This invention concerns security cabinets, safe storage deposit boxes, cash safes, gun safes, equipment and tool safes and security boxes for vehicles or working sites which are vulnerable at night and non-work days.
Safes are relied upon because they resist attempts to reach their contents. Such resistance requires special construction and special measures to withstand traditional modes of attack such as prying with levers. The rigid construction on which the safe relies however is a disadvantage when the safe is to be shipped. It cannot be reduced in volume. This invention addresses that disadvantage.
One apparatus aspect provides a knockdown box being the lidless precursor of a safe, a toolbox or security box made of sheet metal components and panels including a base, a pair of ends, a pair of sides, which together form a box, a collar securable to the sides for lid attachment, wherein the sides and end are joined to each other and to the base and the collar is attached to the sides and ends by fasteners which allow the box to be freighted as a stack of panels and components and then erected as a box by the application of fasteners which are only accessible from inside the box.
Another apparatus aspect provides a knockdown safe or security box precursor in the form of a ready to assemble kit of parts which includes a base, sides and ends which are attachable to the base and a collar attachable to the sides and ends being capable of supporting a door or lid, the parts being made of sheet metal, the ends and sides at least having complementary, inter-engaging channels for stiffening the box, and fasteners which fasten the parts together and are locked and unlocked from inside the box.
A method aspect of the invention provides a method of assembling a knockdown box made of a base, sides, ends, and a collar, all made of sheet metal including the steps of connecting the sides and ends of the box to the base and to each other, connecting the collar to the sides and the ends by the insertion of ganged fasteners through the sheet metal and securing the fasteners from the inside of the box.
The ganged fasteners may have at least two threaded parallel fingers which extend from a carrier strip and are fixed to the strip so as to prevent rotation. The pins may be tubular or solid and the pins draw the strip into contact with the outer face or the sides and ends with which they are used.
If the carrier strip joins the fingers they cannot be rotated and they bridge the gap between two holes in the side or end acting as a clamp surface to force the superimposed sheets together. It is preferable if the strip extends the full height of the side or end using three or four fingers to clamp the parts together. The carrier strip may take the form of a channel with the floor of the channel excised at the sites of the fingers, the fingers being ordinary bolts, the heads of which sit in the excisions where they are each secured by a weld.
In a preferred form the base has upstands, the sides are bolted to the upstands and when the ends are fastened to base upstands the sides are connected to the ends by the inter-engagement of channels such that bores in the channels lie in register. The insertion of multiple fasteners on a common strip through the registered bores allows application of the fasteners and locking from inside the box. This renders the fasteners inaccessible from outside the box. Accordingly the opposite edges of the sides and ends are substantially S-shaped. The channels being super-imposable so as to stiffen the box, the carrier strips being at least partially accommodated in the cavity defined by the channels.
The collar may be secured by bolts more easily in that it is more accessible than the connections between the base and the sides/ends.
Thus an end may comprise a rectangular panel with the two upright edges bent to form channels, the lower edge between the channels being bent to form a 90E flange while the upper edge extends beyond channels. The collar may be bolted directly to the projecting upper edge.
One embodiment of the invention is now described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring now to
The components including base 16 are made from 1.3 mm sheet steel. The base is rectangular with a raised margin 18 terminating in an L-section upstand 20. Both have bolt holes 22.
In
In
The collar 4 is also S-shaped in section and connected to the side upstands 38 and the end upstands 24 by bolts inserted and screwed up from the inside during assembly.
Whereas a box collar as shown in
The nesting of channels and the shape of the base results in high stiffness and resistance to deformation for a sheet steel structure. The design of the upstands and margins resists water entry and it is possible to waterproof the product by sealing with a silicone cartridge and gun.
In
We have found the advantages of the above embodiment to be:
1. The box increases packing density.
2. The safety of the construction is preserved.
3. The benefits 1. and 2. pertain to boxes with or without swing and slide lids.
4. The construction is applicable to gun safes.
5. Resists water entry onsite.
It is to be understood that the word “comprising” as used throughout the specification is to be interpreted in its inclusive form, ie. use of the word “comprising” does not exclude the addition of other elements.
It is to be understood that various modifications of and/or additions to the invention can be made without departing from the basic nature of the invention. These modifications and/or additions are therefore considered to fall within the scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2012901357 | Apr 2012 | AU | national |