This invention relates to locking mechanisms for use with an overhead door, in particular with the type of overhead door on which supporting rollers move up or down in a vertical track or rail. The locking mechanism provides a bar or rod that passes into the path of the rollers in the track, and obstructs the roller from movement in the direction to open the door. The locking mechanism is a straightforward mechanical item with a frame, bar, spring, and a place to secure a padlock to hold the mechanism in its locked position. A microswitch contained within the housing changes state (from open or OFF to closed or ON) when the locking mechanism is moved to the locked position. The microswitch can be used to indicate the locked/unlocked status of the overhead door, and may also be used as an interlock, e.g., to prevent a hydraulic dock leveler from actuating when the door is closed and locked, or to keep a dock light from turning on, which might heat a spot on the door and cause heat damage.
To date, overhead door locks of this kind have been made of a sheet steel bent into a box shape which is mounted onto the door, with a bar that slides through slots in the box, and which enters a slot cut in the track or rail. These devices are prone to bending and deforming, and are often damaged after a period of normal use in an industrial or warehouse environment. Consequently, there is a need for frequent replacement. Also, the security afforded by these conventional overhead door locks is quite limited.
An example of a lock for an overhead door is described in Shoemaker U.S. Pat. No. 6,027,148 in which a fixed component mounted onto the frame of the overhead door, i.e., somewhere along the track, captures a rod that is mounted somewhere on the movable overhead door, entering an opening in a rotary element that turns and is retained in a detent. This is a fairly complex apparatus, with numerous moving parts which can be easily knocked out of alignment.
Another example of a lock for an overhead door is described in Shoemaker Patent Application Publication Pub. No. 2003/0188489, in which a rocking member, e.g., a cam, is disposed in a trackway of the overhead door, allowing the door to close but blocking a track wheel to prevent opening until the cam is moved out of the way. This device automatically moves the cam to the closed position, and a solenoid needs to be actuated to release the cam to permit the overhead door to open.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an overhead door lock mechanism, with a microswitch or an equivalent electrical switch, that avoids the drawbacks of the prior art.
It is another object to provide an overhead door lock mechanism and microswitch or other switch device that is robust and reliable, and which will sustain, without damage, forces and shocks expected in normal use, and achieve an increase in use lifetime and in the level of security afforded.
It is a more specific object to provide an overhead door lock that mounts directly onto the vertical rails or tracks, rather than on the door, and in which the microswitch device closes only when the door is closed and the lock mechanism is slid into its locked position.
In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, in the track-mounted overhead door lock mechanism, a round rod or dowel moves, i.e., slides, through a hole in the track or rail to block travel of the roller up the track. The device has a frame in which there is a mounting block that is affixed onto the track using standard overhead door fastening hardware, a plate that extends proximally, i.e., out laterally away from the overhead door rail, and a second block or plate spaced proximally from the mounting block. There are aligned circular openings in the second block and in the mounting block, and the sliding pin or dowel passes through these openings. A coil spring is positioned over the pin or dowel between the mounting block and a retaining pin or retaining ring on the sliding pin, urging the latter towards its open or unlock position. A corresponding opening is formed or drilled in the track to allow the pin to penetrate and block the travel of the rollers when in the locked position. Alternatively, the pin can slide into a receiver plate or receiver housing mounted on a door panel.
A swing arm extends radially from the proximal end of the pin, and this is rotatable into or out of alignment with a retaining plate or a retaining slot. The retaining plate or slot holds the arm and the sliding pin in place in the locked position; if the swing arm is rotated out of engagement, the spring urges the pin out to its unlocked or open position. Some means is provided for insertion of a padlock or other key or combination lock to prevent the swing arm from being rotated to the unlock position; this can be an opening in the retaining plate, in the radial arm of the pin, or in both.
Favorably, the pin or dowel may be formed of a hard, rigid steel, such as a tool steel of the type used in drills. Mounting holes may be formed in the distal or mounting block for accepting mounting screws or bolts to attach the locking device to the track or rail.
In embodiments of this invention, a microswitch is mounted within the frame of the lock. This microswitch has a switch arm, lever, or equivalent actuator that which is movable between a first position in which the microswitch is in an ON or OFF state and a second position in which the microswitch is in the other state. A cooperating switch actuating member is affixed, directly or indirectly, onto the sliding pin, and configured so as to engage the switch arm to move it to its second position when the pin slides distally to its locked portion, and so as to move out of engagement when the pin returns proximally to its unlocked position to permit the switch arm to return to its first position. Typically, the microswitch is normally OFF, i.e., when the lock mechanism is unlocked and the overhead door is opened or may be opened) and is turned ON when the lock mechanism is closed or locked.
The microswitch can be used as a positive interlock to ensure, for example, that a dock leveler is not operative when the overhead door is closed and locked, so that inadvertent attempts to actuate the dock leveler when the door is locked in its lowered position will not damage the overhead door. Also, the microswitch may be used with a dock light, so that it can only be turned on when the overhead door is unlocked and opened, as the heat from the dock light may damage the overhead door if the door is closed. Importantly, this arrangement can provide a positive indication that the overhead door is locked, helping to address security concerns and safety concerns.
The switch actuating member can take the form of a sleeve member disposed over a proximal portion of sliding pin member. In favorable embodiments of the lock mechanism, the spring is a coil spring coaxially disposed over the sliding pin with one end seated against the distal mounting portion of the frame of the lock, and with its other end seated against a retaining member, e.g., a cross pin, that is affixed onto the aid sliding pin. In that case, the tubular member may be in the form of a hollow cylinder disposed over the coil spring.
The above and many other objects, features, and advantages of this invention will be more fully appreciated from the ensuing description of a preferred embodiment, which is to be read in conjunction with the accompanying Drawing.
With reference now to the Drawing, and initially to
The frame also has an upper plate 40 and lower plate 42, which together with the front plate 16, proximal end plate 18 and distal block 14, defines an enclosure. Here the back of the enclosure is open, e.g., as viewed in
At the proximal end of the pin 24 there is a radial swing arm or plate 34, i.e., situated perpendicular to the axis of the sliding pin 24. This swing arm 34 engages the slot or gap 22 between the plate 18 and the retaining plate 20 to hold the sliding pin 24 in its extended or locked position, as shown in
There are many variations possible for this type of sliding-pin door lock, and many of these are discussed in our earlier U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/600,838, filed Aug. 30, 2012, and the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Inside the enclosure, and in this embodiment mounted on the lower plate 42, is a microswitch 50. This is placed towards the distal side of the enclosure space within the frame. The microswitch is a normally-open momentary contact switch with an actuator arm 52 that turns the switch on when it is depressed, and turns the switch off when it is released. Favorably, the microswitch has a solid rectangular body that encloses and protects switch parts within. The leads or wires to the microswitch are not shown here, but these may extend to a safety light, or to an interlock, e.g., for a dock leveler system or for a dock light. In some embodiments, the microswitch could be a normally-closed switch, depending on the application.
A cylindrical sleeve 54 is shown here disposed over the proximal portion of the sliding pin 24 and abutting the cross-pin 32. Favorably the sleeve 54 may be affixed to the cross-pin, so that it travels with the sliding pin when the latter is moved between its unlocked and locked positions. The sleeve has an inside diameter sufficient so that the coil spring 30 fits within the annulus that exists between the sleeve 54 and the pin 24. When the pin 24 is pushed in (distally) to the locked position, as shown in
As shown in
Alternatively, the sleeve 54 may be of ferromagnetic material, with the microswitch being magnetically actuated when the sleeve is in proximity to it.
Here, the locking device 10 on the door rail 62, is illustrated as being secured in the locked position with a padlock 66. The shackle of the padlock 62 passes through the opening 44 in the swing arm 34 and prevents the swing arm from being lifted out of the gap 22, so the sliding pin 24 cannot be moved to the unlocked position until the padlock is removed.
The embodiments shown and described here illustrate the main principles of the invention, but many other applications and arrangements are possible. The shape and dimensions of the frame, the shape of the swing arm, and the size and materials used for the sliding pin can be varied depending on engineering and design choices. The sliding pin 24 does not have to have a round shaft. In place of the coil spring 30, other resilient springs could be used. While the invention has been described with reference only to one specific preferred embodiment, the invention is certainly not limited to that embodiment. Rather, many modifications and variations will become apparent to persons of skill in the art without departure from the scope and spirit of this invention.
This application is a continuation-in-part of our earlier U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/600,838, filed Aug. 31, 2012, and which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) of Provisional Patent Appln. Ser. No. 61/530,098, filed Sep. 1, 2011.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2784023 | Pisani | Mar 1957 | A |
3929360 | Gulistan | Dec 1975 | A |
4658106 | Makoe | Apr 1987 | A |
5546777 | Liu et al. | Aug 1996 | A |
6925785 | Kawasaki | Aug 2005 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150061300 A1 | Mar 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61530098 | Sep 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13600838 | Aug 2012 | US |
Child | 14018471 | US |