The invention relates, in general, to munitions, and, in particular, to the mitigation of recoil in weapons.
Conventional methods for mitigating weapon recoil in small arms may include muzzle brakes, breech venting, improved buttstock designs, improved buffer designs and bolt/slide designs that redirect bolt momentum. Because both gas venting momentum and operating group momentum may contribute to recoil, the conventional recoil mitigation methods may, at best, only partially mitigate recoil. Partial mitigation of recoil may occur because the conventional methods do not address both the momentum produced by venting gases and the momentum produced by the operating group. Thus, a need exists for an apparatus and method to mitigate recoil caused by both gas venting momentum and operating group momentum.
It is an object of the invention to provide a mechanism to mitigate recoil in a weapon.
It is another object of the invention to provide a mechanism to mitigate recoil caused by both gas venting momentum and operating group momentum.
One aspect of the invention may be a weapon having a translatable recoil mass and two translatable counterweights disposed on opposite sides of the recoil mass. Each counterweight may have a mass that is substantially one-half the mass of the recoil mass. The directions of translation of the recoil mass may be substantially opposite the directions of translation of the two counterweights. The translatable recoil mass may include a barrel and barrel block.
The weapon may further include a pair of racks fixed to respective ones of the counterweights, a second pair of racks fixed to opposite sides of the translatable recoil mass, and a pair of pinions. Each pinion may engage a counterweight rack and a translatable recoil mass rack.
Another aspect of the invention may be a method of mitigating recoil in a weapon. The method may include moving a pair of counterweights in a direction substantially opposite a direction of movement of a recoil mass. The pair of counterweights may each have a mass that is about one-half a mass of the recoil mass. The counterweights and the recoil mass may move at substantially the same speed. The method may include controlling movement of the counterweights and the recoil mass using pinions that engage racks on the counterweights and the recoil mass.
The invention will be better understood, and further objects, features, and advantages thereof will become more apparent from the following description of the preferred embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
In the drawings, which are not necessarily to scale, like or corresponding parts are denoted by like or corresponding reference numerals.
A kinematic chain may alleviate weapon recoil by canceling (by way of opposing counterweight momentum) some or all of the momentum generated in a translating barrel during firing. A kinematic chain that includes a translating barrel block and momentum-canceling counterweights may mitigate both gas venting momentum and operating group momentum, simultaneously. The kinematic chain may be used in weapons of any caliber, for example, from small arm calibers to artillery calibers.
The momentum P of a body is the product of the mass m and velocity v of the body (P=mv).
In
The box B may represent a weapon's receiver, the ball A may represent the weapon's barrel, and the balls C, C may represent the weapon's operating group. Under certain conditions, no momentum may be transferred to the weapon's receiver B and, ultimately, the weapon's operator. The momentum of the weapon may govern its recoil.
It is important that the mass of the two counterweights each be equal to or substantially equal to half the mass of the translating barrel. That is, in
The kinematic chain shown in
The recoil mass and the counterweights 58, 60 may be engaged with each other via a rack and pinion arrangement. Racks 62, 62 may be fixed to respective ones of the counterweights 58, 60. A second pair of racks 66, 66 (only one rack 66 is visible in
Barrel block 54 and counterweights 58, 60 may be supported by, and slidable on, mounting rods 68. Mounting rods 68 may extend between and may be fixed to a front plate 70 and a rear plate 72. Side members 88 may be extend between and may be fixed to the front plate 70 and the rear plate 72. Pinion mounts 90 (one mount 90 on each side) may support the rotatable shaft 92 of a pinion 64.
The receiver 56 may include front and rear flanges 80, 84. A pair of cylinders 78 may be fixed to the front plate 70 and be slidable through front flange 80. An inertial spring 74 may be mounted on each cylinder 78. Spring 74 may bear against the front flange 80 and a spring clamp 76. Springs 74 may bear the initial inertial loading of the weapon 50 upon firing, by compressing against front flange 80 as spring clamp 76 moves rearward.
To ensure proper positioning of the counterweights 58, 60 and barrel block 54 prior to firing weapon 50, positioning springs 82 may be disposed on one or more mounting rods 68. In
Rear flange 84 of receiver 56 may include a pair of cylinders 86. To allow movement of rear plate 72 with respect to rear flange 84, cylinders 86 may be fixed to rear plate 72 and may be slidable in rear flange 84, or, cylinders 86 may be fixed to rear flange 84 and may be slidable in rear plate 72.
A method of mitigating recoil in a weapon 50 may include moving a pair of counterweights 58, 60 in a direction substantially opposite a direction of movement of a recoil mass, such as barrel 52 and barrel block 54. The pair of counterweights 58, 60 each has a mass that is about one-half a mass of the recoil mass. The counterweights 58, 60 and the recoil mass move at substantially a same speed. The movement of the counterweights 58, 60 and the recoil mass may be controlled using pinions 64, 64 that may engage racks 62, 62 on the counterweights 58, 60 and racks 66, 66 on opposite side of the barrel block 54.
Recoil was simulated using a computer model of the weapon 50.
While the invention has been described with reference to certain preferred embodiments, numerous changes, alterations and modifications to the described embodiments are possible without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims, and equivalents thereof.
This application claims the benefit under 35 USC 119(e) of U.S. provisional patent application 61/120,954 filed on Dec. 9, 2008, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
The inventions described herein may be manufactured, used and licensed by or for the U.S. Government for U.S. Government purposes.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
789806 | Haussner | May 1905 | A |
1059093 | Voller | Apr 1913 | A |
4524671 | Bender et al. | Jun 1985 | A |
5585590 | Ducolon | Dec 1996 | A |
7895930 | Fisk et al. | Mar 2011 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61120954 | Dec 2008 | US |