The present invention relates to a security seal of the padlock type. The seal has a housing which can receive the legs of a U- or J-shaped hasp. The hasp can be broken and removed from the housing, allowing the seal to be reused with a new hasp.
EP-A-0223905 discloses a padlock-type seal which comprises a plastic housing having a pair of apertures for receiving a shackle formed of a U-shaped piece of wire. The shackle can be passed over the member to be locked and pushed into the housing, to irreversibly lock therein. The seal is released by cutting of the wire. This particular seal cannot be reused.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,230,541 discloses a seal which is in the form of a fastener for cabinets. The fastener is closed by means of a flexible, elongated band which engages on first and second latches within the fastener body. The band can be released for reuse.
WO-A-97/48603 discloses a seal having a J-shaped hasp which may be locked in the seal housing by means of a pressure sensitive catch. The seal can be opened by one leg of the hasp being cut. A product based on the design of WO-A-97/48603 is manufactured and sold by ITW Envopak under the name “Padseal” (registered trade mark). This product has a J-shaped hasp with parallel arms which are inserted into slots within the seal housing. The arms are locked within the housing by means of a sprung catch. The hasp is removed by one leg being cut, the lower part of that leg then being pulled out of the bottom of the housing, which allows the remained of the hasp to be removed from the top.
It is one object of the invention to provide a seal of the above mentioned type which has a high degree of security and tamper evidence.
According to a first aspect of the invention, there is provided a seal of the type comprising a housing and a J- or U-shaped hasp, the housing having first and second openings to receive the legs of the hasp, the first opening communicating with a third opening of the housing to form a channel for a first leg of the hasp, a locking mechanism being provided within the housing which is biased to resist withdrawal of the first leg of the hasp through the first opening, the hasp being lockable within the housing such that it can only be removed by cutting of the first leg of the hasp, characterised in that the legs of the hasp are substantially rigid and are connected together by a resilient hinge such that in a first, relaxed position the legs adopt a position in which they are not parallel, the legs being moveable to a second, parallel position against the resilient force of the hinge for insertion into the housing.
One advantage of the invention is that on breakage or cutting of the hasp, one leg will spring away from the parallel position which it adopts for insertion into the housing. This spring force makes it more difficult to tamper with the hasp and then seek to reconnect the broken leg parts. Furthermore, the fact that the hasp has been broken and the seal is thus no longer secure is immediately evident because the hasp adopts a different shape than in its locked condition.
Preferably, the hasp is formed as a unitary member and of a material which is substantially rigid but which can form a living, resilient hinge at the juncture between the legs of the hasp.
Another preferred feature is that a point of weakening is provided in the first leg of the hasp, which extends fully through the leg, the hasp being designed to be broken at this point of weakening. This preferred feature further increases security, in that it is more difficult to rejoin the broken legs of the hasp without the join being obvious to an observer.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a seal of the type comprising a housing and a J- or U-shaped hasp, the housing having first and second openings to receive the legs of the hasp, the first opening communicating with a third opening of the housing to form a channel for a first leg of the hasp, a locking mechanism being provided within the housing which is biased to resist withdrawal of the first leg of the hasp through the first opening, the hasp being lockable within the housing such that it can only be removed by cutting of the first leg of the hasp, characterised in that the housing is formed of a main body and a cover, the cover being sealed onto the body part, the cover having at least one protrusion which engages in a corresponding recess within the body part, the protrusion having an aperture therethrough which in use receives one leg of the hasp.
Preferably, the cover has two apertures which may be through separate protrusions, so that both legs of the hasp are received through apertured parts of the cover when the seal is in its locked position.
One advantage of the second aspect of the invention is that the seal housing is more tamper-proof. The seal cover cannot easily be removed from the housing body, when the seal is in the locked condition, because the legs of the hasp hold the cover on the body, in addition to the normal seals which are used to bond the parts of the housing together.
For the avoidance of any doubt, the first and second aspects of the invention can be used together.
Further advantages of the invention will be understood from the filing detailed description of preferred embodiments that the invention, which are described below, by example only, with reference to the accompanying figures. In the drawings:
As shown in
The hasp is U- or J-shaped and in the embodiment shown has a longer leg (8) and a shorter leg (9). At the juncture of the legs (8, 9) is a resilient hinge (10). In this embodiment, the hasp is formed of a suitably stiff yet resilient plastics material (for example acetal, nylon, styrene, ABS, PP or PE) such that the legs are substantially rigid yet can be flexed towards or away one another. A weakened point (11) is formed in leg (8). Leg (8) has a notch (29) and leg (9) has a notch (30). The hasp may, for example, be 6.5 mm by 3.5 mm in its maximum dimensions, and 2 mm thick.
As illustrated, legs (8, 9) in the relaxed condition assume a position relative to one another such that they are not parallel. In the preferred example illustrated, the legs diverge or are splayed, that is they open away from each other away from the hinge. The resilience of the hinge is such that the legs can, however, be squeezed together so that they adopt a parallel orientation.
The parallel condition of the legs (8, 9) as seen in
Thus,
The hasp is removed entirely from the housing, as shown in
Within the seal housing is an angled, resilient catch member (21) which has arms (22, 23) which join at a curved juncture (24) and extend away from each other from this juncture to form an ‘A’ shape. The housing body (20) is moulded so as to create the first passage (6) and the passage (7) described with reference to
After the legs of the hasp are squeezed together so that they are parallel (as shown in
In this position, the hasp is locked within the seal body. In particular, the hasp cannot be pulled out of the seal body in the direction it was inserted, because the arms of catch (21) are engaged in the notches of both legs of the hasp.
Upon breakage at the point of weakness (11), as seen in
In addition to the pins, or in an alternative embodiment instead of the pins, the cover (30) includes protrusions (35, 36) which in this example are square or rectangular. These protrusions engage in correspondingly shaped recesses (37, 38) in the housing body. The recesses (37, 38) interrupt passages (6, 7) in the housing body.
The protrusions (35, 36) are formed with apertures (39, 40) such that when the cover is fitted on to the seal body, the apertures are in registration with passages (6, 7) and thus form part of the seats for the legs (8, 9) of the hasp. This means that when the seal is locked, with the hasp engaged in the housing, the cover will be physically held onto the housing body not only by its normal connection (gluing, welding, or mechanical fix, etc.) but by the arms of the hasp itself. This means that removal of the cover for unwanted tampering is prevented.
The seal body and cover described above can be used with a flexible hasp as described in relation to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04 257828.6 | Dec 2004 | EP | regional |