Security sometimes requires that keys be destroyed. There is also a need to retain evidence of which keys have been destroyed. These capabilities can be important to keeping track of exactly how many copies of a key are outstanding and who is charged with their possession.
Besides having a convenient capacity to destroy a key and preserve evidence of the destroyed key, it is also desirable that key destroying equipment be inexpensive, safe, reliable, and easy to use.
The invention meets these key destroying objectives by using a motor driven grinding element arranged within an enclosure into which a coded portion of a key can be thrust to be ground away. A holder is preferably used for this to grip a head of the key and also engage a hole in the head of the key so that the holder affords a firm grip on a key to be destroyed. The enclosure around the grinding element also preferably includes a tube through which the holder and a held key can be inserted, key-foremost, so that a coded portion of the key is ground away. The tube through which the holder and key are inserted provides support against lateral force applied by the grinding element to reduce any possibility of the key escaping or deviating from its intended path into engagement with the grinding element. The tube is also preferably guarded with a safety wall on its inner end, and the safety wall preferably has an oblong opening that receives only the coded portion of the key in an orientation that disposes a maximum width of the coded portion to the grinding element.
The tube, the safety wall, and the enclosure for the motor driven grinding element all cooperate to ensure that ground metal particles are captured and retained and do not escape to injure a person operating the key destroyer. The holder, tube, and grinding element enclosure also securely brace the advancing key against any movement other than a direct advance against the grinding element. The combined result protects an operator from injury, ensures that a key does not get loose and jamb or otherwise cause harm, and the enclosure collects and retains the metal particles from destroyed keys so that these can be dumped occasionally. The grinding element is also preferably replaceable.
The advance of the key into the grinding region is preferably limited by the safety end wall of the tube so that only the coded portion of the key is ground away. When this is done, the head of the key and its holder are withdrawn from the supporting tube so that the head of the ground away key can be retained as evidence that a particular key copy has been destroyed. The head of the key can bear an identification number for that purpose. Key security records can then be based upon the evidence retained in the form of heads of destroyed keys.
The inventive key destroyer uses a motor driven grinding element, preferably in a form that is readily available. This form, as best illustrated in
Angle grinder 10 is fitted with a grinding enclosure 15 that contains a rotary driven, disk-shaped grinding element 20. A guide tube 16, preferably incorporated into a cover 17 of enclosure 15, leads into grinding region or chamber 21 within enclosure 15. Tube 16 is configured to allow holder 25 gripping a key 50 to be inserted through tube 16 so that a coded portion of key 50 can be pressed against grinding disk 20 and ground away so that key 50 is destroyed.
Tube 16 has an inner safety wall 18 disposed adjacent grinding element 20, and wall 18 has an oblong opening 19 that allows through passage of a coded end portion of a key 50. As holder 25 and a gripped key 50 are inserted into tube 16, they are rotated until a coded end 51 of key 50 passes through oblong opening 19 and into engagement with rotating abrasive disk 20. A head portion 52 of key 50 will not fit through oblong opening 15 and is blocked by safety wall 18 so that only the coded end portion 51 of key 50 can be ground away. Holder 25 and the head portion 52 of destroyed key 50 can then be withdrawn from tube 16.
Holder 25 is preferably a file holder that is readily available as a tool to attach to and grip a tang end of a file. Knob 26 of holder 25 rotates to open and close holder jaws 27 that grip head 52 of key 50. Preferably a screw 53 is added to the jaws 27 of holder 25 to detent into a hole that is normally available in the head of a key 50. This is to ensure a firm grip on the head of a key, which then cannot escape from the jaws of holder 25 during the destruction process.
Key head 52 can bear a serial number or other identification number that can identify which copy of a particular key has been destroyed, because the head 52 of a destroyed key can remain as a permanent record. Abrasive element 20, suitable for use in angle grinders, is inexpensive and readily replaced when worn. A wrench 60 with an offset head 61 is configured to reach within enclosure 15 to loosen or tighten the attachment of abrasive disk 20 to grinder 10.
The orientation of oblong opening 19 in safety wall 18 of tube 16 preferably disposes the long axis of opening 19 radially of grinding disk 20. This orients the maximum width of the coded portion of key 50 transverse to the direction of rotation so that abrasive disk 20 grinds away the coded portion 51 along the widest possible path. This helps speed up the grinding process and prolong the life of grinding disk 20.
Cover 17, with tube 16, safety wall 18, and oblong key opening 19, all cooperate to ensure that the metal particles that are ground away from a key 50 are retained within grinding chamber 15. This ensures that ground particles do not escape and injure an operator. Cover 17 is preferably removable so that metal particles can be emptied from chamber 15.
Chamber 15 is preferably configured so that it can rest on a horizontal surface that also supports angle grinder 10 in a stable position while keys are being destroyed. Then all that is necessary is to grip the head of a key securely in the jaws 27 of holder 25, start angle grinder 10, and advance the holder in a key foremost direction into tube 16. Holder 25 can then be rotated as necessary to fit coded portion 51 through slot 19 to contact abrasive disk 20. The cooperative configuration of these components helps prevent accidents or any harm to the user or to the equipment. Only the coded portion 51 of a key 50 can be ground away, because safety wall 18 will not permit passage of anything else into the grinding region against disk 20. Tube 16 also supports holder 25 in a sliding fit, which ensures that holder 25 and the key that it grips cannot be forced off the intended path of direct axial insertion of the coded portion 51 of key 50 into engagement with abrasive disk 20. A user does not have to exert a muscle force to keep key 50 properly aligned and aimed at its destination.
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