The present invention relates to locking mechanisms operable to facilitate securing a door or other entry point, such as but not necessary limited to locking mechanisms having capabilities to facilitate securing the door against prying, wedging and related techniques intended to compromise secure by physically separating the door from a door frame or other support structure.
One non-limiting aspect of the present invention contemplates a locking mechanism of the type sufficient to facilitate thwarting security breaches using a wedge or other prying mechanisms intended to separate locking bolts or other security elements from sidewalls or other retaining features of the safe or entry point.
As required, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale; some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention.
The safe 40 may be considered as a secure storage apparatus configured to facilitate safekeeping of deposits, such as but not necessarily limited to deposits in the form of coins, paper currency, bills, documents, letters, boxes or other items that may be electro-mechanically delivered through an exterior input 48 for safekeeping within an interior storage location. The safe 40 is described with respect to including a pull-out control panel or human-machine interface (HMI) 50, a display and/or card reader 52 and a sorter or a bill validator 54 operable to receive and process paper currency for safekeeping, such as in the manner described in U.S. Ser. No. 14/532,145, entitled Note Verify, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety herein, however other similar configurations may be used without deviating from the scope and contemplation of the present invention (e.g., vending machines, automated teller machines (ATMs), video game machines, etc.). The HMI 50 may include a network interface (not shown) sufficient to facilitate remote control and networking of the safe 40 and the safe 40 may be enclosed in a sleeve (not shown), such as in the manner described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/648,503, entitled Mobile Validating System, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety, and the applications and patents noted above.
The safe 40 is shown to be generally rectangular for exemplary non-limiting purposes as the present invention fully contemplates securing access through the door 44 or other entry point for devices having other shapes and configurations. The safe 40 may include a door frame 70 or other structure for defining an opening to the secure storage area 64 within which the door 44 is operable between the opened position (see
The locking mechanism 42 may be include a structure 88 for enclosing the associated components as an essentially modular component attachable to a rearward side 90 of the door, e.g., the structure 88 may be attached with fasteners or suitable welds to the rearward side 90 of the door 44 with an opening being included through a front side of the door to facilitate interaction with the door handle 72. The structure 88 may include a plate (not shown) to enclose, cover or seal the access to the locking mechanism components such that the illustrated locking mechanism components on the rearward side 90 of the door 44 would be unseen and inaccessible when the door 40 is in the opened position. The locking mechanism components may include the first and second cams 60, 62, the handle 72, a linkage 94, a lock 96 and/or an auto-detent mechanism 98 and/or other features suitably operable in accordance with the present invention to facilitate securing the door 44 against the noted prying or wedging actions and/or against other security threats. The contemplated locking mechanism 42 is believed to be particular beneficial in this regard due to the first and second cams 60, 62 providing multiple points of engagement with the door frame 70 and/or other structure of the safe 40 that would be difficult or impossible to overcome through prying or wedging. When moving from the disengaged position (see
The raised portion 108 of the door sill 76 may be offset from the front face 106 so as to overlap part of the door 44 when the door 44 is in the closed position and to cooperate with the door frame 70 to define structural features utilized for securing the door 44. One non-limiting aspect of the present invention contemplates utilizing hooks 110, 112 included on the first and second cams 60, 62 and a foot 114 included on the second cam 62 to provide engagement mechanisms sufficient for securing the door 44 relative to the door sill 76 and the door jamb 78. The locking mechanism structure 88 may include apertures 118, 120 to permit the first and second cams 60, 62 to rotate therethrough in order to facilitate positioning the hooks 110, 112 and the foot 114 relative to the door sill 76 and the door jamb 78. The hooks 60, 62 may be shaped to grab onto or otherwise be retained against a backside of the door jamb 78 within recesses 122, 124 included in the door jamb 78 to thwart lateral forces attempting to pull the door jamb 78 away from the door 44 via a wedge driven into a seam therebetween. The foot 114 may be shaped to be positioned behind a top surface/perimeter of the raised portion 108 of the door sill 76 to provide a stop against the door 44 opening that is inaccessible to a wedge due to the raised portion 108 being overlapped by a bottom of the door 44, i.e., the overlapping raised portion 108 provides no exterior accessible seam to the foot 114.
The engagements 110, 112, 114 between the first and second cams 60, 62 and the door jamb 78 and the door sill 76 are referenced for exemplary purposes as similar engagements may be made with other features of the safe 40, e.g., the door jamb recesses 122, 124 and the raised portion 108 of the sill 76 may be included as part of the safe housing 46 and/or other structural elements may be included in the safe 40 to facilitate similar engagements, such as including recesses, latches or other reliefs in the safe 40 into which the cams 60, 62 may be engaged via the illustrated rotation or other non-rotary movement, i.e., the cams 60, 62 may be lifted or slid into and out of the illustrated engagements instead of the illustrated rotary movement. The rotation of the cams 60, 62 between the engaged and disengaged positions is believed to be particularly beneficial in ameliorating the amount space necessary to achieve the movement needed to ensure the multiple points of engagement as sliding, lifting or other motion of the cams 60, 62 into similar positions may require a larger footprint for the locking mechanism structure 88, which in comparison to the illustrated design may require a greater differential between the size of the door 88 and the size of the opening to the secure storage area 64 in order to accommodate the greater range of motion necessary to support additional, non-rotary movements.
The movement of first and second cams 60, 62 may be facilitated with first and second channels 122, 124 included therein and shaped to guide rotation relative to a corresponding bolt/guide 126, 128 fixed to the door 44 and/or the locking mechanism structure 88. A spring 130 may be connected between the handle bracket 116 and the pin 118 to facilitate automatically moving the locking mechanism 42 from the disengaged position to the engaged position. The spring 130 may be a torsion spring or other rotatably or non-rotatable spring operable with the handle bracket 116 and the pin 118 to force the linkage 94 from the disengaged position to the engaged position when the cams 60, 62 and the handle 72 are free to move. The auto-detent mechanism 98 may be configured to retain the locking mechanism 42 in the disengaged position against the forces generated with the spring 130 by positioning a pin 134 within a notch 136 included within the first channel 122. As shown in
Once the door 44 is closed and the push rod 138 disengages the notch 136 or the pin 134 is otherwise removed from the notch 136, the spring 130 may automatically transition the locking mechanism 42 from the disengaged position to the engaged position absent a contrary force being applied to the handle 72. Assuming no contrary force is applied to the handle 72, the handle 72 may rotate back to a generally vertical position and the cams 60, 62 may rotate into the engaged position shown in
The present invention is predominately described with respect to the locking mechanism 42 being employed with the above-described safe 40 whereby it is assumed that the handle 72 does not include a key lock and that the safe 40 does not include a lock accessible from an exterior of the safe 40. While the present invention fully contemplates its use and application with a safe having a door lock or a lock accessible from an exterior, it is predominately described with respect to including the lock 96 as part of the locking mechanism (see
The first cam 60 may include a ledge 144 shaped to engage the bolt 142 when in the engaged position while the lock 96 is in the locked position so as to prevent the linkage 94 from moving in response to rotation of the handle 72 or other attempt to actuate the locking mechanism 42 from the engaged position to the disengaged position. The bolt 142 may thereafter be actuated to the unlocked position and swung into the retracted position in response to subsequent rotation of the handle rotation 72, i.e., to permit the locking mechanism 42 to be actuated to the disengaged position after authorization has been provided to unlock the lock 96. The lock 96 may be angled in the illustrated manner to orientate a flat side of the bolt 142 in parallel with the ledge 144 to facilitate exchanging forces therebetween sufficient for swinging the bolt 142 from the extended position to the retracted position. As the rotation of the first cam 60 continues toward the disengaged position, the ledge 144 may slide along the flat side of the bolt 142 until traveling past a tip of the bolt 142 whereupon a rear 146 of the first cam 60 continues traveling past the bolt 142 until continued rotation is arrested with the auto-detent mechanism 98 engaging the notch 136. The first cam 60 may thereafter be returned to the engaged position in the above-described manner whereby movement of the spring 130 or handle 72 causes the ledge 144 to once again pass the bolt 142 whereafter a spring or other biasing member (not shown) of the lock 96 automatically re-engages the extended/locked position to retain the locking mechanism 42.
The rear 146 of the first cam 60 is shown to be arcuate from the ledge 144 to the hook 110 with a front 148 extending therebetween is flatter. A portion 150 of the front 148 proximate a relief 152 may be angled relative to a portion of the remainder of the front 148 proximate the ledge 144 so as to provide clearance for the first recess 122 when the first cam 60 rotates therethrough. The second cam 62 may be similarly shaped as the first cam 60 insofar as including an arcuate portion 158 and multiple, flatter portions 160, 162 with an angled portion 164 proximate a relief 168 to similarly provide clearance for the second recess 124 when the second cam 62 rotates therethrough. As shown in
The shaping of the first and second cams 60, 62, the length/difference in the radii of the arcuate/curved portions, the positioning of the pivots 102, 104, the linkage 94, connections pivots 166, 168 to the linkage 94, etc. may be designed in the described manner to permit the locking mechanism 42 to enable the contemplated rotational movement between the engaged and disengaged position in response to corresponding movements of the linkage 94 and handle 72. One non-limiting aspect of the present invention particularly contemplates selecting the geometries of the first and second cams 60, 62 in the illustrated proportions to permit movement of the locking mechanism 42 within a minimal footprint and such that essentially no more than the hooks 110, 112 and the foot 114 extend beyond the locking mechanism support structure 88 when in the engaged position and an entirety of those portions extending beyond the locking mechanism support structure 88 are fully retractable within the locking mechanism support structure 88 once returned to the disengaged position, i.e., hidden from view. The capability to minimally expose the locking/engagement elements of the locking mechanism 42, e.g., the hooks and foot 110, one 112, 114, is believed to be particularly beneficial in thwarting adjustments or other manipulation of the locking mechanism 42 when the door 44 is in the opened position.
As described above, one non-limiting aspect of the present invention contemplates a locking mechanism including cams articulable to provide a clever levering action whereby multiple points of engagement are provided to secure the door or other entry point against prying, wedging and related techniques intended to compromise secure by physically separating the door from a door frame or other support structure. The ability to thwart prying, wedging or other security attacks is believed to be maximized with the use of the use of two-cam locking mechanism described above, however, the present invention fully contemplates its use and application with more or less cams. A single-cam locking mechanism may be employed to enable the first hook or the second hook to provide a singular point of engagement with the door jamb or other safe structure, e.g., the first cam could be utilized without the second cam when use of the foot is unnecessary and the second cam can be utilized without the first cam, optionally with adjustment of the lock to interact the second cam, when the two-points of engagement provided with the second cam are sufficient. A multi-cam locking mechanism may also be employed whereby more than two cams are utilized, such as by including a mirrored arrangement on an opposite side of the door whereby left and right side door jamb are engaged in the manner described above.
While exemplary embodiments are described above, it is not intended that these embodiments describe all possible forms of the invention. Rather, the words used in the specification are words of description rather than limitation, and it is understood that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Additionally, the features of various implementing embodiments may be combined to form further embodiments of the invention.
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