The present invention relates to improvements to combination padlocks.
The present invention is a combination padlock with an advanced anti-picking mechanism which is enclosed in a locking body/housing. Prior art U.S. Pat. No. 6,883,355 has three extended fins on the clutches with three true gates on the lock body. However, the effectiveness is very limited from a lock picking perspective since there are only five of ten chances to locate the true opening position which can quite easily be picked and opened. The present invention is directed to improvements in anti-picking mechanisms.
The present invention incorporates an improved fault gate mechanism which allows seven faulty gates and three true gates (or a number of extended fins on the clutches as true gates and the remaining being faulty gates). Such a feature causes a lock picker to have the “clicking” sound generated in every number which can confuse the picker from locating the true gate. This makes the combination mechanism harder to pick. The new padlock also incorporates another feature in the extended fin on the clutches which is a round edge (could be chamfer) such that when the extended fin is on the faulty gates, the round edge will contact the edge of the faulty gates and true gate and allow them to keep rotating. It allows the picker to still rotate the dial without stopping the extended fin from rotating the clutches such that the picker cannot use his/her tactile feelings to judge the exact location of the true gate in the locked mode. Such a feature also makes it harder for the lock picker to locate which number or letter is part of the correct code.
Fig. D is a cross-sectional view of the padlock taken along line D-D of
The part numbering for this application is presented below:
20 Body. 21 Control-plug holes. 22 Spindle hole. 23 True gates. 23A True gate edge.
24 Faulty gates. 24A Faulty gates edges. 25 Bolt-hole. 26 Shackle Hole. 27 Retain Peg Hole. 28 Anti-Drill Hole. 29 Reset Screw hole.
30 Spindle. 31 Peg Hole. 32 C-Clip slots. 33 Tail. 34 Knob-side.
40 Clutch. 41 Clutch hole. 42 Extended-Fin. 43 Round Slope Edge. 44 Flat Spot.
60 Control-Plug. 61a Long peg-hole. 61b Short peg hole. 62 Reset Surface. 63 Reset Screw hole.
100 Shackle-retain pegs. 101 Tip. 102 Tail.
400 Clutch-with-slope
430 Slope with Edge
The lock 10 contains a shackle 90 wherein the shackle 90 controls by the combination mechanism. When the lock is in the locked mode, the shackle 90 has no horizontal movement (relative to the lock body 20), wherein the shackle 90 remains in the shackle-hole 26 as the combination dials are not in the correct combination code. The locking-ball 80 engages in neck 91 of the shackle 90. The ball is also in contact with the front-surface 72 of bolt 70. The bolt 70 has a neck 71 which is engaged with the tail 33 of the spindle 30. The bolt spring 170 pushes the tail side 73 of the bolt 70 downward such that the front-surface 73 of the bolt 70 pushes the locking-ball 80. This arrangement causes the locking-ball 80 to always be in contact with the neck 91 of the shackle 90 to let the shackle remain in the locked position.
The tail 93 of the shackle 90 has a shackle spring 180 in contact therewith. The shackle spring 180 is assembled with a shackle-spring-guard 130. Some portion of the shackle is trapped in the spring-contact side 111 and all of these parts are pressed fitted in the end of shackle hole 26.
The spindle 30 contains two C-clip slots 32 to assemble the Control-plug 60, Spindle-Spring 160, and clutches 40 inside the spindle and the clutch holes 41 of the clutches 40 pass through the spindle 30 and then two C-clips 140 are positioned to hold these parts in the spindle. The control-plug 60 is press fitted to the control-plug-hole 21 of the lock body such that the sandwiched position is permanently affixed to the combination padlock 10. The spindle also contains a peg hole 31 to receive the press fitted peg 150. The peg contains a long-side 151 which makes the spindle configured to the upside and downside. If the length of the peg is the same in each side, then there is no ability to differentiate the rotational direction during the reset mode as will be described below. The peg 150 is placed inside of the long peg-hole 61a and the short peg hole 61b of the control-plug 60 during the locked mode. A reset screw 130 contains a thread 131 and is placed through the reset screw hole 29 of the lock body 20 and reset screw hole 63 of the control-plug 60.
If at least one dial 50 is not in the lock open combination, then it will not allow the lock to open. The teeth 51 of the dials 50 engage with the extended-fins 42 of the clutches 40. In such a position, the rotation of each dial 50 will be directly transferred to the corresponding clutch 40.
Meanwhile, the lock body 20 contains a series of faulty gates 24, wherein the faulty gates are deep enough to get the flat 44 of extended-fin 42 of the clutch 40 to contact the faulty gate 24 of the lock body 20. Also, each clutch 40 contains a round slope edge 43 which will be in contact with faulty gates edge 24A which will let the round slope edge 43 of the clutch to slide away from the faulty gates 24 as the lock picker turns the dials 50 while pulling knob-side 34 of the spindle 30 to pick the lock. Even if one or two extended-fins 42 of the clutches 40 align with the true-gate 23 of the lock body, and at least one of the extended-fins 42 is aligned with the false gate 24, the lock still cannot be opened. Also, the round slope edge 43 can slide away from the true-gate edge 23a and faulty gates edge 24a as at least one extended fin 42 of the clutch 40 is not aligned to the true-gate 23.
The set of faulty gates 24 of the lock body 20 are not only deep enough to catch the flat side 44 of the clutch 40, but also are able to let the round slope edge 43 to slide away from the faulty gate 24 of the lock body.
The padlock 10 also contains an anti-drilling rod 120 which is placed inside of the anti-drilling hole 28 to stop an attack by drilling the lock.
The shackle 90 contains a slot 92 which receives the Shackle-retain peg 100 which is located in the retain peg hole 27 of the lock body 20. The shackle-retain-peg spring 190 will always contact the tail 102, which always pushes the tip 101 toward the slot 92 of the shackle 90. In this assembly position, the shackle 90 can only move horizontally within the slot 92. Hence once it is assembled, the shackle 90 can move to the open and close positions but cannot completely detach from the combination padlock 10.
Thus, a main feature of the embodiment shown in
In the unlocked by combination mode, the fins 42 of the clutches 40 are fully aligned with the true-gates 23 of the lock body 20. This means that there is nothing to block the fins 42 of the clutches 40 from moving horizontally (rightward) to the open position. As the extended fins 42 move rightward to the true-gates 23 and fully engaged to the true gates 23, a portion of the extended-fins 42 still engages with the teeth 51 of the dials 50. This prevents the clutches 40 and dials 50 from being rotated when in the open mode. It is a very good feature such that the user cannot accidentally change of combination.
As described, due to the sandwiched position of the spindle 30, the user can pull the knob-side 34 of the spindle 30 rightward, so that the spindle moves to the right. The spindle will move to the right until the long-side peg 151 of the peg 150 contacts the stop-edges 132 of the reset screw 130. As the spindle moves rightward, the tail 33 of the spindle 30 will move away from the neck 71 of the bolt 70. At this moment, the shackle spring 180 will exert a force leftward such that the neck 91 of the shackle will force the locking-ball 80 to move upward (toward the dials 50) away from the neck 91 of the shackle 90. The shackle 90 continues to move leftward until the tip 101 of the shackle-retain peg 100 contacts the other end of the slot 92 of the shackle 90.
To relock the lock, the user can push the shackle to the locked position such that the locking ball 80 will engage back to the neck 91 of the shackle 90. At this moment the bolt-spring 170 will force the bolt 70 downward pushing the front-surface 72 and the locking ball 80 toward the neck 91 area to fully engage the locking ball 80 and the neck 91 of the shackle 90. Also, the neck 71 of the bolt 70 will now realign with the tail 33 of the spindle 30 to move leftward such that the tail 33 will engage back to the neck 71. The spindle spring 170 is assembled in between the C-clip 140 and the control-plug 60. The control-plug 60 does not contain any movement throughout any mode as it is press fitted into the control-plug-hole 21. Also, a reset screw 130 is placed through the lock body and the control-plug and threaded through holes 29/63 of the lock body/control plug 20/60. As the control plug remains silent, the spindle spring 170 will exert a force and push the C-clips 140 leftward which makes the spindle move leftward. Hence, the alignment of the neck 71 of the bolt 70 and the tail 33 of the spindle 30 causes the spindle to move leftward allowing the engagement of the two parts.
Also, in relock, the extended-fins 42 of the clutches 40 will disengage away from the true gates 23 of the lock body 20 and the extended-fins 42 still engage with teeth 51 of the dial 50. Therefore, as the user scrambles the dials 50 then it will rotate the clutches 40 in the same manner. As the dials are being scrambled, then the extended-fins 42 will no longer align to the true gates 23 of the lock body 20. Thus, the user cannot pull the spindle knob 34 to open the lock. The lock is now back to the locked mode.
In the reset mode, the user must open the lock via unlock by combination mode by aligning all the extended-fins 42 of the clutches 40 to the true gates 23 of the lock body 20. Then, the user needs to unwind the reset-screw 130 away from the lock unit 10 such that the stop-edges 132 will not block the long-side 151 of the peg 150. Since nothing blocks the peg, the assembled-spindle 30 can further move rightward such that the extended-fins 42 of the clutches 40 will disengage away from the teeth 51 of the dials 50 so that the extended-fins 42 are fully engaged in the true-gate 23 of the lock body 20. The rotational movement of the dials 50 will not rotate the clutches 40. The user can keep pulling rightward until the peg passes the reset surface 62 of the control-plug 60. Then the user can turn the knob 34 of the spindle such that the long-side peg 151 can rest on the reset surface 62 of the control plug. The user can use both hands to turn the dials 50 to set a new code.
After setting the new code, the user can rotate the knob such that the long-side peg 151 aligns with the long-peg-hole 61a of the control-plug 60. Then the spindle spring 160 will exert a force to push the assembled-spindle 30 leftward toward the bolt 70 such that the long side peg 151 will engage back to the long-peg hole 61a and the extended-fin 42 will engage back with the teeth 51 of the dial 50. The user can place the reset screw 130 back to the reset screw hole 29/63 of the lock body 20 and control-plug 60. In this way the user cannot further pull the assembled-spindle further rightward to change the code as the stop-edges 132 of the reset screw 130 will block the long-side peg 151 of the peg 150.
This embodiment has a clutch 400 with a slope to demonstrate that the round edge can also be in the form of a slope edge.
The second embodiment of
Thus, the Second Embodiment Clutch 400 contains an important part which is the second embodiment slope 430. In the locked mode, if a lock picker pulls the knob 34 rightward then the second embodiment flat spot 440 will contact the faulty gates 24. This stops clutch 400 from rotating which yields the dial stop rotation and performs the “clicking sound”. If the lock picker further turns the dials 50, then the second embodiment clutch 400 turns in the same manner in the locked mode so that the second embodiment slope 430 will contact the faulty gates edges 24A and then the clutch 400 will rotate again without seizing in rotation to make it difficult for the lock picker to feel the true gates. This is an important feature of the application.
This application claims benefit to U.S. Provisional Application No. 63/230,230 filed Aug. 6, 2021, which application is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63230230 | Aug 2021 | US |