Many buildings are equipped with doors that require transfer of electric power from the door frame to locks, latches, panic devices, alarms, cameras, I.D. readers and the like mounted on or in the door. The prior art provides examples of transfer of electrical power through knuckle hinges (hereinafter referred to as butt hinges) such as those described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,838,234; 3,84286; and 4,412,711. U.S. Pat. No. 7,063,042 provides an example of electrical transfer through a continuous gear butt hinge, not a surface mounted hinge.
A butt hinge is largely hidden from view when a door employing the hinge is closed. In contrast a surface mounted hinge is almost fully visible. An example of electrical transfer through a surface mounted continuous gear hinge can be found at the Pemko website. The Pemko product passes electricity through a flat cable that passes through a cutout in a portion of the gears.
The present invention is a geared surface mounted continuous door hinge with the capacity to provide a conduit for an electric current to pass from the frame in which a door is mounted to appliances in the door through a hole in a thrust bearing. Surface mounted hinges are generally employed as replacements for hinges on heavy doors and/or doors subject to heavy use after butt hinges originally installed with the doors no longer function effectively. Eventually heavy doors and heavy usage combine to cause the screws used to connect the small widely separated leaves of butt hinges to loosen and cause the doors to sag and close unevenly. Since the doors themselves are expensive enough to be worth retaining, it makes sense to replace the hinges rather than the doors. A surface mounted hinge is more durable than a butt hinge, especially when the leaves of a butt hinge are reconnected to the same worn locations in a frame as originally installed. In any case a continuous hinge spreads the load better than a butt hinge. Since doors often contain electrical devices, it is also necessary to find a way to deliver electric current from the building in which a door is mounted to appliances in the door.
The present invention differs from the prior art by passing electric wiring enclosed in a flexible tube through channels under the leaves and a hole in a thrust bearing employed in the hinge. The Pemko product passes electric wiring enclosed in a flat, flexible cable through a cutout in the gears employed in the hinge. This arrangement weakens the gears at the point where the cutout occurs. The Pemko design also employs a taller cap than that employed in the present invention to cover the cable and the gears, apparently to provide space for the cable. The taller cap prevents the door on which the Pemko hinge is installed from opening more than 150 degrees. In contrast the tube containing wiring in the present invention passes through a hole in a thrust bearing employed in the hinge. This arrangement permits the use of a cap with a lower profile that in turn allows a door on which the present invention is installed to open a full 180 degrees. The use of a flexible tube to enclose the wiring facilitates the passage of wiring through the hole in the bearing. Less exposure of the wiring also reduces wear and tear as well as the possibility of tampering. The character and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent in the following more detailed description.
The present invention consists essentially of a combination for providing a conduit for electrical wiring through a geared full surface continuous hinge adapted for attachment to the outside surfaces of a door and a frame in which the door is mounted. The combination comprises a door leaf and a frame leaf, each leaf having a plate segment and a plurality of geared segments interrupted by thrust bearing segments. The leaves are adapted to pivot around said bearings and meshed geared segments. More specifically the combination comprises (a) at least one thrust bearing having a hole aligned with holes in and channels under the hinge leaf plates, said holes and channels being large enough to allow a flexible tube containing electrical wires to pass sequentially into a first or outer round hole in the frame leaf plate, through the channel under that plate, out a second or inner oval hole in the frame leaf plate, through the hole in the thrust bearing, through a first or inner oval hole in the door leaf plate, through the channel under a door leaf plate and out a second or outer round hole in the door leaf plate, (b) a cap covering and holding the gears and bearings portions of the hinge together and extending for substantially the full length of the hinge and (c) covers extending for substantially the full length of the hinge over the first hole in frame leaf plate and the second hole of the door leaf plate. The covers over the leaf plates also cover the holes through which screws or bolts attach the leaves to the frame and door surfaces. Thus the wiring assembly is both substantially concealed and protected as it passes through the hinge without interfering with a full 180 degree operation of the door on which the hinge is attached. When the holes in the plates and wires are covered, they are also more secure and less subject to tampering, especially important when appliances in a door are designed to make the doors less accessible to unauthorized personnel.
The preferred embodiments of the present invention consist of the following components as more clearly shown in
The work holding fixtures are employed to hold hinge components in place while the machine tool machines the hinge components necessary for wire installation using materials, equipment and procedures known to those skilled in this art. The hole 10 drilled in the thrust bearings 9, the holes 11,12,13,14 and channels 29,30 in the leaf plates 6,7 and the tube 15 are large enough to allow passage of 22 gauge wires 16 in sets of 5 or less from the frame 2 side of a door 1 through the hinge 3 to door mounted electrical appliances (only one, a keypad 35, shown) as illustrated in
The specifications disclosed herein for the various components of the present invention and associated doors and the frames are illustrative of an especially preferred commercial version of the present invention but are not critical.
To prepare the preferred commercial embodiment of the hinge 3 for delivery to an installer, a thrust bearing 9 with a ¼ inch diameter hole 10 replaces a plain bearing 31 that would otherwise be used in the hinge. The bearings 9,31 are preferably composed of hard durable plastic material, such as Valox 310SEO, 0.789 inches long, 0.443 inches high and 0.625 inches wide at its widest dimensions albeit with rounding, projections 32a,32b and channels 33a,33b as more clearly shown in
Substantially identical instructions for installing unwired full surface mounted hinges are provided by manufacturers and those instructions are incorporated herein by reference. The wired hinges 3 of the present invention are installed like any other such unwired full surface hinge with the following additional steps:
In contrast to the Pemko wired hinge, the wiring in the present invention is connected after installation of the hinge itself. The wiring in the Pemko hinge must be connected before installing the hinge. This is accomplished in part by using a bulky connection that increases the chances of pinching the wires when the wiring is covered.
Independent testing has proven that sagging doors refitted with the full surface continuous hinges of the present invention can endure 25 million cycles of door opening and closing equivalent to about 50 years of high traffic use. The wiring in the product of the present invention is warranted for a full 5-years.
The present invention has been described in its preferred embodiments that are not intended to be limiting. Various alterations and modifications will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art after reading the present disclosure. The scope of the present invention should therefore be limited only by the scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit under 34 U.S.C. 119(e) of provisional application No. 61/074,855 filed Jun. 23, 2008 entitled “SURFACE MOUNTED GEAR HINGE WITH ELECTRICAL WIRING”.
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| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20090313790 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 61074855 | Jun 2008 | US |