Springs, Colo. Examples of 80 series locks include models D80PDEL, D80PDEU, D80BDEL and D80BDEU. Those of ordinary skill in the art should note that the solenoid 10 of the present invention may be used with parts for other Schlage models or with parts from other manufacturers such as Cal-Royal Products, Inc. of City of Commerce, Calif.; Sargent Lock of New Haven Conn., a subsidiary of subsidiary of Assa Abloy Group Company of Sweden; Corbin-Russwin of Monroe, N.C., a subsidiary of YSG Door Security Hardware which is a subsidiary of Assa Abloy Group Company of Sweden; Yale Locks of Monroe, N.C., a subsidiary of YSG Door Security Hardware which is a subsidiary of Assa Abloy Group Company of Sweden; Arrow Locks of Brooklyn, N.Y., a subsidiary of Assa Abloy Group Company of Sweden; Falcon Locks and Security Products of Brea, Calif., a subsidiary of Ingersoll-Rand; and Marks Locks of Amityville, N.Y.
Although the present invention has been described in terms of the presently preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that such disclosure is not to be interpreted as limiting. Various alterations and modifications will no doubt become apparent to those skilled in the art after having read the above disclosure. Accordingly, it is intended that the appended claims be interpreted as covering all alterations and modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
This patent application is a division of prior application Ser. No. 10/384,500 entitled “Reversible Solenoid” filed Mar. 7, 2003 by the same inventor and issued Feb. 15, 2005 as patent number U.S. Pat. No. 6,856,221 B1.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10384500 | Mar 2003 | US |
Child | 10987520 | US |