US3623063A - Alarm - Google Patents

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US3623063A
US3623063A US868424A US3623063DA US3623063A US 3623063 A US3623063 A US 3623063A US 868424 A US868424 A US 868424A US 3623063D A US3623063D A US 3623063DA US 3623063 A US3623063 A US 3623063A
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oscillator
doorknob
door
signalling
handle
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US868424A
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John V Fontaine
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FAIL SAFE BRAKE CORP
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John V Fontaine
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Assigned to FAIL SAFE BRAKE CORPORATION reassignment FAIL SAFE BRAKE CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST. Assignors: FONTAINE, JOHN V.
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G08SIGNALLING
    • G08BSIGNALLING OR CALLING SYSTEMS; ORDER TELEGRAPHS; ALARM SYSTEMS
    • G08B13/00Burglar, theft or intruder alarms
    • G08B13/22Electrical actuation
    • G08B13/26Electrical actuation by proximity of an intruder causing variation in capacitance or inductance of a circuit

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  • a further object of the invention is to provide one oscillator that alone will produce a variation in voltage through a change of frequency thereby reducing the number of components required to accomplish the desired results, unlike other capacity reactors which require an oscillator as well as an additional tuned circuit.
  • Still another object of the invention is to provide a portable alarm system as herein described with a balancer plate incorporated as an integral part thereof, thereby resulting in a workable, compact unit which requires no ground or other wires extending therefrom, resulting in increasing its desirability and usage.
  • a further object of the invention is to provide means whereby when the unit is hung on a doorknob the anodized or other coating which usually is nonconductive will be pierced thereby assuring contact at all times.
  • Still another object of the invention is to provide means whereby the hook can be extended, positioning the unit beyond doorknob plates, found in a number of homes, which tend to interfere with its performance when in alignment with on the other hand permitting the unit to be portable by retracting the hook and be carried in a briefcase or other luggage while traveling.
  • While yet another object of the invention is to provide a volume control on the face of the unit whereby the user, when confined to small quarters such as a hotel room, or bedroom, can alter the volume to a suitable intensity.
  • Still one last object of the invention is the incorporation therein of a miniature transmitter that when the doorknob is touched before entry is gained a silent signal is transmitted to a remote receiver to in turn activate any number of apparatus.
  • FIG. I is an elevational view of a portable alarm device in accordance with one embodiment of the invention showing the device hanging on a doorknob ofa door;
  • FIG. 2 is an elevational view of the device of FIG. 1 also hanging on a doorknob, but with the handle of the device extended to position the device below a doorknob plate on the door;
  • FIG. 3 is a perspective view of a telescoping handle of the alarm device.
  • FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram of a circuit for this embodiment of the alarm device.
  • FIG. I shows a portable alarm device 10 suspended by a handle 12 from a conductive doorknob 14 of a door 16.
  • the device 10 has a plastic or other nonconductive housing 18 with a grill 20 through which an audible alarm signal sounds when the doorknob 14 is touched either from the outside or the inside of the door.
  • the doorknob 14 has a like knob on the opposite side of the door 16, the two knobs being conductively connected together in the usual manner, and it is intended that if the outside knob is touched, even with gloves, the device 10 will sound an alarm.
  • the device 10 has an on-off switch 22, a sensitivity control 25 and a volume control 24.
  • FIG. 2 shows the device 10 suspended by the handle 12 from a doorknob 14 having a doorplate 15 which might tend to interfere with proper operation of the device. For this reason, the handle 12 of the device is extended to position the housing 18 of the device below the door plate 15.
  • FIG. 3 shows an example of a telescoping handle for the device 10.
  • the handle 12 is an am: having a hook 26 at its upper end, the handle being made of conductive material such as metal. On the lower side of the hook there is sharp point 28 which contacts the doorknob 14 when the device is suspended, and this point 28 will break through any oxide film or other similar film on the metal of the doorknob to establish good continuous electrical contact with the doorknob. Such oxide films are usually nonconductive, and they are often found on aluminum doorknobs particularly.
  • the handle 12 extends through a bracket 30 having a flange 32 which may be attached to the housing 18 of the device through apertures 34 downwardly as viewed in FIG.
  • the handle telescopes relative to the housing 18 of the device to permit the handle to be extended for suspending the device below a doorplate 15 in the manner shown in FIG. 2, and also to permit the handle to be retracted either for hanging the device on a doorknob as shown in FIG. 1 or to make the device more readily portable so that it can easily be packed in luggage or the like.
  • the handle 12 has a shoulder 40 which catches on the bracket 30 as the handle is retracted into the case and forms a stop for limiting inward movement of the handle.
  • the handle 12 is electrically connected to an oscillator inside the case as will be described further in connection with FIG. 4.
  • FIG. 4 shows the circuit diagram for one embodiment of the invention.
  • the handle 12 is represented by a sensor which is intended to be the electrical equivalent of the and engages the handle 12 handle at any position where actually a metallic conductor plate which acts as a balancing means for the circuit.
  • a plate 44 is shown at the left side of the circuit diagram to illustrate the fact that this is a planar conductor serving as an internal reference conductor for the circuit.
  • the balancer plate 44 also acts to couple the oscillator of the circuit to the door when the device 10 is suspended from the handle of the door, as will be described further.
  • a battery 46 Connected between lines 42 and balancer plate 44 is a battery 46 in series with an on-off switch 48.
  • the battery 46 may, for example, have a value of about 3 volts, and it supplies operating potential to the rest of the circuit.
  • a signalling device 50 Also connected between line 42 and balancer plate 44 are a signalling device 50 and a semiconductor switch 52.
  • the semiconductor switch 52 is the actuating means for actuating the signalling device 56 to sound an alarm when the frequency of the oscillator of the circuit is changed.
  • the semiconductor switch may be a semiconductor controlled rectifier as shown, a suitable rectifier being a GE C106Y2 SCR.
  • the signalling device 50 may be a horn or buzzer, the type of device not being critical, but a suitable horn will provide a loud alarm when it is actuated by conduction of the semiconductor switch S2.
  • the semiconductor switch 52 is connected with its anode-cathode portion in series with the signalling device 50 with this series combination being connected between line 42 and the balancer plate 44.
  • a third series circuit which includes the oscillator 54 of the circuit.
  • the oscillator 54 includes a transistor 56 having an emitter 58 and its collector 60 connected in a series circuit path 62.
  • a first tuned circuit 64 is connected between the collector 60 of transistor 56 and line 42, and a second tuned circuit 66 is connected to the emitter B of transistor 56.
  • a resistor 68 is connected between tuned circuit 86 and balancer plate 44.
  • the base 70 of transistor 56 is connected by a capacitor 72 and a resistor 71 to the balancer plate 44 and is connected by a resistor 74 to the positive supply line 42.
  • Handle 12 is connected to base 70.
  • Tuned circuit 64 includes a coil 76 and a capacitor 78 in parallel, and tuned circuit 66 includes a coil 80 and a capacitor 82 in parallel.
  • the two coils 76 and 80 each have a resonance value of 262 kilocycles
  • capacitor 78 has a value of l80 pf.
  • capacitor 82 has a value of 39 pf.
  • the capacitors 78 and 82 slightly modify the resonance values of the coils.
  • Coil 76 is variable by knob 25 for sensitivity control.
  • Knob 24 is part of the signalling device 50.
  • resistor 71 has a value of 18 kiloohms
  • capacitor 72 has a value of 700 pf.
  • resistor 74 has a value of 68 kiloohms
  • resistor 68 has a value of 680 ohms.
  • the transistor 56 is an NPN-type designated 2N 2924. Values are given for these components by way of example, but it is not intended that the invention should be limited in any way to these values.
  • the oscillator 54 has tuned emitter and tuned collector circuits for the transistor 56, and this tuning causes the transistor to sustain oscillations when operating potential is supplied thereto by closing the switch 48. Operating potential is applied to the base 70 of transistor 56 through the resistor 74.
  • the oscillator 54 oscillates at the resonance frequency of the two tuned circuits 64 and 66 in this quiescent condition of the alarm device.
  • the balancer plate 44 is mounted on the inside of the back cover plate of the housing 18, and therefore it is positioned close to and parallel to the door 16 when the device is suspended from the doorknob 14 by the handle 12.
  • the balancer plate 44 capacitively couples the reference point of the oscillator 54 to the door 16 so that the door provide an external reference potential for the oscillator.
  • This capacitive coupling is indicated in FIG. 4 by a dashed-line capacitor 84 which is really a distributed capacitance.
  • the door becomes a part of the oscillator circuit in the same sense as the relationship of one side of a capacitor has with the other.
  • the balancing plate is, in eflect, one side of the capacitor and the door is the other side of the capacitor.
  • the door if made of wood and not a conductor of electricity, is nevertheless a conductor of radiofrequency signals and has adequate mass to constitute ground for a small oscillator.
  • the relationship of the balancing plate and the door allows the oscillator to have the necessary grounding that is essential for operation. Without this balancing plate and the capacitive coupling it provides to the door, the alarm itself becomes capacity sensitive rather than the doorknob.
  • the semiconductor switch 52 is normally off since the power supplied by resistor 68 is insufiicient to turn the switch on. However, when the frequency of the oscillator changes, current is drawn through the gate 86 of the semiconductor switch, and this current turns on the anode-cathode portion of the switch to produce a relatively large current through the signalling device 50, causing the alarm to sound.
  • the device 50 can be a miniature transmitter which sends an RF signal to a remote receiver having an audible alarm.
  • the alarm device includes an oscillator that alone will produce a variation in voltage applied to the actuating means 52 of the circuit through a change in frequency in the oscillator, and no additional tuned circuits are required other than those included in the oscillator itself.
  • the oscillator is a simple emitter and collector tuned circuit requiring very few components.
  • the alarm device is a portable, compact unit which can simply hang on the doorknob of a door and that will sound an alarm in the event that the doorknob is touched by a person. No ground wires or other wires need extend from the alarm device since a balancer plate is incorporated into the unit and couples the oscillator of the circuit to the door itself so that the door provides an external reference potential for the oscillator.
  • the handle of the device is retractable and extendable, the extended position being desirable to accommodate doorknob plates found on some doors, and the retracted position being desired for other installations and alsb for packing of the device.
  • the handle has a sharp point on the hooking portion thereof which assures that the handle or sensor of the device makes good electrical contact with the doorknob so that the doorknob itself acts as a sensor.
  • a radiofrequency oscillator controlling the condition of actuating means for a signalling device which provides an alarm signal when the frequency of the oscillator is changed
  • an alarm device having a battery-powered oscillator controlling the condition of actuating means for signalling means which produces an alarm signal when the frequency of the oscillator is changed, the oscillator having a tuned circuit controlling the frequency thereof, the combination therewith of a hooking conductor connected to said oscillator for hookingly attaching said device to a doorknob of a door and electrically connecting said oscillator to the doorknob, and a planar balancer conductor capacitively coupling a reference portion of said oscillator to the door when the hooking conductor is attached to the doorknob with the plane of the balancer conductor close to and parallel with the door, so that when the doorknob is touched, the frequency of the oscillator is changed to actuate the signalling means.
  • An alarm device comprising a battery supply, signalling means, actuating means for said signalling means, an oscillator controlling the condition of said actuating means to in turn cause said signalling means to produce an alarm signal when the frequency of said oscillator is changed, a conductive suspending handle electrically connected to said oscillator means and mechanically connected to a housing for the device for (a) suspending said device from a conductive doorknob of a door and (b) electrically connecting the oscillator to the doorknob, and conductive balancer plate means connected to said oscillator to capacitively couple a reference portion of said oscillator to the door when said device is suspended from the doorknob by said handle with said balancer plate means close to and parallel with the door, whereby touching of the doorknob, even with gloves on, changes the frequency of the oscillator to actuate the signalling means.
  • An alarm device having a housing and comprising,
  • a. oscillator means having a tuned circuit therein.
  • said at taching means comprises a hooking handle which telescopes into and out of said housing.
  • tile alann device as claimed in claim 5 in which said hooking handle has a sharp point engageable with the doorknob to pierce a film thereon and establish good electrical contact with the doorknob.
  • a portable, battery-operated alarm device comprising:
  • a semiconductor switch in said housing connected to said oscillator means and said supply means and responsive to a change in the frequency of the signals of said oscillator means to conduct current, i e. signalling means in said housing connected to said semiconductor switch and responsive to the conduction of said semiconductor switch to 'produce an alarm signal, a generally planar balancing conductor connected to said oscillator means and mounted at one side of said housing to stay close to and generally parallel with the door when the device is hung from said doorknob, said balancing conductor providing an internal reference for said oscillator means and serving to capacitively couple the radiofrequency signals of said oscillator means to the door so that the door constitutes ground for said oscillator means, and g.
  • a conductive suspending handle mechanically connected to said housing for suspending said housing from said doorknob thereby placing said planar balancing conductor close to and generally parallel with said door to make said capacitive coupling of said device to said door effective, said handle being electrically connected to said oscillator means and serving to conductively connect said oscillator means to the doorknob so that touching of the doorknob, even with gloves, applies capacitance to said oscillator means which changes the frequency of said signals to trigger said semiconductor switch and thereby actuate said signalling device to produce an alarm.

Abstract

An alarm device in which an oscillator controls the condition of actuating means for a signalling device which provides an alarm signal when the frequency of the oscillator is changed, the device including a conductive suspending handle electrically connected to the oscillator for (a) suspending the device from a conductive doorknob of a door and (b) electrically connecting the oscillator to the doorknob, and a balancer plate for the oscillator to capacitively couple a reference portion of the oscillator to the door when the device is suspended from the doorknob by the handle, whereby touching of the doorknob changes the frequency of the oscillator to actuate the signalling device.

Description

United States Patent [72] Inventor John V. Fontaine 2817 NE. 26th Court, Fort Lauderdale,
Fla. 33308 [21 Appl. No. 868,424
[22] Filed Oct. 22, 1969 [45] Patented Nov. 23, 1971 [54] ALARM 10 Claims, 4 Drawing Figs.
[52] U.S. Cl 340/274, 340/258 C, 340/283 [51 Int. Cl G08b 13/26 [50] Field of Search 340/258 C.
[56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,254,313 5/1966 Atkins etal 340/258C 3,465,325 9/1969 Goldfarbetal 3,508,239 4/1970 Fontaine ABSTRACT: An alarm device in which an oscillator controls the condition of actuating means for a signalling device which provides an alarm signal when the frequency of the oscillator is changed, the device including a conductive suspending handle electrically connected to the oscillator for (a) suspending the device from a conductive doorknob ofa door and (b) electrically connecting the oscillator to the doorknob, and a balancer plate for the oscillator to capacitively couple a reference portion of the oscillator to the door when the device is suspended from the doorknob by the handle, whereby touching of the doorknob changes the frequency of the oscillator to actuate the signalling device PATENTEDNBY 2 I91! 3,623 O63 SHEET 1 [IF 2 JOHN V FONTAINE.
SETTLE 8 OLTMAN,
ATT'YS.
IN VIIN'I JR.
ALARM Although many types of burglar alarms and other alarm devices have been proposed, there remains a need for a portable, battery-powered compact alarm device that a person before retiring, or at other times, can place at a door to be protected and which will sound an alarm in the event the doorknob is touched, even with gloves, before entry is gained. Some known devices have not been portable, others have required relatively large pieces of equipment, and others have required that external connections be made from the device, for example to ground the device. It would be desirable if the alarm hang on the doorknob of a door, but a problem is encountered in making electrical contact to the doorknob, particularly with aluminum doorknobs which often have an oxide coating which usually is nonconductive.
OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION It is an object of the present invention to long battery life, self-contained, householder before retiring, or at other times, can simply hang on the doorknob from the inside of the residence, that will sound an alann in the event the doorknob is touched, even with gloves, before entry is gained.
A further object of the invention is to provide one oscillator that alone will produce a variation in voltage through a change of frequency thereby reducing the number of components required to accomplish the desired results, unlike other capacity reactors which require an oscillator as well as an additional tuned circuit.
Still another object of the invention is to provide a portable alarm system as herein described with a balancer plate incorporated as an integral part thereof, thereby resulting in a workable, compact unit which requires no ground or other wires extending therefrom, resulting in increasing its desirability and usage.
A further object of the invention is to provide means whereby when the unit is hung on a doorknob the anodized or other coating which usually is nonconductive will be pierced thereby assuring contact at all times.
Then still another object of the invention is to provide means whereby the hook can be extended, positioning the unit beyond doorknob plates, found in a number of homes, which tend to interfere with its performance when in alignment with on the other hand permitting the unit to be portable by retracting the hook and be carried in a briefcase or other luggage while traveling.
While yet another object of the invention is to provide a volume control on the face of the unit whereby the user, when confined to small quarters such as a hotel room, or bedroom, can alter the volume to a suitable intensity.
Still one last object of the invention is the incorporation therein of a miniature transmitter that when the doorknob is touched before entry is gained a silent signal is transmitted to a remote receiver to in turn activate any number of apparatus.
Other objects of this invention will appear from the following description and appended claims, reference being had to the accompanying drawings forming a part of this specification wherein like reference characters designate corresponding parts in the several views.
ON THE DRAWINGS FIG. I is an elevational view of a portable alarm device in accordance with one embodiment of the invention showing the device hanging on a doorknob ofa door;
FIG. 2 is an elevational view of the device of FIG. 1 also hanging on a doorknob, but with the handle of the device extended to position the device below a doorknob plate on the door;
FIG. 3 is a perspective view of a telescoping handle of the alarm device; and
FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram of a circuit for this embodiment of the alarm device.
provide a portable, compact unit that a Before explaining the present invention in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and arrangement of parts illustrated in the accompanying drawings, since the invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology or terminology employed herein is for the purpose of description and not of limitation.
AS SHOWN ON THE DRAWINGS FIG. I shows a portable alarm device 10 suspended by a handle 12 from a conductive doorknob 14 of a door 16. The device 10 has a plastic or other nonconductive housing 18 with a grill 20 through which an audible alarm signal sounds when the doorknob 14 is touched either from the outside or the inside of the door. It is to be understood that the doorknob 14 has a like knob on the opposite side of the door 16, the two knobs being conductively connected together in the usual manner, and it is intended that if the outside knob is touched, even with gloves, the device 10 will sound an alarm. The device 10 has an on-off switch 22, a sensitivity control 25 and a volume control 24.
FIG. 2 shows the device 10 suspended by the handle 12 from a doorknob 14 having a doorplate 15 which might tend to interfere with proper operation of the device. For this reason, the handle 12 of the device is extended to position the housing 18 of the device below the door plate 15.
FIG. 3 shows an example of a telescoping handle for the device 10. The handle 12 is an am: having a hook 26 at its upper end, the handle being made of conductive material such as metal. On the lower side of the hook there is sharp point 28 which contacts the doorknob 14 when the device is suspended, and this point 28 will break through any oxide film or other similar film on the metal of the doorknob to establish good continuous electrical contact with the doorknob. Such oxide films are usually nonconductive, and they are often found on aluminum doorknobs particularly. The handle 12 extends through a bracket 30 having a flange 32 which may be attached to the housing 18 of the device through apertures 34 downwardly as viewed in FIG. 3 frictionally under bias to hold the it is set, but to allow extension of the handle in the manner shown in FIG. 2 and retraction of the handle in the manner shown in FIG. 1. Thus, the handle telescopes relative to the housing 18 of the device to permit the handle to be extended for suspending the device below a doorplate 15 in the manner shown in FIG. 2, and also to permit the handle to be retracted either for hanging the device on a doorknob as shown in FIG. 1 or to make the device more readily portable so that it can easily be packed in luggage or the like. The handle 12 has a shoulder 40 which catches on the bracket 30 as the handle is retracted into the case and forms a stop for limiting inward movement of the handle. The handle 12 is electrically connected to an oscillator inside the case as will be described further in connection with FIG. 4.
FIG. 4 shows the circuit diagram for one embodiment of the invention. In this diagram, the handle 12 is represented by a sensor which is intended to be the electrical equivalent of the and engages the handle 12 handle at any position where actually a metallic conductor plate which acts as a balancing means for the circuit. A plate 44 is shown at the left side of the circuit diagram to illustrate the fact that this is a planar conductor serving as an internal reference conductor for the circuit. The balancer plate 44 also acts to couple the oscillator of the circuit to the door when the device 10 is suspended from the handle of the door, as will be described further.
Connected between lines 42 and balancer plate 44 is a battery 46 in series with an on-off switch 48. The battery 46 may, for example, have a value of about 3 volts, and it supplies operating potential to the rest of the circuit. Also connected between line 42 and balancer plate 44 are a signalling device 50 and a semiconductor switch 52. The semiconductor switch 52 is the actuating means for actuating the signalling device 56 to sound an alarm when the frequency of the oscillator of the circuit is changed. The semiconductor switch may be a semiconductor controlled rectifier as shown, a suitable rectifier being a GE C106Y2 SCR. The signalling device 50 may be a horn or buzzer, the type of device not being critical, but a suitable horn will provide a loud alarm when it is actuated by conduction of the semiconductor switch S2. The semiconductor switch 52 is connected with its anode-cathode portion in series with the signalling device 50 with this series combination being connected between line 42 and the balancer plate 44.
Also connected between line 42 and balancer plate 44 is a third series circuit which includes the oscillator 54 of the circuit. The oscillator 54 includes a transistor 56 having an emitter 58 and its collector 60 connected in a series circuit path 62. A first tuned circuit 64 is connected between the collector 60 of transistor 56 and line 42, and a second tuned circuit 66 is connected to the emitter B of transistor 56. A resistor 68 is connected between tuned circuit 86 and balancer plate 44. The base 70 of transistor 56 is connected by a capacitor 72 and a resistor 71 to the balancer plate 44 and is connected by a resistor 74 to the positive supply line 42. Handle 12 is connected to base 70.
Tuned circuit 64 includes a coil 76 and a capacitor 78 in parallel, and tuned circuit 66 includes a coil 80 and a capacitor 82 in parallel. in a particular embodiment, the two coils 76 and 80 each have a resonance value of 262 kilocycles, capacitor 78 has a value of l80 pf. and capacitor 82 has a value of 39 pf. The capacitors 78 and 82 slightly modify the resonance values of the coils. Coil 76 is variable by knob 25 for sensitivity control. Knob 24 is part of the signalling device 50. In the particular embodiment being described, resistor 71 has a value of 18 kiloohms, capacitor 72 has a value of 700 pf., resistor 74 has a value of 68 kiloohms, and resistor 68 has a value of 680 ohms. In this same embodiment, the transistor 56 is an NPN-type designated 2N 2924. Values are given for these components by way of example, but it is not intended that the invention should be limited in any way to these values.
It is apparent that the oscillator 54 has tuned emitter and tuned collector circuits for the transistor 56, and this tuning causes the transistor to sustain oscillations when operating potential is supplied thereto by closing the switch 48. Operating potential is applied to the base 70 of transistor 56 through the resistor 74. The oscillator 54 oscillates at the resonance frequency of the two tuned circuits 64 and 66 in this quiescent condition of the alarm device. The sensor 12, which is the bandle as previously explained, electrically connects the oscillator 54, and particularly the tuned circuit 64, to the conductive doorknob 14 of the door. The balancer plate 44 is mounted on the inside of the back cover plate of the housing 18, and therefore it is positioned close to and parallel to the door 16 when the device is suspended from the doorknob 14 by the handle 12. Thus, the balancer plate 44 capacitively couples the reference point of the oscillator 54 to the door 16 so that the door provide an external reference potential for the oscillator. This capacitive coupling is indicated in FIG. 4 by a dashed-line capacitor 84 which is really a distributed capacitance.
By means of this capacitive coupling, the door becomes a part of the oscillator circuit in the same sense as the relationship of one side of a capacitor has with the other. The balancing plate is, in eflect, one side of the capacitor and the door is the other side of the capacitor. It should be noted that the door, if made of wood and not a conductor of electricity, is nevertheless a conductor of radiofrequency signals and has adequate mass to constitute ground for a small oscillator. The relationship of the balancing plate and the door allows the oscillator to have the necessary grounding that is essential for operation. Without this balancing plate and the capacitive coupling it provides to the door, the alarm itself becomes capacity sensitive rather than the doorknob.
When a person touches the handle 12, either on the inside of the door or on the outside of the door, even with gloves on, this places additional capacitance in parallel with the bias circuit of the transistor which changes its operating frequency. The additional capacitance is effectively amplified. The semiconductor switch 52 is normally off since the power supplied by resistor 68 is insufiicient to turn the switch on. However, when the frequency of the oscillator changes, current is drawn through the gate 86 of the semiconductor switch, and this current turns on the anode-cathode portion of the switch to produce a relatively large current through the signalling device 50, causing the alarm to sound. The device 50 can be a miniature transmitter which sends an RF signal to a remote receiver having an audible alarm.
Thus, the alarm device includes an oscillator that alone will produce a variation in voltage applied to the actuating means 52 of the circuit through a change in frequency in the oscillator, and no additional tuned circuits are required other than those included in the oscillator itself. The oscillator is a simple emitter and collector tuned circuit requiring very few components. The alarm device is a portable, compact unit which can simply hang on the doorknob of a door and that will sound an alarm in the event that the doorknob is touched by a person. No ground wires or other wires need extend from the alarm device since a balancer plate is incorporated into the unit and couples the oscillator of the circuit to the door itself so that the door provides an external reference potential for the oscillator. The handle of the device is retractable and extendable, the extended position being desirable to accommodate doorknob plates found on some doors, and the retracted position being desired for other installations and alsb for packing of the device. The handle has a sharp point on the hooking portion thereof which assures that the handle or sensor of the device makes good electrical contact with the doorknob so that the doorknob itself acts as a sensor.
Having thus described my invention, 1 claim:
1. in a battery-operated alarm device having a radiofrequency oscillator controlling the condition of actuating means for a signalling device which provides an alarm signal when the frequency of the oscillator is changed, the combination therewith of a conductive suspending handle electrically connected to the oscillator for (l) suspending said device from a conductive doorknob of a door and (2) electrically connecting the oscillator to the doorknob, and conductive balancer plate means connected to the oscillator to capacitively couple a reference portion of said oscillator to the door when said device is suspended from the doorknob by said handle, so that the door serves as external ground for the oscillator and touching of the doorknob, even with gloves on, changes the frequency of the oscillator to actuate the signalling device.
2. in an alarm device having a battery-powered oscillator controlling the condition of actuating means for signalling means which produces an alarm signal when the frequency of the oscillator is changed, the oscillator having a tuned circuit controlling the frequency thereof, the combination therewith of a hooking conductor connected to said oscillator for hookingly attaching said device to a doorknob of a door and electrically connecting said oscillator to the doorknob, and a planar balancer conductor capacitively coupling a reference portion of said oscillator to the door when the hooking conductor is attached to the doorknob with the plane of the balancer conductor close to and parallel with the door, so that when the doorknob is touched, the frequency of the oscillator is changed to actuate the signalling means.
3. An alarm device comprising a battery supply, signalling means, actuating means for said signalling means, an oscillator controlling the condition of said actuating means to in turn cause said signalling means to produce an alarm signal when the frequency of said oscillator is changed, a conductive suspending handle electrically connected to said oscillator means and mechanically connected to a housing for the device for (a) suspending said device from a conductive doorknob of a door and (b) electrically connecting the oscillator to the doorknob, and conductive balancer plate means connected to said oscillator to capacitively couple a reference portion of said oscillator to the door when said device is suspended from the doorknob by said handle with said balancer plate means close to and parallel with the door, whereby touching of the doorknob, even with gloves on, changes the frequency of the oscillator to actuate the signalling means.
4. An alarm device having a housing and comprising,
a. oscillator means having a tuned circuit therein.
b. battery supply means for supplying operating potential to said oscillator means,
c. a semiconductor switch connected to said oscillator and said supply means,
d. signalling means connected to said semiconductor switch and responsive to a change in the conductive condition of said switch to produce an alarm signal,
e. a generally planar balancing conductor providing an internal reference for said oscillator, and
f. attaching means for l. attaching said device to a doorknob of a door,
2. connecting the oscillator to the doorknob, and
3. positioning said planar balancing conductor close to and parallel to the door to capacitively couple the planar conductor to the door, whereby in the operation of said device, a person touching the doorknob, even with gloves on, changes the frequency of said oscillator to change the conductive condition of said switch and thereby actuate said signalling device.
5. The alarm device as claimed in claim 4 in which said at taching means comprises a hooking handle which telescopes into and out of said housing.
6. The alarm device as claimed in claim 4 in which said signalling means comprises a transmitter.
7. The alarm device as claimed in claim 4 in which said signalling means comprises a horn or buzzer.
8. The alann device as claimed in claim 7 in which said signalling means has a volume control.
9. Tile alann device as claimed in claim 5 in which said hooking handle has a sharp point engageable with the doorknob to pierce a film thereon and establish good electrical contact with the doorknob.
10. A portable, battery-operated alarm device comprising:
a. a small, readily portable housing capable of being hung from a doorknob of a door,
b. battery supply means in said housing constituting the sole source of power for operating said alarm device, oscillator means in said housing connected to said supply means and having tuned-circuit means tuning said oscillator means to produce radiofrequency signals,
d. a semiconductor switch in said housing connected to said oscillator means and said supply means and responsive to a change in the frequency of the signals of said oscillator means to conduct current, i e. signalling means in said housing connected to said semiconductor switch and responsive to the conduction of said semiconductor switch to 'produce an alarm signal, a generally planar balancing conductor connected to said oscillator means and mounted at one side of said housing to stay close to and generally parallel with the door when the device is hung from said doorknob, said balancing conductor providing an internal reference for said oscillator means and serving to capacitively couple the radiofrequency signals of said oscillator means to the door so that the door constitutes ground for said oscillator means, and g. a conductive suspending handle mechanically connected to said housing for suspending said housing from said doorknob thereby placing said planar balancing conductor close to and generally parallel with said door to make said capacitive coupling of said device to said door effective, said handle being electrically connected to said oscillator means and serving to conductively connect said oscillator means to the doorknob so that touching of the doorknob, even with gloves, applies capacitance to said oscillator means which changes the frequency of said signals to trigger said semiconductor switch and thereby actuate said signalling device to produce an alarm.

Claims (12)

1. In a battery-operated alarm device having a radiofrequency oscillator controlling the condition of actuating means for a signalling device which provIdes an alarm signal when the frequency of the oscillator is changed, the combination therewith of a conductive suspending handle electrically connected to the oscillator for (1) suspending said device from a conductive doorknob of a door and (2) electrically connecting the oscillator to the doorknob, and conductive balancer plate means connected to the oscillator to capacitively couple a reference portion of said oscillator to the door when said device is suspended from the doorknob by said handle, so that the door serves as external ground for the oscillator and touching of the doorknob, even with gloves on, changes the frequency of the oscillator to actuate the signalling device.
2. In an alarm device having a battery-powered oscillator controlling the condition of actuating means for signalling means which produces an alarm signal when the frequency of the oscillator is changed, the oscillator having a tuned circuit controlling the frequency thereof, the combination therewith of a hooking conductor connected to said oscillator for hookingly attaching said device to a doorknob of a door and electrically connecting said oscillator to the doorknob, and a planar balancer conductor capacitively coupling a reference portion of said oscillator to the door when the hooking conductor is attached to the doorknob with the plane of the balancer conductor close to and parallel with the door, so that when the doorknob is touched, the frequency of the oscillator is changed to actuate the signalling means.
2. connecting the oscillator to the doorknob, and
3. positioning said planar balancing conductor close to and parallel to the door to capacitively couple the planar conductor to the door, whereby in the operation of said device, a person touching the doorknob, even with gloves on, changes the frequency of said oscillator to change the conductive condition of said switch and thereby actuate said signalling device.
3. An alarm device comprising a battery supply, signalling means, actuating means for said signalling means, an oscillator controlling the condition of said actuating means to in turn cause said signalling means to produce an alarm signal when the frequency of said oscillator is changed, a conductive suspending handle electrically connected to said oscillator means and mechanically connected to a housing for the device for (a) suspending said device from a conductive doorknob of a door and (b) electrically connecting the oscillator to the doorknob, and conductive balancer plate means connected to said oscillator to capacitively couple a reference portion of said oscillator to the door when said device is suspended from the doorknob by said handle with said balancer plate means close to and parallel with the door, whereby touching of the doorknob, even with gloves on, changes the frequency of the oscillator to actuate the signalling means.
4. An alarm device having a housing and comprising, a. oscillator means having a tuned circuit therein, b. battery supply means for supplying operating potential to said oscillator means, c. a semiconductor switch connected to said oscillator and said supply means, d. signalling means connected to said semiconductor switch and responsive to a change in the conductive condition of said switch to produce an alarm signal, e. a generally planar balancing conductor providing an internal reference for said oscillator, and f. attaching means for
5. The alarm device as claimed in claim 4 in which said attaching means comprises a hooking handle which telescopes into and out of said housing.
6. The alarm device as claimed in claim 4 in which said signalling means comprises a transmitter.
7. The alarm device as claimed in claim 4 in which said signalling means comprises a horn or buzzer.
8. The alarm device as claimed in claim 7 in which said signalling means has a volume control.
9. THe alarm device as claimed in claIm 5 in which said hooking handle has a sharp point engageable with the doorknob to pierce a film thereon and establish good electrical contact with the doorknob.
10. A portable, battery-operated alarm device comprising: a. a small, readily portable housing capable of being hung from a doorknob of a door, b. battery supply means in said housing constituting the sole source of power for operating said alarm device, c. oscillator means in said housing connected to said supply means and having tuned-circuit means tuning said oscillator means to produce radiofrequency signals, d. a semiconductor switch in said housing connected to said oscillator means and said supply means and responsive to a change in the frequency of the signals of said oscillator means to conduct current, e. signalling means in said housing connected to said semiconductor switch and responsive to the conduction of said semiconductor switch to produce an alarm signal, f. a generally planar balancing conductor connected to said oscillator means and mounted at one side of said housing to stay close to and generally parallel with the door when the device is hung from said doorknob, said balancing conductor providing an internal reference for said oscillator means and serving to capacitively couple the radiofrequency signals of said oscillator means to the door so that the door constitutes ground for said oscillator means, and g. a conductive suspending handle mechanically connected to said housing for suspending said housing from said doorknob thereby placing said planar balancing conductor close to and generally parallel with said door to make said capacitive coupling of said device to said door effective, said handle being electrically connected to said oscillator means and serving to conductively connect said oscillator means to the doorknob so that touching of the doorknob, even with gloves, applies capacitance to said oscillator means which changes the frequency of said signals to trigger said semiconductor switch and thereby actuate said signalling device to produce an alarm.
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Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3706982A (en) * 1968-07-01 1972-12-19 Gen Dynamics Corp Intrusion detection system
US3774191A (en) * 1972-02-14 1973-11-20 El Sig Lab Inc Proximity alarm circuit for entrance annunciators
US4011554A (en) * 1976-06-03 1977-03-08 Butler & Law Incorporated Intrusion alarm apparatus
US4091371A (en) * 1976-07-28 1978-05-23 Simco, Inc. Touch-responsive portable intrusion alarm
WO1979000196A1 (en) * 1977-10-11 1979-04-19 J Sweeney Pre-intrusion detection device
EP0041781A2 (en) * 1980-06-11 1981-12-16 Gentex Corporation Intrusion detection and alarm system
US4348662A (en) * 1980-11-24 1982-09-07 Sleep Safe, Limited Capacity sensing intrusion alarm apparatus
US5712623A (en) * 1994-11-04 1998-01-27 Casio Computer Co., Ltd. Small-sized alarm device

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3254313A (en) * 1964-02-06 1966-05-31 Tung Sol Electric Inc Touch responsive oscillator and control circuits
US3465325A (en) * 1966-06-23 1969-09-02 Adolph E Goldfarb Self-contained contact alarm device
US3508239A (en) * 1967-03-15 1970-04-21 John Victor Fontaine Burglar alarm

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3254313A (en) * 1964-02-06 1966-05-31 Tung Sol Electric Inc Touch responsive oscillator and control circuits
US3465325A (en) * 1966-06-23 1969-09-02 Adolph E Goldfarb Self-contained contact alarm device
US3508239A (en) * 1967-03-15 1970-04-21 John Victor Fontaine Burglar alarm

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3706982A (en) * 1968-07-01 1972-12-19 Gen Dynamics Corp Intrusion detection system
US3774191A (en) * 1972-02-14 1973-11-20 El Sig Lab Inc Proximity alarm circuit for entrance annunciators
US4011554A (en) * 1976-06-03 1977-03-08 Butler & Law Incorporated Intrusion alarm apparatus
US4091371A (en) * 1976-07-28 1978-05-23 Simco, Inc. Touch-responsive portable intrusion alarm
WO1979000196A1 (en) * 1977-10-11 1979-04-19 J Sweeney Pre-intrusion detection device
US4168495A (en) * 1977-10-11 1979-09-18 Unisen, Inc. Pre-intrusion detection device
EP0041781A2 (en) * 1980-06-11 1981-12-16 Gentex Corporation Intrusion detection and alarm system
EP0041781A3 (en) * 1980-06-11 1982-07-14 Gentex Corporation Intrusion detection and alarm system
US4348662A (en) * 1980-11-24 1982-09-07 Sleep Safe, Limited Capacity sensing intrusion alarm apparatus
US5712623A (en) * 1994-11-04 1998-01-27 Casio Computer Co., Ltd. Small-sized alarm device

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