The present invention relates generally to residential or commercial door hinges, more specifically, a hinge with a built-in door stop that limits the range of motion of the hinge to a predetermined position.
The standard residential or commercial door hinge allows for a door to swing freely on the door frame with full range of motion. This has long been an issue that caused problems with door handles or the door itself making contact with the materials immediately behind the door. Several patents have been developed to limit the range of motion of the door and prevent further damage to the materials immediately surrounding the door.
Initial patents utilized a wall, floor or baseboard mounted door stop that would be screwed into the wall, floor or baseboard to provide an immediate but secure stop that eliminated the damage to the materials behind the door. The issue with these items are that the door itself would become damaged or the mounted stops would break. These types of stops were also visually unappealing and took away from the décor of the home or commercial space.
Next came the hinge mounted attachments that eliminated the need for a wall mounted, floor or trim mounted stops. These were more visually appealing due to the fact that they were only attached to the hinges of the doors and they were less visible than a fixed wall, floor or baseboard mounted stop. The hinge mounted attachments also allowed for the flexibility to adjust the hinge range of motion by using screws to adjust the length of the stop. These types of hinges however still were prone to breaking or making holes in the door or the door trim in the area that comes into direct contact with the stopper.
Most recently there have been several patents that allow for built-in hinge door stops that eliminate the need for additional attachments and eliminate the damage to the door, trim and materials immediately surrounding the door. The issues have been that the built-in hinge door stops have been complicated and expensive to manufacture.
The Flag Stop Door Hinge is a simple, inexpensive built-in hinge door stop that is both visually appealing and eliminates the risk of damaging the door, trim, or materials immediately around the door. Because of the simplicity of the hinge design, the Flag Stop Door Hinge can be placed as all three door hinges to ensure stability and eliminate the need for additional hardware to stop the door from damaging any materials immediately around the door.
The present invention represents a new hinge that provides the ability to limit the range of motion specific to the needs of each door. It utilizes a hinge with two leaves; leaf one (1) contains three knuckles (3) and leaf two contains two knuckles (3). Leaf one contains two flag receptacles (4) in both the upper and lower knuckles (3) that accept a pin flag (6) that is intended to stop the hinge at designated ranges to ensure the door does not hit the various materials located behind the door. Leaf one (1) contains flag receptacles (4) on both the upper and lower knuckles (3) to ensure it will work with both right and left-handed doors. The use of two flag receptacles (4) on each upper and lower knuckle (3) allows for the user to select the appropriate range of motion and ensures the hinge will stop at the desired range of motion for both right and left handed doors.
There is also a pin flag (6) that is included with the hinge that allows for the flag (6) to be inserted into the flag receptacle (4). The pin flag (6) is a one-piece item that when secured into the appropriate flag receptacle (4) will prohibit the hinge from opening as the second leaf (2) makes contact with the pin flag (6). This hard stop eliminates the need for additional door stopping hardware and eliminating the damage to the door, frame, wall, floor or baseboard.
It is important that when mounting the hinge to the door and door jam that leaf one (1), containing three knuckles, is mounted to the door jam and that the second leaf (2), containing two knuckles, is mounted to the door. This is due to the fact that the pin flag (6) should remain stationary and the door mounted second leaf (2) swings into contact with the pin flag (6). Keeping the pin flag (6) stationary ensures that the pin will not ride up and come out of the pin holes as commonly found with pin mounted door stops. It also ensures the pin flag (6) will come into contact with the second leaf (2). If the second leaf (2) was mounted to the door jam, the door trim around the door may interfere with the preselected range of motion and cause damage to the door trim.
The Flag Stop Door Hinge is shown in three pieces (