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Patent Searching and Data


Title:
A MODULE KIT FOR A MOUNTABLE AND LOCKABLE STORAGE CONTAINER, A CONTAINER AND A COVER LOCK DEVICE FOR SAID CONTAINER
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/2005/071189
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
The present invention relates to a module kit for an in situ mountable storing container, to a container and to a covered/enforced lock device for said con­tainer. The container comprising the following parts; least one lower element (7), least one upper element (5, 6), side wall elements (1, 2) and maybe one end piece (3) detachably arranged between the lower and the upper elements, least one Dorr section (4), and one lock device in said door section (4). The container is characterized in that each part is so dimensioned in regard to extension and weight that it is manually manageable, if necessary during use of a simpler lifting equipment, and that the mountable storing container, with a closed and locked door section (4), is so constructed that it does not show gaps or other points of attack for insert­ing tools between the different parts.

Inventors:
GUSTAVSSON JACK (SE)
Application Number:
PCT/SE2005/000075
Publication Date:
August 04, 2005
Filing Date:
January 24, 2005
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
CESIUM AB (SE)
GUSTAVSSON JACK (SE)
International Classes:
E04H6/00; E05C9/04; E05D7/14; E05D11/00; E05G1/00; (IPC1-7): E04H6/00; E05G1/00; E05B63/14; E06B5/10
Foreign References:
US5265385A1993-11-30
US20020166483A12002-11-14
US4704880A1987-11-10
GB2372066A2002-08-14
EP0964117A21999-12-15
US4438606A1984-03-27
FR2689172A11993-10-01
US5265385A1993-11-30
US20020166483A12002-11-14
Other References:
See also references of EP 1713988A1
Attorney, Agent or Firm:
Eriksson, Hans G. (Katrineholm, SE)
Download PDF:
Claims:
CLAIMS
1. A module kit for an in situ mountable storing container, comprising the fol lowing parts; at least one lower element (7), at least one upper element (5,6), side wall elements (1,2) and maybe one end piece (3) detachably arranged be tween the lower and the upper elements, at least one Dorr section (4), and one lock device in said door section (4), characterized in that each part is so dimensioned in regard to extension and weight that it is manually manageable, if necessary during use of a simpler lifting equipment, and that the mountable storing container, with a closed and locked door section (4), is so constructed that it does not show gaps or other points of attack for insert ing tools between the different parts.
2. A module kit according to claim 1, characterized in that each part over a given weight has bails and/or hooks for an extern attachment of a lifting device, said bails and/or hooks and/or their attachment in the part has an intentionally limited strength.
3. A module kit according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the door sec tion (4), in its closed position, have parts protruding into and/or behind adjacent side wall elements (1,2), and, in a locked position, has looking means protrud ing into the lower element (7) and into the upper element (5,6).
4. A module kit according to claim 3, characterized in that the upper element (5,6) of the module kit is displaceable to and from an obstructing engagement with the end piece (3) and with the door section (4) resp..
5. A module kit according to claim 1, characterized in that at least the side wall elements (1,2) have outer and inner casings of metal, that these casings are placed between an upper and a lower profile beam, in which openings are arranged, whereby the intermediate space and the upper and the lower profile beam are at least partially filled with concrete.
6. A module kit according to claim 5, characterized in that the concrete has ballast in the shape of rubber pieces.
7. A module kit according to claim 3, characterized in that in the wall, the up per, the lower, and the door sections one or several scantlings and/or metal bars are arranged along the whole extension of said sections.
8. A storing container assembled by a module kit according to one or several of the preceding claims, characterized in that.
9. A protected locking device for a container assembled of a module kit accord ing to any of the claims 1 to 7, characterized in that at least two of each other independent locking devices are arranged in connection to a door section in which at least one primary locking device will protect against admission to a secondary head locking device.
10. A locking device according to claim 9, characterized in that a primary locking device has the shape of a mortise lock of the bayonet catch type hiding an other primary locking device or a secondary head locking device.
11. Concrete intended to be used in manufacturing of storing containers accord ing to any of the preceding claims, characterized in that between 4 and 20 percentage by volume is rubber pieces and/or wooden pellets.
12. Concrete according to claim 11, characterized in that the rubber pieces or the wooden pellets have a size of 5 to 20 mm.
Description:
A module kit for a mountable and lockable storage container, a container and a covered lock device for said container.

The present invention relates to a module kit for a mountable and lockable storage container, to a container and to a covered/enforced lock device for said container.

To keep the excess at burglary reasonably low the insurance company call for better and better documented safe storing of property. A safe storing is also in the interest of the leasing and finance companies as they are the owners of the property during the lease or property purchase by instalments. An increase of fraud when reporting loss of property is connected to the low risk of being de- tected due to scanty police resources.

For a company it is important that a planned daily activity can be carried out without interruption, which will easily be the case if the company is the victim of burglary. Within certain enterprises, as in the building trade and in other kind of contract work this is of particular importance as other sub contractors often are depended of that certain tasks are performed by others within stipu- lated time limits to make it possible for them to execute their own work at the right time. In addition to this comes that the building site is a temporary place of work where tools and material have to be safely stored. Often tools and ma- chines at a building site are of the kind that can be used for criminal operations.

Also by this reason it is important that they are stored safely.

In former days the term professional thieves meant a group of dishonest people which with a long experience and a high skill could break into locked spaces and grasp others property. Today there are internationally working crime syn- dicates and terror organisations having access to advanced equipment, as plasma lances and diamond cutting tools. These groups are kept informed about where goods that are especially liable to be stolen are stored and in which way these goods are protected. Unfortunately it has shown that a manned guard for the property have a deterrent effect to an ever increasing extent. Today one can expect that such a manned guard without hesitation is disarmed or liquidated to get a hold of the property.

In the struggle for honesty and to provide guard against sabotage to the every- day work more protection hard to break will unfortunately be called for, which will become dearer to the society. Nevertheless this increase in prices must be compared to the costs involved in burglaries and swindles. The companies, not to say the whole society, will probably find it profitable to invest in burglary protection which is safer and harder to break.

To have a burglary protection being 100 % safe is not realistic. Thus, it is just plausible to make it so much harder for an unwarranted access to a storing place for property, that the effort and the tools needed to perform this access shall be so repellent and so advanced, respectively that very few persons can put this into practice and perform a theft within a reasonable time. If the expo- sure of occasions for theft are decreased by safer storing of the property the costs of the society for these thefts and frauds will also decrease and, at the same time, the prerequisite of a"profitable"criminality will deteriorate.

The main object of the present invention is to, at a reasonable cost ; obtain a module kit for a mountable and lockable storage container, which purpose is to obstruct an unwarranted access also with advanced tool equipment. With con- tainers are meant such containers which can be handled and mounted by quali- fied personal with a moderate effort. Therefore, each part of the kit is propor- tionately easy to handle. On the other hand is the container built by the mounted parts of the kit, besides of being hard to break into, also very hard to move. Furthermore the container is also very hard to dismount and to take to pieces, both from the outside and from the inside, as long as the lock device is closed.

The storing container according to the present invention can be manufactured in different security classes and sizes, and will in the following be described both as a somewhat smaller and simpler container for storing of e. g. motor bikes, and as a bigger, completely closed and heavier container for storing e. g. more expensive tool equipment, weapons and/or explosives/ammunition.

Thus with the invention a module kit is obtained where both the size of the fin- ished container and the security level of the same can be chosen according to existing requirements.

An other object of the invention is to obtain a module system where the parts can be constructed of different materials, and which according to their chosen positions in the part will make this extremely hard to break, both with common and uncommon used burglar tools and methods.

Yet another object with the present invention is to obtain an enforced and pro- tected lock device for said container, which device is suited to lock a door of the container, but which device also can be used to direct and mutually look the other parts of the kit.

Further another object of the invention is to obtain a protected lock device for said storing container which is very hard to break by any unauthorized also from the inside of said container.

A last object of the present invention is to so compose a concrete mixture form- ing part of the container according to the invention that a successful attack on the container using cutting/burning tools will increasingly be obstructed.

The above stated objects of the invention is obtained by a module kit, a con- tainer and by a lock device according to the characterizing clauses stated in the claims.

By having each part of the kit so dimensioned with regard to extension and weight that it will be manually manageable, if necessary during use of an ordi- nary lifting equipment, it will, with a reasonable input of personal and ma- chines be possible to build safe storing containers for machines, equipment and material at a temporary working site. When, at the same time, the mounted con- tainer, being closed and locked by its door section, does not show any narrow openings or points of attack for tools, e. g. corner chisel or the like, between the different parts of the container, at the same time as the weight of the container does not allow for a simple removal of the complete container, the container will provide a good protection for property being stored therein.

By having each part of the container over a certain weight equipped with bails and/or hooks for an extern attachment of lifting means, these bails and/or hooks having an intentionally limited strength and placing, the advantage is obtained that these bails and/or hooks can not be used to lift a completely mounted con- tainer, as this will be too heavy regardless if several hooks should be used in a lifting action.

By having parts in the door section, in a closed position of the same, protruding into and/or behind adjacent side portions, and in a locked position, having look- ing means protruding into the floor element and into the top element, it will be very difficult to remove a door section, even though its butt hinge would be placed on and manipulate able from the outside of the container.

By having the different parts/elements of the container filled with concrete, the advantage, besides of higher weight of each part/element, is that special tool equipment must be used to break trough the concrete. To further make it more difficult to saw through the concrete, metal casings at the inside and at the out- side of the parts, and reinforcing wooden scantlings and/or pellets of wood/rubber pieces in the concrete are used. By this a concrete saw will tend to pinch and stuck in an effort to saw through. The presence of scantlings, wooden pellets and mix of rubber in the concrete in all parts will also make it extremely hard to cut through the concrete using a plasma lance. The weaken- ing of the concrete by mixing pellets and rubber pieces into it is not critical as the physical properties is obtained by the combination and by the placement of the material chosen.

The invention will now be described in connection to a couple of shown em- bodiments, where ; Fig. 1 shows the different components forming part of a first embodiment of the storing container for e. g. motor bikes, Fig. 2 shows a view from above of a mounted storing container with a closed door, Fig. 3 shows a detail from above of the hinged and lengthwise displaceable at- tachment in a wall element, and their locking in a closed position of the storing container, Fig. 4a and 4b show diagrammatically views from above of the hinged attach- ment of a door section to an end pole of a wall section, where fig. 4a concerns its locking interference to said end pole and the blocking interference between the door section and one of the upper element at a closed position, and where fig. 4b shows how a complementary break protection is arranged in connection to the upper section/the door section, Fig. 5 shows a diagrammatic view of the storing container assembled of the module kit and in a closed position, Fig. 6 shows a variant of a lock device which also can be used to mutually fix and lock other parts than the door section, Fig. 7 is a side view with a partially removed portion of a side wall element forming part of a module kit for a mountable, burglar proof and lockable stor- ing container of an alternative embodiment with heavier and more robust parts in the module kit, Fig. 8 shows a side wall element according to fig. 7 in a sectional view from above, Fig. 9 is a view from above of a lower element, Fig. 10 is a view from above of an upper element, Fig. 11 is a front view of a door section of the storing container according to fig. 7, Fig. 12 shows a section through the locking and interfering mechanism used at the storing container according to fig. 7, Fig. 13 shows a lock plunger actuated mechanism in connection to a lock and interfering mechanism according to claim 12, and where Fig. 14 shows a diagrammatic side view, partly sectional of a locking and inter- fering mechanism according to fig. 12 and fig. 13 and its connection to the lock plunger actuated mechanism.

In fig. 1 the different parts forming part of the module kit for a storing con- tainer e. g. for storing motor bikes are shown, where 1 and 2 refer to side wall elements, 3 to an end piece, 4 to a door section, 5 and 6 to upper elements, 7 to a lower element of steel or concrete, and 8 refer to an enforced element for the door section. The advantage of the construction kit module is that each element included is manually manageable, i. e. one person can in fact by himself assem- ble the storing container and starts with a connection of a side wall element 1 or 2 to the end piece 3. Thereafter the next side wall element 2 or 1 is assem- bled at the same time as the enforced element 8 of the door section is placed at the still open end piece of the storing container. The door section 4 is hinged- via 9 (see fig. 4) -onto the one end of the one side wall element.

In fig. 2 the upper elements 5 and 6 are shown mounted onto hinges 10, which allow a lengthwise displacement of each upper element into and out of the rear end piece 3 for a locking co-operation. Lower elements 7 are placed within the storing container and are locked therein. The different parts are so locked to each other that they in the connected condition and with a closed and locked door section 4 completely lock each other and prevent the insertion of tools to be used to prize the connected parts open, which is the position shown in fig. 2, where the storing container can be seen in a view from above and with closed door section 4.

Fig. 3 shows a detail of the attachment of one hinged and lengthwise displace- able attachment of one upper element in a wall element and the parts locking in closed position of the storing container. Thus here strap hinges 11 and taper means 12 arranged in the side wall element and the upper element, or vice versa. The lengthwise displacement of the upper elements 5 and 6 will take place automatically at the closing of the door section 4 which accordingly will push the upper elements 5 and 6 towards the end section 3, whereby recesses 13 and studs 14 in and on said parts 5,6 and 3, respectively, will be forwarded to a locking interaction in one position with the upper elements 5,6 down folded and the door section 4 closed. The position for this interactive locking between end piece/upper element and door section/upper element has been shown in fig. 2 in four positions at"13/14".

A locking interaction according to what have been stated above can be seen in fig. 4a where the attachment of the door section at a hinge at one of the end poles of the side element is shown and where also an interfering retractable projection at the door section is arranged to be able to interfere in an opening in said end pole in a closed position of the door section. Fig. 4b shows a variant of an interlocking and into the end pole folded projection, here shown in an acute shape.

Fig. 4c discloses how a completing break protection is arranged in connection to the pivoted attachment of a door section at the end pole of the wall section.

By the covering profile as here arranged it is prohibited or at least made more difficult to have an admittance to the slit between the door section and the end pole of the wall section.

Fig. 5 discloses a perspective view of the storing container assembled by the module kit in a closed position. Here one can catch a glimp of a front wheel receiving support for a parked motor bike.

Fig. 6 discloses a variant of a lock device 17 which also can be used to mutu- ally fix and lock other parts than the door section. The lock device 17 includes one, by a enforcing tin plate 18 strengthened locking cylinder 19 for a key 20.

The locking cylinder 19 is arranged in connection to a metal piece 20 of a high test steel having first apertures 21 and 22. In these apertures there are arranged loosen locking plunge means 23 and 24, which by excenter means 25, con- nected to the locking cylinder 19 are in and outwards displaceable in each out- wards open locking plug receiving recesses 26 and 27, respectively. Locking plugs 28,29 on a part included in the module kit according to the invention, which shall be securely locked at an other part of the module kit, are brought into the outwards open recesses 26,27, whereby the locking plunge means 23, 24 can be brought into the recesses cl, c2 in the locking plugs when the excen- ter means 25 being rotated by the key 20 in the lock cylinder 19. The lock cyl- inder may be of a conventional kind that is with a very moderate level of secu- rity but via the enforcing tin plate 18 and its countersunk arrangement in one of the parts included in the module system, the security is increased sharply against unwarranted drilling in the lock cylinder 19 itself. The lock device 17 is preferably arranged in the door section 4, but may also be positioned between two other parts of the module kit to mutual lock these parts in an assembled state of the module kit. In the figure further guidance can be seen at dl and d2 which can be used in connecting the two parts.

In fig. 7 a side view of a wall module 28 is shown with a partially broken out portion and forming part of the module kit for an alternative embodiment of an mountable storing container, but here in a completely closed, heavier and more robust fashion and in a higher security class. From fig. 7 is disclosed that the wall module 28 consists of several segments A. In fig. 8 the segments A are shown with included profiled outer and inner wall elements 29,30 resting to- wards an upper and a lower profile beam B, C, whereby the wall elements 29, 30 having intermediate distance means 31 which in turn have intermediate scantlings 32 extending along the whole height of the module. The segments A are each welded and the width of each segment is chosen in such a way that various long wall modules of a standardized measure are obtained by a suitable choice of a number of segments A. Besides of scantlings 32 there are also ar- ranged metal bars 33,34, preferably reinforcement bars also extending along the whole length of the wall module 28. By these metal bars it will be very hard, e. g. using an angular cutting machine or any other. The lock device itself is laid in a profile pipe which in turn has been pushed into a protecting squared profile pipe and being locked thereto by a fitting. In the squared profile pipe the lock plungers 38 and 39 runs into and out of a locking interaction with the up- per and lower elements.

At an extra high security, e. g. for a military purpose when storing weapons, ammunition and explosives, several different actors may have a task to unlock one lock each, i. e. it comes to the participation of several actors (also outsiders - e. g. a security company) assistance to unlock a security container according to the invention. Preferably this can be done in that a mortise lock with its own key will cover the entrance to a countersunk head lock, which in turn has its own key with an extended shaft. To further increase the security and make an unwarranted access to the head lock more difficult a foldable mechanical cover or lid may be folded and locked in a covering position to the lock device.