Sept 9, 1969 s. M. MOBERG -ALL-PLASTIC SEAL 2 Shets-Sheet 1 Filed may 1, 1968 Ill. .1
I N VEN TOR:
SIGURD M. MOBERG ATTORNEY Sept. 9, 1969 s. M. MOBERG 3,466,077
ALL-PLASTIC SEAL Filed May 1, 1968 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 INVEN'IUR:
SIGURD M. MOBERG ATTORNEY United States Patent 3,466,077 ALL-PLASTIC SEAL Sigurd M. Mobcrg, East Orange, N.J., assignor to E. J. 3rooks Company, Newark, N.J., a corporation of New ersey Filed May 1, 1968, Ser. No. 725,628 Int. Cl. B65d 55/06, 63/00 US. Cl. 292-322 8 Claims ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE A one-piece seal formed entirely of moldable, resilient plastic material includes a group of resilient fingers enclosed within a generally cylindrical housing, and a shackle fixed, at one end thereof, to said housing and its other end being insertable to a limited extent into an opening in one end of the housing to lockably engage said fingers. To deny tampering access to said fingers within which a shackle end is locked, the other end of the housing is completely closed and the shackle includes a space-filling portion to close said opening.
Background of this invention Prior shackle seals have provided locking fingers at one end of the shackle to lockably engage the other end of the shackle. The interlocked parts, however, have, objectionably, been entirely accessible, making it possible for an interloper to open the seal and reuse it.
' The present invention, by providing a completely closed housing, as indicated in the foregoing abstract, overcomes the just stated objection.
The drawing In the drawing:
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a preferred form of seal according to this invention, as immediately prior to a last step in the manufacture thereof. Although the seal may be made in various sizes, this figure shows the seal approximately twice the actual size of one form of practical, usable seal.
FIG. 2 is a greatly enlarged, central, axial, sectional view of the housing of said seal and parts therein, shown in full lines as after completion of said last step; one end portion of the housing being shown in broken lines as before said last step, and end, interlocked portions of a related shackle being also shown in broken lines.
FIG. 3 is a similarly enlarged, end elevational view of the unfinished seal of FIG. 1, as viewed from the top of that figure.
FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view, substantially on the line 4-4 of FIG. 2; the parts of the shackle being omitted.
FIG. 5 is an end elevational View of the open end of an otherwise closed housing of a modified form of seal according to this invention.
FIG. 6 is a central, axial sectional view of the housing of FIG. 5, substantially on the line 6-6 of FIG. 5; end, interlocked portions of a related shackle being shown in broken lines.
FIG. 7 is a fragmentary, broadside view of the free or lockable end of a bandlike shackle of the modified seal.
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FIG. 8 is an edgewise view of the same parts illustrated in FIG. 7.
Description of the illustrated seals The seals are molded, in one piece, of suitable plastic material such as, for example, polyethylene, which is relatively rigid in thick sections and flexible in thin sections. The plastic material selected should have such hardness and flexibility characteristics .as would enable the molded seal to function as hereinafter described.
The seal illustrated as a first embodiment (FIGS. 1-4) comprises two essential principal parts, aflexible shackle 10 and ashackle capturing housing 12 to which one end of the shackle is integrally connected.
Theshackle 10 is aflat band 14 which is thin enough to give it substantial flexibility. Its free end is formed as alocking portion 16 which includes anannular arrowhead member 18 at the extremity of theband 14, anannular stop member 20, spaced from the arrowhead member, and an annular space-filling portion 22 at the side of the stop member which faces the arrowhead member. Theportion 22, also, is suitably spaced from the arrowhead member, and an interveningportion 24 connects thearrowhead member 18 to the space-fillingportion 22.
Thehousing 12 is generally cylindrical and substantially hollow. In its form as completely manufactured and supplied to a user, one of its ends is closed as at 26. The other end of the housing has acoaxial opening 28 leading into a taperedcoaxial passage 30, the inner end of which is defined by inner,tapering surfaces 32 of plural, circularly arranged resilient fingers 34.
The illustrated first embodiment is provided with a group of three similar, axially extending fingers 34, which are spaced sufficiently from adjacent wall portions of the housing to enable them to flex as hereinafter described. These fingers are generally cylindrical in shape; departing from such shape only in thetapering surfaces 32 thereof. The tapering of these surfaces is such thatroots 34a of the fingers are thinner than the extremities 34b of said fingers. The roots are thin enough to facilitate flexing of the fingers thereat, while their extremities are thick enough and rigid enough to enable the fingers to perform a locking function hereinafter described.
The closing ofend 26 of thehousing 12 is the mentioned last step in manufacturing the seal. This step involves use of a suitable die, under suitable heat and pressure, to draw in the wall of saidend 26 from its broken line to its full line condition shown in FIG. 2. It will be be observed that after completion of manufacture, the extremities 34b of the fingers 34 are substantially spaced from the drawn-in end wall.
The seal is preferably formed with an opening 36 in the band portion of theshackle 10, adjacent to thestop member 20. Said opening provides an area of relative weakness to induce breakage of the shackle in the presence of undue manpulation which probably would occur in an attempt of an interloper to open the seal without rendering it non-reusable.
The seal is particularly useful for sealing hasps on railway car doors, doors of other vehicles, covers of boxes or other containers, etc. In use, thelocking portion 16, at the free end of the shackle, is pushed endwisely into the housings opening 28. Because of the tapers of thearrowhead member 18 and of thefinger surfaces 32, themember 18 wedges the fingers 34 radially outwardly, sliding easily into the housing until the back end of said member clears the extremities 34b of the fingers 34, whereupon the latter resiliently contract to cause flat, end surfaces of said fingers to seat upon a flat, annular rear surface of thearrowhead member 18. With the fingers and the arrowhead member thus interengaged, theshackle 10 is securely held against withdrawal from thehousing 12.
After the fingers 34 and thearrowhead member 18 become thus interlocked, thestop member 20 is in intimate association with the adjacent end of thehousing 12, thereby preventing material endwise movement of theshackles locking portion 16 within the housing.
Upon movement oflocking portion 16 to its locking position relatively to the fingers 34, the space-fillingportion 22 of the shackle enters and substantially fills the housings opening 28, thereby preventing lateral looseness of the shackle. As the opening 28 must be large enough to enable thearrowhead member 18 to pass therethrough, and the interveningportion 24 of theshackles locking portion 16 must be thin enough to permit the fingers and the arrowhead portion to interlock as described, it will be understood that, without thepacefilling portion 22, the shackle would possess objectionable lateral looseness in the housing.
The modified form of seal illustrated in FIGS. 5-8 diflers from the seal of FIGS. 1-4 chiefly in thatlocking portion 116 ofshackle 110 is angular rather than circular in cross section, and interlockingly engages a rectangularly arranged, rather than a circularly arranged, group offingers 134.
Thelocking portion 116 includes a relatively flat, Wedge shaped,arrowhead member 118 at the extremity of aband 114 of the shackle, a transverselyoblong stop member 120, spaced from the arrowhead member, and a transversely oblong space-fillingportion 122 at the side of the stop member which faces the arrowhead member. Theportion 122, also, is suitably spaced from the arrowhead member, and an interveningportion 124 connects thearrowhead member 118 to the space-fillingportion 122. The said intervening portion is in the nature of a continuation of theband 114.
A substantiallyhollow housing 112 of the modified form of seal has a transverselyoblong opening 128 at one end, and the housingsother end 126 is closed. The opening 128 leads into atapered passage 130, defined by inner, substantially flat and paralleltapering surfaces 132 of the rectangularly arrangedfingers 134. These fingers, except for theirtapering surfaces 132, are each substantially cylindrical in shape. Because of the taper of thesurfaces 132, thefingers roots 134a are thin enough to facilitate flexing of the fingers at their roots, while their extremities are thick enough and rigid enough to enable the fingers to perform a locking function hereinafter described.
The modified form of seal is utilized in the same manner as the seal of FIGS. 1-4. Thus, pushing of thearrowhead member 118 into opening 128 and through tapered passage 130 (FIG. 6) wedges thefingers 134 outwardly untilstop member 120 enters into abutment with thehousing 112. At that point, said fingers resiliently contract to their normal or unstressed condition to cause flat, end surfaces of the fingers to seat, in locking engagement, upon a flat rear surface of the arrowhead member. When the parts are thus interlocked, thespace filling portion 122 substantially fills theopening 128 and prevents any material lateral shifting of theshackles locking portion 116 in thehousing 112.
Interlopers, attempting to open any seal, without rendering it non-reusable, often attempt to release interlocking parts by using a suitable, usually very thin, in-
strument to effect such release. This invention defeats such attempts by reason of the facts that thehousing 12 or 112 completely enclosed the lockingfingers 30 or 130, and thestop member 20 or and the space-fillingportion 22 or 122 completely block oif and fill theopening 28 or 128 to prevent the introduction of any instrument into the housing for the purpose of releasing lockingfingers 34 or 134 from their locking engagement witharrowhead member 18 or 118.
The described concepts may be utilized in other ways than shown herein, without departing from the invention.
I claim:
1. A one-piece seal constituted entirely of moldable, plastic material which is resilient in relatively thin sections and relatively rigid in thicker sections, said seal comprising a hollow, cylindrical, housing having an opening, at one end thereof, leading into the housings interior, an elongate shackle integral, at one of its ends, with said housing and having a locking portion at its other end adapted to enter said opening for interlocking association with said housing, locking means, within said housing adapted to coact with said locking portion to hold the latter against withdrawal from said housing, and a stop member, on said shackle, adapted to abut housing portions, defining said opening, to limit the extent of movement of said locking portion into the housing; said locking portion having a wedge shaped extremity portion, terminating at its rearward end in a transversely extending surface, and said locking means comprising plural, similar, resilient fingers within said housing, having root portions, integral with said housing toward the latters said one end and extending freely within said housing toward the latters other end, said fingers having inner surfaces tapering toward said other end of the housing and defining an expansible, wedge shaped passage adapted to receive said wedge shaped portion therewithin, and said fingers having transversely extending surfaces at their free ends; said wedge shaped portion of the shackle and said fingers being so shaped relatively to each other as to permit finger expanding movement of said locking portion into the housing and between said fingers until said transversely extending surfaces of said wedge shaped portion and of said fingers become interlocked to prevent material reverse movement of the shackles locking portion within the housing. 2. A seal according to claim 1, said root portions bemg of such thinness as to enable said fingers to flex about said root portions, and said fingers having free end portions of substantially greater thickness and rigidity than said root portions.
3. A seal according to claim 1, said fingers being disposed in a circular group; and said wedge shaped portion being transversely circular. 4. A seal according to claim 1, said fingers comprismg a pair thereof; the fingers of said pair having said tapering inner surfaces facing each other; and said tapering surfaces, transversely thereof, both being parallel to a plane extending therebetween; and said wedge shaped portion being transversely oblong.
5. A seal according to claim 1, said fingers including plural pairs; the fingers of each of said pairs having said tapering inner surfaces facing each other; and said tapering surfaces, transversely thereof, being paral lel to a plane extending between the facing fingers of all said pairs; and said wedge shaped portion being transversely oblong.
6. A seal according to claim 1, said opening of the housing being shaped correspondingly to and at least as large as the largest cross-section of said wedge shaped extremity portion of the shackle, and the seal further including a space-filling portion of said shackle, so located on the latter and of such transverse dimension as to substantially fill said opening when said wedge shaped portion and said fingers are interlocked.
7. A seal according toclaim 6, said fingers being disposed in a circular group, and said Wedge shaped portion, said opening and said space-filling portion being transversely circular.
8. A seal according toclaim 6, said fingers including a pair thereof; the fingers of said pair having said tapering inner surfaces facing each other; and, said tapering surfaces transversely thereof, being both parallel to a plane extending therebetween; said opening being oblong and said wedge shaped portion and said spacefilling portion being transversely oblong.
MARVIN A.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS CHAMPION,Primary Examiner 10 E. J. MCCARTHY, Assistant Examiner US. Cl. X.R.