The present invention relates to a locking system having a lock cylinder and a key; to a key for use in such a locking system; and to a key blank for manufacturing such a key.
A locking system can comprise a lock cylinder and a key. The lock cylinder can have a cylinder housing, a cylinder core rotatably supported in the cylinder housing and having a keyway, and a plurality of tumblers which partly project into the keyway of the cylinder core. The key can have a key bow (also called a key head) and a key shaft which extends, starting from the key bow, along a key axis in a key introduction direction and which has a shaft profile to act on the tumblers of the lock cylinder. Such a locking system can in particular comprise a plurality of keys and/or a plurality of lock cylinders, wherein provision can be made, on the one hand, that a respective key is suitable to open a plurality of different lock cylinders and wherein provision can be made, on the other hand, that a plurality of different keys can be suitable to open the same lock cylinder.
So that a respective key can open a respective lock cylinder, the key must first be configured with such an exact fit to the keyway of the cylinder core that at least an introduction region of its key shaft can be introduced into the keyway. The rotation of the cylinder core in the cylinder housing for opening the lock cylinder is, however, initially prevented by the tumblers which are as a rule preloaded into a position blocking the cylinder core with respect to the cylinder housing. Only when the shaft profile of the key acts on the tumblers and thus displaces them into a releasing position can the cylinder core be rotated in the cylinder housing so that the lock cylinder can be opened.
In this respect, the dimension by which a respective tumbler has to be displaced to achieve the releasing position can vary from tumbler to tumbler. For this purpose, different tumblers which differ, for example, in their lengths or in the size of a cut-out or in another manner and thus have respective different release positions can be inserted into the tumbler receivers which are provided in the cylinder core and in the cylinder housing. In this manner, different lock cylinders can be encoded differently with an otherwise like configuration by the fitting with different combinations of different tumblers.
Whether a respective key is suitable to open a lock cylinder then depends on whether the shaft profile has a suitable configuration to act on the tumblers of the lock cylinder exactly such that all the tumblers are displaced into a respective release position. The key can thus be encoded for one lock cylinder (or also for a plurality of lock cylinders) by the specific configuration of the shaft profile. The so-called secret code is therefore encoded in the shaft profile of the key in such keys.
The shaft profile alone is, however, not sufficient to ensure that all the tumblers are displaced into the respective releasing position. For this purpose, the shaft profile also has to be correctly aligned relative to the tumblers, in particular along the key axis or key introduction direction. A key fitting into the keyway can generally be introduced into the keyway at different depths within the keyway. The tumblers are, however, only displaced into the respective release position and thus only release the cylinder core for a rotation when the key is introduced into the keyway to the correct axial introduction depth and is thus aligned exactly relative to the tumblers such that regions of the shaft profile corresponding to a respective tumbler act on this respective tumbler.
It is therefore necessary to fix the correct axial introduction depth by the cooperation of the key and of the lock cylinder. The key bow, which projects out of the keyway on a completely introduced key and which is typically widened with respect to the key shaft for a better gripping of the key, can for this purpose typically form one or more abutments which abut the lock cylinder, for example, an end side of the cylinder core and/or of the cylinder housing, from the outside. Alternatively or additionally, the key tip, i.e. the end of the key shaft opposite the key bow, can also abut the end of the keyway opposite the key introduction opening. Such abutments are particularly easy to produce since only one or more simple edges have to be provided at the key bow or the key shaft only has to have a specific length.
However, this is accompanied by the fact that such keys can be copied relatively simply. Key blanks adapted for a respective lock system, for instance, can thus already have the required abutments at the key bow and/or a key shaft of the required length. Only the shaft profile then has to be transferred onto an initially non-profiled encoding section of the key shaft of a key blank for a key copy. This can take place in a largely automated manner in a copying machine. For this purpose, the original keys to be copied and a key blank matching it are clamped into the machine which then traces the vertical extent of the shaft profile of the original key and synchronously to this cuts the same vertical extent as a shaft profile into the encoding section of the key shaft of the key blank or drills it for dimple keys in which the shaft profile is located at the broad side or broad sides of the key shaft.
So that the copied shaft profile is applied axially correctly to the key blank, such a copying machine can have respective abutment surfaces at which the abutments of both the original key and of the key blank are aligned. It is achieved in this manner that the key copy produced from the key blank as a result has the same alignment of the shaft profile to the abutments as the original key. The simple copying ability of such keys reduces the security of the locking system.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide a locking system, a key and a key blank which offer increased security and whose copying ability is made more difficult.
The object is satisfied by a locking system having the features of claim 1. In particular, an abutment section is formed at the key shaft between the key bow and the shaft profile, said abutment section having an abutment profile i.e. a dimension difference, in the axial direction. The abutment profile comprises at least one projection aligned in the key introduction direction and an undercut formed between the projection and the shaft profile. The lock cylinder furthermore comprises a movable counter-abutment, wherein the abutment section of the key and the movable counter-abutment of the lock cylinder are advantageously arranged and configured such that, on the introduction of the key into the keyway, at least one abutment surface of the abutment section (in particular an abutment surface of the projection and/or of the undercut) abuts the movable counter-abutment of the lock cylinder and in so doing forms the only active abutment formed at the key for limiting the introduction of the key into the keyway to a correct axial introduction depth. In this respect, the projection or the undercut or both can be active as an abutment or as abutments.
In addition to the shaft profile, a further profile is therefore provided, namely said abutment profile at the key, which, unlike the shaft profile, does not serve to act on the tumblers in accordance with the secret code, but rather to fix the introduction depth of the key in the keyway. The fact that a section of the key shaft has a profile means in this respect that the surface contour of this section varies in its height along the extent of the respective profiled section in a direction perpendicular to the extent and in so doing increases in size at least once and decreases in size at least once. Since the shaft profile extends along the key axis, its vertical extent therefore varies in the radial direction. This can be the case, for example, in the manner of notches or dimples. The vertical extent thus varies in the axial direction in the abutment profile which is preferably aligned radially or substantially radially to the key axis. The abutment profile consequently has at least one axially aligned projection and one undercut. The vertical extent of a respective profile can be configured in different manners, for example at least sectionally constant, stepped, linear or increasing or decreasing in a different manner. The profile can be produced by simple cutting out, for example. Different means are, however, also conceivable. The projection of the abutment profile can thus, for instance, be formed as a pin or as tongue which is connected to the key shaft.
The provision of an abutment profile makes the copying of such a key using conventional cutting machines substantially more difficult. Since the projection is aligned in the key introduction direction and consequently the undercut is also aligned substantially axially to the key axis, the abutment profile cannot be cut out of the same direction as the shaft profile which extends axially and whose vertical extent therefore varies radially. The forming of the undercut is thus in particular not possible in a simple manner.
It is furthermore a major aspect of the invention that the explained abutment section does not abut an outer surface of the lock cylinder, but rather cooperates with the movable counter-abutment within the keyway. In this manner, the reference point for the axial position of the shaft profile is displaced into the cylinder core. The copying of such key using conventional copying machines which are designed for a reference point at the end side of the cylinder core is also hereby made difficult.
Furthermore, in accordance with the invention, it is not only the reference point which is made deeper with respect to the end side of the cylinder core, is namely displaced into the interior of the cylinder core, but a special counter-abutment is rather also provided. Instead of a static counter-abutment provided at the cylinder core itself and/or at the cylinder housing, the counter-abutment is namely configured as movable in accordance with the invention. This movability advantageously makes it possible that the introduction depth of the key can be dependent on the position of the movable counter-abutment. This can be utilized for a further increase in the security of the locking system as will be explained further below. In addition, the copying of the key is made even more difficult by such a variable reference point. Due to its movability, the counter-abutment furthermore does not hinder the sliding along of the shaft profile of the key shaft disposed upstream of the abutment section.
So that the cooperation of the abutment section with the movable counter-abutment can have an advantageous effect in the explained manner, it is important that the key also does not abut the lock cylinder outside the keyway and also does not abut a static element within the keyway. For otherwise at least one further reference point would be present for the axial position of the shaft profile which would again simplify the more difficult copying of the key.
It is therefore advantageous that the abutment section or one or more abutment surfaces of the abutment section forms the only effective abutment formed at the key for limiting the introduction of the key into the keyway to a correct axial introduction depth in order hereby to ensure the correct interaction of the shaft profile with the tumblers. However, this does not preclude the fact that in general further abutments are provided at the key, for instance in the form of exposed features which may e.g. be necessary or useful in the manufacture of the key, but which are not active as abutments when the key is introduced into the keyway. The key can additionally—for example with a so-called reversible key whose key shaft is radially symmetrical to allow an introduction of the key into the keyway in two different rotational orientations of the key—generally have further abutment sections which can equally abut the movable counter-abutment within the keyway. However, only a respective one of these abutment sections forms the active abutment, i.e. the abutment actually abutting the movable counter-abutment of the lock cylinder on the introduction of the key into the keyway.
In accordance with an advantageous embodiment, the movable counter-abutment is supported in the cylinder core displaceable radially to the keyway. The abutment is consequently supported displaceable radially to the key axis with a key introduced into the keyway. In this manner, the forces acting on the movable counter-abutment on the abutment of the abutment section at the movable counter-abutment are directed in a different direction (namely axially) than the direction of movability of the counter-abutment (namely radially) so that the counter-abutment is not unintentionally displaced by the abutment itself.
The movable counter-abutment is preferably preloaded along said radial direction toward the keyway, for example by means of a compression spring likewise received in the cylinder core.
The movable counter-abutment is preferably formed as one of the tumblers of the lock cylinder, in particular as the tumbler arranged closest to the key introduction opening of the keyway. No separate movable counter-abutment thus has to be provided in addition to the tumblers provided for the locking function so that the lock cylinder can be particularly simple and/or compact. The tumblers are in particular pin tumblers which have a respective core pin and a housing pin which are arranged in the releasing position of the respective pin tumbler just completely in the cylinder core or in the cylinder housing so that their common boundary surface coincides with the common boundary surface of the cylinder core and the cylinder housing and the tumbler therefore releases the cylinder core for a rotation with respect to the cylinder housing. The tumblers can, however, also be disk tumblers or other types of tumblers.
The movable counter-abutment can, however, alternatively also only be formed (similar to the core pin of a pin tumbler) as a cylindrical pin or the like which is displaceable radially to the keyway and is preferably preloaded in a radial direction, but without cooperating with a housing pin or otherwise having the blocking function of a pin tumbler.
The abutment section is preferably aligned radially, i.e. perpendicular, to the key axis. It is, however, not absolutely necessary that the abutment section or the at least one abutment surface is aligned exactly perpendicular to the key axis. It is rather sufficient that the abutment section is aligned at least sectionally substantially radial to the key axis such that it can absorb the axial forces occurring on the abutment at the movable counter-abutment without substantial radial force actions occurring by which, for instance, the preferably radially movable counter-abutment could be displaced.
In a preferred embodiment, the shaft profile and the abutment section are aligned at least regionally radially in the same direction relative to the key axis. The shaft profile and the abutment section can in particular substantially form an L-shape aligned in a common radial direction in a side view. When the movable counter-abutment is configured as a tumbler, such a design in particular simplifies the cooperation of both the shaft profile and of the abutment section with this tumbler. This in particular applies to keys whose shaft profile is formed as notches at a narrow side of the key shaft. In contrast, it can be advantageous with dimple keys whose shaft profile is formed as dimples at a broad side of the key shaft if the abutment section is formed at a narrow side of the key shaft, that is if the shaft profile and the abutment section are aligned radially in respective directions perpendicular to one another with respect to the key axis.
The key in particular has an introduction region which can be introduced into the keyway of the lock cylinder and has an outer region adjacent thereto, wherein the abutment section is formed completely within the introduction region of the key. The introduction region is consequently defined such that it—unlike said outer region of the key—is located within the keyway when the key is completely introduced into the keyway, i.e. when the key is introduced into the keyway to the correct axial introduction depth to displace all the tumblers into the respective releasing position. The introduction region of the key can, for example, have a special cross-section which corresponds to the cross-section of the keyway perpendicular to the key introduction direction. The axial extent of the introduction region with respect to the key axis in particular exactly corresponds to the correct axial introduction depth of the key which is predetermined by the cooperation of the abutment section with the movable counter-abutment.
It is furthermore advantageous if the abutment section of the key and the movable counter-abutment of the lock cylinder are arranged such that the key bow is spaced apart from the lock cylinder (in particular from an end side of the cylinder housing or of the cylinder core) when the key is introduced into the keyway up to the correct axial introduction depth (as is predetermined by the cooperation of the abutment section with the movable counter-abutment). The key bow is therefore in particular located completely in said outer region of the key. The key bow, which is typically radially widened with respect to the key shaft to be able to be gripped better, furthermore does not form an abutment in this manner, for instance for an end side of the lock cylinder. It is thus ensured that the key bow cannot represent any reference point for the axial position of the shaft profile which simplifies the copying of the key.
In accordance with an advantageous embodiment, the shaft profile is formed as an arrangement of a plurality of notches. With such notches, the vertical extent of the profile increases or decreases continuously section-wise, with all increases and/or all decreases optionally being able to take place at the same pitch angle. The tumblers can advantageously be urged into a respective position in the radial direction due to the notches with their angled flanks despite the axial introduction movement of the key with respect to the key axis. Alternatively or additionally to this, the shaft profile can also comprise an arrangement of a plurality of dimples.
The abutment profile is in contrast preferably formed as a step or as an arrangement of a plurality of steps (in particular two steps) in which the vertical extent of the profile is stepped, that it is sectionally constant, and changes abruptly between these sections. The steps of constant height are then in particular aligned exactly perpendicular to the axial introduction movement of the key and are therefore particularly suitable as abutment surfaces. For example, said projection can have an end side extending perpendicular to the key axis, with the base of said undercut being able to form a further end side in the sense of a bottom of the corresponding step which in particular likewise extends perpendicular to the key axis. Provided that said projection has a plurality of steps, the abutment profile can have a plurality of end sides extending perpendicular to the key axis, but offset from one another in the axial direction, with said undercut being provided between the projection and the key shaft or the shaft profile. The profile of this undercut can likewise be stepped in accordance with the plurality of steps. In general, each of these plurality of end sides of the abutment section can serve as an abutment surface for abutting the movable counter-abutment. This is, however, not absolutely necessary. It is rather sufficient—and can also be of advantage—if only a single one of a plurality of end sides of the abutment section is active as an abutment surface.
Said abutment surface of the abutment section can generally be provided at the projection or at the undercut, or both at the projection and at the undercut of the abutment profile. In the last-named case, in particular two or more abutment surfaces offset relative to one another are provided and are active together as the abutment.
The abutment profile can in particular have at least one end side which is aligned perpendicular to the key axis and which forms said abutment surface or one of a plurality of abutment surfaces for abutting the movable counter-abutment of the lock cylinder. Such an end side or abutment surface can be provided at the projection of the abutment profile, for example. Provision can alternatively or additionally be made that the undercut has at least one end side which is aligned perpendicular to the key axis (for example at the base of the undercut) and which forms an abutment surface for abutting the movable counter-abutment of the lock cylinder.
In accordance with a further embodiment, the abutment profile can have at least two projections. These projections can be arranged next to one another and/or aligned in parallel with one another. The projections can furthermore be of equal length or of different length. Alternatively or additionally to the at least two projections, the abutment profile can have at least two undercuts. In such an embodiment, the complexity of the abutment profile is increased. The copying of the key is thereby advantageously made more difficult.
In a preferred embodiment, the movable counter-abutment of the lock cylinder has a counter-profile for cooperating with the abutment profile of the key. The counter-profile is in particular configured such that it is aligned in parallel with the abutment profile with a key introduced into the keyway. A stable abutment effect is achieved in this manner. The movable counter-abutment, which is configured as a pin tumbler, for example, is preferably aligned perpendicular to the key introduction direction in this respect. The counter-profile then preferably has an extent varying in the key introduction direction.
The counter-profile can in particular have an annular groove or a plurality of annular grooves whose respective cross-sections can differ in their size, depth and shape when the movable counter-abutment is a pin tumbler. Such annular grooves can be produced in a constructively simple manner.
The counter-profile of the movable counter-abutment is preferably configured completely or only regionally (i.e. only in a part region of the projection and undercut) complementary to the abutment profile of the key. The abutment profile and the counter-profile therefore have a vertical extent in the respective region which corresponds to the inverse of the respective other one. The counter-profile has a projection, for example, where the abutment profile has an undercut, and vice versa. When the abutment profile and the counter-profile are configured completely complementary, that is can come to lie substantially seamlessly at one another, a particularly large common contact area can thereby advantageously be formed.
However, the profiles are not necessarily completely complementary with one another. In accordance with an advantageous embodiment, the abutment profile of the key can only be configured regionally complementary to the counter-profile of the movable counter-abutment. This can be realized, for example, in that the respective extents of the profiles correspond in quality, but not necessary also in quantity everywhere. This is the case, for example, when the position of an elevated portion in the one profile corresponds to the position of a recess in the other profile, but the height of this elevated portion does not correspond to the depth of this recess. In such an embodiment, the abutment profile does not contact the counter-profile completely flush, but only sectionally, with a key introduced into the keyway to the correct axial introduction depth. The abutment profile can, for example, only contact the counter-profile with the projection, but not with the base of the undercut, or only with the base of the undercut, but not with the projection. This has the advantage that it cannot be seen from the key alone which sections of the abutment profile actually abut the counter-profile and thus represent a reference point for the correct axial position of the shaft profile. The actual reference point can thus be masked to make a copying of the key even more difficult. Different abutment profiles and in particular different abutment surfaces at the different keys can furthermore still be used in different lock cylinders within a locking system in order thus to increase the system versatility.
It is in particular preferred with such an embodiment if the abutment profile is only configured regionally complementary to the counter-profile such that when the abutment section abuts the movable counter-abutment, only an end side of the projection, but not a base of the undercut set back with respect to the end side, contacts the movable counter-abutment as an abutment surface and hereby forms said only active abutment for limiting the introduction of the key to the correct axial introduction depth. The projection of the abutment section can, for example, engage into said annular groove of the movable counter-abutment and can abut a peripheral surface of the base of the annular groove, with a collar of the movable counter-abutment bounding the annular groove admittedly engaging into the undercut of the abutment section, but not contacting the base of the undercut. In other words, with such an embodiment, the projection projects further with respect to the base of the undercut than the collar of the movable counter-abutment with respect to the base of the annular groove. It is hereby particularly difficult subsequently to reproduce the abutment profile by means of manual reworking after an automatic copying of the key by means of a cutting machine since, for example, the reference point for the correct removal depth is missing when the projection is filed off.
It is, however, conversely possible that the abutment profile is configured only regionally complementary to the counter-profile such that when the abutment section abuts the movable counter-abutment, only a base of the undercut set back with respect to the projection, but not an end side of the projection, contacts the movable counter-abutment as an abutment surface so that only the base of the undercut of the abutment section forms said only active abutment which defines the correct axial introduction depth on the introduction of the key into the keyway.
Since a counter-profile is provided with which the abutment profile cooperates on the abutment of the abutment section at the movable counter-abutment, an extended secret code can be encoded. For the abutment profile and the counter-profile can be configured such that the introduction of the key is limited exactly to the correct axial introduction depth in which the key opens the lock cylinder only when the abutment profile and the counter-profile cooperate in a suitable manner—which depends on the presence of a key with the correct abutment profile for a respective lock cylinder.
It is preferred in this connection if the abutment profile and the counter-profile are configured such that they interlock on an abutment of the abutment section at the movable counter-abutment at least regionally (i.e. completely or only regionally). The actual interlocking in this respect depends on whether the key has the abutment profile matching the counter-profile of the movable counter-abutment. Only if this is the case is it ensured that the abutment profile and the counter-profile interlock in a correct manner. Otherwise the key abuts on the introduction into the keyway at an introduction depth in which it—despite a possible correct shaft profile—cannot open the lock cylinder due to the incorrect axial alignment of the shaft profile relative to the tumblers. This advantageously also applies to a copied key whose abutment profile does not exactly coincide with the abutment profile of the original key.
In accordance with an advantageous embodiment, the shaft profile is formed such that, on an introduction of the key into the keyway, the movable counter-abutment is aligned for an interlocking of the counter-profile and of the abutment profile, in particular in a direction radial to the key axis. Even if the abutment profile formed at a key and the counter-profile of the movable counter-abutment are configured to match one another, it will depend on the position of the movable abutment, for example displaceable within the cylinder core, whether the abutment profile and the counter-profile are aligned relative to one another such that they can actually interlock. On an introduction of the key into the keyway, the movable counter-abutment can be acted on, for example, by the shaft profile and can thereby change its position. If the movable counter-abutment is configured as one of the tumblers, the shaft profile can, for instance, advantageously be configured exactly with respect to the abutment profile and to the counter-profile such that the movable counter-abutment adopts that position, at the latest just before the abutment profile reaches the counter-profile, in which the abutment profile and the counter-profile can interlock with an exact fit. The security of the locking system is increased due to this complex interplay of the shaft profile, abutment profile and counter-profile and the copying of the key is made more difficult, in particular when copying without knowledge of the counter-profile of the movable counter abutment.
The object of the invention is also satisfied by a key for use with a lock cylinder in a locking system in accordance with one of the described embodiments. In this respect, the key can have a key bow and a key shaft which extends, starting from the key bow, along a key axis in a key introduction direction and has a shaft profile for acting on tumblers received in the lock cylinder. An abutment section can furthermore be formed between the key bow and the shaft profile, said abutment section having an abutment profile having at least one projection aligned in the key introduction direction and having an undercut formed between the projection and the shaft profile. The abutment section in particular forms the only active abutment formed at the key for limiting the introduction of the key into a keyway of the lock cylinder to a correct axial introduction depth. The advantages of such a key named above in connection with the locking system in accordance with the invention, in particular the key's more difficult copying ability, also result independently of the respective associated lock cylinder.
The abutment section of the key is in particular aligned radially to the key axis. The shaft profile and the abutment section can furthermore be aligned radially in the same direction or in respective directions perpendicular to one another relative to the key axis. It is furthermore preferred if the key has an introduction region which can be introduced into the keyway of the lock cylinder and an outer region which is adjacent thereto and the abutment section is formed completely within the introduction region. The abutment section of the key can have at least one abutment surface for abutting a counter-abutment of the associated lock cylinder, with the abutment surface being provided at the projection and/or at the undercut of the abutment profile.
The object of the invention is furthermore also satisfied by a key blank for manufacturing such a key. In this respect, the key blank has a key bow and a key shaft which extends, starting from the key bow, along a key axis in a key introduction direction and the key blank has an encoding section for forming a shaft profile for acting on tumblers received in the lock cylinder. An abutment section is furthermore formed at the key shaft between the key bow and the encoded section, said abutment section having an abutment profile having at least one projection aligned in the key introduction direction and having an undercut formed between the projection and the encoded section. This abutment section forms the only active abutment present at the key blank for limiting the introduction of a key produced from the key blank into a keyway of the lock cylinder to a correct axial introduction depth.
The key blank therefore substantially differs from the previously described key in that instead of the shaft profile an encoding section is provided from which the shaft profile is only formed, for example by cutting or drilling, on the manufacture of a key from the key blank. The abutment profile can in this respect have one or more of the features (singly or in combination) which were described above in connection with the abutment profile of a key in accordance with the invention or of the key of a locking system in accordance with the invention, from which the advantages named there result.
The abutment section of the key blank is in particular aligned radially to the key axis. The encoding section and the abutment section can furthermore be aligned radially in the same direction or in respective directions perpendicular to one another relative to the key axis. It is furthermore preferred if the key blank has an introduction region provided for introduction into the keyway of the lock cylinder and an outer region which is adjacent thereto and the abutment section is formed completely within the introduction region. The abutment section of the key blank can have at least one abutment surface for abutting a counter-abutment of the associated lock cylinder, with the abutment surface being provided at the projection and/or at the undercut of the abutment profile.
The invention will be described in more detail in the following only by way of example with reference to the drawings.
The key 17 is introduced into a keyway 25 of the cylinder core 13. In this introduced state, the key 17 acts on the first tumbler 15 which is preloaded radially toward the keyway 25 such that the first tumbler 15 is urged radially against the preload radially outwardly into a position in which the core pin 17 terminates flush with the cylinder core 13 and thus releases it for a rotation about its cylinder axis Z with respect to the cylinder housing, not shown, of the lock cylinder 11.
As can be more clearly recognized in the individual representation of the key 17 in
An abutment section 35 is formed at the key shaft 29 between the key bow 27 and the shaft profile 31. The abutment section 35 has an abutment profile 37 in the form of a projection 39 aligned in the key introduction direction (arrow) and in the form of an undercut 41 formed between the projection 39 and the shaft profile 31 so that the abutment profile 37 is stepped (cf. in particular
As is shown in
The key 17 has an introduction region 43 and adjacent thereto an outer region 45 which are delineated from one another by a chain-dotted line in
An embodiment of a movable counter-abutment 15 is shown in
In this respect, the annular groove 51 and the collar 49 of the first tumbler 15 are formed to this extent complementary to the projection 39 and to the undercut 41 of the abutment profile 37 shown in
The key shaft 29 of a key 17 in accordance with the invention and the movable counter-abutment 15 configured as a core pin of the first tumbler as well as the core pin of a further tumbler 23 are each shown in different embodiments in
The abutment profile 37 of the embodiment shown in
In contrast, in
The embodiments shown in
Further embodiments of the abutment profile 37 in a plurality of detail views are shown by way of example in
A further embodiment is shown in
The detailed views of
An embodiment of a key blank 57 in accordance with the invention for manufacturing a key 17 for use with a lock cylinder 11 in a locking system is shown in
The key blank 57 also has an abutment section 35 which is suitable for forming an abutment profile 37. In the embodiment of the key blank 57 shown in
Like the key 17 shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102014116376.1 | Nov 2014 | DE | national |