The invention relates to a mobile device for securing an item. Specifically, the invention relates to an adjustable mobile device where a cable or wire is drawn through clothing, e.g. through the sleeve of a jacket, one leg of a pair of trousers or the sleeve of a sweater and out again, either through the other sleeve of the jacket or sweater, the other leg of the pair of trousers, or through any other opening, e.g. in the form of a fixed suspension opening, or wrapped around the item and then locked together as a cable loop. The security device comprises a cable length adjusting device that is adapted to tighten and widen the cable loop as desired.
Theft and unauthorized tampering of goods and items for purchase is a constant threat to retail stores. Today, it is very difficult to protect items from being removed by an unauthorized person in shops and malls. For preventing item thefts, i.e. removing of items from the shop without paying for them, the item is provided with an element which trigger an alarm if the item is moved from the shop or a defined area in the mall, or the item, if having no alarm, is fastened by a cable or wire to a fixed/firm object, e.g. by fastening a wire lock for a bicycle around a bicycle rack or a pole. Such a bicycle wire lock is for example disclosed in DE-U1-93 18 894, and is provided with an adjustable cable length. This known bicycle cable lock has a one-piece cable lock housing fixedly attached to the bicycle. In the fixed cable lock housing a free end of the cable is releasably locked during bicycling and when securing the bicycle against theft. This is done by releasing the cable end, pulling the cable end while wrapping the cable around a fixed object and/or parts of the bicycle, and then introducing the cable end back into the cable lock housing locking it therein. This cable lock may be equipped with an alarm.
When protecting items, one must balance the grade of security with cost, accessibility, especially for clothing that is tried on, i.e. a jacket or other clothing provided with an alarm must be easy to try on, and appealing looks, i.e. consumers want to be able to see, and also often want to touch and feel the clothing before buying it. It is well known to use a number of solutions in order to protect items and to make the items accessible at the same time, such as lockable cables with alarms that may be removed when trying on the clothing or alarm pins that are removed from the item at the paydesk. These solutions provides means to protect an item from being removed by an unauthorized person undetected.
However, these solutions have disadvantages. The cable lock in DE-U1-93 18 894 is immobile, i.e. it is not used for securing other items than the bicycle onto which it is fixedly attached. Other prior art solutions require cables with certain dimensions, i.e. lengths, e.g. a long length for securing the alarm to a big item, such as big and thick winter jackets, bicycles or other large items, and a short cable length for securing for example children's clothing, and items with unusual size and/or shape will require cables with a lot of “over dimensioned” length resulting in a unduly handling and manipulation of each cable wasting time and increasing costs for this handling and storing of unused cable locks.
Moreover, these prior art cable locks are difficult to handle as they require complicated manipulation both when attaching the cable to or through the item and when removing the cable from the item as an unnecessary long cable length is difficult to keep track of and control and occupies a lot of space. These known cable alarm locks also require items that have certain sizes and shapes, whereby, e.g. a cable lock with a shorter cable for a small item can not be used on a larger item if the cable locks with longer lengths for the larger items are out of stock. Furthermore, cable locks with unnecessary long wires are easily tangled, both when used and stored for future use, requiring a lot of time and effort to disentangle, and are, in some cases, impossible to disentangle. These prior art cable locks are therefore cumbersome to use and bulky.
An overall object of the invention is therefore to provide a simplified construction for a anti-theft or security device which includes at least one cable lock with an adjustable cable allowing for differently sized cable loops to be formed for securing an item to be protected from theft and which is simple to operate and handle when introducing it through clothing, wherein also no extra tool is required to adjust the cable loop. It is therefore desired to provide an improved security device that secures items for purchase and is adaptable to different shapes and sizes of the items.
The anti-theft device of the present invention fulfils this object by means of a security device for protecting an item from theft, comprising: at least one cable with two ends, a cable lock that is adapted for releasably attaching the two cable ends together by means of a locking device for forming a loop, the cable lock comprising a first cable end holding part and a second cable end holding part, which parts are adapted to releasably lock together with the locking device for forming the cable loop, the cable lock comprises a cable adjusting device, which is configured for forming an adjustable loop for the cable, wherein the first cable end holding part comprising a biased drum rotatably mounted therein and operatively connected to one end of the cable for winding up of the cable, and a cable controlling device operatively connected to the biased drum and operable to narrow the cable loop by releasing the drum for winding up the cable and to brake the unwinding of the cable such that the size of the cable loop is adjusted. Moreover, the cable lock is a two-part cable lock formed by the two cable end holding parts when locked together, and each of the two cable end holding parts is a guiding member when the cable lock is unlocked and the two cable end holding parts are detached.
In one embodiment of the security device, one of the cable end holding parts comprises an alarm element adapted for triggering an alarm if the item is removed from a certain defined area.
In another embodiment, the cable end holding parts are movably inter-connected, such that the parts are displaceable in opposite directions in relation to each other to allow opening or closing of the cable loop for removing or securing the item when the locking device is released and fixed in relation to each other to close the cable loop for holding and securing the item from theft when the locking device is locked.
In yet another embodiment, one cable end holding part has at least one male member extending in the direction of movement for the two cable end holding parts and facing at least one female member of the other cable end holding part, which female and male members are configured for displaceable interconnection in opposite directions. In still another embodiment, one cable end holding part has two male members extending in the direction of movement for the two cable end holding parts, each male member facing a female member of the other cable end holding part.
A first male member in another embodiment is adapted to guide the movement of the cable end holding parts in relation to each other and to form part of an alarm circuit adapted to trigger an alarm if the cable lock is tampered with. In yet another embodiment, a second male member is adapted to guide the movement of the cable end holding parts in relation to each other such that the stiffness of the cable lock is increased to make the cable lock resistive against tampering.
Moreover, the cable controlling device in one embodiment comprises an operable actuator with a braking member, the actuator being biased so that when in an inoperative position the braking member engages the biased drum to brake the unwinding of the cable and when the actuator is operated the braking member is moved out of engagement with the drum to release the drum for winding up the cable such that the size of the cable loop is adjusted.
In still another embodiment, the locking device in one of the cable end holding parts comprises at least one magnetically attractable leaf spring having an edge portion which in a rested state is engaged with the other cable end holding part.
Furthermore, the cable lock in another embodiment comprises an alarm circuit connected to the cable, configured to sound an alarm when the cable is cut off. Yet another embodiment of the security device comprises an electronic article surveillance (EAS) tag.
In another embodiment, each cable end holding part is rounded.
In accordance with the invention, the improved security device for items to be protected from theft, e.g. clothes and bicycles, simplifies the manipulation, handling and assembly of a security device for such items, enhances the degree of security of such security devices, reduces the size of the security device such that it occupies less space, both in use and when stored for future use, and reduces the need of different security devices for different items. Furthermore, the inventive security device is cheap, especially to manufacture, and adaptable, especially to items with different dimensions. The security device reduces the length of cable in a cable lock, i.e. optimizes the used cable length of the cable lock for securing the item to be protected, whereby the fastening and handling are simplified and the associated costs for this reduced, and the storage of the cable locks simplified, i.e. the cable length may be minimized if the cable lock is to be stored for future use. Moreover, by providing the security device with a cable lock having an adjustable cable length, the field of application for the security device is widened enormously as the same cable lock may be used for many differently sized items compared to prior art cable locks where different cable locks are impossible to use for larger items than intended. Some of the prior art cable locks are even impossible to use for securing other items as the cable lock is fixedly attached to one item and therefore not adapted to be moved from one item to another. Moreover, the two-part structure of the inventive cable lock makes it easy to introduce one end of the cable through clothing, especially sleeves or legs, as each cable end holding part functions as weights at each cable end when the parts are separated, i.e. after the cable lock is unlocked, and simplifies the introduction through the sleeve by “falling through” the sleeve with help of gravity.
The invention will be described in more detail below with reference to examples of embodiments and with reference to the attached drawings, of which
Referring to
In
In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the two cable end holding parts 30a and 30b together form the cable lock 30 when locked together. This means that in one embodiment the two cable end holding parts form a two-part cable lock housing. In another embodiment, the two cable end holding parts 30a and 30b in principle constitute two complementary cable lock halves.
The security device 10 comprises the cable 20 with two ends 20a, 20b for securing portable items, e.g. jackets as shown in
The locking device 40 comprises two spring leaf tongues of metal, as shown in
The cable lock 30 is adapted for releasably attaching the two cable ends 20a, 20b together by means of the locking device 40 for forming a cable loop in that the first cable end holding part 30a and the second cable end holding part 30b are adapted to releasably lock together with the locking device for forming the cable loop when securing an item to be protected against theft and to be released in relation to each other when releasing the item. The cable lock 30 also comprises a cable adjusting device 50, which is configured for providing an adjustability for the cable loop 20, i.e. its size and shape by widening the cable loop before securing the item and narrowing the cable loop after securing the item and for storage of an unused cable lock, meaning that the length of the cable 20 is adjustable to fit around items with different sizes and shapes and to protect them from theft, or at least make it more difficult to steal them undetected. The first cable end holding part 30a is partly rounded and form a case for enclosing a biased drum 51 being rotatably mounted therein and operatively connected to one end 20a, 20b of the cable 20 for winding up of the cable, i.e. this cable end 20a, 20b is of course fixedly attached to the drum such that the end is secured thereto. The other end 20a, 20b is fixedly attached to the second cable end holding part 30b also having a partly rounded shape. In the embodiment shown, the first end 20a of the cable 20 is connected to the first cable end holding part 30a but may instead be connected to the second cable end holding part 30b if the drum 51 instead would be arranged therein.
The drum 51 may be biased by a coiled spring (not shown) such that it is biased for rotary movement in one direction, providing the same function as in a retractable measure tape or the retractable electric cable for a vacuum cleaner and its function and design will not be explained in more detail.
The cable lock 30 in
As shown in
In one embodiment of the security device 10 shown in
The cable end holding parts 30a, 30b are movably interconnected, such that the parts are displaceable in opposite directions, as shown by the arrow in
Advantages with the two-part cable lock 30 according to the invention are that each of the two cable end holding parts 30a and 30b functions as a weight on or as a guiding member for its corresponding cable end 20a, 20b, when the cable lock is unlocked and the parts are detached/separated from each other. This simplifies the manual introduction of each cable end through clothing, e.g. sleeves or legs of jackets, shirts or trousers, in that the cable end holding part “falls through” the sleeve or leg and guides the respective cable end 20a or 20b when introduced there through with help of gravity (shown in
As shown in
The male members 31 have different lengths as shown in
In the security device 10, the locking device 40 in one of the cable end holding parts 30a, 30b comprises at least one magnetically attractable leaf spring 40 having an edge portion which in a rested state is engaged with the other cable end holding part 30a, 30b.
The security device 10 is provided with the cable lock 30 that may comprise an alarm circuit connected to the cable 20, configured to sound an alarm when the cable is cut off.
Moreover, the security device 10 according to the invention may comprise an electronic article surveillance (EAS) tag.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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07104068.7 | Mar 2007 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP08/53051 | 3/13/2008 | WO | 00 | 11/25/2009 |