The invention relates to a locking cylinder having pin tumblers, in which a basic code can be changed using at least one change key, having a cylinder housing in which a rotor is mounted which has a keyway into which a shank of a standard key which is provided with control surfaces can be pushed in order to position the tumblers which are arranged in three first rows, and having further tumblers which have coding elements and which are arranged in further bores in the cylinder housing in a programming position of the rotor.
Numerous embodiments of locking cylinders having pin tumblers whose locking arrangement can be changed are already known. For example, EP 0250701 presents a cylinder lock in which at least one pin tumbler has what is known as a combination plate. This combination plate can be accommodated by a recess in the core and thus be removed from the region of the pin tumbler. The locking arrangement of this locking cylinder can be changed without replacing and even without dismantling the lock. This is necessary, for example, when a key is lost.
EP 0918124 A likewise discloses a locking cylinder in which a basic code can be changed. For this purpose, a key has a recess which can accommodate an auxiliary tumbler, and therefore this auxiliary tumbler can be removed or reinserted. Rekeying of this cylinder is comparatively complex and requires an expert.
GB 2154652 A discloses a locking cylinder which has coding disks for collecting locking elements in a separate bore and a separate core. These coding disks can be stored away. The locking cylinder has a plurality of shear lines and can therefore be produced only with a comparatively large outside diameter.
The invention is based on the object of providing a locking cylinder of the abovementioned type which ensures a considerably higher locking reliability.
In the case of a generic locking cylinder, the invention is achieved in that the change key interacts with three further rows of tumblers in the programming position, these tumblers being arranged in slides, and these further rows each contain tumblers having coding elements. In the locking cylinder according to the invention, the rekeying can be performed simultaneously in three rows or three bore lines. The rekeying positions, and thus the tumblers having coding elements, can therefore be arranged over three planes and thus over significantly more bores. The rekeying options are significantly increased in this way. This results in significantly higher reliability. The higher reliability is produced in particular by the rekeying positions or the coding positions being reliably disguised. It is therefore impossible to determine the location of the coding positions on the key. On account of the many rekeying options, the owner of the locking cylinder may rekey or program it back and forth several times, for example 10 or 20 times. Key sets which have been used can be archived and reused after a certain period of time. The fact that a small outside diameter and also particularly simple installation are possible as a result of the further rows being arranged in slides is also significant.
According to one development of the invention, provision is made for the cylinder housing to have recesses into each of which a slide is inserted which accommodates housing pins of the pin tumblers. These slides can be produced and fitted with the housing pins before being inserted into the abovementioned recesses. The rotor fitted with the tumbler pins can be installed in the cylinder housing when the slides are inserted, so that the locking cylinder is already functional after the slides are pushed into the housing. This development additionally has the significant advantage that the locking cylinder can be implemented with a customary outside diameter of 17 mm.
One development of the invention provides for the further rows to be arranged asymmetrically with respect to a central plane of the locking cylinder. In this way, it is possible to produce a left-sided version and a right-sided version. This has the significant advantage that central systems can be constructed. In the case of an apartment block, the front door, for example, is then equipped with a left-sided locking cylinder. The apartment doors are then each equipped with a right-sided locking cylinder.
One development of the invention provides for at least one of the three further rows to have a fixed pin position. This pin position is preferably the rearmost position. A standard key can therefore not be used for programming purposes. A special change key or programming key is necessary for programming purposes, this key having a notch into and out of which the radially immobile pin can move. A standard key without this notch cannot be pushed into the keyway as far as the key stop in the programming position. All normal keys are therefore blocked in the programming position.
According to one development of the invention, the locking cylinder is a double locking cylinder. The two cylinder housings are preferably produced separately and connected to a web. The division into two cylinder halves permits particularly simple installation, during which the abovementioned slides are inserted into the recesses in the cylinder halves.
The invention also relates to a change key for a locking cylinder according to claim 14. In this case, provision is made for the change key to have at least one notch, which is open at the front, at the front end of the shank. This notch makes it possible to use the key in the programming position in which at least one pin is fixed.
Embodiments having two notches which are arranged to be rotationally symmetrical or four notches which are arranged symmetrically are of course also possible. Two or four fixed pins are correspondingly present in the locking cylinder.
Further advantageous features can be found in the dependent patent claims, the following description and the drawings.
One exemplary embodiment of the invention is explained in greater detail in the text which follows with reference to the drawing, in which;
a-11c show three exemplary embodiments of programming keys according to the invention,
a-12c front views of the keys according to
a-13c show longitudinal sections through fitted slides,
The locking cylinder 1 shown in
The rotor 3 has a keyway 4 for receiving a standard key or a change key 17. The change key 17 or programming key is preferably what is known as a turning key or flat key which, according to
The cylinder housing 2a has six recesses 7 which extend in longitudinal directions of the keyway 4 and which each accommodate a slide 6. According to
The slides 6 having the springs 11, the housing pins 12 and possibly the coding elements 13 form tumbler rows A to F. The tumbler rows A, B and C interact with the standard key. In contrast, the tumbler rows D, E and F serve merely to rekey or program the locking arrangements. As can be seen, the tumbler rows A, B and C according to
The rotor 3 is provided with three bore rows H, I and K, the first bore row H having core pins 14, the second bore row I having core pins 15 and the third bore row K having core pins 16. These pins 14, 15 and 16 generally have different lengths, even within one bore row. Core pins such as these are well known per se.
The rekeying of a locking arrangement using a change key 17 is explained in greater detail below with reference to FIGS. 1 to 4.
Two coding elements 13 of the tumbler row F are moved outward across the shear line 5 into the corresponding slide. One coding element 13 is located in the bore row H. Furthermore, the two coding elements 13 are located in the bore row I.
The rotor 3 is next turned through 45° by turning the change key 17 in the counterclockwise direction. As a result, the coding elements 13 in the rotor 3 are also turned through 45° in the counterclockwise direction. These coding elements therefore change position. The change key 17 is then withdrawn. The tumblers are then moved radially inward by the action of the springs 11 until the tips of the core pins 14, 15 and 16 touch. The rotor 3 is blocked as a result. This naturally applies simultaneously not only for three tumblers but for each of three rows of tumblers. The rekeying of the locking arrangement is thus concluded. As can be seen, rekeying such as this is extremely simple and can be performed very quickly by anyone in a few seconds.
FIGS. 5 to 7 show rekeying using a change key 17′, where
The arrangement according to
As shown in
a, 13b and 13c respectively show longitudinal sections through the fitted slides 6, 6′ and 6″ of the tumbler rows D, E and F. As can be seen, each slide 6, 6′ and 6″ has a plurality of coding positions P which each have at least one coding disk 13. These coding positions P and the bore patterns can be varied in many ways. It is also possible to turn the slide 6 through 180°, so that another arrangement is produced. The slides 61 and 6″ thus correspond to the slide 6, but are merely turned through 180°. The slides 6, 6′ and 6″ can be fitted outside the cylinder and form inserts 24, 25 and 26 which can be automatically installed. In the case of the insert 26, the abovementioned fixed pin position is formed by a pin 28 which is inserted into a corresponding bore in the slide 6″.
A fixed core pin 31 correspondingly bears against the pin 28. The inserts 24, 25 and 26 can also be interchanged, so that other locking arrangements are produced in turn. The coding positions P can therefore be varied in three planes and thus over a large number of different bores. This significantly increases the rekeying options and thus reliability. The coding positions P are therefore completely disguised and cannot be identified.
The cylinder housing 2a may be in the form of the version according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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01009/04 | Jun 2004 | CH | national |