The present invention relates to a flat key. More particularly this invention concerns a lock usable with a special high-security flat key.
A standard flat key, as opposed to an axially bitted tubular key, has an elongated blade formed along one or both edges with bitting that coacts with tumblers carried in the plug of the lock for the key. In a standard system with seven bits each of which can be at four or five different levels, the number of combinations available is large but by no means impossible to discover by random action. In addition such a lock frequently can be forced relatively easily as the physical strength of a small number of slim tumblers, which are all that block rotation of the plug in the cylinder, is small.
In commonly owned U.S. Pat. No. 4,977,767 the flat key has a blade formed with a pair of opposite edges, with a pair of opposite faces between the edges, and with an outer-end tip. In addition this blade is formed with bitting along at least one of its edges, with a pair of relatively shallow, outwardly open, and generally parallel but spaced grooves formed in at least one of the faces extending generally longitudinally in a nonstraight path from the tip, and with a relatively deep and outwardly open groove formed in the one face and extending generally longitudinally in a nonstraight path from the tip generally nonparallel to the shallow grooves. The deep groove is between the shallow grooves and the shallow grooves have inner flanks separated by a spacing that is greater than the width of the deep groove. Furthermore the grooves flare parallel to the surface at and toward the tip.
The key in this patent has grooves that have control positions at which they extend substantially parallel to the blade and are inclined to the blade between the control positions. They can extend as straight-section zigzags or as more smoothly curved undulations. In fact each of the grooves has a plurality of such control positions and the control positions of the shallow grooves are transversely aligned and staggered relative to the control positions of the deep groove. The lock for this key has a relatively stationary lock housing, a lock cylinder rotatable in the housing about an axis and formed with an axially outwardly open flat passage shaped to snugly receive the key blade, a first slide displaceable in the cylinder generally secantally of the axis and parallel to the one face of a key in the passage and provided with a formation engageable generally radially of the axis in the deep groove, and a second slide displaceable in the cylinder generally secantally of the axis and parallel to the one face of a key in the passage and provided with a formation engageable generally radially of the axis in the shallow grooves. Thus the slides are shifted secantally on insertion of the key by interengagement of the formations and the respective grooves. A lock element is displaceable in only one predetermined position of the slides between a position blocking rotation of the cylinder in the housing and a position permitting such rotation.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an improved key and lock of the above-described general type.
Another object is the provision of such an improved key and lock of the above-described general type that overcomes the above-given disadvantages, in particular that offers a higher level of security than the described lock.
A flat key according to the invention has a blade formed with a pair of opposite edges, with a pair of opposite faces between the edges, and with an outer-end tip. The blade further is formed with a pair of relatively shallow, outwardly open, and generally parallel but spaced grooves formed in at least one of the faces and each extending generally longitudinally in a nonstraight path through a plurality of control points from the tip. Each of these shallow grooves has a greater transverse width outward toward the tip from one of its control points than inward from the one control point. A relatively deep and outwardly open groove is formed in the one face mainly between the shallow grooves and extends generally longitudinally in a nonstraight path from the tip generally nonparallel to the shallow grooves.
This key is intended for use in a lock having a relatively stationary lock housing and a lock cylinder rotatable in the housing about an axis and formed with an axially outwardly open flat passage shaped to snugly receive the key blade. A first slide is displaceable in the cylinder generally secantally of the axis and parallel to the one face of a key in the passage and has a formation engageable generally radially of the axis in the deep groove. A second slide is displaceable in the cylinder generally secantally of the axis and parallel to the one face of a key in the passage and has a pair of narrow formations engageable generally radially of the axis in the shallow grooves and of generally the same transverse width as the shallow grooves. Normally there are a plurality of such second slides. In accordance with the invention a third slide is displaceable in the cylinder generally secantally of the axis and parallel to the one face of a key in the passage and has a pair of wide formations engageable generally radially of the axis in the shallow grooves and of generally the greater transverse width of the shallow grooves at the outermost points. The slides can shift secantally on insertion of the key by interengagement of the formations and the respective grooves when, of course, these grooves have their control points positioned to align with the respective formations. A lock element is displaceable in only one predetermined position of the slides between a position blocking rotation of the cylinder in the housing and a position permitting such rotation.
Thus with this system the third slide with the wide formations cannot fit in a key with the prior-art narrow grooves, making it impossible to operate a lock according to the invention with a prior-art key. Conversely a key for the system of this invention, if inserted in a prior-art lock will not transversely position the third slide accurately, making it impossible to operate a prior-art lock with the newer key of this invention.
According to the invention the one face is formed with a nonstraight ridge extending between and defining inner flanks of the shallow grooves. The ridge is of a predetermined identical effective transverse width between the points of each pair of points. Thus at the outermost control points the outer flanks of the shallow grooves flare outward. In this manner the formations or pins of the slides can ride along the shallow grooves, but only the wide formations or pins of the third slide will fit properly with the outer control points.
In accordance with the invention the outer control points are offset by half or some other fraction of the standard offset of the control points, making operation of the lock according to this invention impossible even with a somewhat reworked old-style key.
According to another feature of the invention the deep groove crosses the ridge only between the control points of the shallow grooves so that the ridge is always present between the control points of the shallow grooves. This ensures that the second slides do not get misaligned by catching in the deep groove.
The key according to the invention further is formed along at least one of its edges with standard bitting. This makes the lock extremely secure, as not only are there tumblers that shift in the plane of the key blade like in a standard lock, but there are also the control slides.
The above and other objects, features, and advantages will become more readily apparent from the following description, reference being made to the accompanying drawing in which:
As seen in
According to this invention at least one face of the blade 2 is formed with three generally longitudinally extending and laterally open nonstraight grooves 7, 8, and 9. The two grooves 7 and 9 are of substantially the same width and extend generally parallel to each other. These outer grooves 7 and 9 are relatively shallow (see
The grooves 7 and 9 are intended to work with first and second slides 17 and 17′ (see
The grooves 7, 8, and 9 are inflected at longitudinally uniformly spaced levels indicated at a, b, c, d, e, and f in
As seen in
The plug 13 itself is provided with a radially displaceable locking element 15 formed as an axially elongated bar having a rounded outer end engageable in the groove 14. A spring urges the locking bar 15 radially outward. The locking bar 15 is formed with a plurality of radially inwardly projecting formations or pegs 28 (see also
On the other hand, a flat key 1 that does not have its grooves 7 and 9 sided at the control points site 23 could not be entirely inserted into a lock according to the invention.
There is one slide 17 for each level a-e and one slide 17′ for the level f. The slides 17 and 17′ are thus axially equispaced at the levels a-e of
In the lock shown in
The width 25 of the ridge 24 and spacing 30 between the bolts 21 or 27 are generally the same, but can change depending on the arrangement of the angles of ridge 24. The width 25 of the web 24 at the control points 11 and 23 and spacing 30 remain unchanged, even though the width of the web 24, measured perpendicularly on the web faces 26, has to vary (see
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A614/2005 | Apr 2005 | AT | national |