This application claims priority under 35 USC § 119 to European Application No. 16 204 036.4, filed on Dec. 14, 2016, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosure relates to a method for actuating a door lock comprising a lock mechanism in a door lock housing for a door of an electrical domestic appliance, preferably a dishwasher, wherein a locking bar is moved from an open position into a locked position by means of a spring element for locking, wherein, in the open position, the door is opened and the locking bar is disengaged from a latch of a striker disposed on the domestic appliance and, in the locked position, the door is closed, the striker is in a locked position in the door lock housing, and the locking bar is engaged with the latch. The disclosure also relates to a door lock for an electrical domestic appliance, comprising a door lock housing, which can be disposed in the door of the domestic appliance and which has an opening for a striker, which can be fastened on the domestic appliance, a locking bar disposed in the door lock housing for engagement into a latch in the striker in a locked position, in which the striker is in a locked position, wherein the locking bar has a contact surface and is connected to a lever element, which is mounted so as to be rotatable about an axle, and a spring element, which is disposed between the lever element and an abutment.
In the case of electrical domestic appliances designed in the manner of a dishwasher, the door lock can be installed into the door as well as into the housing of the device. Located on the other one of these two parts is a striker, which, during the closing of the door, is introduced into the lock and hooks into position there. The present disclosure relates to the cases in which the door lock is disposed in the door.
The fronts of the domestic appliances can comprise a handle for opening the door, in the traditional manner, or, in the case of handle-free fronts, can be opened by means of appropriate actuating mechanisms, which are triggered either automatically by the machine or by the operator. In door locks used to date, the closing spring is usually loaded during the opening of the door, in order to thus build up the closing force for the closed state, DE 198 37 248 A1 describes a door lock of the type described at the outset, wherein the closing spring is tensioned in an open position of the door lock. The door lock comprises a frame having an opening for a striker and a closing member, such as a closing lever, in the frame. Moreover, a closing spring is provided, which is disposed between the closing member and an abutment in the frame, wherein the closing member is connected to a gripping device. In the open position of the door lock, the gripping device is pressed against a part of the frame or in the frame at a contact point by the closing spring and, in this way, release of the spring is prevented. The gripping device has a gripping latch, into which the striker can be introduced through the opening in the frame, and which has a contact surface, against which the incoming striker presses and thus causes a movement of the gripping device. The gripping device is shaped in such a way that, during a movement of the hook, the gripping device loses contact with the contact point and, as a result, the closing spring can release.
It is disadvantageous that the spring for closing must be preloaded by the operator during opening. As a result, an automatic opening of the door, in particular in the case of handle-free doors, is possible only by means of additional, complex devices, for example a motor. The motor is required in order to open the door and preload the spring. Since a motor is usually too complex, such closing systems are dependent on the handle for opening the door. In the case of dishwashers, in particular, the manufacturers are encouraged, due to regulations, to provide for automatic opening of the door after the washing process, in order to support the drying process. This automatic opening can also be utilized in handle-free doors.
The problem addressed by the present disclosure is therefore that of providing a possibility for actuating a door lock or a door lock for domestic appliances, in particular for dishwashers, wherein the closing mechanism is functionally designed in such a way that it can be unlocked (opened) manually as well as automatically and a correspondingly designed door lock can be utilized, in an easily adaptable manner, in the case of doors with or without a handle.
This problem is solved according to the present disclosure by a method for actuating a door lock having the features described herein.
Therein, in the open position, the spring element is released with respect to the closing force to be applied and, in order to lock the door, the locking bar, proceeding from the open position, is brought into the locked position under tension of the spring element. In this position, a closing force, which is determined by the spring element, acts on the locking bar. In order to unlock the door, the locking bar is brought out of the locked position into an unlocked position with the aid of an actuating force that is not applied by the spring element, and, after the striker has moved out of the locked position, the locking bar is moved into the open position by means of the force of the spring element. During the unlocking of the door, the applied actuating force can be applied manually with the aid of muscular force, for example by pulling on the door, or mechanically with the aid of an operative element. The locked positions that are assumed can deviate from each other depending on the type of the actuation during the opening. The movement of the locking bar out of the locked position into the open position can be implemented by way of a single movement or by way of several movements, depending on the type of the actuation.
According to one embodiment of the method, in order to lock the door and, therefore, in order to move the locking bar out of the open position, an actuator of the lock mechanism located at the locked position of the striker presses against the striker, and therefore the striker moves into the locked position by the actuator moving away, i.e., being pushed away. During this action, the spring element is initially tensioned via the actuator by means of the striker and, thus, the locking bar moves out of the open position into an intermediate position and, subsequently, the spring element partially releases and, thus, the locking bar moves out of the intermediate position into the locked position while a remaining residual tension of the spring element forming the closing force is maintained. By virtue of the embodiment or the arrangement of the door lock housing described at the outset, the door is moved during closing, and therefore the striker moves into the door lock housing due to the movement of the door lock housing. The locking bar therefore moves out of the open position first into an intermediate position, in which the locking bar has not yet engaged with the striker, and subsequently out of the intermediate position into the locked position. The spring element, which is released at the beginning with respect to the closing force, is fully tensioned in the intermediate position and is partially tensioned in the locked position and therefore maintains an adjustable closing force, with the aid of which the locking bar, in the latch of the striker, presses onto the striker.
In order to manually unlock by hand by pulling on the door, the locking bar is moved out of the locked position into a first unlocked position by means of a relative movement of the striker with respect to the locking bar counter to the closing force of the spring element. In order to automatically unlock, the locking bar is advantageously moved into a second unlocked position, wherein the actuating force is applied by an electrical operative element. The unlocked positions in the different types of opening are therefore different. As described above, the locking bar is moved back into the open position by means of the spring force of the spring element, independently of which unlocked position the locking bar is in.
According to yet another embodiment of the method, the actuator is moved back into its start position while the striker is leaving the locked position or after the striker has left the locked position. This movement can be effectuated by assisting the spring element via the lever element and by assisting the inherent force of the actuator, or simply by means of the inherent force of the actuator.
The door lock according to the disclosure is distinguished by the fact that, in the open position, in which the door is unlocked, the spring element is released with respect to a closing force to be applied and the lever element holds the locking bar in a striker region which is occupied by the striker in the locked position. The locking bar is therefore located substantially in a region which it also occupies in the locked position, in which the locking bar is disposed in the latch in the striker. In order to move into the locked position, the locking bar must therefore first be moved out of this striker region. The spring element itself can also be preloaded in the open position, although this preload only has an effect on the operative forces of the spring element to be adjusted, per se, and does not have an effect on actuation in conjunction with the locking.
This advantageously takes place, according to the disclosure, by means of an actuator, which comprises an actuating element and a rotational element, which is mounted in the door lock housing and is rotatable about an axle, and upon which the striker acts during the locking process. In the open position, the actuating element lies in a recess in the door lock housing and extends into the striker region. In the locked position, the actuating element lies in a curved guide region—which abuts the striker region—of the recess in the door lock housing. The guide region serves to deflect the actuating element in the door lock housing by approximately 180°. The actuating element acting tangentially on the rotational element during locking can be designed, for example, as an elastic spring hinge, which is tensioned by way of the guidance of the recess over the curved guide region. At a later point in time, when the locking bar moves back into the open position, the spring element can release and, as a result, can return to the open position, and therefore the rotational element interacting with the actuating element also returns to its start position. The same can also be implemented by means of a roller hinge consisting of a large number of parallel cylindrical rollers, wherein a torsion spring is to be disposed on the rotational element in this case, the torsion spring effectuating the return movement of the actuator, i.e., of the rotational element and of the actuating element, back into the start position, in the open position. The rollers and the spring hinge can be made of plastic or metal. Advantageously, the magnetic embodiment may consist of metallic rollers. The actuating element extends into a region of the recess, into the striker region, which is occupied by the striker in the locked position thereof. During the relative movement between the door lock housing and the striker, the striker presses against the actuating element and pushes the actuating element into the curved recess in the door lock housing. As a result, the rotational element of the actuator rotates about the axle mounted in the door lock housing.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the rotational element of the actuator and the lever element comprise teeth, which are disposed at the circumference and can be brought into and out of engagement with each other. During the movement of the striker into the locked position, the teeth of the rotational element of the actuator and the teeth of the lever element enter into engagement during the initial movement of the actuator. The number of teeth depends on the distance that the lever element must be moved. Usually there are one to three teeth, which are to be provided on the actuator as well as on the rotational element. Due to the interlocking, the actuator, which is mounted so as to be rotatable about the axle thereof, rotates the lever element about the axle thereof, which differs from the axle of the actuator. The lever element thus tensions the spring element, which is preferably designed in the form of a coil spring, to which pressure can be applied in the axial direction. During this rotation of the lever element, the locking bar moves out of the position that it had occupied in the open position of the lock. Once an intermediate position has been reached, the teeth disengage, and therefore the actuator can no longer apply force, via the teeth thereof, onto the lever element. Consequently, the spring element releases and moves the lever element back again, and therefore the locking bar comes to rest via the contact surface thereof in the latch of the striker. Since the spring cannot completely release, because the locking bar is already resting against the striker, a residual tension exists, which forms the closing force, with the aid of which the locking bar holds the striker in the locked position of the striker. This closing force can be adjusted by means of an appropriate embodiment and dimensioning.
According to yet another embodiment, the lever element is rotatably mounted in a tilting bearing mounted on an axle of the rotational element in the door lock housing. As a result, due to the rotation of the lever element effectuated by the rotational element, the lever element can be advantageously additionally rotated about the axle of the rotational element by means of the striker pressing on the locking bar in order to move the locking bar out of the open position into the intermediate position. In this case, the locking bar is therefore not moved out of the open position into the intermediate position solely by means of the teeth, but rather first by means of the indirect action of the striker via the actuator having the interlocking teeth and, finally, directly by means of the striker. This embodiment also makes it possible for the locking bar to be opened by way of the lever element moving about the axle of the rotational element by the action of force by the striker. This embodiment advantageously also makes automatic opening possible, advantageously by means of an electromagnetic operative element, which engages at the axle of the lever element. Due to this movement, the teeth of the rotational element of the actuator and the teeth of the lever element also become disengaged, and therefore the actuator can move back into the start position thereof, into the open position, in the manner described above.
The opening of the door can take place either manually or automatically, as mentioned above. During manual opening by way of pulling on the door by hand, the lever element is rotated at least partially about the axle thereof, preferably via the locking bar by means of a relative movement of the striker with respect to the locking bar counter to the closing force of the spring element, until either the locking bar has moved out of the latch of the striker due solely to the rotational motion or due to a force applied by the striker onto the tilting mounting. As a result, the actuating element can release and extend in the direction of the striker, wherein, as described above, either a spring hinge releases or a torsion spring moving a roller hinge releases.
During automatic opening, an electromagnetic operative element, preferably a solenoid, engages at the axle of the lever element, and therefore the lever element for opening the locking bar can be moved out of the position thereof during locking, due to the tilting mounting, by the action of force. The unlocked position occupied by the locking bar deviates from the unlocked position during the manual opening.
According to yet another embodiment, the spring element, in the absence of a counteracting force, independently of the manner in which the opening of the door lock has taken place and independently of the unlocked position in which the locking bar is, moves back into the open position and, thus, releases, and therefore the start position is reached by all participating elements of the door lock in the open position with the spring element released. To this end, the lever element rotates back into the position thereof in the open position, wherein the axle of the lever element is also brought back into the start position by means of the tilting mounting. Microswitches can be disposed in the door lock housing, in order to transmit the particular position of the locking bar to a machine control. In this way, for example, a microswitch can signal the open position and, if necessary, the closed position by means of an appropriate electrical signal to the machine control. In the case of a handle-free door, it can be detected, for example, by means of a sensor that is usually provided for this purpose, when the user is pressing against the door and, therefore, the position of the locking bar or the door as a whole is changing slightly. This change triggers a corresponding signal in the machine control, and therefore the solenoid is actuated and the locking bar is moved out of the latch of the striker. The embodiment also makes it possible to actuate the solenoid and unlock the door lock, by means of the machine control, at a certain point in time, for example in order to assist the drying process (EcoDry). The opening of the door then usually takes place by means of the weight of the door, wherein assistance can additionally be given by means of the releasing actuator, which is pressing against the striker. Opening elements, such as, for example, compression springs, which are installed directly into the door hinges, are also provided for this purpose. By virtue of the embodiment of the door lock according to the invention and by virtue of the arrangement of the spring element in combination with the lever element having a transmission ratio, there is a relatively long displacement of the moving end of the spring element, and therefore this can be advantageously used to detect the locking-bar position and, in the case of a handle-free door, the desire of the operator to open. As mentioned above, the user then presses once or, to be certain, twice against the closed door and therefore triggers the automatic opening. To this end, a sensor body connected to the end of the spring element can be provided, which, during the movement of the end of the spring element, is guided over at least one coil located in a circuit board, in order to generate a measurement signal.
By virtue of this method according to the disclosure and the door lock according to the disclosure, it is therefore possible to implement the opening by hand as well as automatically with one door lock, wherein the lock mechanism can remain unchanged and adaptation can be made simply by means of one additional operative element, for example in the form of a solenoid. This design can be adapted to the device-related specifications, and therefore this locking and unlocking principle can be implemented with all domestic appliances, in particular dishwashers. This saves additional motors for opening and is an advantageous alternative to existing door locks for such domestic appliances.
The method and door lock are described in greater detail in the following with reference to exemplary embodiments shown in the drawings. Further features will become apparent from the description of the exemplary embodiments of the disclosure that follows, in combination with the claims and the attached figures. The individual features of the disclosure can be implemented alone or in combination in different embodiments of the disclosure.
The view according to
The closing process is described in the following with reference to
In
The rotation operation has progressed further in
The result of this movement is depicted in
In
In
The manual opening by hand by means of pulling in a non-illustrated handle on the door 4 is depicted in
In
Once the locking bar 6 has reached the unlocked position, reversal of the rotational direction of the locking bar 6 with the lever element 12 takes place, while the rotational element 21 continues to rotate in the same direction. This is depicted in
In
In
The result of these movements is depicted in
Finally,
1 door lock
2 door lock housing
3 lock mechanism
4 door
5 domestic appliance
6 locking bar
7 spring element
8 latch
9 striker
10 actuator
11 solenoid
12 lever element
13 abutment
14 deflection element
15 spring holder
16 spring cable
17 closing surface
18 pressure surface
19 impact surface
20 actuating element
21 rotational element, 21′ end
22 recess, 22′ curved region
23 opening
24 rotational axle of lever element
25 rotational axle of rotational element
26 teeth of lever element
27 teeth of rotational element
28 tilting element, 28′/28″ tilting element arm
29 front edge of lever element
30 stop edge
31 torsion spring
32 circuit board
33 sensor body
34 armature
35 rollers
36 mating surface
37 locking bar tip
38 locking bar depression
39 free surface
40 recess in 28
41 striker region
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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16204036 | Dec 2016 | EP | regional |
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9267315 | Lee | Feb 2016 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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195 40 843 | May 1997 | DE |
198 37 248 | Feb 2000 | DE |
19944050 | Mar 2001 | DE |
10350710 | May 2005 | DE |
0 727 178 | Aug 1996 | EP |
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Entry |
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Extended European Search Report dated May 26, 2017 for corresponding European Application No. EP 16 20 4036. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20180163433 A1 | Jun 2018 | US |