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Unique Kromer combination lock (1887 German patent)

It all started with Yale Linus Jr and patent US18169A in 1857. Look how far we've come. Post your patents here, discuss prior art, new designs, and various mechanisms important to the lock and lock picking world.

Unique Kromer combination lock (1887 German patent)

Postby Publius » 2 Oct 2021 3:19

Here's another interesting and unique 19th-century European combination lock patent -- this one an 1887 German design by Theodor Kromer (founder of the company also behind the Kromer Protector key lock, etc.), described in German patent DRP46083.
Page 1
Page 2
Page 3
Page 4
Page 5

While it superficially resembles a a more conventional combination dial, the interior workings are quite different: As seen in the first photo below, the fixed outer ring of the combination dial has a group of letters and numbers at the top reading 9876543210abc from left to right. To enter the 4-part alphanumeric combination, one would first turn the pointer to 0, then to one of the numbers 1-9; then repeat for each of the letters a, b, and c (e.g., the combination might be something like 0-8; a-2; b-3; c-5) -- kind of analogous to the operating principle of some modern Fichet Bauche combination locks where you would alternately turn a larger numbered dial marked 1-4 and a smaller dial to a certain number of clicks in between.

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The three photos below illustrate different versions of the dial -- the first two (one being the same lock as above from a wider angle) simply unlocked an escutcheon blocking the keyhole for a lever-tumbler lock below the dial and above the handle, such that the combination must be dialed before inserting the key. The version in the third photo (I believe) functioned as a standalone combination lock with a built-in 'T'-handle to retract the boltwork. An all-around interesting combination lock with a user-friendly dialing sequence, although its popularity may ultimately have been limited by the fact that the combination was fixed and could not be changed and also by the limited number of potential combinations (5,040) compared to competing designs.

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The escutcheon version, as seen in the additional photos below, operates a sliding steel plate such that in the unlocked position aligns the hole with the keyway, allowing the key to pass into the lock. The second photo below shows the lock from the rear with the mechanism exposed in the unlocked state, with the four sliders aligned, permitting the lever to drop into position. Photos 3 and 4 below, belonging to a different lock of the same model, give a closer view of the locked and unlocked slider positions -- note that here the sliders are actually marked with the combination numbers (0-7, etc.). Photo 5 gives a clearer view of the disassembled sliders (pages 3-5 in the patent above also include diagrams).

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Re: Unique Kromer combination lock (1887 German patent)

Postby Squelchtone » 2 Oct 2021 19:55

Hello,

This is very interesting, I am trying to figure out how dialing the first number of the combination, then resetting the dial back to 0 and dialing the next number in the combination advances the mechanism to only act on the next lever/slider in the sequence?

Thank you for your recent posts, they're very informative, and please accept my late welcome to the forum, nice to have you here.

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Re: Unique Kromer combination lock (1887 German patent)

Postby Publius » 3 Oct 2021 15:36

Hi Squelchtone --thanks for the welcome, and glad to be here! I love talking about this stuff :) Good question on the inner workings, and it's tricky to see from the photos. I don't have one of these on hand to make a video, but I'll come back around and post more details when I have more time later on this evening. I'll also post a full translation of the patent, since that makes the diagrams and the photos easier to interpret.
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Re: Unique Kromer combination lock (1887 German patent)

Postby MartinHewitt » 11 Dec 2021 16:18

My understanding is, that:

Each "wheel" has a cut out on the lower left edge. These cut outs are of different size and determine in which order the "wheels" will be lifted. When turning the dial back the just programmed "wheel" is tilting away by pushing at the lower edge of this cut out. You can see in the patent, that the lower stump is not fully round. So when the next time the dial is turned to lift a "wheel" the last one (and all previous) are out of reach and the next higher cut out can be reached and then only this one is lifted,
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Re: Unique Kromer combination lock (1887 German patent)

Postby RangerF150 » 15 Dec 2021 13:34

Great post, very interesting lock. Thanks!
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