TECHNICAL FIELD
Embodiments of the present invention are directed to locks, and more particularly to locks opened with a key.
Many conventional locks are designed to be opened with a key specifically configured for the locking device within the lock. Users often have a very difficult time locating which key is the proper key for a particular lock. Systems have been developed to help the user match keys with locks. For example, users can put colored rings or bumpers on a key for a lock to distinguish that key from other keys. This color coding of the keys, however, does not indicate which lock goes with the key, so the user still must remember which lock is opened by the color coded key. Many users have a drawer in their house with multiple keys in it. It is impossible for them to know which key opens which lock. When a user has multiple keys and locks, or when multiple people use multiple locks and keys, even the color coding system does not adequately correlate the keys to the locks.
The present invention is directed to a lock and key system that overcomes drawbacks experienced in the prior art and provides other benefits.
The present disclosure describes a key-based lock system that includes a lock and key assembly, wherein a lock and corresponding key each includes one or more common indicia, including a keyword unique to that key-based lock assembly, in accordance with certain embodiments of the present invention. Several specific details of the invention are set forth in the following description and the Figures to provide a thorough understanding of certain embodiments of the invention. One skilled in the art, however, will understand that the present invention may have additional embodiments, and that other embodiments of the invention may be practiced without several of the specific features described below.
Referring to
When conventional key-based locks are manufactured, the manufacturer may builds hundreds of thousand of locks and mating keys, but there are typically only about 1500 different locking devices within those hundreds of thousands of padlocks. This means that one single key can open many of the manufactured locks such that the keys and locks are actually not unique. These conventional key-based padlocks, however, will typically be distributed throughout large geographic areas, so there may be a low likelihood that a holder of a key in that area would find a different lock that could also be opened with his or her key. If, however, the geographic area is relatively small, then there is a higher likelihood that one key could open multiple locks in the same small geographic area. The bottom line is that the key and lock combinations are not unique.
The system of the present disclosure provides the illustrated key-based lock assembly 10 having a unique key and lock combination, independent of the number of locking devices made by the manufacturer. This is accomplished by using a unique combination of indicia, such as including keywords. with each key and lock combinations, so as to provide unique key-based lock assemblies. In an embodiment in accordance with the present disclosure, the key 14 for each assembly 10 includes a word-based keyword 16 on the key 14. That same keyword 16 is also provided on the particular lock 12 that mates with the key 14. In the illustrated embodiment, the keyword 16 is engraved, stamped, etched, formed, or otherwise permanently affixed to the key 14 and/or to the lock 12. In other embodiments, the keywords 16 may be printed or otherwise applied onto the key 14 and/or the lock 12.
The use of the keyword 16 allows a user to easily and visually determine which key 14 goes with which lock 12. The user need only match the keywords 16 between the keys 14 and locks 12. Accordingly, if the keyword 16 on a key 14 is “First Prize” (see,
The key-based lock assembly 10 of the present disclosure is manufactured so that the same keyword 16 is never used on multiple locks 12 that include the same locking device 20. For example, if a lock manufacturer uses 1500 different locking devices 20, each identified with a part number, such as part numbers 0001-1500. The keywords 16, the locks 12 and associated part number of the locking devices 20 in the locks are tracked so that the same keyword 16 is never used on more than one lock 12 that included locking devices 20 with the same part number. Preferably a keyword 16 is never used more than once, which may render unnecessary correlating and tracking the keywords 16 and locking devices 20. This means that the combination of the keyword 16 and the mating key 14 and lock 12 (with the selected locking device 20) will be unique and not duplicated, even when the manufacturer produces one million, ten million, twenty million or more locks with the keywords. This also means that a user having a key 14 having a particular keyword 16 on it will only be able to open the one mating lock 12 with the matching keyword 16. This lack of duplication between the keywords, keys and locks results in an increased security for the user.
In one embodiment, the locks 12, keys 14, and associated keywords 16 can be correlated, recorded, and/or registered, to track the key-based lock assemblies 10. This registration program can be used to allow a properly authenticated user to obtain a replacement key 14 or a lock 12 simply by identifying the keyword 16 on the lock 12. This registration process, of course, has adequate safeguards so a replacement key 14 will be provided only to the proper, authenticated user associated with the particular key-based lock assembly 10.
The keywords 16 on the lock 12 and the key 14 define a first indicia usable by a person to quickly and easily identify which key corresponds to which lock. The system of the present disclosure provides the illustrated lock assembly 10 that also has a key 14 with a unique shape as compared to conventional lock keys. In the illustrated embodiment, the head 15 of the key 14 has a visually distinctive shape that allows a user to visually and/or tactilely differentiate the key 14 from other conventional keys that, as an example, the user may have on one or more key rings. In other embodiments, other portions of the key 14 can have the visually or tactilely differentiatable shape that acts as the indicia for differentiating the key from other conventional keys. Accordingly, the key shape is a second indicia that, alone or in combination with the keyword 16 (i.e., the first indicia), enables a person to quickly and easily identify which key corresponds to which lock.
The system of the present disclosure provides the lock assembly 10 illustrated in
The lock 12 that mates with the key 14 also includes at least a portion 19 having the same identifiable, distinguishable color as on the mating key 14. The identifiable, distinguishable colors are selected so as to differentiate them from conventional key/lock sets. As seen in
The key-based system of the present disclosure provides a lock and key assembly that uses the three-indicia identification system (key-shape, color, and keyword) to greatly increase the user's ability to quickly and accurately locate the key that mates with a selected lock. For example, a user may own a hundred key-based locks, including ten of the key-based lock assemblies 10, which include four different colors (red, blue, green and purple), and the user desires to open the lock assembly 10 of
The key-based system of the present disclosure provides a lock and key assembly that uses a two-indicia identification system (color and keyword) to greatly increase the user's ability to quickly and accurately locate the key that mates with a selected lock. For example, a user may own a fifty key-based locks, including eight of the key-based lock assemblies 10, which include four different colors (red, blue, green and purple), and the user desires to open the lock assembly 10 of
The system with the two and three-indicia identification system for the key-based lock assembly 10 also provide an apparent increased level of security against duplication during manufacture, because the likelihood of ever having an unintentional duplication of the same keyword, color and shape on the identical keys and locks is incredibly small. For example, a lock manufacturer making the key-based lock assemblies 10 of the present disclosure may have an inventory of locks and keys with 1000 different lock tumbler arrangements. If the manufacturer used a list of 10,000 different keywords and randomly assigned keywords from the list to randomly selected key-lock sets, and the manufacturer also randomly assigned a color from a selection of five different colors for the key-lock assemblies 10, the likelihood of ever duplicating a key/lock assembly with the same lock tumbler arrangement, the same keyword, and the same color is incredibly miniscule. The result is that, even by random selection of the components, a lock manufacturer will likely never make the same key/lock assembly twice. This means that the owner of the key-based lock assembly 10 of the present disclosure would virtually never encounter another person with the same key-based lock assembly 10 with an identical key that could open the owner's lock.
From the foregoing, it will be appreciated that specific embodiments of the invention have been described herein for purposes of illustration, but that various modifications may be made without deviating from the invention. Additionally, aspects of the invention described in the context of particular embodiments or examples may be combined or eliminated in other embodiments. Although advantages associated with certain embodiments of the invention have been described in the context of those embodiments, other embodiments may also exhibit such advantages. Additionally, not all embodiments need necessarily exhibit such advantages to fall within the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is not limited except as by the appended claims.
This non-provisional patent application claims the benefit of and priority to Provisional U.S. Patent Application No. 61/655,408, titled WORD-BASED LOCK AND KEY, filed Jun. 4, 2012, and Provisional U.S. Patent Application No. 61/714,084, titled WORD-BASED LOCK AND KEY, filed Oct. 15, 2012, which are hereby incorporated herein in their entirety by reference thereto.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61655408 | Jun 2012 | US | |
61714084 | Oct 2012 | US |