The present invention relates to a motor-vehicle door latch.
A standard motor-vehicle door latch has a housing attached to a door edge and holding a pivotal fork that can move between a latched position engaged around a bolt extending from a doorpost and an unlatched position allowing the latch to move relative to the bolt. When latched, the door is held closed, when unlatched it can be opened. As a rule the fork is retained in the latched position by a pawl which is pivotal to release the fork and which itself is displaced by a release lever. An actuating lever moved by an inside and/or outside door handle is coupled through respective inside and outside operating levers with the release lever to operate same and unlatch the door. Another locking lever is provided that can, in a locked position, set the mechanism of the latch so no movement is transmitted from the actuating lever to the release lever and, in an unlocked position, set the mechanism so the actuating lever operates the release lever. See EP 1,070,816 of Bland and EP 1,039,079 of Hochart.
It is standard to form the door latch with a base plate acting as a main housing element and in which a plurality of pins are permanently set, e.g. by riveting. The various pivotal elements of the latch mechanism—the fork, pawl, release lever, operating levers, actuating lever, and locking lever—are carried on these pins and interact with each other and with external elements through slots in the housing plate. It is also standard for the outer ends of these pivot pins to be seated in another housing plate so as to rigidify the assembly and enclose the mechanism.
In normal use considerable radial forces are exerted on the pins traversing the two plates. For instance, when the door is closed its entire mass is effective as a torque on the locking fork which is converted by the latching pawl into a force radial of its axis, often in a direction tending to push the fork's pivot away from the pawl's pivot. Since the various levers and elements of the latch mechanism are often made as simple stampings or castings and do not conform dimensionally to high tolerances, these forces can vary considerably. In time they can deform the housing assembly comprised of the plates and pivot pins, changing the spacing and/or the relative angular orientation of the pivot pins. The latch can misfunction either by opening when it should not or by not opening when it should.
When the car door held by the latch is subjected to violent movement, as for instance when traveling on a very bumpy road or in an accident, the forces pushing the pivot pins apart can be even more extreme and lead to immediate unwanted failure of the latch. The classic problem is a door that refuses to open after the vehicle has been in an accident.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an improved motor-vehicle door latch.
Another object is the provision of such an improved motor-vehicle door latch that overcomes the above-given disadvantages, in particular that is more resistant to malfunction caused by shifting of its pivot pins.
A motor-vehicle door latch has according to the invention two spaced rigid housing parts, at least one main pivot pin extending between the parts and having an inner end fixed in one of the parts against movement relative thereto and an outer end fixed in the other of the parts against movement relative thereto, and an element pivotal on the main pivot pin. At least one secondary pivot pin extending between the parts has an inner end fixed in the one housing part against movement relative thereto and an opposite outer end, and an element is also pivotal on the secondary pivot pin. A lost-motion joint is provided between the secondary-pin outer end and the other housing part for free limited relative movement in at least one direction of the secondary-pin outer end and the other housing part and no relative movement of the secondary-pin outer end and the other housing part in a perpendicular direction.
With this system the outer end of the secondary pivot pin is movable limitedly, but not in the movement direction of the lever or operating element it carries. Normally in a door latch the operating element have outer elements that are displaced vertically, typically by actuating rods or Bowden cables attached to door handles, so that the lost-motion coupling only allows horizontal movement of the secondary-pin outer end. Thus the secondary-pin outer end can move in the housing in directions that do not affect its operation; the pin is only prevented from shifting in its actuation direction as such movement could prevent it from doing its intended function. Thus a deformation of the housing, for example, will not normally shift the secondary pivot pin and prevent the latch from operating properly.
The free movement of the lost-motion joint according to the invention is parallel to a normal direction of travel of a motor vehicle in which the latch is mounted. Furthermore the secondary pivot pin extends transversely of this normal-travel direction.
The other housing part in accordance with the invention is formed with a throughgoing slot and the secondary-pin outer end has a small-diameter portion extending through the slot. The portion and slot form the lost-motion joint. The element pivotal on the secondary pin also has an outer end movable on pivoting in a predetermined element direction that is transverse to the slot, which inhibits movement of the secondary-pin outer end transversely of the element direction. The pin portion has a large-diameter head spaced from an outer end of the secondary pin by a distance substantially greater than a thickness of the other housing part at the slot so that the secondary pin can move relative to the other housing part in a direction parallel to an axis of the secondary pin.
According to a further feature of the invention, the housing parts both are L-shaped with a pair of flat flanges. The main pivot pin extends between one of the flanges of the one housing part and one of the flanges of the other housing part and the secondary pin extends between the other of the flanges of the one housing part and the other of the flanges of the other housing part. The pins are oriented generally at right angles to each other. The main and/or secondary housing part has stiffening formations.
Furthermore according to the invention there are two such main pivot pins extending substantially parallel to each other, two respective elements pivotal on the main pivot pins, two such secondary pivot pins extending substantially parallel to each other, and two respective elements pivoted on the secondary pivot pins. The pins are horizontal.
The above and other objects, features, and advantages will become more readily apparent from the following description, reference being made to the accompanying drawing in which:
As seen in
Pivot pins 7a and 7b extend parallel to each other from the flange 1a to the flange 6a of the part 6 and form a solid traverse-like assembly solidly fixing the rotation axes of the fork 2 and pawl 3 relative to each other. The fork 2 turns on the pivot 7a and the pawl 3 on the pivot 7b. Thus the flanges 1a and 1b and the pivots 7a and 7b form a solid traverse-like assembly that solidly prevents any shifting of the axes of the fork 2 and pawl 3 relative to each other. Even if the door whose bolt is engaged by the fork 2 is subjected to considerable transverse forces in direction 6 or even crushed inward in an accident, the two pins 7a and 7b will not shift relative to each other. These pins 7a and 7b can either be permanently fixed to the parts 1 and 6 by riveting or welding, or secured removably thereto by threading their ends and providing attachment nuts.
Two parallel pivot pins 8a and 8b extend between the flange 1b and the coplanar flanges 6b of the housing part 6. The levers 4 and 5 are pivoted on the pins 8a and 8b to move in a direction Z perpendicular to horizontal directions x and y, the former direction being parallel to the normal direction of travel of the motor vehicle provided with the inventive latch. Unillustrated Bowden cables, actuating rods, or the like connect the levers 4 and 5 to inside and outside handles of a door holding the latch. The part 6 is fixed relative to the part 1, by the pins 7a and 7b.
When the levers 4 and 5 are pivoted about their respective pins 8a and 8b by action on their outer ends in the direction z, these pins 8a and 8b are also urged apart or toward each other. The forces exerted on these pins 8a and 8b are never as great as the nominal forces exerted on the pins 7a and 7b, so that these pins 8a and 8b need only be solidly anchored in the flange 1b of the part 1 in order to resist them.
According to the invention the outer ends of the pins 8a and 8b, as shown for pin 8a in
It is therefore possible for the outer ends of the two pivot pins 8a and 8b to shift, if necessary, limitedly in the directions x and y, but not in the perpendicular direction z relative to the housing assembly formed by the parts 1, 6, 7a, and 7b. Thus if, for instance, the entire lock housing 1 is deformed so that its flanges 1a and 1b form slightly less than a right angle with each other, the pins 8a and 8b will not jam, but will shift in the slots 10 through a play L, leaving the mechanism operational. The pins 8a and 8b will not, however, be able to shift away from or toward each other, that is in the direction z, so that the levers 4 and 5 will continue to interfit and coact properly.
In practice the bolt 9 can be of uniform diameter, that is without a head 12, since spreading of the flanges 1a and 1b is not encountered. The play L in the direction x as well as play in the direction y between the outer ends of the pins 8a and 8b and the housing part 6 allows these parts to be assembled easily and built to somewhat loose tolerances.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10361445.1 | Dec 2003 | DE | national |