The present invention is generally directed to a split hatch having armored leaves that can be positioned to shield the hatch opening or occupants standing in the hatch opening. Specifically, the present invention is directed to an armored split hatch having armored leaves shaped to provide side protection for occupants and the hatch opening when open and sealable to prevent nuclear, biological or chemical (“NBC”) penetration through the hatch when closed.
Armored vehicles often comprise armored hatches for accessing the interior of the vehicle through a hatch opening when the hatch door is open while preventing ballistic threats from entering through the hatch opening when the hatch door is closed. However, hatch doors typically comprise little or no armor to reduce the weight of the door for easier movement of the hatch doors. The minimally armored hatch doors provide less ballistic protection than the surrounding armor. Accordingly, hatches are often placed on the top of the armored vehicle rather than on the sides of the vehicle where most ballistic threats are directed. Placing hatches on the roof also provides the added benefit of allowing occupants of the vehicle to stand in the open hatch opening during operation of the hatch opening to provide greater visibility when operating the vehicle. As the view ports or cameras used by operators often provide a limited field of view, operating the vehicle while standing in the hatch opening is often preferred when not in direct combat as providing a significantly greater field of view. A top hatch also allows occupants to operate roof mounted equipment or weapons while standing within the hatch opening.
An inherent drawback of top hatches is that the greater visibility provided by standing in the top hatch exposes the portion of the occupant's body protruding from the hatch opening is exposed to ballistic threats. In addition, the portion of the occupant's body protruding from the hatch opening is often silhouetted presenting an easier target for attackers. When open, the hatch door is typically folded against the roof of the vehicle or otherwise positioned to prevent obstructing the operator's vision or operation of roof mounted equipment of weapons. However, this positioning of the hatch door increases the potential directions from which the occupant can be targeted when standing the hatch opening. In particular, the occupant is particularly susceptible to threats directed at the occupant from the sides of the vehicle where attackers are likely positioned and have an ideal target due to the silhouetting of the occupant's body.
A common hatch type is a single hinged sweep hatch in which the hatch door is elevated and rotated in a plane parallel to the hatch opening between a closed position in which the door is aligned with the hatch opening and an open position in which the door is rotated out of alignment with the hatch opening. While the sweep hatch allows the hatch door to be easily rotated out of the way for unobstructed ingress/egress through the hatch opening, the parallel position of the sweep hatch relative to the roof of the vehicle leaves an operator standing within the hatch opening completely exposed to ballistic threats. Another common hatch type is a single rear hinge hatch in which the hatch door rotates along an axis parallel to the plane of the hatch opening to open and close the hatch as shown in
Similarly, split hatches have multiple door leaves that when opened can shield the operator from ballistic threats coming from multiple directions. However, an inherent tradeoff with split hatches is that the multiple leaves create additional gaps in the closed door through which NBC contaminants can enter the interior of the vehicle. Unlike single door hatches which present a continuous hatch surface with a gap along the periphery of the closed hatch, the interface between the leaves when rotated into the closed position provide potential gaps across the hatch increasing the likelihood that NBC contaminants will enter into the interior of the vehicle. Accordingly, the increased ballistic protection provided by the leaves of split hatches necessarily increases the risk of NBC contaminants penetrating the hatch.
As such, there is a need for a means of providing effective ballistic protection for occupants operating the vehicle while standing in the hatch opening without substantially compromising the NBC protection of the hatch when the hatch is closed.
The present invention is directed to a split hatch assembly mountable to a hatch opening and having a plurality of armored door leaves each having an open/close assembly for rotating the corresponding leaf between a substantially upright open position and a generally horizontal closed position. Each open/close assembly can further comprise a hook element having a primary hook portion engagable to a latch pin to maintain the armored leaves in the open position. The hook element can lock the corresponding armored hatch leaf in the upright open position to prevent the armored hatch leaf from inadvertently rotating closed or forced closed from ballistic impacts. Each hook element further comprises a secondary hook portion that can be engaged to the latch pin instead of the primary hook portion, wherein the secondary hook portion maintains the armored hatch leaf in an intermediate position between the open position and the closed position. The hook element can be fully disengaged from the locking pin to allow the door leaf to rotate into the closed position.
In the open position, each door leaf can be oriented in a substantially upright orientation providing protection from threats directed at the occupants standing within the hatch opening. In certain embodiments, each door leaf can be oriented outward from the center of the hatch opening to maintain the side protection for the operator while providing clearance for the occupant to move within the hatch opening or operate roof mounting equipment or weapons. In the closed position, the plurality of door leafs can be positioned in a substantially horizontal orientation over the hatch opening and cooperate to cover the entire hatch opening. In the intermediate position, the plurality of leaves are angled inward toward the center of the hatch opening to shield occupants from ballistic threats directed at the sides of the vehicle as well as ballistic threats directed downwardly toward the hatch opening.
In certain embodiments, the plurality of leaves can comprise a pair of armored leaves positioned on opposing sides of the opening such that one leaf is positioned on either side of the occupant to protect the operator from ballistic threats directed at the sides of the vehicle. The leaves can be contoured to follow the shape of a circular or partially rounded hatch opening to minimize the footprint of the hatch when closed. The leaves can also comprise generally rectangular shapes increasing the effective area of the armored hatch leaf, thereby improving protection of the operator. In other embodiments, each leaf can comprise a substantially flat front edge and a contoured rear edge, wherein the flat edge can be oriented toward the front of the vehicle. In this configuration, the flat front edge of the leaf can maximize protection for occupants from threats directed from the front of the vehicle where threats are most likely to originate. Similarly, the rounded back edge of the leaf can minimize the foot print of the hatch assembly on the rear of the vehicle to provide more roof space for roof top mounted equipment or weapons.
In one aspect, the door leaves can be sized to have a greater combined area than the size of the hatch opening such that the leaves extend beyond the edges of the hatch opening when rotated into the closed position. The overlap between the oversized leaves and the edges of the hatch opening to reduce the likelihood that the NBC contaminants can exploit gaps between the leaves and the hatch opening when the hatch is closed to enter the vehicle. In certain embodiments, a flexible seal can be positioned at the intersection of the leaves and edges of the hatch opening, wherein the seal is compressed between the leaves and edges of the hatch opening as the leaves are rotated into the closed position further prevent NBC contaminants from passing between the leaves and the edges of the hatch opening.
In one aspect, each leaf can comprise a seal portion engagable to an adjacent leaf. The seal portion overlaps with the adjacent leaf to reduce the likelihood that NBC contaminants can exploit the gap between the leaves when the hatch is closed. In certain embodiments, the seal portion can also comprise a flexible seal positioned at the intersection of the leaves and edges of the hatch opening, wherein the seal is compressed between the seal portion and the adjacent leaf as the leaves are rotated into the closed position further prevent NBC contaminants from passing between the leaves.
A split hatch assembly for selectively sealing a hatch opening, according to an embodiment of the present invention, can comprise a plurality of armored hatch leafs each having a hinge receivable within a pivot portion of an open/close assembly for rotating each leaf between a generally horizontal closed position and a generally upright open position. Each open/close assembly further comprises a hook element operably engaged to the leaf and a fixed latch pin, wherein the hook portion is movable with the leaf as the leaf is rotated between the open position and the closed position. The hook element comprises a primary hook portion and a secondary hook portion, wherein the primary hook portion is engagable to the fixed latch pin when the leaf is positioned in the open position and the secondary hook portion is engagable to the fixed latch pin when the leaf is positioned in an intermediary position between the open position and the closed position. In certain embodiments, each open/close assembly further comprises a handle operably engaged to the hook element for rotating the hook element independently of the leaf to disengage the hook element from the latch pin.
In one embodiment, each leaf can comprise at least one contoured edge along at least a portion of the periphery of the leaf, wherein the contoured portion of the leaf is shaped to follow the contours of the hatch opening to minimize the footprint of the leaf on the top of the vehicle when the leaf is rotated into the closed position. In another embodiment, each leaf can define at least one flat edge along at least a portion of the periphery of the leaf, wherein the flat edge is not shaped to follow the contours of the hatch opening and maximizes the effective area of the leaf increasing the protection provided by the leaf. In another embodiment, each leaf can comprise at least one contoured edge and at least one flat edge, wherein the flat edge is positioned on the leaf to maximize protection from directions from which the risk of ballistic threats is high and wherein the contoured edge is positioned on the leaf to minimize the footprint of the leaf on sides of the leaf corresponding to directions from which the risk of ballistic threats is low.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the leaves are sized such that the combined area of the plurality of the hatch opening is greater than the area of the hatch opening. In this configuration, a portion of each leaf overlaps with a corresponding portion of the edge of the hatch opening when the leaves are rotated into the closed position. The overlapping orientation eliminates any potential direct path between the leaves and the edge of the hatch opening perpendicular to the plane of the hatch opening. The circuitous path formed by the overlapping oversized leaves and hatch opening reduces the likelihood that NBC contaminants will penetrate the vehicle through an imperfect seal between the hatch opening and the leaves.
In certain embodiments, each leaf can further comprise a seal portion positioned to overlap with an adjacent leaf such that the seal portion extends between the leaves to eliminate any potential direct path between the leaves perpendicular to the plane of the hatch opening. The overlapping portion is affixed to the first leaf such a portion of the overlapping portion extends outwardly from the edge of the first leaf such that overlapping portion covers the interface between the leaves. As with the oversized leaves, the circuitous path formed by the overlapping portion reduces the likelihood that NBC contaminants will penetrate the vehicle through an imperfect seal between the closed leaves.
In certain embodiments, each open/close mechanism can comprise a mechanical or motorized system for compensating for the weight of the armor paneling as the armored hatch leaf is rotated between the closed position and open position. In certain embodiments, each leaf further comprises at least one armor panel preventing ballistic threats from penetrating through the leaf such that the leaf can serve as a ballistic shield.
The above summary of the various representative embodiments of the invention is not intended to describe each illustrated embodiment or every implementation of the invention. Rather, the embodiments are chosen and described so that others skilled in the art can appreciate and understand the principles and practices of the invention. The figures in the detailed description that follow more particularly exemplify these embodiments.
The invention can be completely understood in consideration of the following detailed description of various embodiments of the invention in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
While the invention is amenable to various modifications and alternative forms, specifics thereof have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the intention is not to limit the invention to the particular embodiments described. On the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Each open/close assembly 24, 28 comprises mechanical or motorized systems for positioning the corresponding hatch leaf 22, 26. The mechanical or motorized systems offset the weight of the armored hatch leaf 22, 26 and the armor panel 29 allowing for easier manual positioning of the leaf 22, 26. The leaves 22, 26 can each further comprise at least one handle 30 for manually positioning the leaves 22, 26. In certain embodiments, each open/close assembly 24, 28 comprises a spring 31 biasing the hinge 23, 27 toward the open position to reduce the perceive weight of the leaves 22, 26 as the leaves 22, 26 are rotated into the open position.
In operation, the open/close assemblies 24, 28 each rotate the corresponding leaf 22, 26 around an axis parallel to the plane defined by the hatch opening 14 between a closed position and an open position. In the closed position, the leaves 22, 26 are aligned in a plane parallel to the plane of the hatch opening 14. In the open position, the leaves 22, 26 are positioned generally perpendicular to the plane of the hatch opening 14. The axis of rotation for each leaf 22, 26 is opposite sides of the hatch opening 14 such that the leaves 22, 26 are positioned in parallel on both sides of hatch opening 14 when rotated into open position to provide ballistic protection from at least two opposing directions. In one aspect, the axes of rotation can be aligned with roof mounted equipment or weapon such that an occupant can operate the equipment or weapon will protected on either side by the leaves 22, 26.
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
While the invention is amenable to various modifications and alternative forms, specifics thereof have been shown by way of example in the drawings and described in detail. It is understood, however, that the intention is not to limit the invention to the particular embodiments described. On the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/664,366, entitled ARMORED SPLIT HATCH and filed Jun. 26, 2012, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61664366 | Jun 2012 | US |