This invention concerns locks for cabinets, lockers, drawers, access panels and similar situations. Specifically the invention embraces an electronic cam lock that fits office furniture, usually metal and wood file cabinets and other furniture units with doors, panels or drawers.
Metal and wood file cabinets, desk and cabinet drawers, locker doors, access panels and doors, mail boxes, dispensers and other secure situations often utilize relatively simple lock mechanisms known as cam locks. Such cam locks may or may not involve a camming action. In some cases they move other mechanisms that are engaged with the door or drawer of the cabinet or engaged with other mechanisms that are linked to the door and drawer of the cabinet or multiple doors or drawers of the cabinet. In all cases except plungers, cam locks have a rotatable component at a back side. In one of the simplest forms, a cam lock on a cabinet door typically fits in a ¾ inch diameter D-shaped or double D-shaped hole and, at the back side of the cam lock cylinder unit, has a metal blade or arm called a cam that rotates when the key is turned, from a position disengaged from surrounding cabinet hardware to a position of engagement in a slot or behind a ledge of the surrounding cabinet hardware. Other locks, such as those for desk drawers, commonly referred as cabinet locks, involve a camming type action as the key and plug are rotated, and these are also referred to as cam locks herein. The rotation causes a cam or nipple to move a deadbolt linearly to a locking or unlocking position, or in the case of a spring loaded latch or deadlatch, the rotation causes the cam or nipple to move a latch or deadlatch to unlocking position and removing the key keeps the latch or deadlatch in the extended locked position. The term cam lock excludes door entry locks on commercial or residential buildings. Such locks are heavier-duty and more secure than cam locks, which are typically small (¾ inch hole receives them) and lighter-duty, as for office furniture.
Metal filing cabinets often utilize cam locks, but sometimes have a variation known as a plunger type lock in which a spring loaded plunger/lock cylinder located in the top horizontal margin of the cabinet, when pushed in, will lock all drawers. The use of a key releases the spring plunger to return to the outward position and unlock the drawers. These plunger locks are also referred to as cam locks herein, even though they have no rotatable member that locks and releases doors or drawers.
Locker and cabinet locks have included electronic locking devices, some of which utilized keypads and some of which utilized IButtons or other ID or non-volatile memory devices which work on contact to release the lock. See, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,894,277, 5,886,644, 6,655,180 and 6,791,450. The disclosures of all of these patents are incorporated herein by reference.
There is a need for a relatively simple, easily used, reliable and compact electronic lock, which may have a keypad but optionally operable by an electronic key or wireless device which may not require contact, or both, for situations in which typically cam, plunger and cabinet locks were employed, and capable of fitting into a small space in the cabinet to produce a low-profile and aesthetic appearance. This is an objective of the current invention described below.
The invention addresses these needs with a low profile and very compact electronic lock that, in one application, fits in the top one inch horizontal margin or “rail” of a steel file cabinet. The compact electronic locking device in one embodiment has a knob or handle that can rotate the cam lock cylinder plug or other rear-extending driver when such manual rotation is permitted by the lock electronics. A keypad for entry of a code may be included, and if so, the code can be either permanently set to a reprogrammable code, or set in each case by a temporary user, who can then input the same code to lock and unlock the lock, this feature depending on circumstances and function desired.
In one preferred embodiment particularly adapted for a file cabinet, the locking device in one embodiment is less than one inch in height (about ⅞ to 31/32 inch), about five inches in length and roughly about ¾ inch in depth or thickness (or about ½ to ¾ inch), as to the housing of the device. A cam locking device of this size will fit inside the horizontal top rail or vertical side rail, typically a space U-shaped in cross section, with the unit's keypad or access panel and the rotary knob extending through openings formed in the top rail for this purpose. In another embodiment, an electronic lock of a similar size is configured for front-recess mounting. A collar or rim around the face of the housing engages against the face of the file cabinet and the approximately ¾ inch depth of the housing extends into the cabinet.
The housing may contain several battery cells, such as two or three AA batteries. From the back of the housing in one embodiment extends a cam lock cylinder unit which may be of conventional cam lock size, and with a length to fit the application, i.e. the depth of material and configuration where mounted. In other embodiments a dummy plug can extend back from the housing unit, or simply a driver or spindle.
In the inside mount configuration described above, with the lock housing fitting into the top rail of a metal file cabinet and inserted from the inside, the housing can have mounting flanges, one at each end, extending essentially co-planarly with the bottom side of the unit. These mounting flanges allow for screwing or riveting the housing into the top rail from the bottom of the top rail. (References to “top”, “bottom”, etc. are for convenience in describing the locks as horizontally mounted, as in the top rail. These inside-mount locks can be vertically mounted in the vertical side rail as well; the directional wording is not meant to be limiting.) For the front-recess mount form of the invention, the housing body is retained closely within a preferably rectangular hole in the file cabinet, with the rim that extends from the face bearing against the face of the file cabinet. This configuration includes a plastic or metal receiver casing that is slipped over the body of the lock housing from the back, i.e. from the inside of the panel or drawer or door and which is then secured to the housing body by machine screws to firmly retain the lock and the casing in place. This casing may have a battery case at one end, or a battery case can be separately retained within the file cabinet and connected by wire or plug-in cable to the lock housing. The type of battery housing can be determined by space requirements.
The same front/recess mounted electronic lock can be used for wood file cabinets or other office furniture having a thicker depth, e.g. ¾ inch panels (as opposed to the thin panel of a steel cabinet). In this case the electronic lock includes different components at the back side of the door, drawer or panel. The battery case is positioned essentially flush against the back surface of the drawer or panel and can be directly behind the recess-mounted electronics housing.
In all forms of the electronic lock of the invention, a keypad can be provided and/or a wireless terminal can be provided, which can be RFID, or NFC (near field communication) allowing cell phone access or other wireless communication, all for security in accessing the lock and/or transferring data to or from the lock.
Importantly, the electronic lock device is compact and simple, at least as to mechanical elements, and without any further electronics required to be connected to the lock at the back side of the door or panel. Essentially the only element extending from the lock unit at the back side of the panel is the rear-extending cam or cabinet lock cylinder unit or actuator, i.e. a latch or cam positioned to engage with a ledge or slot or multiple-drawer locking rod or other hardware to retain the door(s), drawer(s) or panel locked.
In a preferred form the invention is embodied in a cam lock for a door, cabinet or drawer mountable from back of the door, cabinet or drawer such that only the user interface and knob extend through the face of the door, etc. and includes a compact electronics housing with an electronic key receptacle and a keypad, RF reader or wireless reader or IButton reader for entry of a code, a driver unit extending from a back side of the housing that matches the end of a cam lock or cam lock plug of the typical mechanical lock for engaging with a strike or other locking bars, cams or apparatus. The knob extends from the housing for operating the cam lock manually when permitted by the electronics. Note that the manual knob in all forms of the invention can be spring-loaded to perform an auto relock feature when applicable to the lock hardware.
In all forms of the invention the electronic lock devices can be fitted with an RJ45 jack or another type of jack or wireless antenna for network connectivity and external power.
It is therefore among the objects of the invention to improve over prior cam and cabinet locks, particularly in office furniture, with an electronic cam lock that can be efficiently installed in doors, drawers, access panels, mail boxes, etc., particularly office furniture. The device is simple, compact, unobtrusive and provides a very clean and integrated appearance. These and other objects, advantages and features of the invention will be apparent from the following description of preferred embodiments, considered along with the accompanying drawings.
The electronic lock 12 or 12a is shown front recess mounted in
As seen in
The front recess mount lock 12 is received a rectangular hole 40 formed in the panel 36 at the appropriate location. The panel is assumed to be sheet metal, usually steel, and typically about 12 to 20 gauge. When the lock housing 18 is inserted into the rectangular opening 40, the housing body 24, only slightly smaller than the opening, slips through the opening and the rim 22 around the face plate engages against the surface of the panel 36 surrounding the opening. The cam lock cylinder 28 or other rotatable driver extends back through the opening 40, as does nearly all the depth of the lock housing body 24, which may be about ¾ inch in depth. In this embodiment of the invention, a plastic or metal rear housing or casing 42 is assembled over the back of the housing body 24 from the inside of the drawer or other item of office furniture. The lock cylinder 28 passes through the back of the plastic casing 42 (hole 43), and the casing 42 and lock housing 18 are secured together to firmly hold the lock assembly in place. This can be using machine screws 44 as indicated in the assembly drawings of
The exploded views of
In addition to the access terminal, a knob or lever 26 must also be positioned at the outside of the top rail. A second opening, preferably circular, can be provided in the rail for this purpose as indicated in
Although the inside-mount electronic cam housing 86 could be secured to the top rail front piece 82, as by machine screws or rivets, in this preferred embodiment the attachment is all internal and not exposed, via side-protruding horizontal flanges 98 integral with the housing 86 and extending generally planarly along the bottom of the housing. This allows securing to the bottom piece 100 of the top rail 82 of the cabinet, by machine screws or rivets 102 as shown in the exploded and partially cut away view of
With this top rail installation, a battery case 106 that generally is not secured at the back of the electronics housing 86. The battery case 106 can conveniently be secured to the electronics housing by cables 54, 56 and connectors 54a, 56a, and with the casing secured to the underside of the top panel 107 of the file cabinet such as using self-stick VELCRO hook and loop fastener material 108. This is shown in
If the electronic cam locks of the invention are wired for networking, this could be either individually or in groups. The wiring can be done as part of a bus system where the locks can be wired for data, with the same cable also providing power. This can allow the units to be wired and receive data such as access data. Even without wiring, a data network can be established using a WiFi for a group of locks, and access and/or audit data can be transmitted to and from the locks from a central location, via the WiFi or Internet connection. The information can be distributed to all locks in the system either individually or as a whole, but with data coded for particular locks as needed.
This is a power over Ethernet arrangement when both power and data are carried by the cable 112. Note that connectors other than RJ 45 could be used.
As noted above, the entire disclosures of copending application Ser. Nos. 11/809,172 and 12/214,357, as well as U.S. Pat. No. 7,336,150, are incorporated herein by reference. All disclosure regarding networking, antennas, different types of wireless access reader protocol, emergency access or power loss, etc. can be applied to the locks disclosed herein.
The above described preferred embodiments are intended to illustrate the principles of the invention, but not to limit its scope. Other embodiments and variations to these preferred embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art and may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 11/809,172, filed May 30, 2007, U.S. Pub. No. 2007/0277571, to be issued Jul. 30, 2013 as U.S. Pat. No. 8,495,898, and of application Ser. No. 12/214,357, filed Jun. 17, 2008, U.S. Pub. No. 2009/0249846, to be issued Jul. 23, 2013 as U.S. Pat. No. 8,490,443. The disclosures of those two copending applications are both incorporated herein by reference in their entireties, including specifications and drawings.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11809172 | May 2007 | US |
Child | 13945695 | US | |
Parent | 12214357 | Jun 2008 | US |
Child | 11809172 | US |