The present disclosure relates to movable barriers. More particularly, the present disclosure relates to juvenile gates for inside a dwelling.
A gate unit in accordance with the present disclosure includes a gate that can be moved about a vertical gate-pivot axis by a person between OPENED and CLOSED positions. In illustrative embodiments, the gate unit also includes a slidable latch that is movable relative to the gate to retain the gate in the CLOSED position and establish a LOCKED mode of the gate.
In illustrative embodiments, the gate unit also includes a gate mount that is adapted to mate with a frame bordering a passageway such as a door frame bordering a doorway or a wall bordering a hallway. The gate is mounted on upper and lower hinges included in the gate mount for pivotable movement about a vertical gate-pivot axis between a CLOSED position closing a walkway passage formed in the gate mount to block movement of a person through the walkway passage and an OPENED position opening the walkway passage. The latch is carried on the pivotable gate and arranged to engage a latch receiver provided in the gate mount to lock the gate in the CLOSED position and to disengage the latch receiver to free the gate to be pivoted about the gate-pivot axis to an OPENED position.
In illustrative embodiments, the latch is included in a gate lock of the gate unit. The gate lock is coupled to the gate and configured to mate with the gate mount to retain the gate in the CLOSED position. The gate lock is configured to be activated by a gate operator using a two-step SLIDE-BACK/LIFT-UP gate-unlocking process in accordance with the present disclosure to unlock the gate so that it can be pivoted by the gate operator from the CLOSED position to the OPENED position.
In illustrative embodiments, the gate lock also includes a latch actuator that is configured to provide means for establishing a two-step SLIDE-BACK/LIFT-UP gate-unlocking process in accordance with the present disclosure. In this process, a LIFT-UP step is carried out by a gate operator to move the slidable latch from the EXTENDED position the RETRACTED position to free the gate to be pivoted to the OPENED position after a SLIDE-BACK step has been carried out by the gate opener to activate the mechanism that is used to in the LIFT-UP Step.
In illustrative embodiments, the latch actuator comprises a slidable latch release that is first used by the gate operator in the SLIDE-BACK step and a pivotable latch retractor that is then used by the gate operator in the subsequent LIFT-UP step to move the latch of the gate-pivot blocker from the EXTENDED position to the RETRACTED position to disengage the latch receiver formed in the gate mount so as to free the gate to be pivoted to an OPENED position by the gate operator. The slidable latch release is mounted for sliding movement on and relative to the pivotable latch retractor between a FORWARD PIVOT-BLOCKING position and a REARWARD RETRACTOR-RELEASING position. The pivotable latch retractor is mounted for pivotable movement on the gate about a retractor-pivot axis between a LOWERED position and a PIVOTED position. The slidable latch release is carried on the pivotable latch retractor so that it will also be pivoted about the retractor-pivot as during pivotable movement of the pivotable latch retractor.
In illustrative embodiments, the pivotable latch retractor can be pivoted about the retractor-pivot axis by a gate operator to complete a LIFT-UP step of the two-step SLIDE-BACK/LIFT-UP gate-unlocking process disclosed herein. The pivotable latch retractor includes first pin-guide means for moving a latch-retractor pin coupled to the slidable latch away from the latch receiver formed in the gate mount to cause the slidable latch to move to the RETRACTED position in response to upward pivoting movement of the pivotable latch retractor relative to the top rail about the retractor-pivot axis under the manual control of a gate operator that has gripped and pivoted the pivotable latch retractor during the LIFT-UP step. A slanted slot formed in the pivotable latch retractor to receive the latch-retractor pin for back-and-forth sliding movement therein provides the pin-guide means in an illustrative embodiment of the present disclosure.
In illustrative embodiments, the slidable retractor release that is mounted for back-and-forth slidable movement on the pivotable latch retractor functions normally to anchor and thereby disable the pivotable latch retractor so that is cannot be pivoted about the retractor-pivot axis to retract the latch until a gate operator first completes a SLIDE-BACK step of the TWO-STEP/SLIDE-BACK lift-up gate-unlocking process. The slidable retractor release is coupled to the pivotable latch retractor to pivot therewith about the horizontal retractor-pivot axis. The slidable retractor release is mounted for sliding movement on the pivotable latch retractor during the SLIDE-BACK step between (1) a normal FORWARD PIVOT-BLOCKING position in which the slidable retractor release engages the latch-retractor pin to block sliding movement of the slidable latch relative to the top rail of the gate from the EXTENDED position to the RETRACTED position so that the gate cannot be pivoted by the gate operator about the vertical gate-pivot axis from the CLOSED position to the OPENED position and (2) a temporary REARWARD RETRACTOR-RELEASING position in which the slidable retractor release disengages the latch-retractor pin to allow the latch-retractor pin to be moved by the pin-guide means of the pivotable latch retractor away from the latch receiver gate mount during upward pivoting movement of the pivotable latch retractor about the retractor-pivot axis to cause the slidable latch to move rearwardly on the gate from the EXTENDED position to the RETRACTED position so that the gate can be pivoted by a gate operator about the gate-pivot axis from the CLOSED position to an OPENED position.
In an illustrative process in accordance with the present disclosure, in a first gate-unlocking SLIDE-BACK step, a gate operator grips and slides the slidable retractor release back on the pivotable latch retractor from FORWARD PIVOT-BLOCKING position to the REARWARD RETRACTOR-RELEASING position to free the pivotable latch retractor to be pivoted about the retractor-pivot axis. In a subsequent second gate-unlocking LIFT-UP step, the gate operator grips and pulls upwardly on the slidable retractor release while the slidable retractor release remains in the REARWARD RETRACTOR-RELEASING position on the pivotable latch retractor to pivot the now-free-to-pivot pivotable latch retractor upwardly about the retractor-pivot axis to cause the latch-retractor pin that is linked to the pivotable latch retractor via the pin-guide means to be moved away from the latch receiver formed in the gate mount so that the slidable latch is moved relative to the top rail of the gate from the EXTENDED position to the RETRACTED position to disengage the latch receiver provided in the gate mount. Since the slidable latch on the gate has now disengaged the latch receiver provided in the gate mount following the completion of the two-step gate-unlocking SLIDE-BACK/LIFT-UP process in accordance with the present disclosure, the gate is free to be pivoted by a gate operator about the gate-pivot axis from the CLOSED position to an OPENED position.
Additional features of the present disclosure will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon consideration of illustrative embodiments exemplifying the best mode of carrying out the disclosure as presently perceived.
The detailed description particularly refers to the accompanying Figs. in which:
A gate unit 10 in accordance with the present disclosure is place in a doorway 12 as suggested in
Gate unit 10 also includes a gate lock 18 that is coupled to gate 16 to pivot therewith as suggested in
As suggested in
Blocker mover 30 includes a pivotable latch retractor 302 that (once released for pivotable movement using a SLIDE-BACK step described herein) can be pivoted upwardly by gate operator 19 about retractor-pivot axis 302A in a LIFT-UP step of the two-step SLIDE-BACK/LIFT-UP gate-unlocking process to cause slidable latch 22 to slide from an EXTENDED position engaging latch receiver 22R in gate mount 14 to a RETRACTED position disengaging latch receiver 22R in gate mount 14. Blocker-mover anchor 40 includes a slidable retractor release 402 that can be slid back on pivotable latch retractor 302 by gate operator 19 in a SLIDE-BACK step of the two-step SLIDE-BACK/LIFT-UP gate-unlocking process from a FORWARD PIVOT-BLOCKING position to a REARWARD RETRACTOR-RELEASE position. Blocker mover 30 and blocker-mover actuator 40 cooperate to define a latch actuator 34 that can be hand-operated by a gate operator 19 to withdraw latch 22 of gate lock 18 from latch receiver 22R of gate mount 14 using the two-step SLIDE-BACK/LIFT-UP gate-unlocking process disclosed herein to free gate 16 to be pivoted about gate-pivot axis 16A from a CLOSED position shown in
Gate lock 18 is configured to lock gate 16 to gate mount 14 as shown in
Outer casing 402 is formed to include a 7-shaped pin-receiver slot 402S that receives a latch-retractor pin 24 as shown in
A cover 404 may be coupled to outer casing 402 to block access to the 7-shaped pin-receiver slot 402S as suggested in
Outer casing 402 is configured to translate or slide relative to top rail 16T and inner casing 302 from a FORWARD PIVOT-BLOCKING position (slid to the right) as shown in
Gate unit 10 is placed in a doorway as shown in
Gate lock 16 includes a gate-pivot blocker 20 comprising a slidable latch 22 mounted for back-and-forth sliding movement in a top rail 16T of gate 16 between an EXTENDED position extending beyond a free end of top rail 16T to block pivotable movement of gate 16 about the gate-pivot axis 16A as suggested in
Gate lock 18 further includes a latch actuator 34 comprising a blocker-mover anchor 40 that is moved by a gate operator in a first SLIDE-BACK step to free a blocker mover 30 that will be pivoted by the gate operator 19 in a subsequent second LIFT-UP step to move gate-pivot blocker 20 to disengage gate mount 14 so that gate 16 is unlocked and free to pivot from the CLOSED position to an OPENED position. A pivotable latch retractor 302 included in blocker mover 30 is mounted on top rail 16T of gate 16 for pivotable movement about a horizontal retractor-pivot axis 302A during a LIFT-UP step from an INACTIVE position in which the slidable latch 22 is retained in its EXTENDED position shown in
As suggested in
As suggested in
Gate-pivot blocker 20 includes a latch 22 and a latch-retractor pin 24 as suggested in
The slidable latch 22 is shown in
The slidable retractor release 402 of blocker-mover anchor 40 is formed to include a 7-shaped pin-receiver slot 402S comprising a horizontal slot segment 402SH and a positively sloping angled slot segment 402S communicating with a right end of the horizontal slot segment 402SH at a segment junction 402SJ between the slot segments 402SH, 402SJ. The pivotable latch retractor 302 is formed to include a positively sloping slanted slot 302S (shown in phantom) that is not aligned with the positively sloping angled slot segment 402SA of the 7-shaped pin-receiver slot 402S of the slidable retractor release 402. A side elevation view is provided in
The pivotable latch retractor 302 of latch actuator 34 is mounted to top rail 16T of the gate 16 for pivotable movement about retractor-pivot axis 302A. As shown in
Latch actuator 34 is shown in a STAGE-TWO INACTIVE position in which the slidable retractor release 402 of blocker-mover anchor 40 has been moved to the left away from the free end of top rail 16T of gate 16 to compress a spring 306 interposed between the pivotable latch retractor 302 and the slidable retractor release 402 and to cause relative movement between the slidable retractor release 402 of latch actuator 34 and the slidable shuttle 222 of latch 22 to cause latch-retractor pin 24 to move in the 7-shaped pin-receiver slot 402S to a junction 402SH provided at the right end of the horizontal slot segment 402SH between the horizontal slot segment 402SH and the positively sloping angled slot segment 402SA so that latch-retractor pin 24 is now poised to enter and move downwardly in the positively sloping angled slot segment 402SA as shown in
As suggested in
A process is disclosed and illustrated herein for withdrawing a latch 22 mounted for sliding movement on a gate 16 toward gate-pivot axis 16A associated with gate 16 to disengage a latch receiver 22R included in a gate mount 14 that is adapted to mate with a frame 13 bordering a passageway 12. Gate mount 14 is formed to include a walkway passage through which a person may walk and is used to support gate 16 for pivotable movement about gate-pivot axis 16A between a closed position closing the walkway position formed in gate mount 14 to block movement of a person through the walkway passage and an opened position opening the walkway passage.
The process comprises the step of mounting a pivotable latch retractor 302 on a top rail 16T of gate 16 to engage a latch-retractor pin 24 that is coupled to latch 22 to slide with latch 22 relative to top rail 16T of gate 16 as latch 22 slides from an EXTENDED position engaging latch receiver 22R formed in gate mount 14 to a RETRACTED position disengaging latch receiver 22R formed in gate mount 14 and to pivot on top rail 16T about a retractor-pivot axis 302A between a LOWERED position lying alongside top rail 16T of gate 16 and a PIVOTED position lying at an angle to top rail 16T of gate 16. The process also includes the step of locating a slidable retractor release 402 on the pivotable latch retractor 302 normally to engage latch-retractor pin 24 to block pivotable movement of the pivotable latch retractor 302 about retractor-pivot axis 302A while the slidable retractor release 402 remains in a FORWARD position lying at a first distance from gate-pivot axis 16 and the latch 22 remains in the EXTENDED position engaging the latch receiver 22R formed in gate mount 14 to block pivoting movement of gate 16 about gate-pivot axis 16A.
The process further comprises the step of sliding the slidable retractor release 402 on the pivotable latch retractor 302 from the FORWARD position in a direction toward gate-pivot axis 16A to a REARWARD SLIDE-BACK position lying at a relatively smaller second distance from gate-pivot axis 16A to disengage the pivotable latch retractor 302 from latch-retractor pin 24 to release the pivotable latch retractor 302 so that the pivotable latch retractor 302 is free to pivot upwardly about retractor-pivot axis 302A from the LOWERED position to the PIVOTED position.
The process also comprises the step of pivoting the pivotable latch retractor 302 upwardly about retractor-pivot axis 302A from the LOWERED position to the PIVOTED position while the slidable retractor release 402 remains in the REARWARD SLIDE-BACK position on the pivotable latch retractor 302 to apply a retraction force to latch-retractor pin 24 to cause latch 22 to move relative to gate 16 and gate mount 14 from the EXTENDED position engaging the latch receiver 22R formed in gate mount 14 to the RETRACTED position disengaging the latch receiver 22R formed in gate mount 14 to free gate 16 to be pivoted about gate-pivot axis 16A from the CLOSED position to the OPENED position to allow movement of a person through the walkway passage formed in gate mount 14.
The pivotable latch retractor 302 includes pin-guide means 302R for moving latch-retractor pin 24 away from the latch receiver 22R formed in gate mount 14 in a direction toward gate-pivot axis 16A. This movement of latch-retractor pin 24 causes latch 22 to move from the EXTENDED position to the RETRACTED position in response to upward pivoting movement of the pivotable latch retractor 302 relative to top rail 16T about retractor-pivot axis 302A.
The pivotable latch retractor 302 includes a retractor top wall 302T lying above the top rail 16T of the gate 16 and a retractor side wall 302W depending from the top wall 302T to lie alongside a vertical side wall 16TW of top rail 16T. The pin-guide means 302S is provided by a positively sloping slanted slot 302S formed in the retractor side wall 302W to receive latch-retractor pin 24 for back-and-forth sliding movement therein along a positively sloping path.
The slidable retractor release 402 includes a release side wall 402W arranged to lie in laterally spaced-apart relation to the vertical side rail 16TW of top rail 16T of gate 16 to locate the retractor side wall 302W therebetween. The release side wall 302W is formed to include a 7-shaped pin-receiver slot 402S comprising a horizontal slot segment 402SH and a positively sloping angled slot 402SA segment communicating with a right end of the horizontal slot segment 402SH at a segment junction 402SJ between the horizontal and angled slot segments 402SH, 402SA and aligning in side-by-side parallel relative to one another with the positively sloping slanted slot 302S formed in the retractor side wall 302W only when the slidable retractor release 402 occupies the REARWARD SLIDE-BACK position on the pivotable latch retractor 302.
Latch-retractor pin 24 is arranged to lie in the horizontal slot segment 402SH formed in the slidable retractor release 402 when the slidable retractor release 402 occupies the FORWARD position on the pivotable latch retractor 302 to engage a segment edge 402E included in the slidable retractor release 402 as shown in
The gate lock 18 further includes an indicator 221R1, 221G, 221R2 configured to tell a caregiver when gate unit 10 is used and installed properly in a doorway 12 as suggested in
The position of gate mount 14 and gate 16 relative to doorjamb 13 of the doorway 12 determines which indicator or indicators are visible to the caregiver. Gate mount 14 is configured to cause right leg 14R shown in
Once gate mount 14 is set up properly as suggested in
In illustrative embodiments, gate lock 18 includes a slidable latch 22 and a latch-retractor pin 24 coupled to the slidable latch 22 to move therewith. The slidable latch 22 is mounted for back-and-forth horizontal movement along a horizontally extending top rail 16T of gate 16 between EXTENDED and RETRACTED positions. In the EXTENDED position, the slidable latch 22 extends beyond end of top rail 16T and engages the latch receiver 24R provided in gate mount 14 when gate 16 occupies the CLOSED position so as to lock gate 16 and block pivoting movement of gate 16 about gate-pivot axis 16A. In the RETRACTED position, the slidable latch 22 is drawn into a hollow region provided in top rail 16T to disengage the latch receiver 22R provided in gate mount 14 so as to unlock gate 16 and free gate 16 to be pivoted about gate-pivot axis 16A to the OPENED position.
Gate lock 18 also includes a pivotable inner casing 302 mounted for pivotable movement relative to top rail 16T of gate 16 about a casing-pivot axis 302A. Latch-retractor pin 24 is arranged to extend outwardly into an angled slot 302A formed in the pivotable inner casing 302 so as to lie in an upper end zone in the angled slot 302A when the pivotable inner casing 302 lies in a horizontal orientation to extend along top rail 16T of gate 16 as suggested in
A user can pivot the pivotable inner casing 302 about the casing-pivot axis 302A to cause an outer end of the pivotable inner casing 302 to move upwardly away from top rail 16 as suggested in
Gate lock 18 also includes a releasable inner-casing pivot blocker 40 that is configured to provide means for blocking pivotable movement of the pivotable inner casing 302 about the casing-pivot axis 302A until released by a lock operator 19. The releasable inner-casing pivot blocker includes a movable outer casing 402 that is wrapped around the pivotable inner casing 302 and mounted for back-and-forth horizontal sliding movement relative to the pivotable inner casing 302 and a casing-biasing spring 306 that is interposed between the inner and outer casings 302, 402. The movable outer casing 402 is mounted for sliding movement on the inner casing 302 between FORWARD and REARWARD positions. The casing-biasing spring 306 is arranged to yieldably urge the movable outer casing 402 normally toward the outer end of the rail 16T to assume the FORWARD position.
Latch-retractor pin 24 is also arranged to extend into a 7-shaped pin-receiver slot 402S that is formed in the movable outer casing 402. The 7-shaped pin-receiver slot 402S includes a horizontal segment 402SH and an angled slot segment 402SA that connect at a segment junction 402ST. When the latch-retractor pin 24 lies in the horizontal segment 402SH, pivotable movement of the inner casing 302 about the casing-pivot axis 302A is blocked. However, when the latch-retractor pin 24 lies in the angled slot segment 402SH, pivotable movement of the inner casing 302 about the casing-pivot axis 302A is possible because the angled slot 302S formed in the inner casing 30 and the angled slot segment 402SA formed in the surrounding outer casing 402 are aligned in spaced-apart parallel relative to one another.
The slidable latch 22 further includes a slidable shuttle 222 and a bolt-biasing spring 223 acting between the slidable shuttle 222 and the lock bolt 221 normally to move the lock bolt 221 to the EXTENDED position. The latch-retractor pin 24 is coupled to the slidable shuttle 22 to move back and forth with the slidable shuttle 222 relative to the inner and outer casings 302, 402 during pivotable movement of the inner and outer casings 302, 402 relative to top rail 16T about the casing-pivot axis 302A.
In illustrative embodiments, in a first gate-unlocking step, the operator slides the outer casing 402 back on the inner casing 302 to the REARWARD position to compress the casing-biasing spring 306 provided between the inner and outer casings 302, 402 and to cause latch-retractor pin 24 to move in the horizontal slot segment 402SH to the segment junction 402ST between the horizontal and angled slot segments 402SH, 402SA In a subsequent second gate-unlocking step, the operator pivots the inner and outer casings 302, 402 of the latch retractor 34 about the casing-pivot axis 302A while latch-retractor pin 24 travels in the angled slot segment 402SA of the 7-shaped pin receiver 402S formed in the outer casing 402 and from the top end zone to the bottom end zone of the angled slot 302S formed in the inner casing 302 from the segment junction 402ST to a bottom end of the angled slot segment 402SA. Such travel also causes rearward lateral movement of latch-retractor pin 24 away from the latch receiver 22R formed in gate mount 14 and lateral movement of the slidable latch 22 from the EXTENDED position extending into the latch receiver 22R to the RETRACTED position disengaging the latch receiver 22R. At this point, gate 16 is unlocked and free to be pivoted about gate-pivot axis 16A from the CLOSED position to the OPENED position.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) to U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/558,539 filed Sep. 14, 2017, which is expressly incorporated by reference herein.
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