Many switches, such as, for example, circuit breaker switches, are designed to be switched between two positions (for example, an “on” position and an “off” position) with minimal force. Additionally, a circuit breaker switch may be configured to reset certain functions of the circuit breaker when the switch is toggled to the “on” position. Switches are commonly designed to offer little resistance to position change. In application, this feature makes switches easy to use and operate. However, in some conditions, the low resistance of switches to position change can create several concerns. Accidental or unauthorized switch position changes can cause safety hazards, damage equipment or cause lost production time and/or in-process material losses. For example, a switch could be changed to an ON position while maintenance is being performed, causing machinery to activate and potentially injure a worker.
According to an exemplary embodiment of the present application, a lockout device includes a body, a clamp, and a cover. The body includes a recess and a first lock passage extending from a first opening in an upper surface to a second opening in a rear surface. The clamp is assembled with a clamp retaining portion of the body. The cover is connected with the body and is movable between a lockout position covering at least a portion of the clamp and a release position uncovering the clamp to permit adjustment. The cover includes first and second cutouts. When the cover is in the lockout position, the first and second cutouts align with the first and second openings of the body to permit insertion of a lock member through the first lock passage, thereby preventing movement of the cover from the lockout position to the release position.
Another exemplary embodiment of the present application involves a method of locking out a fuse box having an end wall extending outward from a fuse receptacle to an access opening, using a lockout device including a body, a clamp, and a cover. In the exemplary method, the end wall of the fuse box is received into a recess disposed in a lower surface of the body and extending between a front clamp retaining portion of the body and a rear clamping portion of the body, such that the body at least partially blocks the fuse receptacle. The clamp is adjusted to extend into the recess and into clamping engagement with the end wall. The cover is moved from a release position, in which the clamp is uncovered to permit adjustment, to a lockout position, in which a front portion of the cover covers at least a portion of the clamp to prevent adjustment of the clamp. A lock member is secured through a lock passage defined by the lock member, such that the lock member blocks movement of the cover from the lockout position to the release position.
In another exemplary embodiment of the present application, a lockout device includes a body, a clamp, and a cover. The body includes a recess disposed in a lower surface of the body and extending between a front clamp retaining portion and a rear clamping portion toward an upper surface of the body. The body further defines a lock passage extending between first and second openings in the body. The clamp is assembled with the clamp retaining portion of the body and is adjustably extendable into the recess for clamping engagement of an external structure when the external structure is inserted into the recess. The cover includes a front portion, an upper portion and a rear portion. The cover is assembled in arcuate sliding engagement with the body for arcuate sliding movement between a lockout position, in which the front portion of the cover covers at least a portion of the clamp to prevent adjustment of the clamp, and a release position, in which the clamp is uncovered to permit adjustment. The cover includes first and second cutouts. When the cover is in the lockout position, the first cutout aligns with the first opening of the body and the second cutout aligns with the second opening of the body, to permit insertion of a lock member through the lock passage, thereby preventing movement of the cover from the lockout position to the release position.
Features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description made with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The Detailed Description of the Invention merely describes exemplary embodiments of the invention and is not intended to limit the scope of the claims in any way. Indeed, the invention as claimed is broader than and unlimited by the exemplary embodiments, and the terms used in the claims have their full ordinary meaning
According to an exemplary aspect of the present application, a lockout device is provided for a switch assembly having a lever or toggle switch extending from a base and movable between at least first and second switching positions. One such type of switch is an ISO-DIN type circuit breaker switch commonly used in Europe and Asia, which is dimensioned and configured in accordance with ISO and DIN standards.
The clamp 40 is assembled with the clamp retaining portion 21 of the body 20 and is movable between a lever clamping position, to directly or indirectly secure the lever L in a selected switching position, and a lever releasing position, to permit movement of the lever L out of the selected switching position (e.g., either by permitting removal of the device 10 from the switch assembly A or by providing clearance for lever movement while the device 10 remains mounted to the switch assembly A). Any suitable type of clamp may be utilized, including, for example, a screw, bolt, or other threaded fastener, a friction pad, or a ratcheting cam or plunger. The cover 30 is connected with the body 20 (e.g., integrally or as an assembly) and is movable between a covering or lockout position (
The exemplary device 10 includes a locking arrangement (shown schematically at 50) to secure the cover 30 in the lockout position, to prevent unauthorized movement of the clamp 40 to the lever releasing position. While many different locking arrangements may be used to secure the cover in the lockout position (including key cylinder locks, combination dial locks, or other integral locking mechanisms), in an exemplary embodiment, at least one of the body 20 and the cover 30 defines a lock passage 51 (e.g., formed from aligned holes 52, 54, see
The exemplary clamp 140 includes a screw portion 141 threadably engaged with a threaded bore 126 in the clamp retaining portion 121 of the body 120. The screw portion extends to a nose portion 142 sized and contoured to effectively grip the switch lever Lc without marring or otherwise damaging the lever. While the clamp may be provided with a tool engaging head (e.g., hex-shaped head, screwdriver slot, or Allen key socket) for tightening and loosening with a corresponding tool, in the illustrated embodiment, the clamp 140 includes a user graspable knob 143 for hand tightening and loosening of the clamp. In some embodiments, excluding a tool interface (e.g., screwdriver slot, etc.) from the clamp 140 may reduce the likelihood of over-tightening of the clamp 140 with the switch lever Lc, which may protect against damage.
As shown in
As with the embodiment of
Any suitable movable coupling arrangement may be utilized to secure the cover to the body while permitting movement of the cover between lockout and unlocked positions.
For example, the cover may be assembled in sliding engagement with the body for sliding movement between the lockout and unlocked positions. In the illustrated embodiment, the cover 130 includes arcuate rails 132 (
To secure the cover in the lockout position, a lock passage may be defined by one or both of the body and cover of the lockout device. When a padlock shackle or other lock member is inserted through the lock passage, movement of the cover out of the lockout position is blocked by the lock member. In one embodiment, a lockout device includes a lock passage that extends across the width of the body, or in a direction substantially parallel to the pivot axis of the switch lever with which the device is assembled. In another embodiment, a lockout device additionally or alternatively includes a lock passage that extends along a length of the body, or in a direction substantially perpendicular to the pivot axis of the switch lever with which the device is assembled.
In the illustrated embodiment, the body 120 includes a lock passage 154 extending between first and second lock openings 153, 155 in the first and second sides of the body. The cover 130 includes first and second cutouts 133, 135 in first and second side walls 134, 136. The first and second cutouts align with the first and second lock openings 153, 155 in the body 120 when the cover 130 is in the lockout position, to permit insertion of a padlock shackle Sc or other lock member (as shown in
In an exemplary embodiment, a body of a lockout device may additionally or alternatively include a lock passage extending between lock openings in one or more of the upper, front, and rear portions of the body, such that the lock passage extends in a longitudinal direction with respect to the body, instead of a lateral direction across the body. In the illustrated embodiment, the body 120 includes a second lock passage 158 extending between third and fourth lock openings 157, 159 in the upper and rear portions of the body 120. As shown, the second lock passage 158 may extend substantially perpendicular to a pivot axis of the switch lever Lc, and may be arcuate or otherwise shaped to accommodate a curved portion of a shackle. The exemplary cover 130 includes a third cutout 137 in an upper wall portion 138, and a fourth cutout 139 in a rear wall portion 131 of the cover 130. When the cover 130 is in the lockout position, the third and fourth cutouts 137, 139 align with the third and fourth lock openings 157, 159 to permit insertion of a lock member through the second lock passage 158, thereby securing the cover 130 in the lockout position.
When a padlock shackle Sc is secured through the second lock passage 158, the padlock Pc may extend in an axial orientation, such that a properly sized padlock Pc does not extend beyond the side portions of a convention circuit breaker switch assembly Ac. In an application where multiple side-by-side circuit breaker switch assemblies are to be locked out, installation of padlocks with the second lock passages 158 of lockout devices 100 assembled with each of the multiple circuit breaker switch assemblies Ac allows for clearance between the installed padlocks (not shown). While the exemplary third and fourth cutouts 137, 139 form separate, discrete apertures in the cover 130, in another embodiment (not shown), the third and fourth cutouts may form a single elongated aperture extending to expose the third and fourth lock openings when the cover is in the lockout position.
A lockout device having one or more of the features of the exemplary lockout devices described above may be used to lock out other types of equipment, including, for example, valve handles, buttons, electrical outlets or plugs, and fluid system connections. In one embodiment, a lockout device may be configured to clamp onto an equipment housing or other structural feature in a position blocking access to an operable, connectable, or removable component, to block access to the component. As one example, a lockout device may be secured to a wall of a fuse box to at least partially cover a fuse receptacle, for example, to prevent removal or insertion of a fuse in the fuse receptacle.
As shown, the clamp 240 of the fuse lockout device 200 may be substantially the same as the knob-handled screw-type clamp 140 of the device 100 of
The clamp 240 is assembled with the clamp retaining portion 221 of the body 220 and is movable between a wall clamping position and a wall releasing position. In the wall clamping position, the device 200 grips the wall Wf between the clamp 240 and the inner surface 225 of the wall engaging portion 223 of the body 220, to secure the device 200 in a position that blocks access to the fuse receptacle Rf. In the wall releasing position, the device 200 is removable from the fuse box assembly Af to permit access to the fuse receptacle Rf.
Any suitable movable coupling arrangement may be utilized to secure the cover to the body while permitting movement of the cover between lockout and unlocked positions. As shown, the cover 230 and body 220 coupling arrangement may be substantially the same as the arcuate sliding arrangement of the lockout device 100 of
Any suitable locking arrangement may be utilized to secure the cover in the lockout position. As shown, the cover 230 may be provided with cutouts 233, 235, 237, 239 positioned in the side walls 234, 236, upper wall 238, and rear wall 231 of the cover to expose first and second lock passages 254, 258 in the body 220 when the cover 230 is in the lockout position, and may, but need not, be substantially the same as the cutouts and passages provided in the lockout device 100 of
In an exemplary method of locking out a fuse box having an end wall extending outward from a fuse receptacle to an access opening, using the exemplary lockout device 200 of
The bodies, covers, and clamps of the lockout devices described herein may be provided in any suitable material, including, for example, polycarbonate or PBT.
While various inventive aspects, concepts and features of the inventions may be described and illustrated herein as embodied in combination in the exemplary embodiments, these various aspects, concepts and features may be used in many alternative embodiments, either individually or in various combinations and sub-combinations thereof. Unless expressly excluded herein all such combinations and sub-combinations are intended to be within the scope of the present inventions. Still further, while various alternative embodiments as to the various aspects, concepts and features of the inventions—such as alternative materials, structures, configurations, methods, devices and components, alternatives as to form, fit and function, and so on—may be described herein, such descriptions are not intended to be a complete or exhaustive list of available alternative embodiments, whether presently known or later developed. Those skilled in the art may readily adopt one or more of the inventive aspects, concepts or features into additional embodiments and uses within the scope of the present inventions even if such embodiments are not expressly disclosed herein. Additionally, even though some features, concepts or aspects of the inventions may be described herein as being a preferred arrangement or method, such description is not intended to suggest that such feature is required or necessary unless expressly so stated. Still further, exemplary or representative values and ranges may be included to assist in understanding the present disclosure; however, such values and ranges are not to be construed in a limiting sense and are intended to be critical values or ranges only if so expressly stated. Moreover, while various aspects, features and concepts may be expressly identified herein as being inventive or forming part of an invention, such identification is not intended to be exclusive, but rather there may be inventive aspects, concepts and features that are fully described herein without being expressly identified as such or as part of a specific invention. Descriptions of exemplary methods or processes are not limited to inclusion of all steps as being required in all cases, nor is the order that the steps are presented to be construed as required or necessary unless expressly so stated.
This application claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/737,311, entitled “SWITCH LOCKOUT DEVICE” and filed Dec. 14, 2012, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61737311 | Dec 2012 | US |