The invention relates to a foot bolt of a sideways movable sliding door, a wall, a sliding window or a similar element, the foot bolt comprising a part locking the element in the base, such as a pin fitting in the hole in the base and also comprising a counterpart in the next element movable beside it, in which counterpart the part in the edge of the preceding element can be fitted so that the adjacent elements get sideways interlocked and that on moving the elements in the opposite direction pushing the last brought element from beside the preceding element opens the locking of the preceding element from the base.
Previously known are foot bolt constructions as described among others from U.S. patent publication 6108989, DE published applications 4428718 and 19634390. In all of them as solution an automatic foot bolt is presented always placed in the move preceding element in its edge against which the next element is moved. The foot bolt has a pin fitting in the hole in the base, the sliding wall of which pin moved as the next contact makes by means of different gears sink down into the hole in the base. The solutions include that on moving walls away the removal of the preceding element releases the foot bolt pin in the next element up from the hole in the base.
Such a solution is easily produced but in practice the solution works only in connection with most accurately controlled elements, for which the holes in the base are just in positions according to the elements. In these solutions pushing the next element as extension of the preceding one the locking of the edge of the preceding element takes place only when the next element is pushed into contact. Accordingly, there is then nobody to secure that the pin takes its place in the hole in the base.
The weakness of these solutions is that on moving high elements, such as those of 2,5-3 meter height, while only from their upper edge in slide suspension, the elements do not at all hang by themselves so accurately that in the bottom edge a pin, for instance with a diameter of about 10 mm would hit a hole with a diameter of about 15 mm. In spaces where such closing walls are used there are often so much air flows that the elements simply swing. Under those circumstances it is impossible in the practice that automatic locking would work nearly in ways corresponding to one another according to solutions represented in the publications.
The aim of the invention is to produce a foot bolt, the function of which is reliable, its locking quickly done and its opening automatic, when walls are moved. The invention is characterized in that the pin fitting in the hole in the base is meant to get manually pressed with the foot into the hole, and the bolt construction comprises a locking/release pin, which in the first stage is arranged to lock the pressed-down pin in the hole in the base, and directed towards the next element the pin has a bracket, for which there is in the next element a counter-hole for interlocking and that the locking/release pin is arranged to stick out from the element edge so that it can with the next close beside the preceding brought element be pushed into a pin releasing position, whereby he pin is individually, for instance by a spring, arranged to get up from the hole in the base, when the adjacent element is removed.
The advantage of the foot bolt according to this invention is that when a separate wall is in its turn pushed to the position intended for it, it can be controllably steered to its place and at the same time simply stamp the locking pin down. The staying put of the element is easily secured and the pin position is easily seen, whether it has the possibility to get into the hole at the time. In the solution you need not to bend, since locking, that is stamping down the pin is most suitably done by foot. The next element to be brought into contact tunes-up the foot bolt so that it opens automatically, when starting to remove elements. The solution according to the invention can be used both for small size elements and especially for large ones.
In the following the invention is disclosed referring to the enclosed drawing, where
In
In
When the next element is brought closed beside the preceding one, there is in the edge of profile 6 of the element to be the brought a cover an a hole 9. The cover hits locking/releasing pin 12 and pushes it into the body, bracket 13 gets into position in cover hole 9. When cover hole 9 is loose or slightly oblong lengthwise bracket 13 and pin 11 can get up a little by the force of spring 15, and when thinning point 16 of pin 12 is now on the line of pin 11 this pin 11 gets up crosswise with thinning point 16 of pin 12 (oblong hole 9 allows raising) so much that it gets locked into position that releases pin 11. Bracket 13 is still in hole 9 and pin 11 is still in the hole in the base, whereby the element is locked to the base at the foot bolt and both sideways and in moving direction and even the other end of the element's lower edge is locked sideways. The ends of the lower edge profile 6 of each element have a hole 9 and cover in one end and foot bolt 10 in other end. Foot bolt body 10 is most suitably formed to be pushed directly into profile 6 according to
When elements 1-3 are moved away in the opposite direction the move of element causes that foot bolt 11 of the next element gets up by force of the spring 15 immediately Thus the next element is automatically opened from locking and can be moved away as the other ones left behind.
By means of the foot bolt solution the moving and locking of elements to their places can be reliably carried out, since the element is handled and controlled manually till the locking. Locking can in no way be opened from the outside of the wall and no steering rails need to be arranged for the elements, only a series of holes on the line and at proper distances from one and other.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI03/00666 | 9/12/2003 | WO | 6/12/2006 |