The invention relates to a safety locking mechanism for roof containers to prevent the edge of the container tipping up as the result of excessively high wind pressure or of a failure of the normal locking device while the vehicle is moving, for which a locking element at a container part engages a counter element at a different part of the container.
For a safety locking mechanism of the type mentioned initially, which has become known from the utility patent DE 295 08 826 U1, a securing hook, which can be swiveled in and, in the swiveled-in securing position, is hinged at the edge of the lid and freely grips below the sealing edge of the lower part and, when the lid is swiveled up, hooks under the edge of the bottom part. The construction is such, that this securing hook is swiveled under its own weight into the locking position, in which it rests below the bordered edge of the lower part of the roof container. The safety locking mechanism is therefore active constantly. When the vehicle is stationary, the user, for opening the roof container, must first make this safety locking mechanism inoperative by swiveling the securing hook back. However, this may, in turn, create difficulties when the closing device of the lid is actuated and the lid is swiveled up.
It is therefore an object of the invention to develop a closing device of the above-mentioned type so that it is ineffective when the vehicle is stationary and effective only when the vehicle is moving.
To accomplish this objective, provisions are made pursuant to the invention so that a locking element, disposed at a container part and pretensioned elastically in a not engaged position, is constructed and disposed, so that it is swiveled into its locking position by head wind only while the vehicle is moving.
Quite generally, the locking element may be connected with an actuating element of any type, which depends on the dynamic pressure and, starting out from the increasing dynamic pressure, moves the locking element as the speed of the vehicle increases from the not engaged position into the engaged position, with additional safety locking of the container lid at the lower part of the container.
In the simplest case, the locking element, disposed at a container part, is a locking hook or a locking pin, which grips above or below an edge flange of the counterpart of the container or engages a transverse recess of this counterpart of the container.
Although, in principle, the locking part could be disposed at any part of the container, it has proven to be particularly appropriate in practice to dispose the locking part at the upper part of the roof container.
A particularly simple and operationally reliable version of an inventive safety locking mechanism arises in a development of the invention owing to the fact that the locking element is disposed at a pressure adjusting plate, which is acted upon by the head wind and can be shifted into the locking position. In turn, the pressure adjusting plate is mounted elastically resetably at a foot part, which can be fastened to a container part.
In accordance with a first development of the present invention, this pressure adjusting plate, constructed as a wing plate, may be mounted pivotably preferably as a foot part, which is constructed as a foot plate. The pivot axis may be disposed horizontally, that is, parallel to the junction plane of the container, as well as vertically, that is, perpendicularly to the junction plane of the container. However, in practice, it has proven to be particularly appropriate to use the horizontal pivot mounting axis.
In the case of a different embodiment of the invention, the pressure adjusting plate forms the piston of a dynamic pressure cylinder, which is disposed, for example, at the front edge of the roof container. The piston rod of this dynamic pressure cylinder either carries the locking element or forms this locking element directly.
Finally, it is also still within the scope of the invention that the pressure adjusting plate is a spring-elastic membrane, which carries the locking element.
Further advantages and details of the invention arise out of the following description of some embodiments, as well as from the drawings.
For the first embodiment of the present invention, shown in FIGS. 1 to 5, a roof container 1, with a lower part 2, and a lid 3, which is pivotably hinged to the lower part 2, may be recognize, to begin with. In this connection, it is immaterial whether the lid 3 can be hinged about the rear edge, which is remote from the recognizable front side of the roof container 1, or about a side edge of the lid 3. An additional, inventive safety locking mechanism, which prevents the lid 3 being swiveled up at the front end of the container relative to the lower part 2 by the head wind while the vehicle is moving, is indicated at 4. For this purpose, the safety locking mechanism 4 is constructed so that, when at rest, that is, when the vehicle is stationary (shown in
The safety locking mechanism 4 of FIGS. 1 to 5 comprises a foot plate 5, which is fastened to the edge 6 of the lid 3, and a pressure adjusting plate, which is constructed here as a wing plate 9, carries a locking hook 10 and is mounted pivotably over a hinged bearing 7 with a return spring 8. This locking hook is in the position at rest, that is, with the vehicle stationary, it is disposed in the outwardly swiveled position, shown by solid lines in
Only while the vehicle is moving is the wing plate 9 swiveled to the right by the head wind into the position drawn by a broken lines in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 043 962.1 | Sep 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE05/01512 | 8/30/2005 | WO | 4/4/2007 |