A locking bar adapted to cooperate with a shackle of a padlock, which locking bar comprises a shackle-receiving orifice and an abutment provided on the surface of said bar, the arrangement being such that with the padlock secured to the bar by means of a padlock shackle passing through said orifice, the abutment is adapted to engage with the body and/or shackle of the padlock to restrain substantial rotation of said padlock about the orifice in said bar.
An improved padlock construction having a body defining an upper surface and a bottom surface. Access to a locking mechanism is provided through the bottom surface, while the top surface is designed so that the body can receive a shackle and portions of locking bars in locking engagement. To achieve this purpose a cruciform-shaped depression is provided in the top surface, which depression extends downwardly into the padlock body. The depression comprises a first area adapted to receive dependent leg portions of the shackle and a second area transverse to and intersecting the first area for receiving the perforated ends of the locking bars. The portion of the body of the padlock defining the recess is designed so that when the shackle and locking bars are in a locking engagement, the shackle is substantially completely accommodated within said depression in an inaccessible position.
|
1. An improved lock construction comprising a main body portion, a top wall portion arranged for introduction of a staple therewithin, front and rear wall portions, a bottom wall portion including a locking mechanism extending internally thereof and actuatable from without, and adapted for releasable interengagement with the staple to maintain said staple in a locking position, said top wall also including a cruciform-shaped depression extending downwardly toward the main body portion and terminating in a perforated shelf area, the cruciform-shaped depression comprising a first area adapted to receive dependent leg portions of the staple and a second area intersecting said first area for entry of perforated locking bars including a portion to be secured to said lock by said staple, said top wall portion including a forwardly projecting stepped portion arranged to extend beyond and overhand a limited area of the front wall, said stepped portion further including a terminus.
8. An improved padlock construction for securing perforated locking bars, said padlock construction comprising a U-shaped shackle and a padlock body, said padlock body including a first end portion having an end surface thereof arranged for the introduction of the U-shaped shackle therewithin, a second end portion including a locking mechanism, extending internally thereof and actuatable from an end surface of said second end portion, for releasable interengagement with the shackle to maintain said shackle in a locking position, said body further including a cruciform depression extending inwardly from the end surface of said first end portion towards said second end portion, the side walls of said padlock body closing the ends of three arms of said cruciform depression and the fourth arm of said cruciform depression being open on one side of the padlock body, the first and second closed arms of the cruciform depression receiving the legs of the U-shaped shackle and substantially completely accommodating the U-shaped shackle when the shackle is in said locking position, and the third closed arm of the cruciform depression and the fourth open arm of the cruciform depression receiving the perforated locking bars to be secured together by the shackle of the padlock so that, in use, the perforated locking bars project through the side wall of the padlock and extent into the third and fourth arms of the cruciform depression.
2. An improved padlock construction comprising a padlock body including a first body portion having a surface arranged for introduction of a staple therewithin, a second body portion including a locking mechanism extending internally thereof and actuatable from without and adapted for releasable interengagement with the staple to maintain said staple in a locking position, a cruciform depression extending through the surface of said first body portion towards said second body portion, said cruciform depression comprising a first area adapted to receive dependent leg portions of the staple, a second area intersecting said first area for entry of perforated locking bars including a portion to be secured to said padlock by said staple, first shielding portions in outwardly covering relation to opposite ends of said first area, a second shielding portion in covering relation to one end of said second area, said shielding portions forming an uninterrupted protective shield for one end of said second area and for each end of said first area.
3. A padlock as claimed in
plates. 4. A padlock as claimed in
5. A padlock construction as claimed in
6. A padlock construction as claimed in
7. An improved lock construction as claimed in
9. An improved padlock construction as claimed in
|
This is a streamlined continuation of application Ser. No. 73, filed Jan. 2, 1970
FIG. 2 is a side view of the assembly shown in FIG. 1.
A locking bar 10 comprises an elongate steel strip substantially three-tenths inch thick, said strip being angled at 11 towards its center thereof to provide a first portion 12 adapted to be fixed and/or secured to an item to be locked or closed, for instance a door, and the a second portion or tongue 13 projecting forwardly from said door or other item to be secured to form a tongue having a forward end 14, a top edge 15 and a bottom edge 16 and flat sides. The tongue 13 is provided with a substantially circular drilling or eye 17 towards the bottom edge 16 at the forward end of the tongue 13, said eye 17 being adapted to accommodate the curved bar engaging portion 50 of a U-shaped padlock shackle or staple 51.
The forward end 14 of the tongue 13 is defined by a curved portion 20 extending upwardly from the bottom edge 16, said curved portion 20 being adapted to be entered into the transverse recess 52 of a cooperating padlock 530. received in a cruciform depression 52 in a flat upper surface 32 of a built up and extended first body portion 33 of a padlock body 52. The curved portion 20 of the tongue 13 defining the junction between the bottom edge 16 and the forward end 14 of the locking bar terminates at a longitudinal plane of the tongue 13, just upwardly of the uppermost extremity of the shackle receiving eye 17 in a forwardly extending abutment 22 having a downwardly disposed abutment surface 23. The forward extremity 24 of the abutment 22 extends upwardly from the abutment surface 23 and forms a convexly curved upper edge 25 to terminate in the upper edge 15 of the tongue 13.
A similar bar 30 is secured to the other element such as a second door or an adjacent door post and in use the two bars are located side by side with eyes arranged to correspond for the passage of the shackle 51 of a padlock of the kind described in copending application Ser. No. 794,250 now U.S. Pat. No. 3,572,064 and with the abutments 22 on each bar forming a substantially continuous surface from one bar to the other.
The padlock shackle 51 is passed through the eyes of the locking bars so that the arcuate portion 50 of the padlock shackle 51, that is to say, the bar engaging portion thereof bridging the pair of spaced limbs of the shackle, is accommodated within the eye 17 of each bar. With the padlock in The downwardly depending legs of the shackle 51 are received within a first recessed area of the depression 52 formed in the flat upper surface 32 of the first body portion 33 of the padlock body 53. The forward end of tongue 13 of the locking bar 10 and the corresponding end of the tongue of the locking bar 30 are received in a second recessed area of depression 52 which extends transverse to and intersects the first recessed area. The first body portion 33 has shielding walls which close off opposite ends of the first recessed area and a second shielding wall which closes off one end of the second recessed area, the shielding walls forming a unitary part of the first body portion which may be made of laminar plates. The flat upper surface 32 of the first body portion 33 and the shielding walls are located in a single plane not substantially lower than the staple when the padlock is in the locked position, the flat upper surface of the first body portion being continuous except for the depression 52. With the padlock in the locked position, the flat upper surface 32 of the extended first body portion 33 of the padlock body 34 53 is adapted to be disposed near the downwardly disposed abutment surface 22 so of the locking bars 10, 30 so that an attempt to move the padlock body 34 53 arcuately upwardly about the axis of that portion of the shackle 51 passing through the eyes 17 in the locking bars brings the extended portion 33 of the padlock body 34 53 into abutting relationship with the abutment abutments 22 on of the bar locking bars to prevent substantial rotation of the padlock relative to the locking bars and to prevent access to the underside of the padlock containing the open end of the recess 52 therein. In the locked position, the padlock shackle 51 is substantially completely shielded by the built up and extended portion 33 of the padlock body 34 53 and by the locking bars themselves and an attempt to move the padlock arcuately upwardly as described above is substantially prevented thus hindering the use of cropping tools and the like to attack the shackle of the padlock from the underside thereof. Further, as is illustrated in FIGS. 1 and 2, the size of the second recessed area of depression 52 relative to the forward ends of the tongues of the locking bars 10, 30 received therein is such that the tongues substantially fill this second recessed area.
The padlock body 53 also includes a second, lower body portion 34 within which a locking mechanism is housed. The locking mechanism is not shown for clarity. The locking mechanism may be engaged by a key 35 which is received within a key slot (not shown) in a bottom surface 37 of the second body portion 34. Both the first body portion 33 and the second body portion 34 define a front wall 39 and a rear wall 40 when viewing the padlock in the direction of the arrow A in FIG. 2. The front wall 39 is discontinuous, i.e., has a stepped portion, due to the forwardly extending nature of the first body portion 33. As a result the first body portion 33 defines a lower wall 41. The padlock body 53, consisting of the first body portion 33 and the second body portion 34, is a unitary structure which is not separable during ordinary use.
It will be appreciated from the foregoing that only one of the locking bars need be provided with an upstanding abutment but for improved security, it is preferred that an abutment be provided on each bar.
Berry, Daniel Victor, Knott, Stanley Gerald Thomas
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
4694667, | Jul 26 1985 | Permanent padlock-chain assembly | |
4763496, | May 27 1987 | Sargent & Greenleaf, Inc. | High security changeable key cylinder type shackle padlock |
4776187, | May 27 1987 | Sargent & Greenleaf, Inc. | Changeable key cylinder exposed shackle padlock |
4799369, | Jul 30 1987 | Lock protector | |
4873849, | Jul 30 1987 | Lock protector |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
1546021, | |||
2104981, | |||
2541638, | |||
3345837, | |||
DD381,399, | |||
IT413,366, | |||
IT414,307, |
Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Dec 26 1974 | Ingersoll Locks, Limited | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / |
Date | Maintenance Fee Events |
Date | Maintenance Schedule |
May 30 1981 | 4 years fee payment window open |
Nov 30 1981 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
May 30 1982 | patent expiry (for year 4) |
May 30 1984 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4) |
May 30 1985 | 8 years fee payment window open |
Nov 30 1985 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
May 30 1986 | patent expiry (for year 8) |
May 30 1988 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8) |
May 30 1989 | 12 years fee payment window open |
Nov 30 1989 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
May 30 1990 | patent expiry (for year 12) |
May 30 1992 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12) |