[0001] The present invention is an alarm device, suitable for use with venetian blinds and
other retractable blinds, including roller blinds and vertical-louvre blinds.
[0002] Venetian blinds have been used for many years to reduce the amount of light, including
sunlight, passing through a window and they are recognised also to be a deterrent
to burglars. Other types of blinds, for example roller blinds, have been developed
with the specific purpose of preventing unauthorised intrusion into a property.
[0003] Alarm devices have been used to give added security to blinds of these types but
the installation of such known devices, which usually have been developed for other
purposes, requires a level of skill not generally possessed by the average lay householder.
However installation of such devices by a qualified specialist may prove sufficiently
expensive to deter the householder from fitting such an alarm device.
[0004] It is an object of the present invention to provide a form of alarm device which
is suitable for use with venetian blinds and the like but which is easy to install
by an average competent householder.
[0005] The alarm device according to the present invention comprises, secured together as
a single unit, a piezoelectric motion sensor, an amplifier circuit electrically connected
to the piezoelectric sensor to amplify signals generated in the sensor, an audible
alarm electrically connected to the amplifier circuit for activation by such amplified
signals, and a source of electrical power for said circuit and for said audible alarm.
[0006] Because all of the above-specified components are secured together as a single unit,
which is therefore wholly self-contained, the alarm device according to the present
invention may be installed without difficulty by a householder of average competence.
Indeed even "installation" as such may be unnecessary, since in one application of
the invention, the device may simply be located in the bottom fold or hem of a curtain.
[0007] However, the device has primarily been devised with installation in a blind in mind.
It may advantageously be made in a very compact form, optionally somewhat elongated
in plan, so that it may be inserted into one end of the hollow bottom rail of a conventional
venetian blind.
[0008] Piezoelectric motion sensors suitable for incorporation in an alarm device according
to the present invention are readily available. Typically they comprise a plate of
piezoceramic material or of piezoelectric crystalline material, which materials give
rise to small voltage signals when the material is subjected to distortion such as
occurs on a microscopic scale when the material is bent or squeezed by adjacent vibrations.
Thus the sensor may comprise a flat disc of piezoelectric material, sandwiched between
a conductive metal plate on its one side and a coating of electrically conductive
material on the other, supporting a weight at a point adjacent to its centre and held
around its circumference in a housing. In another form, it may comprise an elongated
length of the material, supported at one end only so as to be free to flex in response
to adjacent vibrations. In yet another form, the sensitivity of the sensor may be
enhanced by providing, secured to the sensor, a roughened surface, especially a roughened
spherical surface, over which a metal sphere is free to roll when disturbed by adjacent
vibrations.
[0009] Advantageously, the alarm device is assembled upon a flat support, which in particular
may be in the form of a printed circuit board upon which the electrical circuitry
is formed by etching and to which the other components of the device, in particular
the audible alarm and the power source, are secured.
[0010] The audible alarm may be a simple buzzer or other electrically-operated generator
of a warning sound. However, if desired, the alarm may also incorporate a transmitter
of radio signals, which signals may then remotely operate another alarm, which may
provide a visual warning (for example a flashing light) or an audible warning that
an intruder, or potential intruder, has disturbed the device according to the invention.
Preferably the audible alarm is a "latched" alarm, which, once triggered, will continue
to operate.
[0011] It is an important feature of the alarm device of the present invention that it incorporates
its own source of electrical power. Other alarm devices usually rely upon an external
power supply, which makes installation in general more difficult and scarcely practical
in the case of flexible blinds or curtains. Because the present device relies upon
a piezoelectric sensor, the power requirements are very small and the provision of
an internal power supply becomes feasible. Thus the device may conveniently be powered
by a simple dry-cell battery of the type used to power pocket calculators or clocks.
A battery of this type may provide enough power to operate an alarm device according
to the present invention for a year or more.
[0012] It is preferred that the alarm should not respond to every minor signal generated
in the piezoelectric sensor; otherwise, the alarm may be triggered unnecessarily by
non-intrusive vibrations and the credibility of the warning may be diminished. It
is therefore desirable that the alarm device also incorporate a switch means responsive
only to signals exceeding a predetermined threshold value. Preferably the amplified
signals are fed to a solid-state switch, such as a thyristor, which in turn triggers
the audible alarm when the signal exceeds the predetermined value. Less satisfactorily,
the signals may operate a relay (which consumes more power than a solid-state switch).
[0013] The alarm device will also usually incorporate an on-off switch, so that the device
will normally be switched on only when the security it affords is specifically required,
and also to enable the audible alarm to be switched off when the warning has been
given. A simple lever switch may be sufficient, since it is intended that the intruder
should be immediately deterred by the audible alarm. However greater security is achieved
if the switch is operable only by a key.
[0014] The circuit of the alarm device preferably also includes a delay means, so that the
householder is allowed a short space of time, say 20 seconds, to adjust the blinds
as desired after the unit has been switched on and before it becomes fully operative.
[0015] The invention will now be further described, and other features of the invention
will be apparent, with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:-
Fig. 1 illustrates, in perspective view, one embodiment of the alarm device according
to the present invention about to be inserted into the bottom rail of a venetian blind;
Fig. 2 illustrates the alarm device of Fig. 1, after insertion into the rail; and
Fig. 3 is a schematic diagram of the electric circuit of the device of Fig. 1.
[0016] Referring firstly to Figs. 1 and 2 of the drawings, the numeral 4 designates the
bottom rail of a venetian blind, which conventionally is of generally flat cross-section
such as illustrated and is hollow and of thin steel or aluminium. The illustrated
alarm device 5 is built upon a printed circuit board (PCB) 6 as its base and the PCB
6 is slightly narrower than the interior width of the rail 4.
[0017] The circuit 7 printed upon the PCB is confined to a relatively small area thereof,
so that there is ample space for the PCB also to support a buzzer 8, a piezoelectric
sensor 9 and a small dry-cell battery 10, which latter is connected into the circuit
by a push-on connector 11 to permit its easy replacement. The sensor 9 incorporates
a spherical or, as illustrated, hemispherical housing having a roughened interior
surface over which a small metal ball is free to move. Any vibration of the rail 4
causes the ball to move and that movement of the roughened surface gives an enhanced
vibration, thereby giving a greater effect on the piezoelectric material within the
sensor.
[0018] The illustrated unit incorporates a key-operated on-off switch 12, built into an
end-cap 13 of plastics material which is a push-on fit over the end of the rail 4.
[0019] Fig. 3 illustrates schematically the electrical interconnection of the components
of the alarm device shown in Figs. 1 and 2. The same reference numerals have been
used in Fig. 3 to designate components illustrated in Figs. 1 and 2.
[0020] When the householder wishes to install the device in an existing blind, he simply
has to insert the unit endwise into the rail 4 until the cap 13 is fitted over the
end of the rail. To activate the device, for example at night or when the house is
unoccupied, he inserts the key into the switch 12 and turns it to the "on" position,
then withdrawing the key as an extra safety precaution if desired. Power is thus supplied
by the battery 10 to the PCB circuit 7 but a time delay device in the circuit ensures
that the alarm is not operative for a short period, say 20 seconds, during which the
householder may adjust the blind to its desired position.
[0021] Thereafter, any piezoelectric signal generated in the sensor 9 by movement of the
blind by an intruder or by any other adjacent vibration is passed to the circuit 7,
wherein it is amplified and passed to a solid-state switch in the circuit. When a
signal sufficient to trigger the switch is received, the audible alarm (the buzzer
8) is activated and continues to sound until power is removed by the switching of
the switch 12 to the "off" position.
[0022] While the illustrated device has been described specifically as applied to a venetian
blind, it is wholly suitable, modified if desired, for incorporation in the bottom
rail of a roller blind or for putting into the pocket or hem of a vertical louvre
blind or of a curtain.
1. An alarm device for blinds and the like, characterised in that it comprises,secured
together as a single unit, a piezoelectric motion sensor, an amplifier circuit electrically
connected to the piezoelectric sensor to amplify signals generated in the sensor,
an audible alarm electrically connected to the amplifier circuit for activation by
such amplified signals, and a source of electrical power for said circuit and for
said audible alarm.
2. An alarm device according to claim 1, characterised in that all of the components
thereof are mounted upon a generally flat support.
3. An alarm device according to claim 2, characterised in that the generally flat
support is a printed circuit board incorporating the amplifier circuit.
4. An alarm device according to any of the preceding claims, characterised in that
the piezoelectric sensor comprises a flat disc of piezoelectric material, held around
its circumference in a housing.
5. An alarm device according to any of the preceding claims, characterised in that
the audible alarm also incorporates a transmitter of radio signals to remotely operate
another alarm.
6. An alarm device according to any of the preceding claims, characterised in that
the source of electrical power is a battery.
7. An alarm device according to any of the preceding claims, characterised in that
a solid-state switch is electrically connected between the amplifier circuit and the
audible alarm.
8. An alarm device according to any of the preceding claims, characterised in that
it also incorporates a key-operated on-off switch.
9. An alarm device according to claim 8, characterised further by a time delay means
to delay the device becoming fully operative after the on-off switch has been switched
on.