1. Field of the Invention
The present invention concerns a security lock for securing a locking assembly to a stopping member, and a method for its use.
2. Prior and Related Art
A locking assembly can be disposed within a door and a stopping member within a door frame or vice versa. When a bolt bridges the gap between the two, the door is latched or secured to the frame. A similar arrangement can be used to lock a drawer, etc. In general, the term “lock” as used herein is intended to mean a mechanical latching mechanism where a bolt can bridge a gap between a locking assembly and a stopping member, thereby preventing lateral motion between them. For the sake of simplicity, a door lock where the locking assembly is disposed in a door and the stopping member is disposed within a doorframe is used in the following examples. However, other applications where a lateral motion of a locking assembly with respect to a stopping member is prevented by a bolt extending in a longitudinal direction are anticipated.
In a simple form, the bolt is pressed into the stopping member by a spring, and the bolt is retracted into the locking assembly by a door knob or a handle This mechanism is frequently combined with a separate key operated lock, where the door knob or handle is replaced with a locking cylinder operable by a removable key fitting in the particular locking cylinder. Any locking cylinder can be used together with the present invention. However, a brief discussion of locking cylinders in general is believed to improve understanding the present invention.
The main principle of a key operable locking cylinder is that the cylinder can only be rotated with respect to an outer housing if a key fitting the cylinder is presented. The locking cylinder is coupled to the bolt through a mechanism, such that turning the locking cylinder in one direction causes the bolt to extend from the locking assembly and engage a stopping plate or some other reinforcing stopping member, and turning the locking cylinder in the other direction causes the bolt to disengage from the stopping member to permit opening of the door. In a first example, a mechanical key displaces pins, plates, or rotating discs into positions where the elements within the locking cylinder can be rotated with respect to each other. A second example is a key that is scanned electronically, optically or magnetic, and a lock where the bolt is displaced by an electric motor if and only if the scan fits a predetermined pattern. There are also known mechanisms where a doorknob is used to rotate the locking cylinder, such that the door knob cannot be rotated before a key permits rotation.
In a typical entrance door restricting access to premises such as an apartment, a house, an office, etc., the door, the frame and the hinges are relatively simple mechanisms. This means they are relatively inexpensive to manufacture, and can be made robust without excessive cost. In comparison, the lock is a more complex mechanism with small parts and close tolerances. To avoid excessive cost, the lock tends to be made from relatively inexpensive, and thus not particularly strong, materials. The combination of small parts and relatively inexpensive materials in the mechanism makes the lock a preferred point of attack for someone wanting to break into the premises. One method for breaking in is so-called jimmying, where a crowbar or similar instrument is inserted in the extension of the bolt. When leverage is applied to the crowbar, the bolt is forced against the mechanism in the lock, causing one or more of the relatively small and inexpensive parts to break. It is noted that mounting a protective plate fixed to the door frame to prevent insertion of a crowbar is not an option in countries where an entrance door is required to swing outwards in case of fire or danger. Similar protective plates are sometimes mounted on steel doors, but rarely on a typical entrance door leading to an apartment or a home.
Another method to gain unauthorised access is to drill along the rotation axis of the locking cylinder in order to break the rotation locking elements or the retainer keeping them in place. Once the pins or other elements keeping the cylinder from rotating are broken, the locking cylinder can be rotated to unlock the door.
In some designs, the bolt or latching member is a hook rotating into or out of engagement with the stopping member. However, such hooks can be forced open by jimmying in the direction of rotation rather than in the longitudinal direction of the bolt. Further, a hook makes no difference if the locking cylinder is drilled.
In the examples above, the burglar gains access to the premises once the bolt is forced or retracted into the locking assembly.
A main objective of the present invention is to solve at least one of the above problems, while keeping the benefits of prior art.
The main objective is achieved by providing a security lock for securing a locking assembly to a stopping member, where the locking assembly comprises a housing containing a bolt where the bolt is movable between a retracted position where the bolt is disposed entirely within the housing, and an extended position where part of the bolt extends in a longitudinal direction from a front face of the housing into the stopping member. The security lock is distinguished by a set of first latching members, wherein each first latching member is movable in a lateral direction parallel to the front face between a position entirely within the bolt when the bolt is in the retracted position, and wherein part of the first latching member extends from the bolt and abuts the front face when the bolt is in the extended position.
In another aspect, the invention concerns a method for securing a locking assembly of the kind above to a stopping member, the method comprising the step of causing the set of first latching members to extend laterally from the bolt into engagement with the front face, whereby a load imposed longitudinally on the bolt in the direction from the stopping member toward the housing is transferred through the set of first latching members to the housing.
In other words, a load or force applied to the extended bolt will transfer through the first latching members, which abuts the front face, to the housing, rather than to a mechanism comprising small parts within the housing. As the latching members and the housing can be made robust in a relatively easy manner, the lock's resistance to jimmying is improved significantly without a corresponding increase in the cost of manufacture.
In a preferred embodiment, second latching members engage the stopping member in a similar manner. Further, the housing and stopping member may have cylindrical outer surfaces, such that mounting the security lock simply involves drilling coaxial bores in the door and frame respectively, and inserting the locking assembly and stopping member into their respective bores.
Further features and benefits of the present invention will become apparent from the attached claims and the following detailed description.
The invention will be better understood from the following detailed description with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
a is a front view of a cylindrical locking assembly;
b is a front view of a rectangular locking assembly;
a is a side view of the guide in
b is a diagram illustrating a transfer of forces in
The drawings are intended to illustrate the principles of the invention. They are not to scale, and several details are omitted for clarity.
The stopping member 200 is mounted within a doorframe 20 to receive the bolt 120 from the locking assembly 100 mounted in the door 10. As discussed above, the opposite arrangement is also possible, and the embodiment with two mechanical key operated locking cylinders is an example only. Thus, elements 10-20 illustrate an example of how the locking assembly 100 and stopping member 200 can be used, and have been assigned reference numerals below 100 to indicate that they are not part of the invention.
The bolt 120 is movable relative to the housing 110 in a longitudinal direction indicated by the x-axis in
When the bolt 120 is in its extended position and has entered the stopping member 200, a set of first latching members 121 extend from the bolt 120 in a direction parallel to the front face 111 of the housing 110. The directions parallel to the front face 111 are perpendicular to the longitudinal direction x, and are called ‘lateral directions’ in the following. In other words, a lateral direction is any direction perpendicular to the longitudinal direction x, i.e. any direction in a plane spanned by the y and z axes in
The extended latching members 121 abuts the front face 110, and serves to transfer any force applied to the end of the bolt in the direction toward the housing, to the housing 110 rather than to small parts in the locking cylinder 11 and/or within the locking assembly 100. The transfer of forces is further discussed in conjunction with
a and 2b are front views of two embodiments of the locking assembly 100, i.e. as the embodiments would appear when viewed along the x-axis from right to left in
A cylindrical locking assembly 100, for example as shown in
A rectangular embodiment, such as the one illustrated in
In applications where a locking cylinder is accessible from the outside of the door, this locking cylinder should provide reasonable protection against drilling, for example by providing a face of hardened steel and using other protective means well known in the art.
The guide 140 comprises at least one inclined face 141, 142. The inclination is in the longitudinal direction, and serves to move the latching members 121, 131 laterally when the guide 140 is moved longitudinally. A cylindrical part of the guide 140 comprising frustoconical faces 141, 142 may be disposed within a cylindrical bore in the bolt 120 regardless of the outer shape of the bolt 120, for example, the circular shape in
It should be understood that other methods for moving the latching members 121, 131 laterally, for example biasing the latching members laterally by a spring, can be used instead of or in addition to the guide 140 with inclined faces.
a shows the guide 140 of
The activation discs 150 and 160 work in a similar manner, and hence only disc 150 is described in the following. Referring now to
Returning to
The guide 140 is also movable relative to the bolt 120, such that the latching members 121, 131 can be moved laterally when the guide is moved longitudinally within the bolt 120.
In
Regardless of the particular embodiment of the security lock, rotating the locking cylinder 11 and/or activation disc 150, 160 in a first direction will cause the bolt 120 to extend longitudinally from the housing 110 into a stopping member 200, and the set of first latching members 121 to extend laterally from the bolt 120 into engagement with the front face 111 of the housing 110. Thereby, a load or force F imposed longitudinally on the bolt in the direction from the stopping member 200 toward the housing 110 is transferred through the set of first latching members 121 to the housing 110.
The rotation in the first direction may also cause the set of second latching members 131 to extend laterally from the bolt 120 into engagement with a complementary face 210 within the stopping member 200, whereby the load or force F is partially transferred through the set of second latching members 131 to the stopping member 200.
Rotating the locking cylinder 11 and/or activation disc 150, 160 in a second direction opposite the first direction will cause the latching members 121, 131 to retract into the bolt 120, and the bolt 120 to retract into the housing 110.
In one embodiment, the housing 110 is cylindrical, and thus can be mounted in a bore with internal diameter equal to the outer diameter of the housing. Drilling a bore is easier than milling or manually carving a recess in a door or frame, especially when the door is already mounted. The bolt 120 can conveniently be provided with a small marking tip 129, which can be used to mark the centre for a corresponding bore for a cylindrical stopping member 200.
A hole can be drilled through, or partly trough, the door perpendicular to the first bore, such that a locking cylinder 11 can be inserted to engage the locking assembly 100 and be accessible from a side of the door.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20101433 | Oct 2010 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/067711 | 10/11/2011 | WO | 00 | 4/15/2013 |