US3686660A - Showcase alarm system - Google Patents

Showcase alarm system Download PDF

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US3686660A
US3686660A US45292A US3686660DA US3686660A US 3686660 A US3686660 A US 3686660A US 45292 A US45292 A US 45292A US 3686660D A US3686660D A US 3686660DA US 3686660 A US3686660 A US 3686660A
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Prior art keywords
door
alarm
salesperson
showcase
alarm system
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US45292A
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Hyman A Massover
David I Shapiro
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MASSOVER BROS
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MASSOVER BROS
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G08SIGNALLING
    • G08BSIGNALLING OR CALLING SYSTEMS; ORDER TELEGRAPHS; ALARM SYSTEMS
    • G08B13/00Burglar, theft or intruder alarms
    • G08B13/02Mechanical actuation
    • G08B13/10Mechanical actuation by pressure on floors, floor coverings, stair treads, counters, or tills
    • GPHYSICS
    • G08SIGNALLING
    • G08BSIGNALLING OR CALLING SYSTEMS; ORDER TELEGRAPHS; ALARM SYSTEMS
    • G08B13/00Burglar, theft or intruder alarms
    • G08B13/02Mechanical actuation
    • G08B13/08Mechanical actuation by opening, e.g. of door, of window, of drawer, of shutter, of curtain, of blind

Definitions

  • a door-alarm system for a merchandise showcase includes a floor-mat switch positioned behind the showcase-in the area occupied by-sales personnel, automatically disabling the system vto permitauthorized opening of the showcase and also providing an automatic alarm signal in the event the salesperson commences to leavev with the door open.
  • Showcases typically are rectangular enclosures provided with a door in the wall generally referred to as the back of the showcase, this being the area occupied by sales personnel.
  • shoplifting a shoplifter, when no salesperson is present, frequently reaches over the counter from the front and opens the door.
  • a lock-and-key arrangement is the commonest form of preventive measure. It is well known that the mere act of observably opening a lock with a key creates an atmosphere which is offensive to some customers.
  • FIG. 2 is a schematic circuit diagram of an alarm system of the, invention constructed for a showcase having two doors and illustrating one arrangement of the door switches and pressure floor switches;
  • FIG. 3 is a similar view showing an alternate arrangement of the door and floor switches of FIG. 2.
  • FIG. 1 there is illustrated a portion of a conventional showcase having a counter top 12 and a rear wall 14.
  • Rear wall 14 has a door 16.
  • a common rangement is an alarm device.
  • Door-alarms are of course well known for various purposes in connection with prevention of theft. Suchalarms are normally provided with some form of switch permitting disablement.
  • an alarm system of the invention the presence of the sales person at his station behind the counter is sensed and the alarm system is automatically disabled in response to his presence and placed in operation in response to his absence.
  • FIG. 1 is a fragmentary perspective view of a showcase equipped with an alarm system embodying the in vention
  • Door 16 where hinged at its bottom edge as shown, is normally provided with a suitable latch (not shown)'for retaining the door in the closed position.
  • Switch assembly 22 may be of any conventional door-actuable form. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, it
  • Switch 24 comprises a' magnetically operated reed switch 24 mounted on rear-wall 14 and a cooperating magnet 26 mounted on the door 16.
  • Switch 24 is of the norrnallyopen type, but when door 16 is closed, the magnet 26 is in registry with the switch and maintains it in the closed condition.
  • a housing 28 containing a signal bell or buzzer and the further electrical elements to be subsequently described is located on or near the showcase l0 and preferably mounted on the back wall 14 as illustrated.
  • a floor-mat switch 30 is behind the showcase in the normal salesperson station.
  • the floor-mat switch 30 is of the type used in automatic door-openers and similar applications, closing a circuit in response to weight.
  • Suitable external electrical wiring 32 connects the door switch 24, housing 28 and floor-mat switch 30 in the manner hereinafter described.
  • the electrical circuitry within the housing 28 includes a power transformer 34 whose primary is externally connected to the altemating-current power line.
  • the coil 36 of a relay 37 is energized by the transformer.
  • a battery 38, a bell or buzzer 40 and relay contacts 42 are connected in series.
  • Relay contacts 42 are normally (i.e., when the coil 36 is not energized) closed, this position being shown dotted in FIG. 2. Sounding of the buzzer 40 thus occurs whenever flow of current through the relay coil is interrupted.
  • terminals 44 in parallel with the buzzer are provided for this purpose.
  • the door switch or switches and floor-mat switch or switches may be connected in various ways to suit particular conditions of use.
  • the terminals 46 and 50 are connected in series with the transformer 34 and relay coil 36. Where only a single door is involved the door-switch 24 and floor-switch 30 are connected in parallel between these terminals (this manner of connection being omitted in the drawing).
  • door switches 24 and 24' are connected in series with each other and with the transformer 34 and relay coil 36, and each of the floor mat switches 30 and 30' is connected in parallel with its corresponding door switches.
  • buzzer 40 will sound if either door switch is opened without presence of a sales person on the corresponding floor-mat switch.
  • Such a manner of connection is employed where the conditions of use are such that a sales person is to be prohibited from stepping to the other door without closing the opened door.
  • the door switches are also connected in series with each other and with the transformer and relay coil, but the floor-mat switches 30 and 30' are here in parallel with each other and with the series arrangement of door switches.
  • either or both door switches may be opened withoutsounding the alarm if there is a salesperson on either floor-mat switch.
  • This arrangement is employed where itis desired to permit opening of both doors without sounding of the alarm if the salesperson so desires, but to sound the alarm if the salesperson should leave the common station formed by the two adjacent mats.
  • the present invention provides an efficient and convenient showcase alarm system which virtually eliminates all sources of human error, as well as being effectively tamper-proof. Any cutting or other disconnection of the wiring to the door switches when the salesperson is not present, or severing or disconnection of the power line, actuates the alarm.
  • An alarm system for a merchandise showcase of the type having a sales-counter top and an access door at the salesperson-station portion thereof comprising:
  • a. alarm means having a portion adapted to be coupled to the door of the showcase to produce an audible signal in response to opening of the door;
  • the housing includes a relay having its b. sensing means adapted to be placed at the salesperson-station to sense the presence of a salesperson thereat;
  • disabling means responsive to the sensing means and coupled to the alarm means to disable the audible signal when a salesperson is present.
  • the alarm means including a door-responsive switch opened and closed by opening andclosing, respectively, of the door, and
  • the sensing means including a presence-sensing switch opened and closed by departure and arrival, respectively, of a salesperson
  • housing containing means for producing the audible signal and further containing means externally coupled to the switches for actuatingthe signal-producing rise to the o in 0 b0 5 'tche's.
  • the alarm system of claim 3 having a plurality of door-responsive switches and presence-sensing switches.

Abstract

A door-alarm system for a merchandise showcase includes a floormat switch positioned behind the showcase in the area occupied by sales personnel, automatically disabling the system to permit authorized opening of the showcase and also providing an automatic alarm signal in the event the salesperson commences to leave with the door open. There are described various wiring arrangements for a multiple-door system to suit particular conditions of use.

Description

United States Patent Massover et al.
15 1 SHOWCASE ALARM SYSTEM [72] Inventors: Hyman A. Massover; David I. Shapiro, both of c/o Massover Bros, 30 W. Washington St.,
1 Chicago, 111. 60602 221 Filed; Junel1,1970
21 .ApplQNo; 45,292
52 us. (:1. ..340/274,200/86, 340/272 [51] 1m.c1 ..G08b 13/08, GO8bl3/l0 [58] Field of Search ..340/272, 273, 274, 276, 278, 340/280; 200/86; 307/116; 192/ 1293 s6 References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,438,076 3/1948 Stelter; ...'...340/280x 3,493,780 2/1970 ,Wiggsetal... 192/129 460,019 9/1891 Kruschke..,... ..340/280 4 3,411,215 12/1968 Coronaetal ..200/86 Redmond ....340/278 X [is] 3,686,660 14 1 Aug. 22, 1972 McCracken ..200/ 86 671,350 4/1901 2,128,058 8/1938 Shaw .l ..200/86 3,340,523 9/1967 Whitman ..340/ 278 2,912,540 10/1959 Sawicki ..340/276 X 2,683,784 7/1954 Rector ..200/86 1,181,420 5/1916 Williams ..200/ 86 Primary Examiner-John W. Caldwell Assistant Examiner-Scott F. Partridge Attorney-Leonard G. Nierman [57] ABSTRACT A door-alarm system for a merchandise showcase includes a floor-mat switch positioned behind the showcase-in the area occupied by-sales personnel, automatically disabling the system vto permitauthorized opening of the showcase and also providing an automatic alarm signal in the event the salesperson commences to leavev with the door open. There are described various wiring arrangements for a multipledoor system to suit particular conditions of use.
7 Clains, 3 Drawing Figures Patented Aug. 22, 1972 3,686,660
INVENTORS. HYMAN A. MASwVER DAV/D I. .SHAP/RO SHOWCASE ALARM SYSTEM This invention relates to showcase alarm systems and more particularly to an alarm system for use with showcases of the type wherein salesmen or other authorized persons have access to displayed merchandise through a door at a position or station normally occupied by such authorized personnel.
Showcases typically are rectangular enclosures provided with a door in the wall generally referred to as the back of the showcase, this being the area occupied by sales personnel. In a common form of shoplifting, a shoplifter, when no salesperson is present, frequently reaches over the counter from the front and opens the door. A lock-and-key arrangement is the commonest form of preventive measure. It is well known that the mere act of observably opening a lock with a key creates an atmosphere which is offensive to some customers. Even more importantly, it proves a great nuisance, particularly in a busy salesroom, to use the key in the prescribed manner, and it is common experience that the key is left in the lock when the salesperson stepsaway for what is expected to be only an instant, sometimes in response to a diversion deliberately created by a shoplifter or aconfederate for this purpose.
An alternate sometimes used for a lock-and-key ar- FIG. 2 is a schematic circuit diagram of an alarm system of the, invention constructed for a showcase having two doors and illustrating one arrangement of the door switches and pressure floor switches; and
FIG. 3 is a similar view showing an alternate arrangement of the door and floor switches of FIG. 2.
Referring to FIG. 1, there is illustrated a portion of a conventional showcase having a counter top 12 and a rear wall 14. Rear wall 14 has a door 16. A common rangement is an alarm device. Door-alarms are of course well known for various purposes in connection with prevention of theft. Suchalarms are normally provided with some form of switch permitting disablement.
However, it is found that the employment of known forms of door-alarm devices for a showcase is at least equally objectionable as the use of a lock-and-key. There is thereby introduced the occasional occurrence of the salesperson opening the door without disabling the alarm, thus resulting in a noisy disturbance objectionable not only to the customer being waited upon but to all others on the premises. As a concomitant, the tendency of salespeople to fail to reactivate the alarm during absences expected to be brief is magnified. It has been observed that such systems fall into early disuse.
It is the principal object of the present invention to provide a showcase protection system employing an alarm. which is fully practical for use. In an alarm system of the invention, the presence of the sales person at his station behind the counter is sensed and the alarm system is automatically disabled in response to his presence and placed in operation in response to his absence.
In addition to the principal object thus achieved, a number of subsidiary objects are accomplished by the invention. The system is so constructed so that it cannot be disabled by cutting of wires or similar artifices commonly employed by shoplifters, and also so that it may readily be installed on existing showcases. Flexibility is provided for various conditions of use, as for a two-door showcase or a plurality of showcases. The manner in which these further aims and objects is achieved will be best understood from consideration of the embodiment of the invention illustrated in the drawing and described below.
In the drawing:
FIG. 1 is a fragmentary perspective view of a showcase equipped with an alarm system embodying the in vention;
type of showcase has two horizontally adjacent doors which may be hinge-mounted as illustrated or slideably mounted. Door 16, where hinged at its bottom edge as shown, is normally provided with a suitable latch (not shown)'for retaining the door in the closed position.
Associated with the showcase 10 is an alarm system indicated generally by the reference character 20, having an electrical switch assembly 22 which is actuated by the opening or closing of the door 16. Switch assembly 22 may be of any conventional door-actuable form. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, it
comprises a' magnetically operated reed switch 24 mounted on rear-wall 14 and a cooperating magnet 26 mounted on the door 16. Switch 24 is of the norrnallyopen type, but when door 16 is closed, the magnet 26 is in registry with the switch and maintains it in the closed condition. y
I A housing 28 containing a signal bell or buzzer and the further electrical elements to be subsequently described is located on or near the showcase l0 and preferably mounted on the back wall 14 as illustrated. A floor-mat switch 30 is behind the showcase in the normal salesperson station. The floor-mat switch 30 is of the type used in automatic door-openers and similar applications, closing a circuit in response to weight. Suitable external electrical wiring 32 connects the door switch 24, housing 28 and floor-mat switch 30 in the manner hereinafter described. With showcases having two doors there may be provided a second door switch 24 and a second floor-mat switch 30', as illustrated in FIGS. 2 and 3 of the drawing, but omitted in FIG. 1.
The electrical circuitry within the housing 28 includes a power transformer 34 whose primary is externally connected to the altemating-current power line. The coil 36 of a relay 37 is energized by the transformer. A battery 38, a bell or buzzer 40 and relay contacts 42 are connected in series. Relay contacts 42 are normally (i.e., when the coil 36 is not energized) closed, this position being shown dotted in FIG. 2. Sounding of the buzzer 40 thus occurs whenever flow of current through the relay coil is interrupted. To sound a remote alarmsimultaneously with the buzzer 40, as in an executive office, terminals 44 in parallel with the buzzer are provided for this purpose.
By means of external terminals 46, 48 and 50 on the housing 28, the door switch or switches and floor-mat switch or switches may be connected in various ways to suit particular conditions of use. The terminals 46 and 50 are connected in series with the transformer 34 and relay coil 36. Where only a single door is involved the door-switch 24 and floor-switch 30 are connected in parallel between these terminals (this manner of connection being omitted in the drawing). In FIG. 2, door switches 24 and 24' are connected in series with each other and with the transformer 34 and relay coil 36, and each of the floor mat switches 30 and 30' is connected in parallel with its corresponding door switches.
With this arrangement buzzer 40 will sound if either door switch is opened without presence of a sales person on the corresponding floor-mat switch. Such a manner of connection is employed where the conditions of use are such that a sales person is to be prohibited from stepping to the other door without closing the opened door.
In the arrangement of FIG. 3, the door switches are also connected in series with each other and with the transformer and relay coil, but the floor-mat switches 30 and 30' are here in parallel with each other and with the series arrangement of door switches. In this instance either or both door switches may be opened withoutsounding the alarm if there is a salesperson on either floor-mat switch. This arrangement is employed where itis desired to permit opening of both doors without sounding of the alarm if the salesperson so desires, but to sound the alarm if the salesperson should leave the common station formed by the two adjacent mats.
It should be apparent without further description that the present invention provides an efficient and convenient showcase alarm system which virtually eliminates all sources of human error, as well as being effectively tamper-proof. Any cutting or other disconnection of the wiring to the door switches when the salesperson is not present, or severing or disconnection of the power line, actuates the alarm.
Persons skilled in the art will readily devise variants of the preferred embodiments of the invention described above which utilize the invention in constructions differing substantially in details. The scope of the protection afforded the invention should accordingly be determined in accordance with the definitions of the appended claims, and equivalents thereof.
What is claimed is:
1. An alarm system for a merchandise showcase of the type having a sales-counter top and an access door at the salesperson-station portion thereof comprising:
a. alarm means having a portion adapted to be coupled to the door of the showcase to produce an audible signal in response to opening of the door;
means-within the housing includes a relay having its b. sensing means adapted to be placed at the salesperson-station to sense the presence of a salesperson thereat; and
c. disabling means responsive to the sensing means and coupled to the alarm means to disable the audible signal when a salesperson is present.
2. The alarm system of claim 1 in which the sensing means comprises a floor-mat switch.
3. The alarm system of claim 1 having:
d. the alarm means including a door-responsive switch opened and closed by opening andclosing, respectively, of the door, and
e. the sensing means including a presence-sensing switch opened and closed by departure and arrival, respectively, of a salesperson,
so that disconnection of a switch does notdefeat the alarm. i
housing containing means for producing the audible signal and further containing means externally coupled to the switches for actuatingthe signal-producing rise to the o in 0 b0 5 'tche's.
system of c i iin 5 W ilef l l'l th coil externally connected to the switches and having normally-closed contacts connected to the signal producing means, the signal-producing means including a battery within the housing. 4
6. The alarm system of claim 3 having a plurality of door-responsive switches and presence-sensing switches.
7. In combination with a merchandise showcase of the type having a sales-counter top and an access door e actuating

Claims (7)

1. An alarm system for a merchandise showcase of the type having a sales-counter top and an access door at the salesperson-station portion thereof comprising: a. alarm means having a portion adapted to be coupled to the door of the showcase to produce an audible signal in response to opening of the door; b. sensing means adapted to be placed at the salesperson-station to sense the presence of a salesperson thereat; and c. disabling means responsive to the sensing means and coupled to the alarm means to disable the audible signal when a salesperson is present.
2. The alarm system of claim 1 in which the sensing means comprises a floor-mat switch.
3. The alarm system of claim 1 having: d. the alarm means including a door-responsive switch opened and closed by opening and closing, respectively, of the door, and e. the sensing means including a presence-sensing switch opened and closed by departure and arrival, respectively, of a salesperson, so that disconnection of a switch does not defeat the alarm.
4. The alarm system of claim 3 having an enclosed housing containing means for producing the audible signal and further containing means externally coupled to the switches for actuating the signal-producing means in response to the opening of both switches.
5. The alarm system of claim 4 wherein the actuating means within the housing includes a relay having its coil externally connected to the switches and having normally-closed contacts connected to the signal-producing means, the signal-producing means including a battery within the housing.
6. The alarm system of claim 3 having a plurality of door-responsive switches and presence-sensing switches.
7. In combination with a merchandise showcase of the type having a sales-counter top and an access door at the salesperson-station portion thereof, an alarm system comprising: a. alarm means having a portion coupled to the door of the showcase to produce an audible signal in response to opening of the door; b. sensing means at the salesperson-station to sense the presence of a saleSperson thereat; and c. disabling means responsive to the sensing means and coupled to the alarm means to disable the audible signal.
US45292A 1970-06-11 1970-06-11 Showcase alarm system Expired - Lifetime US3686660A (en)

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4172254A (en) * 1978-02-13 1979-10-23 The Columbus Show Case Company Merchandise case with door lock alarm
US5138299A (en) * 1991-03-07 1992-08-11 Honeywell Inc. Showcase alarm system
WO2013045954A1 (en) * 2011-10-01 2013-04-04 Peter Jeffrey Young Detection device
US11357341B2 (en) * 2019-02-26 2022-06-14 Fasteners For Retail, Inc. Retail merchandise display device with security shield

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4172254A (en) * 1978-02-13 1979-10-23 The Columbus Show Case Company Merchandise case with door lock alarm
US5138299A (en) * 1991-03-07 1992-08-11 Honeywell Inc. Showcase alarm system
WO2013045954A1 (en) * 2011-10-01 2013-04-04 Peter Jeffrey Young Detection device
GB2495391B (en) * 2011-10-01 2015-12-16 Peter Jeffrey Young Detection device
US9454883B2 (en) 2011-10-01 2016-09-27 Peter Jeffrey Young Detection device
US20160371943A1 (en) * 2011-10-01 2016-12-22 Peter Jeffrey Young Detection device
EP3435343A1 (en) * 2011-10-01 2019-01-30 Peter Jeffrey Young Detection device
US10546473B2 (en) * 2011-10-01 2020-01-28 Peter Jeffrey Young Detection device
US11357341B2 (en) * 2019-02-26 2022-06-14 Fasteners For Retail, Inc. Retail merchandise display device with security shield

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