Some handgun holsters are configured to include a trigger guard engagement portion on their bottom wall, which engages and blocks movement of the handgun trigger guard when the handgun is holstered, to help to stabilize the handgun in the holster.
Some handguns have a light secured to the handgun, often at a position below the barrel. The light extends downward from the barrel, often to a distance below the bottom of the trigger guard. For such a handgun assembly, if the holster is tall (deep) enough to receive the light with clearance, then the bottom wall of the holster is far enough away from the top wall so that, when the handgun is inserted into the holster, there may be no engagement between the holster and the trigger guard of the handgun. As a result, the stabilizing benefit described above may not be provided. In addition, if the holster is thus large enough to accommodate the handgun assembly that includes the light, the opening into the holster may provide easier access to the trigger, than is desired.
The present invention is applicable to handgun holsters of varying and different configurations. As representative of the invention, the drawings illustrate a handgun holster 10 that is a first embodiment of the invention. The invention is, of course, not limited to the illustrated embodiment but rather is defined by the claims.
The holster 10 is configured for use with a handgun assembly 11 that includes a handgun 12 (
The handgun assembly 11 also includes a light 22 that is mounted on the handgun 12, in a position below the barrel 16. The light 22 has a forward end portion 23. The light 22 hangs down below the trigger guard 20. As a result, the handgun is taller (up and down as viewed in
The holster 10 (
The holster walls define a chamber 35 for receiving the handgun 12. The end of the holster body 26 opposite from the end wall 34 has an opening or entranceway 36 (
In the illustrated holster 10, the holster top wall 30 and side walls 28 and 29 support a handgun locking mechanism 38 which may be, for example, of the type shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,769,581. This locking mechanism 38 engages the handgun 12 adjacent its ejection port, and prevents inadvertent or unwanted removal of the handgun from the holster 10. The present invention is applicable to holsters with or without locking mechanisms. The holster 10 may also include a muzzle plug as illustrated at 41 for added stability of the handgun in the holster.
The holster 10 includes a stabilizing mechanism for helping to stabilize the handgun assembly in the holster. The stabilizing mechanism includes an articulated trigger guard blocking device 42, and a spring 44. The blocking device 42 and the spring 44, acting together with the holster body 26, help to stabilize the handgun assembly in the holster 10 and also help to impede access to the trigger, in a manner as described below.
The blocking device 42 is supported in the holster body 26, between the side walls 28 and 29, for sliding movement along the bottom wall 32 of the holster body 26. The blocking device 42 has an elongate configuration including a central portion 50. The central portion 50 of the blocking device 42 is configured to engage and slide along either or both of the side walls 28 and the bottom wall 32 of the holster body 26. The blocking device 42 in the illustrated embodiment is molded from Delrin brand plastic. Other suitable materials and/or manufacturing methods may be used.
The blocking device 42 has an inner end portion 52 that is located farther from the entranceway 36 and closer to the holster end wall. An opposite outer end portion 54 of the blocking device 42 is located closer to the entranceway 36 and farther from the holster end wall.
A stop member 56 (
The inner end portion 52 of the blocking device 42 is configured as a spring flange for engagement with the spring 44, as described below. The spring flange 52 extends generally perpendicular to the length of the blocking device 42. The spring flange 52 is fixed to and moves directly with the central portion 50 of the blocking device 42.
The outer end portion 54 of the blocking device 42 has a upwardly-opening U-shaped configuration with two side walls 60 and a bottom wall 61. The outer end portion 54 is connected by a flexible connector portion 62 to the central portion 50 of the blocking device 42.
The spring 44 helps to control the position of the blocking device 42 in the holster body 26. In the illustrated embodiment, the spring 44 is a conical compression spring made from metal. The base of the spring 44 is set against the end wall 34 of the holster body 26. The tip of the spring 44 is set against, and may be connected for movement with, the spring flange 52 of the blocking device 42. The spring 44 biases the blocking device 42 for movement relative to the holster body 26, in the removal direction away from the end wall 34 and toward the entranceway 36.
When the handgun is not in the holster 10 (
The inward movement of the blocking device 42 causes its flexible connector portion 62 to engage the edge 33 on the holster bottom wall 32 and be cammed upward toward the trigger guard 20 of the handgun 12. The outer end portion 54 of the blocking device 40 moves into the chamber 35 and into engagement with the trigger guard 20 of the handgun 12. The outer end portion moves simultaneously both (i) in the insertion direction 37 and (ii) upward toward the top wall and/or into the holster chamber. Specifically, the side walls 60 of the outer end portion 54 move into a position on opposite sides of and in engagement with the trigger guard 20 of the handgun 12. The bottom wall 61 of the outer end portion 54 of the blocking device 42 engages with the bottom of the trigger guard 20 of the handgun 12. Also, the bottom wall 61 of the outer end portion 54 engages the bottom wall 34 of the holster body 26. As a result, the outer end portion 54 of the blocking device is captured between the bottom wall 34 of the holster body 26 and the trigger guard 20 of the handgun 12. With the side walls 60 of the blocking device being located on opposite sides of the trigger guard 20, this engagement limits movement of the handgun 12 in the holster 12, thus stabilizing the handgun in the holster 10.
The blocking device 42 also helps to impede access to the trigger 18 when the handgun 12 is in the holster 10. Specifically, because the holster 10 is designed to accommodate not only the handgun 12 but also the light 22, the entranceway 36 of the holster body 26 is large compared to an opening that would be sized to accommodate only the handgun itself. This enlarged opening can provide inadvertent access to the handgun trigger 18—not only by a person's fingers but also by an object dropped or inserted into the holster. However, the presence of the blocking device end portion 54 adjacent to the trigger guard 20 (as best seen in
The blocking device 40, in the illustrated embodiment, does not lock in position, and does not lock the handgun in the holster 10. Once the locking mechanism 38 of the holster 10 is released, the spring 44 urges the blocking device 40 outward from the holster body, to its starting or free position as shown in
Number | Date | Country | |
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62798177 | Jan 2019 | US |