This present disclosure generally relates to electronic deadbolts, including sensor systems and methods of assembling and operating electronic deadbolts, and particularly to deadbolts that can be operated both electronically and mechanically, as by key or thumb turn.
In one aspect of the invention, an electronic deadbolt operator for a deadbolt lockset comprises an electronic actuator that rotates a powered driver and a follower that has a lost motion connection with the powered driver, and a connector driver that drives a deadbolt between extended and retracted positions. This lost most connection is of a nature that allows the follower to rotate with the powered driver when the follower is inside its range of travel, while enabling the powered driver to rotate freely of the follower after the follower is pushed to a travel limit.
In another aspect, the follower is mounted to a connector driver, which drives the deadbolt, to toggle between two oppositely-disposed off-center positions relative to the connector driver. In one off-center position, only clockwise rotation of the powered driver is operative to rotate the follower. In the opposite position, only counterclockwise rotation of the powered driver is operative to rotate the follower. The interaction between the powered driver, the follower, and stops causes the follower to toggle to an opposite position after hitting a stop.
In a further aspect, stops are positioned to limit the angular travel of the follower between limits sufficient to extend and retract the deadbolt. When the follower reaches a stop and then toggles to an opposing off-center position in relation to the connector driver, the follower becomes positioned to become engaged by the powered driver for rotation in the opposite clockwise or counterclockwise direction.
Additional aspects of the invention accommodate situations in which the deadbolt lockset is operated manually after having been electronically operated to extend or retract the deadbolt. When this happens, as illustrated in
More particularly, the follower and powered driver are co-configured so that when the two are significantly far from a coupling alignment and the deadbolt operator is commanded to re-perform its previous lock operation, the electronic actuator performs a corrective rotation of the powered driver along—and not opposite of—its previous direction of rotation until it is realigned with the follower, and continues the same rotation still further to drive the follower. Furthermore, in one implementation the powered driver is provided with two alternative projections by which the powered driver can become coupled to the follower. When performing the corrective rotation, a first of the projections toggles the follower to its oppositely-disposed off-center position, enabling the second of the projections to become coupled to the follower. By not using the same projection to drive the follower after a corrective rotation as is used to toggle the follower during the corrective rotation, this implementation reduces the length of time the electronic actuator has to be powered, saving energy and increasing battery life.
In another power-saving aspect, the electronic deadbolt operator includes a controller that, using information obtained from a sensor assembly, calculates an initial speed of the electronic actuator and from that determines a length of time to run the electronic actuator to complete a lock function.
In a far more detailed implementation, an electronic deadbolt assembly is provided that allows both mechanical rotation and intelligent electronic rotation. The electronic deadbolt assembly comprises a deadbolt lockset, a key cylinder on the ingress side (outside) of the door and a thumb turn on the egress side (inside) of the door for mechanically operating the deadbolt lockset, and an actuator assembly for at least electronically (and optionally also mechanically) operating the deadbolt lockset from an egress side of the door.
In one aspect, the actuator assembly comprises a housing, a controller, an actuator (such as an electric motor), an actuator-powered driver, a lost-motion follower, and a tailpiece driver. The actuator-powered driver and tailpiece driver are both configured to rotate.
In one implementation, the actuator is an electric motor, the housing comprises a gearbox, and the actuator-powered driver is the main gear of the gearbox. The gearbox output shaft has a press fit pinion gear with a bevel on the gear teeth corresponding and coacting with a main gear with beveled teeth having unlimited rotation. The main gear coacts with a follower (swivel disc) that has limited rotation. When properly positioned, the main gear rotates the follower, which is coupled to a tailpiece driver that is solidly coupled to a connector (e.g., a tailpiece hub) that rotates the tailpiece that operates the tubular dead bolt.
In another aspect, the actuator assembly includes a mechanical mechanism, discussed further below, that automatically decouples the actuator-powered driver from a tailpiece driver at the end of a lock/unlock operation. This enables a person to subsequently turn the key or thumb turn in an opposite direction, without continuing to engage the actuator.
In yet another aspect, the actuator assembly also includes a mechanism that toggles the follower—which is mounted on the tailpiece driver—between first and second settings. In the first setting, the follower is exclusively positioned to be actuator-driven in the clockwise direction. In the second settings, the follower is exclusively positioned to be actuator-driven in the counterclockwise direction. In both the first and second settings, the follower can be manually driven in either direction.
In one implementation, the follower is pivotally but not concentrically mounted to the tailpiece driver to swivel between a spring-biased leftward offset position and a spring-biased rightward offset position.
In another aspect, the actuator assembly comprises stops and limits that constrain the motion of the components. The follower is constrained to rotate between two fixed angular limits by a pin or detent that contacts either of two stops, located inside the housing, at a limit of rotation. The tailpiece driver is similarly constrained by the follower pin contacting either side of a swivel slot in the tailpiece driver.
In another aspect, the actuator-powered driver is freely able to continue rotating even when the follower reaches a limit of rotation.
In another aspect, the powered driver has two catches that project inwardly and radially from an outer rim. The outer rim of the follower is marked by two discontinuities (catches) that, when either is engaged by a corresponding catch of the powered driver, couples the follower to the powered driver for rotation with the powered driver. The relative sizes and coupling configuration of the powered driver and follower, along with the spring biasing of the follower, are such that the follower is not simultaneously coupled for rotation by the powered driver in both directions.
There is lost motion between the powered driver and follower allowing the tailpiece to be manually rotated without rotating the powered driver.
A sensor assembly and controller are provided to reduce the length the actuator-powered driver must travel, thereby increasing battery life. The sensor assembly detects whether the deadbolt was last manually manipulated or actuator-manipulated, and whether the deadbolt is extended, retracted, or somewhere in between. The controller estimates how long to run the actuator on the basis of this information. If the last manipulation of the deadbolt was manual and the deadbolt is only partially extended, the controller runs the actuator an additional length of time sufficient to realign the follower and the powered driver.
In one implementation, the sensor assembly comprises two switches on a front side of a divider and two switches on a backside of the divider. The switches are engaged when radial lobes extending from the actuator-powered driver or tailpiece driver cross over the switch levers or actuators. The back switches detect the angular position of the tailpiece driver, more specifically, whether the deadbolt is extended or retracted (or in between). The frontside switches detect the angular position of the actuator-powered driver, more specifically, whether it is oriented in a position near the start of a locking operation or at the end of a locking operation.
Both the powered driver and tailpiece driver have positive raised radial lobes that coact with simulated roller lever actuated micro switches. Two switches to sense the position of the powered driver and two switches to sense the position of the connector driver. The controller senses both the actuation and deactivation of all switches.
The electronic deadbolt assembly is operable to lock and unlock the cylindrical (tubular) dead bolt that can also be unlocked mechanically. Various improvements are included to lengthen the battery replacement cycle. The controller accounts for variations in motor RPM speed as battery voltage decreases with use.
The controller also accounts for the need to operate the deadbolt assembly different amounts as a function of the starting position, lock function (e.g., locked or unlocked) desired, and handedness of the door.
The controller is operable to lock or unlock the door from any position, without combining rotation and counter-rotation, and without first locking (or unlocking) the deadbolt in order to unlock (or lock) the deadbolt.
It should be understood that the invention does not require all of the features and aspects set forth in this summary or in the detailed description below. The invention may be characterized in many different ways along a continuum from highly specific to very general, and in ways that include equivalents and substitutes of the features and aspects describe above, and also in ways that include fewer than all of the features and aspects described above.
Other systems, devices, methods, features, and advantages of the disclosed assembly, including its sensors and algorithms, will be apparent or will become apparent to one with skill in the art upon examination of the following figures and detailed description. All such additional assemblies, systems, devices, methods, features, and advantages are intended to be included within the description and to be protected by the accompanying claims.
The present disclosure may be better understood with reference to the following figures. Corresponding reference numerals designate corresponding parts throughout the figures. Drawings are not necessarily to scale.
It will be appreciated that the drawings are provided for illustrative purposes and that the invention is not limited to the illustrated embodiment. For clarity and in order to emphasize certain features, not all of the drawings depict all of the features that might be included with the depicted embodiment. The invention also encompasses embodiments that combine features illustrated in multiple different drawings; embodiments that omit, modify, or replace some of the features depicted; and embodiments that include features not illustrated in the drawings. Therefore, it should be understood that there is no restrictive one-to-one correspondence between any given embodiment of the invention and any of the drawings.
Also, many modifications may be made to adapt or modify a depicted embodiment without departing from the objective, spirit and scope of the present invention. Therefore, it should be understood that, unless otherwise specified, this invention is not to be limited to the specific details shown and described herein, and all such modifications are intended to be within the scope of the claims made herein.
In describing preferred and alternate embodiments of the technology described herein, as illustrated in
The actuator assembly 200 allows both manual rotation and intelligent machine-driven rotation of a cylinder tailpiece 154. Moreover, the actuator assembly 200 couples and decouples its motor-driven deadbolt locking/unlocking components (i.e., the motor and gears) from its manually-driven deadbolt locking/unlocking components (discussed further below). This enables manual rotation of the key cylinder 150 or thumb turn 152 without imparting motion to the motor-driven components of the actuator assembly. 200.
The tailpiece 154 passes through the latch cross slot 139 and a tailpiece aperture 119 in the door plate 110 and inserts into a corresponding cross slot 389 of a tailpiece hub 380 (
Within the actuator assembly 200 is a motorized gear assembly and a sensor system 400 that communicate with an electronic controller 490. The electronic controller 490 may be housed outside of the actuator housing 205/285. External inputs from RFID chips, keypad entry, and other sources may initiate electronic operation by communicating with the electronic controller. Once woken up or prompted to perform a locking or unlocking operation, the electronic controller 490 identifies gear location and performs motorized unlocking and locking functions. Monitoring for successful completion of functions enables the electronic controller 490 to self-correct as necessary.
During installation, the rear face 113 of the door plate 110 is placed against the door. Door mounting bolts 125 are inserted through both the door mounting bolt holes 115 of the door plate 110 and the mounting bolt holes 135 of the deadbolt lockset 130. The rear housing 205 of the actuator assembly 200 is mated with the front face 112 of the door plate 110. A decorative closure (not shown) is placed over the front housing 285 of the actuator assembly 200 and likewise mated to the door plate 110. The particular installation shown is for a left handed door, but the present invention serves any hand.
Focusing initially on
The rear housing 205 also comprises a rear housing hub 210 into which the tailpiece hub 380 of the tailpiece driving assembly 300 projects. The tailpiece hub 380 has an aperture that is a cross slot 389 suitable for receiving a tailpiece 154 of the electronic lockset 100. Although a cross-shaped slot is typically employed, the slot of the tailpiece hub 380 is not limited to a cross shape. The rear housing hub 210, as well as the other housing and component parts, is formed of a material, along with any reinforcing ribs or structures, sufficiently durable for use in a lockset 100, particularly for repeated use and resistance to intrusion. Such materials may include, but are not limited to, steel, carbon, polymers, and composite materials.
Opposite the rear housing hub 210 is an aperture 289 in the front housing 285. The hub 329 on the tailpiece driving gear 320 is positioned against the aperture 289, with the frontside mounting hub 368 of the tailpiece driving disc 360 (
In one implementation, wiring 477 from a sensor assembly 400 exits the actuator housing 205/285 and terminates in a plug 480 designed to interface with an electronic controller 490. On the basis, at least in part, of the signals it receives from the sensor assembly 400, the electronic controller 490 intelligently actuates the actuator/motor 222 to lock or unlock the tubular dead bolt 132. However, the sensor wiring 477 and electronic controller 490 are not required to reside outside of the actuator housing 205/285.
Turning now to
As noted above, the actuator is in one implementation a motor 222, and the actuator or gearbox assembly 200 is housed in the interior motor chamber 207/287. Residing on the motor's 222 output shaft is a press fit pinion gear 220 that has a bevel on the gear teeth 223 corresponding to and coacting with a tailpiece driving gear 320, which is the main gear, with beveled teeth 323 and having unlimited rotation. The tailpiece driving gear 320 is a relatively thin part; as such, it may also be called a pancake gear. Many elements of the actuator assembly 200, and particularly the tailpiece driving assembly 300, are designed to take up minimal space in order to function on a door and/or allow an attractive finish. While these parts are not limited to a relatively thin design, and a modified design may use more parts or a larger space, one of skill in the art will recognize that the present invention gains substantial functionality via this streamlined design.
The motor shaft 225 and bevel gear 220 themselves, seen more clearly in
Focusing now on the remaining components of the tailpiece driving assembly 300, the tailpiece hub 380, when assembled, partially nests in the frontside mounting hub 368 of the tailpiece driving disc 360. In turn, the frontside mounting hub 368 passes through the aperture 349 in the swivel disc 340 and into the frontside hub 329 on the tailpiece driving gear 320, which rests in the interior of the front housing 285. As illustrated in
A sensor assembly 400 that interacts with the tailpiece driving assembly 300 is installed within the housing 285/205 and, in one implementation, under the tailpiece driving assembly 300. The two rear sensors 402/403 match the recesses 211 on the interior face 206 of the rear housing 205. The sensor assembly 400 will be discussed in greater detail later in this application. An electronic controller 490 is in communication with the sensor assembly 400, motor 222, and inputs that activate the actuator assembly 200.
As the housing 285/205 is closed together, the pivot stop 354 or detent 354 on the rear face 341 of the swivel disc 340 becomes inserted into an arcuate slot 215 on the interior face 206 of the rear housing 205. Given its shape, and for ease of comprehension, the arcuate slot 215 is herein nicknamed the “smile slot.”
As shown in
Projecting outwardly from the side 327 of the tailpiece driving gear 320 are two positive, radial lobes that are sensor triggers 330. Because these sensor triggers 330 are used to detect positions of tailpiece driving gear 320, they may alternatively be referred to as actuator-position-marking sensor triggers 330 or fingers. In the exemplary embodiment illustrated in the drawings, the sensors that are triggered comprise switches, but the invention is not limited to switches, as there are a variety of alternative forms of sensors that would also be suitable, including but not limited to angle sensors, light sensors, magnetic sensors, and the like. In the illustrated embodiment, the sensor triggers 330 are diametrically opposed to each other and of the same shape and size. The sensor triggers 330 are extensions of the front face 325 (
The tailpiece driving disc 360 has a front face 362 with a centrally located frontside mounting hub 368 with aperture 369 designed to accommodate a tailpiece hub 380 (not shown). An alignment mark 370 on the front edge of the mounting hub 368 is used by installers to calibrate for the handedness of the door. A pivot bore 372 is designed to accept the pivot pin 352 of the swivel disc 340. A swivel hole 374 accepts the detent or pivot stop 354 of the swivel disc 340. The edge 363 of the tailpiece driving disc 360 has two opposing, outwardly extending lobes that are sensor triggers 365, more particularly, lock-position-indicating sensor triggers 365. The sensor triggers 365 have a generally trapezoidal shape and an axis through the sensor triggers 365 is perpendicular to an axis through the pivot bore 372 and swivel hole 374. One of skill in the art will understand that other sizes and shapes may be employed for the earlike lobes to produce a comparable actuator assembly 200 provided the functionality between components is maintained.
The sensor base 410 has an arcuate top edge 420 that corresponds with the radial tailpiece driving assembly 300. Both the tailpiece driving gear 320 and the tailpiece driving disc 360 have positive, raised radial lobes projecting from their sides to coact with simulated roller lever actuated micro switches S1-S4 as the radial lobes roll over the switch levers. The sensor assembly 400 is not limited to use of lever actuated switches S1-S4, but may incorporate other mechanisms including, but not limited to, other types of contact switches, non-contact triggers such as electromagnetics, and angle sensors that may replace two sensors with one. One of skill in the art will understand that sensor logic can easily be adapted to many different types of sensor type.
The controller 490 senses both the actuation and deactivation of all switches S1-S4. Back side 413 switches S2 and S3 detect the angular position of the tailpiece driving disc 360 via the sensor triggers 365 and tell the controller 490 whether the deadbolt 132 is locked or unlocked, or even in between (partially extended or partially retracted) if neither switch S2 nor S3 is depressed. Front side 412 switches S1 and S4 detect the angular position of the tailpiece driving gear 320 via the sensor triggers 330 and, more specifically, detect whether the tailpiece driving gear 320 is oriented in a position near the start of a locking operation or near the end of a locking operation.
Thus, the sensor assembly 400 is operative to sense the position of both the tailpiece driving gear 320 and the swivel disc 340. It senses whether the tailpiece driving disc 360 is in a position (switch S2) that corresponds with the deadbolt 132 being in an extended position or in a position (switch S3) that corresponds with the deadbolt 132 being in a retracted position. It also senses whether the tailpiece driving gear 320 is in a first angular position (switch S1) or a second angular orientation (switch S4). The controller 490 memory records a last power-driven position of the deadbolt 132 independently of the current position of the deadbolt 132.
In contrast, certain prior art uses only a single pair of switches to determine the position of the dead bolt, but has no way to know how long to power the motor because it does not know the position of all parts when it starts. One popular line of prior art products uses a clutch to keep from getting fatally stuck, but the clutch prohibits high torque and efficient operation. Other prior art uses excessive back and forth movement, with waits between movements, to execute a wasteful routine due to lack of awareness of gear and deadbolt positions. Still other prior art sometimes uses a limit switch to determine end of travel and has fixed maximum and minimum run times that do not fully take into consideration the variations in RPMs over different voltage and temperature conditions. Motors and gearboxes run slower when cold due to changes in friction. Using fixed time for running a motor is not efficient because the system perpetually over travels to get to the new state (locked or unlocked), as it must travel enough at low battery conditions when the motor is running slower, and thusly over travels with higher battery voltages.
In the embodiment of
With this information, the controller 490 estimates how long to run the actuator 222. For example, if the last manipulation of the deadbolt 132 was manual and the deadbolt 132 is only partially extended, the controller 490 runs the motor 222 an additional length of time (see
By quickly sensing a stuck deadbolt 132, the controller 490 will quickly reverse and retry as a function of the software decision-making allowed by the complexity of the multiple function switches S1-S4 that convey both deactivation time (when a sensor trigger 330 or switch finger 365 departs from the switch arm) and activation time (when the sensor trigger 330 or switch finger 365 sufficiently contacts the switch arm). The controller 490 uses this procedure for both the locking direction and the unlocking direction, and does so much more quickly than the prior art. Advantageously, this process minimizes the stress of a motor 222 powered in the stalled condition, as well as mitigates the cause.
Both (a) and (b) show the tailpiece driving gear 320 and actuator-position-marking sensor triggers 330, bias spring 358, and relative locations of sensors S1, S2, S3, and S4.
S2 indicates a locked position. Incidentally, in
As another side note, in
As alluded to above, the lockset 100 of the present invention is designed to accommodate for manual operation. There is lost motion caused by the swivel disc 340 between the tailpiece driving gear 320 and the tailpiece driving disc 360 due to the fact that the swivel disc 340 is configured, at specific limits, to swivel between coupled and uncoupled positions with the tailpiece driver gear 320. This allows the tailpiece 154 to be rotated manually, after the deadbolt 132 is electronically locked or unlocked, without turning the tailpiece driving gear.
To completely retract the deadbolt from the position shown in
Accordingly, it may be noticed that the present embodiment provides two mechanisms to toggle the swivel disc 360 between the two offset positions: (1) the moment exerted by the gear catch 336 when it presses against the disc catch 347 while the detent 354 is blocked by a smile slot limit; and (2) the moment exerted by the gear catch as it rides over the disc catch 347. It is also important to note that the second of these mechanisms reduces the amount of rotation required to operate the lockset 100.
It will also be noticed that more rotation to lock or unlock the lockset 100 is needed after the lockset 100 is manually manipulated than between two successive electronic operations of the lockset 100. Here, the controller 222 can use the information it receives from the sensor assembly 400, including memory of the last electronically-actuated lock condition (locked or unlocked), to calculate, approximately, how much extra rotation will be needed to complete a lock function that starts from a manually-operated position.
Turning to
Having described
In one implementation, the motor 222 is a DC powered device that operates in both clockwise and counterclockwise directions based on the polarity of the DC voltage. The motor 222 operates at a variable voltage. As a battery operated device tasked with the critical operation of controlling entry through a door, the actuator assembly 200 preferably operates equally well at a lower voltage when the batteries are nearing replacement (0.8 volts per cell) as at a voltage present when the batteries are new (1.6 volts per cell). The actuator mechanism 200 preferably accounts for variations in RPM as the voltage varies or the temperature changes.
Further, the motor-driven tailpiece driving assembly 300 operates from different starting positions, which may first be determined by an electronic controller 490, and needs to move the tailpiece driving assembly 300 different degrees of rotation dependent on the function required. The sensor assembly 400 informs the electronic controller 490 regarding the position and operation of the tailpiece driving assembly 300. Also, the electronic controller 490 has a programmable variable or hardwired setting to indicate the handing of the door (RH or LH), in order to provide the proper controls to drive the motor 222—as the handing changes, the rotation needs to be opposite. The present invention is an energy efficient, intelligent system that can take all of this into consideration.
It will be understood that the invention need not limit itself to the use of an electronic motor, or the use of gears to convert the low-torque, high-speed output of the motor to a lower-speed, higher-torque impetus on the tailpiece driving assembly 300. Also, it will be understood that the invention is not limited to the use of switches, the number of switches, or sensors that are angularly distributed across the powered driver or tailpiece driver. One of numerous alternative embodiments would employ the use of an angle sensor coupled to the tailpiece driver. Another alternative embodiment would couple a switch or other sensor to the bevel gear driving the powered driver. These are all encompassed within the scope of the invention.
It will be understood that many modifications could be made to the embodiments disclosed herein without departing from the spirit of the invention. Having thus described exemplary embodiments of the present invention, it should be noted that the disclosures contained in the drawings are exemplary only, and that various other alternatives, adaptations, and modifications may be made within the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the present invention is not limited to the specific embodiments illustrated herein, but is limited only by the following claims.
This application claims priority to my U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 62/250,374, filed Nov. 3, 2015, entitled “Electronic Deadbolt,” which is herein incorporated by reference.
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62250374 | Nov 2015 | US |