This invention relates to a key plug for a key-removable lock core that is manually removable by use of a key, and for a key-programmable lock cylinder.
A key-removable lock core of the type shown, for example, in FIGS. 1-7 of Frank E. Best's U.S. Pat. No. 3,206,958 (the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety) has been known since the 1920's and have been widely sold and used in a standard configuration and size so as to be readily interchangeable and renewable in the same lock mechanisms. Such standard lock core includes a core body of figure-8 cross section with body a key plug and a full-length thin-walled sleeve within its bottom lobe, the sleeve being rotatable through a limited angle to retract a core-retainer lug thereon. An axial series of pin tumbler barrels extend through the pin tumbler housing formed by the top lobe of the core body, through a thickened portion of the sleeve contained in a broached recess in such upper lobe, and into the key plug. This arrangement forms a full-length operating shear line at the interface between the key plug and the sleeve, and a full-length control shear line at the interface between the thickened portion of the sleeve and the upper lobe of the core body. An operating key will align the tumblers for shear at the operating shear line to allow the key plug to be rotated, while a control key will align the tumblers for shear at the control shear line to allow the sleeve and the key plug together to be rotated to move the retaining lug on the sleeve between a retracted position within the figure-8 profile of the core and a projected position in which such lug is engaged behind a rearward-facing shoulder in the core receptacle to retain the core in such receptacle.
Walter E. Best's et al. U.S. Pat. No. 4,424,693, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, shows another type of key-removable lock core for a lock chamber of figure-8 cross section having a short cylindrical key plug housing fitting the lower lobe of the chamber and a pin tumbler housing containing a series of pin tumbler barrels, two of which are in an extension beyond the key plug housing. A key plug is contained in such housing and a control sleeve aligned with such housing beneath the extension and having pin tumbler bores aligned with said two barrels. Side faces on the pin tumbler housing and spaced from the chamber side wall provide clearance on one side for a retaining lug on the control sleeve retractable into such clearance from core-retaining engagement behind a shoulder in the chamber, and clearance on the other side for a stop lug. An operating key aligns tumblers in all barrels for shear movement at an operating shear line at the outer surface of the key plug. A control key aligns tumblers in the two extension-contained barrels for shear movement at a control shear line at the outer surface of the control sleeve, and tumblers in the other barrels for shear movement at the operating shear line, to permit rotation of the sleeve to retract its retaining lug. The pin tumbler housing may have flat sides which define the lug clearances or may be cylindrical and have clearance recesses cut in it with end faces which ride against the lugs. The core may have a separate face plate, or the pin tumbler housing may itself form the front face of the core.
Peter H. Field's et al. U.S. Pat. No. 6,382,006, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, shows another type of key-removable lock core for a lock chamber of figure-8 cross section having an extended-length control key that engages a control tumbler, unreachable with the operating key. The control key engages the control tumbler across the operating shear line, while freeing movement of the sleeve at the control shear line.
In the above described key-removable lock cores, and other known and described conventional key-removable lock cores, an operating key aligns the tumblers for shear at the operating shear line to allow the key plug to be rotated, while a separate control key aligns the tumblers for shear at the control shear line, to allow the sleeve and the key plug together to be rotated to move the retaining lug on the sleeve between a retracted position within the figure-8 profile of the core and a projected position in which the lug is engaged behind a rearward-facing shoulder in the core receptacle to retain the core in the receptacle.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,958,759, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety, discloses a key-removable lock core that employs an inserted programming key and a control tooling that when inserted into a control slot, biases auxiliary ball pins partially from with control pin bores and partially into an associated operating pin bore to raise operating pins to a shear line, permitting a sleeve to pivot out of engagement with the core receptacle, and the removal of the lock core from the core receptacle. Despite the improvement in removing plug cores with a programming key and a control tool, there remains a need for a key-operable tumbler lock with improved function and security.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,802,455, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety, describes a key-operated programmable cylinder lock for use with a plurality of user keys without disassembling the lock or replacing the tumblers, with reduction or elimination of incidental or accidental re-configuring of the lock. The lock uses lock configuration change balls that move between the driver chamber and a retainer cavity in the plug to reconfigure the lock for operation with different user keys.
The present invention provides a key plug assembly for a key-operated lock, the key plug assembly comprising: 1) a key plug rotatable between a key insertion position and a control position, having a cylindrical periphery and a longitudinally-arranged keyway, a plurality of radially-arranged tumbler bores that extend from the keyway to the periphery, and an axially arranged groove formed into the periphery of the plug and displaced tangentially from the plurality of tumbler bores, the groove having, in cross-section, a radially-outermost carriage groove, a radially intermediate curved trough extending radially inwardly from the carriage groove, and a tool slot formed radially inwardly from the curved trough; 2) a carriage disposed and moveable axially within the carriage groove between a first and second position, having an outer surface proximate the cylindrical periphery of the key plug, and having a plurality of retainer bores that align tangentially with the plurality of tumbler bores when the carriage is in the second position; and 3) a tooling comprising a blade configured for insertion within the tool slot to intersect at least a portion of the curved trough.
The invention also provides a key-removable lock core comprising: a) a sleeve comprising a lower cylindrical barrel portion having a longitudinally arranged tubular bore, an upper extension having a plurality of spaced-apart radially-arranged operating pin bores, and a securing lug extending from the sleeve; b) a housing having (i) a lower body portion having a longitudinally-arranged tubular bore for receiving the barrel portion of the sleeve, (ii) an upper body portion having a longitudinally-arranged retaining chamber for receiving the upper extension and securing lug of the sleeve, and a plurality of radially-arranged control pin bores extending to the tubular bore to define a control shear line, and (iii) a securing slot to accommodate tangential movement there through of the securing lug; c) a key plug within the tubular bore of the sleeve, rotatable between a key insertion position and a control position, and having a cylindrical periphery, a longitudinally-arranged keyway, a plurality of radially-arranged tumbler bores that extend from the keyway to the periphery, to define an operating shear line, the key plug further having an axially arranged groove formed into the periphery of the plug and displaced radially from the plurality of tumbler bores, the groove having, in cross-section, a radially-outermost carriage groove, a radially intermediate curved trough extending radially inwardly from the carriage trough, and a tool slot formed radially inwardly from the curved trough; d) a plurality of tumbler pins disposed for axial movement within the plurality of tumbler bores; e) a plurality of operating pins disposed for axial movement within the plurality of operating pin bores; f) a plurality of control pins disposed for axial movement within the plurality of control pin bores; g) a carriage disposed and moveable axially within the carriage groove between a first and second position, having an outer surface proximate the cylindrical periphery of the key plug, and having a plurality of retainer bores that register with the operating pin bores of the sleeve when the carriage is in the second position and the key plug is disposed in the control position; h) at least one change ball disposed in at least one of the retainer bores of the carriage and at least partially within the curved trough; and j) a tooling comprising a blade configured for manipulation within the tool slot to intersect at least a portion of the curved trough, for biasing the at least one change ball at least partially out of the curved trough and at least partially into an associated operating pin bore in the sleeve when the key plug is disposed in the control position.
The tooling can comprise a control tooling that is separate from the key plug, wherein the blade of the inserted control tooling raises the at least one change ball only partially out through an outer opening the retainer bore, where the center of the partially-raised change ball remains within the periphery of the key plug.
The tooling can also comprise a change tooling that is separate from the key plug, wherein the blade of the inserted change tooling raises the at least one change ball substantially out through an outer opening the retainer bore, where at least the center of the partially-raised change ball is displaced outside the periphery of the key plug.
The invention also provides a programmable cylinder lock for operating a bolt or a latch, that can be reconfigured to operate with a user key selected from a set of keys, without disassembling the lock or replacing the tumblers, including: a) a set of keys comprising a plurality of user keys; b) a housing having a cylindrical bore with an inner surface and a plurality of driver bores intersecting the inner surface; c) a plurality of drivers, each driver being movable within one of the plurality of driver bores, and having a means for urged each driver toward the inner surface; d) a plug having a cylindrical periphery and rotatably mounted within the bore to form a shear surface at the interface with the inner surface, the plug being rotatable from a key insertion position to an operating position, and to a programming position, the plug having: (i) a keyway configured to receive a key selected from the set of keys, (ii) a plurality of tumbler bores intersecting the plug periphery and the keyway, each tumbler bore being aligned with a corresponding one of the plurality of driver bores when the plug is at the key insertion position to form a pin chamber, and (iii) an axially-oriented groove in the periphery of the plug, displaced tangentially from the plurality of tumbler bores, the groove having, in cross-section, a radially-outermost carriage groove, a radially intermediate curved trough extending radially inwardly from the carriage groove, and a tool slot extending radially inwardly from the curved trough; e) a plurality of tumblers, each tumbler being movable within a corresponding one of the plurality of tumbler bores; f) a carriage disposed and moveable axially within the carriage groove between a first and second position, having an outer surface proximate the cylindrical periphery of the key plug, and having a plurality of radially-formed retainer bores that register with the operating pin bores of the sleeve with the carriage in the second axial position and the key plug is disposed in the control position; g) at least one lock configuration change ball, movable within the lock between at least a second position within the corresponding retainer bore, and a first position within the corresponding driver bore; and h) a change tooling comprising a blade configured for manipulation within the tool slot, to intersect the curved trough, for biasing the at least one change ball at least partially out of the curved trough, and substantially out through an outer opening of the retainer bore, wherein at least the center of the partially-raised change ball is displaced outside the periphery of the key plug when the key plug is disposed in the programming position.
An aspect of the invention includes the plug assembly further comprising at least one change ball that is disposed within a retainer bore and within the curved trough, and can be moved outward radially from the retainer bore and the curved trough when the change tooling is inserted into the tool slot and intersects at least a portion of the curved trough.
Another aspect of the invention includes the carriage further having an axially-arranged change tooling slot along a bottom surface of the carriage, that intersects a lower portion of the plurality of retainer bores, and into which the change tooling is inserted for intersecting at least a portion of the plurality of retainer bores.
A further aspect of the invention includes the carriage having a front end portion that extends through a front face of the key plug when the carriage is in the first position, and a spring means for biasing the carriage toward the first position. The front end portion of the carriage can be manually depressed to move the carriage from the biased first position to the second position so that the carriage bores align with driver bores or operating pin bores of the key-operated lock.
The lock of the invention is functional to change the position of the lock configuration change ball in the lock without disassembling the lock or replacing the tumblers, with reduction or elimination of incidental or accidental re-configuring of the lock.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with a general description of the invention given above, and the detailed description of the embodiments given below, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
As used herein, the phrase “disassembly of the lock” means the removal of the plug from the bore of the housing and removal of the tumbler pins from the tumbler bores of the plug, or the removal of an access panel in the housing and removal of the driver pins and tumbler pins.
As used herein, the term “isolating” means the temporary separation of a pin within one chamber or cavity of the lock from another chamber or pin.
As used herein, the term “integral” means a part or element of a lock that is formed as a unit with the other parts or elements of the lock assembly, which cannot be separated from the other parts or elements of the lock assembly without disassembly of the lock, and in particular disassembly of the plug from the housing.
Key Plug and Carriage Assembly
The present invention provides a key plug assembly that can be employed in a key-operating lock. The key plug assembly includes a cylindrical key plug for rotation within tubular bore of a member of the lock, such as a lock sleeve or housing, between various positions, including a key insertion position and a control position. The key plug has a cylindrical periphery, a longitudinally-arranged keyway, a plurality of radially-arranged tumbler bores that extend from the keyway to the periphery, to define an operating shear line. The key plug also has an axially arranged groove formed into the periphery of the plug. The groove retains a carriage having a plurality of retainer bores within which lock configuration change balls can be disposed during operation of the lock.
In the illustrated embodiment, the key plug 10 has a plurality of cavities disposed in the periphery 12 to accommodate lock configuration change members, illustrated as change balls 15. The lock configuration change members may be other shapes, such as a barrel shape. Any number of cavities and change members can be provided. The cavity is defined within a retainer bore 85 formed into a carriage 84, which is disposed within a groove 80 formed into the periphery of the plug.
As shown in
The axially-arranged curved trough 82 extends radially and inwardly at the center of the carriage groove 81, in a semi-circular shape, and extends axially from (not through) the front flange 16 to and through the rear of the key plug 10. The cross sectional shape of the curved trough 82 accommodates the rolling movement of the change balls 15 when disposed within the carriage bores 85, as shown in
An axially-arranged tool slot 83 extends radially and inwardly at the center of the curved trough 82, and extends axially through the front flange 16 (
The groove 80 can be formed into the key plug 10 by any one or combination of well known machining techniques.
The carriage 84 has a substantially rectangular cross sectional shape with a curved upper surface that lies proximate, and typically flush, with the key plug periphery 12 (
As seen in
The carriage 84 also has an axially-arranged change tooling slot 87 along the bottom surface, typically centered, that intersects the lower portions of the plurality of retainer bores 85 (
The rear end 89 of the carriage 84 includes a cavity 88 (
In an embodiment of the invention wherein the key plug 10 has been rotated to a position where the retainer bores 85 are aligned with driver bores of the lock housing, described herein later (and illustrated in
In one embodiment of the invention, as shown in
In another embodiment of the invention, as shown in
It can be appreciated that for locks which can accommodate access to the plug from the rear of the lock, that the tooling slot(s) can extend through the rear face of the key plug 10.
In an alternative embodiment of a key plug assembly shown in
In another alternative embodiment of a key plug assembly shown in
The key plug assembly described herein above can find use in a wide variety of key-operated locks employing one or more retainer cavities and one or more change members associated therewith whose positioning within the retainer cavity can affect the lock configuration to operate with one of a set of user keys or with lock operation and function, including those locks described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,533,550, 7,290,418, 7,905,125, 7,958,759, and 7,802,455, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Key-Removable Lock Core
A first embodiment of a key-removable lock core assembly of the present invention is shown in
Like reference numerals designate like elements throughout the several views.
A retainer bore 85 and its associated auxiliary control pin 15a are associated with pin chamber “a”, which is the first chamber inboard from the front end of the key-removable lock core 8. Likewise, pin chamber “b” would be the second pin chamber inboard from the front end, etc.
The key-removable lock core comprises a sleeve 20 comprising a lower cylindrical barrel portion 22 having a longitudinally arranged tubular bore 21 centered on centerline 100 for receiving the key plug 10, and comprising on its upper side an extension 24 having a plurality of operating pin bores 23 extending radially from and spaced apart along the centerline 100. The sleeve 20 has a securing lug 27 extending radially from a rear portion of the sleeve 20, and integrally and tangentially from the sleeve extension 24, to define a securing lug profile in cross section. The securing lug 27 has a forward-facing lug face 26 that defines a recess 29 forward of the securing lug 27. The key plug assembly is secured rotatably within the sleeve 20 with end plate 40 using screws. A latch plate 97 includes posts 98 that extend through the end plate 40 and into the key plug 10, for rotating the key plug 10 within the sleeve 20. The rear of the latch plate 97 extends through an opening in the back of the core receipt cal 4, and is held rotatably to the back of the core receptacle 4 with a lock spring 99.
The key-removable lock core also comprises a housing 30 having a lower barrel portion 34 having a longitudinally arranged tubular bore 31 centered on centerline 100 for receiving the barrel portion 22 of the sleeve 20, and an upper portion 35, also shown as having a cylindrical shaft, having a plurality of control pin bores 33 extending radially from and spaced apart along the centerline 100, and that register with the operating pins bores 23 when assembled. Thus, the control pins bores 33 align with the corresponding operating pin bores 23 of the sleeve 20, with their respective centerlines passing through the centerline axis 100 of the tubular bore 31. The upper portion 35 also has a longitudinally-arranged retaining chamber 39 for receiving and accommodating tangential movement of the securing lug 27, as the sleeve 20 rotates relative to the housing 30. A portion of the housing 30 is removed proximate a rearward portion of the interface of the lower barrel portion 34 and the upper barrel portion 35 to form a securing slot 37 having a rearward-facing securing shoulder 36.
The sleeve 20 and housing 30 cooperate for partial rotational movement of the sleeve within the housing around centerline 100, between a first position and a second position. In the first or retained position, shown in
Associated with the pin chambers are a plurality of tumbler pins 41. The tumbler pin 41 is generally the same cross section as the tumbler bore 13, typically circular, and is sized to almost the diameter or cross-sectional dimension of the tumbler bore to allow essentially frictionless axial movement within the tumbler bore. Though not clearly illustrated but as well known in the art, the tumbler bore 13 has a chamfer within the keyway 11 which prevents the tumblers 41 from dropping completely down into the keyway 11.
Also associated with the pin chambers are a plurality of operating pins 51. The operating pin 51 is generally the same cross section as the operating pin bore 23, typically circular, and is sized to almost the diameter or cross-sectional dimension of the operating pin bore to allow essentially frictionless axial movement within the operating pin bore. The lower face or surface of the operating pin 51 interfaces with the upper face or surface of the tumbler pin 41, which two faces can be separated tangentially when the interface is positioned at the operating shear line 45 formed between the outer periphery 12 of the cylindrical key plug 10 and the inner cylindrical surface of the sleeve bore 21.
Additionally associated with the pin chambers are a plurality of control pins 61. The control pin 61 is generally the same cross section as the control pin bore 33, and is typically circular, and is sized to almost the diameter or cross-sectional dimension of the control pin bore to allow essentially frictionless axial movement within the control pin bore. The lower face or surface of the control pin 61 interfaces with the upper face or surface of the operating pin 51, which two faces can be separated tangentially when the interface is positioned at the control shear line 55 formed between the top surface of the sleeve extension 24 of the sleeve 20 and the upper, inner surface of the retaining chamber 39 of the housing 30. The shear line 55 is shown in
A disc plug 69 is friction forced into the top opening of the control pin bore 33 to retain a biasing member shown as biasing spring 68, which biases the tumbler 41, control pin 61 and operating pin 51 within the pin chamber toward the keyway 11.
Operation of the key-removable lock core is illustrated in
In
In
As previously described, manipulation of the control tooling 91 within the tool slot 83 raises the change ball 15 only partially within the retainer bore 85, and raises the associated tumbler pin 41, operating pin 51 and control pin 61 by the control height amount above the shear line 45. As shown in
A second key-removable lock core assembly, having a different arrangement of tumblers, can be inserted into the core receptacle 4 in place of the removed key-removable lock core assembly 8.
Various alternative embodiments of the present invention can be made without departing from the essential features of the invention.
In an alternative embodiment, the securing lug can be disposed on the forward portion of the sleeve, or along the entire length of the sleeve, provided that the core receptacle has a forwardly disposed shoulder or member that blocks axial forward movement of the securing lug in its projected position.
In another alternative embodiment of the present invention, the carriage 84 and can be disposed on the opposed side of the keyway 11 of the key plug 10, whereby rotation of the plug to the first and second positions from the key insertion position is in the counter-clockwise direction.
In a further alternative embodiment, master pins and a master keying system can be used with the key-removable lock core, as is well known in the lock field, by placing master shims or pins between each of the tumbler pins 41 and operating pins 51.
Core Removable with Key Changing
Another embodiment of the invention provides a means and method for reprogramming the key-removable lock core described herein, with one of a plurality of user keys without disassembling the lock or exchanging or re-pinning the tumbler pins, with elimination or reduction of incidental or accidental re-keying of the lock. This embodiment is illustrated in
The key-removable lock core shown in
Therefore, to program the lock to operate with any user key is a set of user keys, the all of the change balls should be moved out of the retainer cavities and into the respective pin chambers, so that the next desired user key can be used to set the lock configuration for that key. This configuration of the lock is called the “null” configuration. To illustrate, user key 140 disposed in the lock shown in
In an alternative means for setting a lock that is configured for operation with any user key, to the null configuration, the programming key 120 (labeled “P”) can be used to set the lock into “programming” mode, as shown in
A first user key 130 (labeled 1) is then inserted into the keyway of the null-configured lock to raise change balls 15 in pin chambers “a”, “d” and “f” above the operating shear line 45, due to the corresponding raised contour positions 144a. 144d, and 144f of the user key 130 (
In similar fashions, the lock can be configured for operation with other user keys having different arrangements and numbers of raised contour positions for moving change balls from the pin chamber to the retainer cavities.
Key-Operated Changeable Lock
The present invention therefore relates to a key-operated, programmable lock that can operate the lock with any one of a plurality of user keys, and is programmable with a programming key to reconfigure the lock to operate with another one of the plurality of user keys, without disassembling the lock.
The programmable lock is substantially described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,802,455, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety. The embodiment includes an improved means for retaining the change members within the plug from where they can be moved to and from the pin chambers. Briefly,
The plug 10 is substantially as described herein previously. A latch plate 97 is secured to the rear end of the plug 10, and extends from the rear end of the housing 20. When the tumbler bores 13 of the plug 10 are axially aligned with the driver bores 223 of the stack portion 224, the plug 10 is in a first rotated position with respect to the housing 220.
An operating shear line is established at the periphery of the plug 10. A key inserted into the plug will operate (turn) the plug within the housing if the pin hardware within a pin chamber (tumblers, drivers, and any change ball within the pin chamber) can separate at the shear line. As described hereinabove, a user key having one or more lower contour positions can operate the lock if there is a change ball within the pin chamber (tumbler bore with the key removed) above the tumbler pin, to raise the driver pin to the operating shear line.
The carriage 84 moveable within the groove 80, and the change tooling 92 insertable within the tool slot 83 of the plug and the change tooling slot 87 of the carriage can raise any one or more change balls, disposed within the retainer bores, outward radially to a position out of their respective retainer bores and into the driver bores 223. As described herein and shown in
The embodiments of a key-removable lock core and a key-operated, programmable lock can be used in a variety of locking devices. These locking devices include both commercial and residential locks, and include by example, knob locks, deadbolt locks, and even padlocks.
While the invention has been disclosed by reference to the details of preferred embodiments of the invention, it is to be understood that the disclosure is intended in an illustrative rather than in a limiting sense, as it is contemplated that modifications will readily occur to those skilled in the art, within the spirit of the invention and the scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application 61/674,480, filed Jul. 23, 2012, and is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/841,876, filed Mar. 15, 2013 (now U.S. Pat. No. 8,794,042 that issued on Aug. 5, 2014), the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference in their entireties.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140331726 A1 | Nov 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61674480 | Jul 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13841876 | Mar 2013 | US |
Child | 14446406 | US |