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US2681762A - Door-controlled signal for mailboxes - Google Patents

Door-controlled signal for mailboxes Download PDF

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Publication number
US2681762A
US2681762A US239274A US23927451A US2681762A US 2681762 A US2681762 A US 2681762A US 239274 A US239274 A US 239274A US 23927451 A US23927451 A US 23927451A US 2681762 A US2681762 A US 2681762A
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Prior art keywords
arm
door
box
signal
opening
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Expired - Lifetime
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US239274A
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Stanley E Long
George H Lasley
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47GHOUSEHOLD OR TABLE EQUIPMENT
    • A47G29/00Supports, holders, or containers for household use, not provided for in groups A47G1/00-A47G27/00 or A47G33/00 
    • A47G29/12Mail or newspaper receptacles, e.g. letter-boxes; Openings in doors or the like for delivering mail or newspapers
    • A47G29/1209Rural letter-boxes
    • A47G29/121Signalling devices
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47GHOUSEHOLD OR TABLE EQUIPMENT
    • A47G29/00Supports, holders, or containers for household use, not provided for in groups A47G1/00-A47G27/00 or A47G33/00 
    • A47G29/12Mail or newspaper receptacles, e.g. letter-boxes; Openings in doors or the like for delivering mail or newspapers
    • A47G29/1209Rural letter-boxes
    • A47G29/121Signalling devices
    • A47G2029/12105Signalling devices activated by the inlet door

Definitions

  • This invention relates to door-controlled signals for mail boxes and more particularly rural boxes.
  • An object of the invention is to provide a highly simplified and relatively inexpensive mechanism for shifting a mail box signal arm from an idle to a signaling position responsive to opening of the door of the box.
  • Another object is to provide a mechanism for the aforementioned purpose requiring no special manipulation by the person delivering mail.
  • Another object is to provide a signal arm and associated control mechanism, rapidly attachable as a unit to a rural mail box, and requiring very simple tools for its attachment.
  • Another object is to horizontally pivot a signal arm on a mail box for travel between a substantially horizontal idle position and a substantially vertical signaling position, to subject said arm to a spring urging it to signaling position, to resist such spring by a latch maintaining the idle position of the arm, and to provide the arm with a cam element normally obstructing opening of the door and eifective through the arm to release the latch when the door is opened.
  • Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a mail box equipped with our improved signal.
  • Fig. 2 is an enlarged fragmentary View in side elevation of the signal occupying its latched position on the box.
  • Fig. 2A is a sectional detail of the signal arm taken on the line 2A-2A of Fig. 2.
  • Fig. 3 is a horizontal sectional view of the same taken substantially on the line 3-3 of Fig. 2.
  • FIG. 4 is a perspective view of a mounting plate for the signal.
  • the reference character I designates a horizontally elongated mail box of a type common to rural districts, the front end of such box being formed by a door 2 hinged at its lower edge to the box as indicated at 3.
  • the door may be swung forward and downward for access to the box, as shown in dash lines in Fig. 1.
  • the upper edge of the door may carry any desired catch 4 for holding the door normally closed.
  • Our signal attachment comprises a substantially triangular mounting plate 5 centrally and rigidly carrying a pin 6 whereon an elongated signal arm 1 is pivoted.
  • the plate 5 is secured to the forward portion of a side wall of the box by bolts 8 and nuts 8a, such bolts re- 'arm flat against the plate 5.
  • the arm "i has differential lengths at opposite sides of the pivot pin, its major length terminating in an enlarged signal flag or plate It and its minor length being terminally bent to form a cam element ll of approximate V-shape. When said. arm is in its idle horizontal position, as illustrated.
  • the pin 6 projects sumciently outward from the arm 1 to carry a coiled torsion spring it having its outer end socketed in said pin at In and having an integral extension l2b from its inner end which extension is terminally hooked over an upper edge of the arm in a manner tending to swing the arm to its upright (or signaling) position responsive to torsion of the spring.
  • the arm is maintained normally in its horizontal or idle position, in resistance to the spring, by a latch means comprising a tongue I 3 struck slightly inward from said arm at a downward inclination and normally received in and abutting an edge of a square aperture l4 formed in the plate.
  • the spring i2 is under a slight compressive stress additional to its torsion stress, so as to urge the Upon opening thereof, the door 2 deflects the cam element H and the forward end of the arm slightly laterally, the arm then horizontally rocking about a vertical axis intersecting the pivot pin, thus disengaging the tongue I3 from the aperture i i, and permitting the spring to raise the flag-mounting end of the arm.
  • the arm When so actuated, the arm is limited to a ninety-degree travel through engagement with a stop formed by vertically slitting the upper edge portion of the plate 5 and imparting a slight outward deflection to the resultant tongue 15, as best appears in Fig. 4.
  • Oilsetting the central portion of the plate 5 away from the box serves to sufficiently space the arm 1 from the box to permit rocking of the arm about the aforementioned vertical axis without such resistance as would arise if the flag-mounting end of the arm were rocked against the box.
  • the signal arm and flap thereon may be seen from a considerable distance, saving a trip to the mail box when the latter is empty.
  • the box owner has removed mail, he closes the door and lowers the 3 signal arm, whereupon the latch tongue I3 snaps into the aperture 14, again maintaining the horizontal position of the arm.
  • a door-controlled signal for a mail box the combination with a mail box having a front end and an opening at such end giving access to the box, a door controlling such opening, and means hinging the door for opening and closing travel, of an elongated signal arm in exterior proximity to a side wall of the box, means pivoting the arm on said side wall to swing about a substantially horizontal axis transverse to the box, between an approximately horizontal idle position and an approximately vertical signaling position, said axis being spaced from the arm ends, the arm being proportioned to forwardly extend, in its idle position, in proximity to an edge portion of the door other than its hinge portion, a cam element on said arm extending into the path of opening travelof the door in the idle position of said arm, a spring urging the arm pivotally toward its signaling position, and coacting means carried independently of the door by box and arm for latching the arm in its idle position in resistance to said spring, said cam element and at least a portion of the arm being laterally actuable by the door in its opening travel to
  • a mounting plate means securing such plate exteriorly to a side wall of the box, an elonsignal arm, means pivoting such arm on the mounting plate to swing in a substantially vertical plane substantially parallel to said side wall, between an approximately horizontal idle position and an approximately vertical signaling position, a spring carried by said plate and urging the arm pivotally toward its signaling position, acting means carried by said plate and arm for latching the arm in its idle position in resistance to said spring, and a cam element carried by the arm and obstructing the opening path of the door in the idle position of the arm, the arm being laterally movable by such cam element and such element being laterally movable by the door in its opening travel, and said latch means being releasable by lateral movement of the arm to afford actuation of the arm
  • a door-controlled signal for a mail box the combination with a mail box having a front end and an opening at such end giving access to the box, a door controlling such opening, and means hinging the door for opening and closing travel, of an elongated signal arm in exterior proximity to a side wall of the box, means pivoting the arm on said side wall to swing about a substantially horizontal axis transverse to the box, between an approximately horizontal idle position and an approximately vertical signaling position, said axis being spaced from the arm ends, the arm being proportioned to forwardly extend, in its idle position, in proximity to an edge portion of the door other than its hinge portion, a cam element on said arm extending into the path of opening travel of the door in the idle position of said arm, a spring urging the arm pivotally toward its signaling position, and coacting means carried by the box and arm between said cam element and the pivot axis of the arm for latching the arm in its idle position in resistance to said spring, said cam element and at least a portion of the arm being laterally
  • a door controlled signal for a mail box as set forth in claim 1 said pivot means comprising a pin laterally projecting from said side wall, said spring comprising a portion coiled upon said pin compressed axially of the pin against the signal arm, whereby said latch means takes effect as the arm assumes its idle position.

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Description

June 22, 1954 s 5, L E 2,681,762
DOOR-CONTROLLED SIGNAL FOR MAILBOXES Filed July 30, 1.951
INVENTORS Stan/2y E A any George .H-A as/ey Patented June 22 1954 UNITED STATES TENT OFFICE DOOR-CONTROLLED SIGNAL FOR MAILBOXES Stanley E. Long and George H. Lasley, Pontiac, Mich.
7 Claims.
This invention relates to door-controlled signals for mail boxes and more particularly rural boxes.
An object of the invention is to provide a highly simplified and relatively inexpensive mechanism for shifting a mail box signal arm from an idle to a signaling position responsive to opening of the door of the box.
Another object is to provide a mechanism for the aforementioned purpose requiring no special manipulation by the person delivering mail.
Another object is to provide a signal arm and associated control mechanism, rapidly attachable as a unit to a rural mail box, and requiring very simple tools for its attachment.
Another object is to horizontally pivot a signal arm on a mail box for travel between a substantially horizontal idle position and a substantially vertical signaling position, to subject said arm to a spring urging it to signaling position, to resist such spring by a latch maintaining the idle position of the arm, and to provide the arm with a cam element normally obstructing opening of the door and eifective through the arm to release the latch when the door is opened.
These and various other objects are attained by the construction hereinafter described and illustrated in the accompanying drawing, wherem:
Fig. 1 is a perspective view of a mail box equipped with our improved signal.
Fig. 2 is an enlarged fragmentary View in side elevation of the signal occupying its latched position on the box.
Fig. 2A is a sectional detail of the signal arm taken on the line 2A-2A of Fig. 2.
Fig. 3 is a horizontal sectional view of the same taken substantially on the line 3-3 of Fig. 2.
.Fig. 4 is a perspective view of a mounting plate for the signal.
In these views, the reference character I designates a horizontally elongated mail box of a type common to rural districts, the front end of such box being formed by a door 2 hinged at its lower edge to the box as indicated at 3. Thus the door may be swung forward and downward for access to the box, as shown in dash lines in Fig. 1. The upper edge of the door may carry any desired catch 4 for holding the door normally closed. Our signal attachment comprises a substantially triangular mounting plate 5 centrally and rigidly carrying a pin 6 whereon an elongated signal arm 1 is pivoted. The plate 5 is secured to the forward portion of a side wall of the box by bolts 8 and nuts 8a, such bolts re- 'arm flat against the plate 5.
spectively engaging the respective apex portions of the plate. Such portions are similarly offset slightly from the central portion of the plate whereby said central portion has clearance from the box for a purpose hereinafter explained. The arm "i has differential lengths at opposite sides of the pivot pin, its major length terminating in an enlarged signal flag or plate It and its minor length being terminally bent to form a cam element ll of approximate V-shape. When said. arm is in its idle horizontal position, as illustrated.
in full lines, and the door 2 is shut, the cam element ll slightly laps the front face of the doorso as to obstruct the opening path of the door, as best appears in Fig. 3. The pin 6 projects sumciently outward from the arm 1 to carry a coiled torsion spring it having its outer end socketed in said pin at In and having an integral extension l2b from its inner end which extension is terminally hooked over an upper edge of the arm in a manner tending to swing the arm to its upright (or signaling) position responsive to torsion of the spring. The arm is maintained normally in its horizontal or idle position, in resistance to the spring, by a latch means comprising a tongue I 3 struck slightly inward from said arm at a downward inclination and normally received in and abutting an edge of a square aperture l4 formed in the plate. The spring i2 is under a slight compressive stress additional to its torsion stress, so as to urge the Upon opening thereof, the door 2 deflects the cam element H and the forward end of the arm slightly laterally, the arm then horizontally rocking about a vertical axis intersecting the pivot pin, thus disengaging the tongue I3 from the aperture i i, and permitting the spring to raise the flag-mounting end of the arm. When so actuated, the arm is limited to a ninety-degree travel through engagement with a stop formed by vertically slitting the upper edge portion of the plate 5 and imparting a slight outward deflection to the resultant tongue 15, as best appears in Fig. 4. Oilsetting the central portion of the plate 5 away from the box serves to sufficiently space the arm 1 from the box to permit rocking of the arm about the aforementioned vertical axis without such resistance as would arise if the flag-mounting end of the arm were rocked against the box.
In its upright position, the signal arm and flap thereon may be seen from a considerable distance, saving a trip to the mail box when the latter is empty. When the box owner has removed mail, he closes the door and lowers the 3 signal arm, whereupon the latch tongue I3 snaps into the aperture 14, again maintaining the horizontal position of the arm.
Due to extreme simplicity of the described signal mechanism, it may be produced at low cost, and its installation on a box requires only the drilling or punching of three holes for the bolts 8, and tightening of the corresponding nuts.
What we claim is:
1. In a door-controlled signal for a mail box, the combination with a mail box having a front end and an opening at such end giving access to the box, a door controlling such opening, and means hinging the door for opening and closing travel, of an elongated signal arm in exterior proximity to a side wall of the box, means pivoting the arm on said side wall to swing about a substantially horizontal axis transverse to the box, between an approximately horizontal idle position and an approximately vertical signaling position, said axis being spaced from the arm ends, the arm being proportioned to forwardly extend, in its idle position, in proximity to an edge portion of the door other than its hinge portion, a cam element on said arm extending into the path of opening travelof the door in the idle position of said arm, a spring urging the arm pivotally toward its signaling position, and coacting means carried independently of the door by box and arm for latching the arm in its idle position in resistance to said spring, said cam element and at least a portion of the arm being laterally actuable by the door in its opening travel to release said latch means.
2. A door-contrclledsignal for a mail box as set forth in claim 1, said cam element comprising a terminal portion of the arm bent to an approximate V-shape.
3. A door-controlled signal for a mail box as set forth in claim 1, saidspring having a portion urging the arm along its pivot axis toward the box, for giving effect to said latch means when the arm assumes its idle position.
i. In a door-controlled signal for a mail box, the combination with a mail box having a front end and an opening at such end giving access to the box, a door controlling such opening, and means hinging the door for opening and closing travel, of a mounting plate, means securing such plate exteriorly to a side wall of the box, an elonsignal arm, means pivoting such arm on the mounting plate to swing in a substantially vertical plane substantially parallel to said side wall, between an approximately horizontal idle position and an approximately vertical signaling position, a spring carried by said plate and urging the arm pivotally toward its signaling position, acting means carried by said plate and arm for latching the arm in its idle position in resistance to said spring, and a cam element carried by the arm and obstructing the opening path of the door in the idle position of the arm, the arm being laterally movable by such cam element and such element being laterally movable by the door in its opening travel, and said latch means being releasable by lateral movement of the arm to afford actuation of the arm to its signaling position by the spring.
5. A door-controlled signal for a mail box as set forth in claim 4, said pivot means comprising a pin fixed on said plate, said spring being coiled on such pin and urging the arm against said plate, whereby said latch means takes effect on the arm as the latter assumes its idle position.
6. In a door-controlled signal for a mail box, the combination with a mail box having a front end and an opening at such end giving access to the box, a door controlling such opening, and means hinging the door for opening and closing travel, of an elongated signal arm in exterior proximity to a side wall of the box, means pivoting the arm on said side wall to swing about a substantially horizontal axis transverse to the box, between an approximately horizontal idle position and an approximately vertical signaling position, said axis being spaced from the arm ends, the arm being proportioned to forwardly extend, in its idle position, in proximity to an edge portion of the door other than its hinge portion, a cam element on said arm extending into the path of opening travel of the door in the idle position of said arm, a spring urging the arm pivotally toward its signaling position, and coacting means carried by the box and arm between said cam element and the pivot axis of the arm for latching the arm in its idle position in resistance to said spring, said cam element and at least a portion of the arm being laterally actuable by the door in its opening travel to release said latch means.
7. A door controlled signal for a mail box as set forth in claim 1, said pivot means comprising a pin laterally projecting from said side wall, said spring comprising a portion coiled upon said pin compressed axially of the pin against the signal arm, whereby said latch means takes effect as the arm assumes its idle position.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS
US239274A 1951-07-30 1951-07-30 Door-controlled signal for mailboxes Expired - Lifetime US2681762A (en)

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Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3294057A (en) * 1966-02-18 1966-12-27 Sam C Feil Automatic rural mail box flag tripper
US3392911A (en) * 1966-11-15 1968-07-16 George W. Clark Mailbox signal
US4685612A (en) * 1986-01-16 1987-08-11 Rascov Anthony J Mailbox indicator
US4702411A (en) * 1986-09-02 1987-10-27 Yager James R Signaling apparatus for mailboxes
US4976215A (en) * 1989-04-10 1990-12-11 Lee William C Door activity monitoring apparatus
US20140069319A1 (en) * 2012-09-13 2014-03-13 Jerry Dale Lentzner Mail's here

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1204580A (en) * 1916-03-02 1916-11-14 Neil Mcdonald Jr Mail-box.
US1458836A (en) * 1921-12-31 1923-06-12 William A Mcdowell Signal attachment for mail boxes
US1671520A (en) * 1927-06-21 1928-05-29 Farrell Horace Albert Mail-box signal
US1685874A (en) * 1927-04-19 1928-10-02 Herman C Feist Mail-box latch and signal
US2421603A (en) * 1945-01-06 1947-06-03 Doppelhammer John Mailbox signaling device

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1204580A (en) * 1916-03-02 1916-11-14 Neil Mcdonald Jr Mail-box.
US1458836A (en) * 1921-12-31 1923-06-12 William A Mcdowell Signal attachment for mail boxes
US1685874A (en) * 1927-04-19 1928-10-02 Herman C Feist Mail-box latch and signal
US1671520A (en) * 1927-06-21 1928-05-29 Farrell Horace Albert Mail-box signal
US2421603A (en) * 1945-01-06 1947-06-03 Doppelhammer John Mailbox signaling device

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3294057A (en) * 1966-02-18 1966-12-27 Sam C Feil Automatic rural mail box flag tripper
US3392911A (en) * 1966-11-15 1968-07-16 George W. Clark Mailbox signal
US4685612A (en) * 1986-01-16 1987-08-11 Rascov Anthony J Mailbox indicator
US4702411A (en) * 1986-09-02 1987-10-27 Yager James R Signaling apparatus for mailboxes
US4976215A (en) * 1989-04-10 1990-12-11 Lee William C Door activity monitoring apparatus
US20140069319A1 (en) * 2012-09-13 2014-03-13 Jerry Dale Lentzner Mail's here

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