Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6760964
-
Patent Number
6,760,964
-
Date Filed
Wednesday, May 3, 200025 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, July 13, 200420 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Oppenheimer, Wolff & Donnelly LLP
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 029 52501
- 029 428
- 029 464
- 029 592
- 070 278
- 070 416
- 070 214
- 235 1 D
- 235 93
- 235 145 R
- 340 20
- 340 22
- 361 730
- 439 426
- 439 493
-
International Classifications
- B23P1100
- B23Q300
- B60R2502
-
Abstract
The key pad assembly includes a housing that attaches to a secure container. The housing has a front wall, and a key pad attaches to the front face of the front wall. A cylindrical side wall extends back from the front wall. The side wall is truncated at an angle to angle the front face to the door. Where the side wall is widest, which should be at the bottom of the housing, the side wall has a removable section through which a battery can be inserted. A cable extends through an opening in the front face from the key pad to a circuit board that mounts the combination sensing circuit. The cable is flat with multiple electric conductors and a slot. When the key pad and circuit board are properly assembled, the cable slot fits over a fixed pin in the housing. The pin secures the cable so that it is not pulled from its connection with the key pad or the circuit board. Other pins within the housing mount the circuit board. Parallel walls from the rear of the front face create a cavity for the battery. The side walls that create a battery chamber each has a shaft with an opening that extends through the front wall. The shafts supply support for bolts attaching the housing to the secure container. When the key pad is attached to the housing, the pad covers the openings.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to key pad assemblies, primarily for safes and other secure containers.
2. General Background and State of the Art
Safes and other secure containers have traditionally used combination locks for controlling and authorizing entry. Locks had been mechanical and relied on a person dialing a correct combination on a rotating dial. The rotation positioned mechanical elements within the lock such that dialing the correct combination allowed a locking bolt to release the container door. For example, traditional mechanical locks, such as Gartner, U.S. Pat. No. 3,968,667 (1976), rely on a dial rotating tumblers. Proper dial rotation aligns gates in the tumblers. Once the gates are aligned, a fence on a fence lever can enter the aligned gates. Continued rotation of the dial and tumblers pulls the fence lever and withdraws the bolt.
Electronics have replaced mechanical structures in many locks. Electronic locks can use electronics rather than aligned tumbler wheels to sense entry of the correct combination. The electronics can sense the rotary position of a combination lock dial, or a key pad can replace the combination dial. Consequently, instead of dialing a number, e.g., 72, the user would first push the “7” and then the “2” keys for the same result. Uyeda, U.S. Pat. No. 5,134,870 (1992) and Gartner, U.S. Pat. No. 5,136,870 (1992) are examples of a key pad entry system for a safe and door lock, respectively.
When the lock is used to secure entry to a container, the electronic components are mounted on a housing inside the container door. The housing contains a battery and a circuit board, which contains the electronic circuitry controlling the lock. The key pad is on the outside of the housing to be accessible to the user. Therefore, a cable must extend between the key pad and the circuit board for transmitting signals between the two components. Additionally, the battery must be secured, and wires must connect the battery to the circuit board.
Batteries power most electronic locks. One could mount the battery within the safe or container. If the battery fails, however, the lock is inoperative, rendering it impossible to use the lock to access the inside of the container. Therefore, mounting the battery in the key pad housing and making the battery accessible without having to open the safe is desirable.
The key pad is on the outside of the key pad housing, but the circuitry is within the housing. Therefore, the cable that carries signals from the keys must extend through a wall of the key pad housing from the key pad to the circuit board. During assembly and use, the cable can separate from the circuit board. Cable bending can also cause a break in one of the conductors in the cable.
Traditionally, the key pad is parallel to the safe or container wall. Thus, it usually is in a vertical plane. Often, the user's eyes are higher than the key pad so he or she looks down and at an angle to it. Accordingly, having a flat key pad with its surface parallel to the door may make the key pad more difficult to see.
INVENTION SUMMARY
One object of the present invention is to disclose and provide a key pad housing in which the external parts such as the key pad connect to the internal parts and circuitry securely. Another object of the present invention is the disclosure and provision of a key pad housing with an angled face that can be seen when the eye level is above the key pad. Another object is to disclose and provide a way of securing a battery that powers the internal circuitry and yet is accessible for replacement.
These and other objects of the present invention will be apparent with the drawings and the detailed explanation of the exemplary embodiments.
The key pad assembly of the present invention includes a housing that attaches to a secure container. The housing has a front wall, and a key pad attaches to the front or outside face of the front wall. A generally cylindrical side wall extends back from the front wall. The side wall is truncated at an angle so that as the edge of the side wall seals against a safe or container door, the front face of the key pad housing is at an angle to the door. Where the side wall is widest, the side wall has a removable section through which a battery can be inserted.
A cable extends through an opening in the front face from the key pad to a circuit board that mounts the combination sensing circuit. The cable is flat with multiple electric conductors through it. The cable also has a slot. When the key pad and circuit board are properly assembled, the slot in the cable fits over a pin extending from the rear face of the front wall of the housing. The pin secures the cable so that it is not pulled from its connection with the key pad or the circuit board. Other pins within the housing mount the circuit board.
Parallel walls from the rear of the front face create a cavity for the battery. Small walls near the bottom of the battery chamber support the bottom of the battery. Each of the side walls that create the battery chamber has a shaft with an opening that extends through the front wall. The shafts supply support for bolts attaching the housing to the secure container. The key pad covers those openings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is a front view of the key pad assembly of the present invention.
FIG. 2
is a rear view of the key pad assembly of the present invention.
FIG. 3
is a side view of the key pad assembly of the present invention.
FIG. 4
is a top view of the key pad assembly of the present invention.
FIG. 5
is a bottom view of the key pad assembly of the present invention.
FIG. 6
is a perspective view of the key pad assembly of the present invention showing the key pad before it is attached to the housing.
FIG. 7
is a rear perspective view of the key pad assembly of the present invention and shows the mounting of the battery and circuit board.
FIG. 8
is a side, sectional view of the key pad assembly of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The key pad assembly of the present invention comprises a housing
10
. It normally will be metal, such as brass or stainless steel. The outside may be chrome-plated, or the unplated metal surface can be polished or brushed for aesthetics. Casting is a preferred way of forming the housing.
Housing
10
has a front wall
12
(
FIGS. 1 and 6
) and a side wall
20
. In the exemplary embodiment, the side wall is generally cylindrical. The cylindrical wall is truncated at an angle as best shown in
FIGS. 3
,
4
,
7
and
8
. The truncation along edge
22
means that the bottom of the side wall is wider than its top. The front wall may also have a chamfer or rounded surface
24
between the front wall and the side wall to avert a sharp edge at the intersection of the walls.
The front face has an indented portion
14
(FIG.
6
). In the exemplary embodiment, the indented portion is formed by creating an opening
18
(FIG.
6
). A plate
42
(
FIG. 2
) is welded to the rear face
44
of front wall
12
. The front face
43
of plate
42
rests against the rear face
44
. Consequently, it creates an indentation equal to the thickness of front wall
12
. Alternatively, the indentation can be formed to an existing casting during the casting process or through a metal milling or deforming process.
A key pad
30
attaches to the front or outside of front wall
12
(
FIGS. 1
,
6
and
8
). The key pad in the exemplary embodiment has 12 keys
32
with the numbers 0 through 9, #*. As (
FIG. 1
shows, letters can also be associated with the numbers. The exemplary embodiment uses a different letter pattern than a telephone, but the letters that correspond with the numbers can be in any desired pattern. The keys
32
are laid out as shown in
FIG. 1
with larger buttons for the 5 and 8 keys than for the 1, 4, * and # keys so that the keys along the side curve aesthetically with the curvature of the housing side wall. If housing
10
were square, the key pad likely would be square or rectangular.
Each key
32
is sealed and covered with flexible material. Depressing a key makes electrical contact within the key.
A cable
100
, which carries conductors
104
, attaches to the top of the key pad
30
. In the exemplary embodiment, seven conductors are on each side of the cable. Six of those conductors connect to one of the keys, and the seventh conductor connects to the grounds of six keys.
During assembly, the assembler feeds cable
100
through opening
86
in front wall
12
(FIG.
6
). The opening
86
is sized to receive the cable. The surface
34
of the key pad
30
has an adhesive backing
36
. The assembler removes a protective sheet (not shown) over the adhesive backing and affixes the key pad
30
to the front face
12
within indentation
18
.
Two parallel battery walls
52
and
54
(
FIGS. 2
,
4
and
7
) extend upward from the bottom of side wall
20
and from plate
42
. In the exemplary embodiment, walls
52
and
54
are sufficiently spaced to hold a 9 volt battery
118
. Walls
52
and
54
taper at
53
and
55
, respectively. A rounded wall
26
(
FIGS. 2
,
4
and
7
) fits between the two tapers
53
and
53
. That wall is removable to allow access to the space between walls
52
and
54
. The opening into which wall
26
slides does not extend the entire height of the side wall as
FIG. 5
shows. The short walls
68
and
70
project upward from the front wall approximately to the base
27
of wall
26
(FIG.
5
). When battery
118
is inserted into the opening between walls
52
and
54
, it can slide along short walls
68
and
70
until it reaches the ends of the short wall. It is then pushed toward the back of front wall
12
where it rests on the tops of the short walls. Pin
88
(
FIGS. 2 and 8
) block the battery from being pushed too far into the housing.
A pair of shafts
56
and
58
are integral with the tops of walls
52
and
54
(FIGS.
2
and
7
). The shafts have openings
60
and
62
that extend through front wall
12
. See FIG.
6
.
Pins
80
and
82
also project upward from the rear of front wall
14
. As best shown in
FIG. 8
, pin
82
has a smaller diameter portion
83
. Where that portion intersects the main part of pin
82
, a shoulder is formed. A circuit board
90
has two openings that align with pins
80
and
82
(FIG.
7
). The circuit board openings receive the pins, and the board rests on the shoulders of the pins. An adhesive at the pin/board interface is optional. The circuit board has circuit elements
92
and a connector
94
. Cable
100
from the key pad plugs into the connector as
FIG. 7
shows. A second cable
98
attaches to circuit board
90
. It receives a signal from circuit elements
92
in response to the user depressing keys
82
. The cable transmits a signal to lock elements (not shown) within or on the outside of the container door. The container door has an opening for receiving cable
98
.
Electrical power from battery
118
is transmitted to a battery clip
112
that attaches to poles
114
and
116
of the battery. Wires within conduit
110
carry current to the circuit board (FIG.
8
). Conduit must be long enough that one replacing the battery
118
through opening
26
can remove the old battery from and attach a new battery to the clip
112
.
The key pad components are assembled as follows. The assembler places the key pad in the orientation shown in
FIG. 6
with cable
100
passing through opening
86
. Cable
100
has a slot
102
(FIG.
6
). That slot is placed over pin
84
(FIG.
8
). Doing so leaves slack in cable
100
and prevents the installer from pulling the cable out of the connector
94
. Cable
100
is then plugged into connector
94
and the circuit board
90
is secured onto pins
80
and
82
An adhesive may be applied at those pins to secure the circuit board.
Battery clip
112
is attached to battery
118
, and the battery is inserted between walls
52
and
54
. Cable
98
(
FIG. 8
) also is attached to the locking and unlocking device in the container door.
Before the key pad is attached to the housing, the installer bolts the housing through openings
62
and
62
to the door of the safe. With the housing secured, the backing is removed from the adhesive
36
on the key pad, and the key pad is then attached to the surface
43
of front wall
12
within indentation
18
.
An assembler can perform many of these assembly steps in different orders.
While the specification describes particular embodiments of the present invention, those of ordinary skill can devise variations of the present invention without departing from the inventive concept.
Claims
- 1. A key paid assembly comprising:a housing attachable to a secure container, the housing having a front wall with a front facing outside of the housing and a rear face facing inside the housing, a side wall extending away from the front wall, the housing further having an inside behind the front wall; a key pad attachable to the front face of the front wall of the housing, the key pad having a plurality of keys, each key sending a signal to a sensing circuit when the key is pressed; a cable containing a plurality of conductors, the cable extending from the key pad and being attachable to the sensing circuit; the sensing circuit being mounted on a circuit board inside the housing; a cable opening through the front face from the outside to the inside, the cable passing through the cable opening into the housing; a slot through the cable on a portion of the cable spaced from the key pad and from the sensing circuit; and a pin on the inside of the housing positioned to engage the slot of the cable to limit movement of the cable and at least two openings through the front face and a shaft extending around the openings through the front face and a shaft extending around the openings, a battery container within the housing for receiving a battery the battery container comprising a pair of battery walls extending from the front wall of and spaced to receive a battery and a battery opening in the side wall adjacent to the battery container of sufficient size to allow insertion and removal of the battery through the battery opening, each shaft being attached to one of the side walls of the battery container.
- 2. A key pad assembly comprising:a housing attachable to a secure container, the housing having a front wall with a front face facing outside of the housing and a rear face facing inside the housing, a side wall extending away from the front wall, the housing further having an inside behind the front wall; a key pad attachable to the front face of the front wall of the housing, the key pad having a plurality of keys, each key sending a signal to a sensing circuit when the key is pressed; a cable containing a plurality of conductors, the cable extending from the key pad and being attachable to the sensing circuit; the sensing circuit being mounted on a circuit board inside the housing; a slot through the cable on a portion of the cable spaced from the key pad and from the sensing circuit; and a pin on the inside of the housing positioned to engage the slot of the cable to limit movement of the cable, wherein the pin fixedly mounts in the housing.
- 3. The key pad assembly of claim 2 wherein the pin mounts to the rear face of the front wall.
- 4. The key pad assembly of claim 3 wherein the pin intersects the rear face generally perpendicularly.
- 5. The key pad assembly of claim 2 wherein the pin is integral to the rear face of the front wall.
- 6. The key pad assembly of claim 2 wherein the pin is open at its top, the slot through the cable being insertable and removable over the open end of the pin.
- 7. The key pad assembly of claim 1 wherein the shafts are integral with the battery walls.
- 8. A method of assembling a key pad housing wherein the housing has a front wall with a front face facing outside of the housing and a rear face facing inside the housing, the method comprising the steps of:passing a cable attached to a key pad through an opening through the front wall, the cable having a free end and an end attached to the key pad; attaching the free end of the cable to a circuit board and mounting the circuit board to the rear face of the front wall; securing the cable to the front wall by placing a slot in the cable over a pin on the rear face of the front wall wherein the slot is loose on the pin; attaching the housing to a safe or other secure container by means of fasteners extending through openings in the front wall; and attaching the key pad to the front face of the front wall over the openings in the front wall, wherein the slot is loose on the pin.
US Referenced Citations (6)