This invention relates to vehicle door latching systems and more particularly to a striker assembly having a protective sleeve.
Automotive vehicles are typically equipped with a door latch in each door. The latch engages a striker shaft that is secured to a vehicle door jamb pillar. The latch, particularly one for a swinging door, has a fishmouth slot that opens toward the vehicle interior and extends through a cutout in the face plate of the latch. This fishmouth slot guides the striker shaft into the interior of the door latch as the vehicle door is closed.
As the striker shaft travels into the fishmouth slot, it “strikes” or engages an internal, pivotally mounted fork bolt lever that is part of a latching mechanism. The striker shaft then rotates the fork bolt lever to a latched position where a portion of the fork bolt lever wraps around the striker shaft and closes off the fishmouth slot. The fork bolt lever is typically held in the latched position by a detent lever or pawl that is released by a door handle when the door is opened.
A striker assembly includes a striker sleeve and a striker. The striker has an attachment portion, a shaft portion having a cylindrical outer surface, and a shoulder portion between the shaft portion and the attachment portion. The striker sleeve has a wall that has an inner surface defining an interior space. The wall also defines first and second openings to the interior space at opposite ends of the sleeve. The wall has corrugations such that the inner surface defines a plurality of alternating concave portions and joining portions (which interconnect the concave portions). The concave portions and the joining portions extend from the first opening to the second opening. The shaft portion is inside the interior space, and the outer surface of the shaft portion contacts the joining portions of the inner surface of the striker sleeve.
The sleeve provided herein facilitates the use of a highly durable and abrasion resistant material with low expansion properties to form the sleeve because the corrugations in the sleeve facilitate the installation of the sleeve on the shaft portion of the striker. More specifically, the corrugations permit the sleeve to elastically expand (i.e., without plastic or permanent deformation) as it is pushed over the larger diameter shoulder portion, and then spring back to its intended (i.e., unstressed) diameter once it is in place over the shaft portion. The corrugations also provide energy damping when the striker engages the fork bolt of a latch.
A method of assembling the striker is also provided.
The above features and advantages and other features and advantages of the present invention are readily apparent from the following detailed description of the best modes for carrying out the invention when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Referring to
The attachment portion 18 is the portion of the striker bolt 10 used to attach the striker bolt 10 to a vehicle body. The attachment portion 18 will typically be inserted through a hole in the door jamb to secure the striker 10 to the vehicle body. For example, in the embodiment depicted, the attachment portion 18 is a threaded bolt portion that has external threads 26. The threaded bolt portion extends through a hole in the doorjamb, and the threads 26 engage with the internal threads of a nut (not shown) on the opposite side of the door jamb pillar to mount the striker 10 to the door jamb pillar such that the shaft portion 14 is exposed in the body opening and can mate with the latch when the door is closed.
It should be noted that the attachment portion 18 may have other configurations within the scope of the claims. For example, the attachment portion 18 may be an unthreaded tenon that is flattened (and thereby widened) by peening after the tenon is inserted though the hole in the door jamb. The shoulder portion 22 has a larger diameter than the attachment portion 18 and the shaft portion 14; the larger diameter of the shoulder portion 22 prevents over-insertion of the striker 10 through the hole in the door jamb pillar (i.e., the diameter of the shoulder portion 22 is larger than the hole in the door jamb pillar).
A polymeric striker sleeve 30 is employed to cover the cylindrical outer surface of the shaft portion 14 and thereby reduce sound generated when the latch contacts the striker shaft portion 14 during door closing. The striker 10 includes a cap portion 34 at the end of the shaft portion 14; the cap portion 34 is generally cylindrical and has a diameter greater than the diameter of the shaft portion 14. The large diameter of the cap portion 34 prevents the removal of the sleeve 30 from the shaft portion 14.
The sleeve 30 includes a wall 36 that is approximately cylindrical, having an inner surface 38 that defines an interior space 42 having first and second openings 44, 46.
However, for the sleeve 30 to go from the position shown in
Referring to
More specifically, and with reference to
In the expanded state seen in
The corrugations 50 enable the deformation of the sleeve 30 by the shoulder portion 22 to be entirely elastic (i.e., without plastic deformation); when the sleeve 30 traverses the shoulder portion 22 and rests on the shaft portion 14, the deformation is reversed. It should be noted that the specific dimensions provided herein describe one particular embodiment, and are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the claims.
Referring to
While the best modes for carrying out the invention have been described in detail, those familiar with the art to which this invention relates will recognize various alternative designs and embodiments for practicing the invention within the scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/768,867, filed Feb. 25, 2013, and which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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102971473 | Mar 2013 | CN |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140239653 A1 | Aug 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61768867 | Feb 2013 | US |