The invention relates to a bullet for shooting range and practice cartridges, said bullet having a cylindrical rear part and an ogive region at the nose end, wherein the ogive region comprises a rear end and a bullet tip.
Bullets, in particular for police operations, are distinguished in that they are either dimensionally stable (military) or deforming (police operations ammunition). For bullets that deform, the cross-sectional area increases when the bullets hit soft targets, and therefore the load per unit area is reduced to values that can be absorbed by a bulletproof vest. Dimensionally stable bullets produce a higher load per unit area because of their ogive shape or ogive region and therefore have better penetration capability. Lead-free (solid) practice bullets usually have good penetration capability, depending on the material, because the material deformability is low. Lead is significantly more ductile in this context.
The problem to be addressed by the invention is that of designing a bullet that behaves like a traditional full-metal-jacket round-nosed bullet (bullet having a closed form consisting of a cylindrical guiding part and an ogive, largely dimensionally stable) in a soft target. In addition, the bullet should have low energy transfer in a soft target, no deformation, and no splintering. There should be no punching effect in protective materials of bullet traps. Typical police operations bullets punch 4-mm holes in rubber-like materials as intended. This punching effect increases the costs in training operations.
This problem is solved in that the bullet is designed as a single-piece bullet, the ogive region is closed on all sides and has a cavity, and the wall thickness of the ogive region continuously decreases from the rear end to the tip. When the bullet according to the invention hits a target, the ogive region is compressed because of the cavity (see
The bullet preferably has no predetermined breaking points. Predetermined breaking points would promote splintering.
The starting material of the bullet is preferably a forgeable copper alloy, CuZn5—CuZn5, CuZn30—CuZn45, referred to as tombac alloys and brass alloys, with or without alloying additions. This material has the necessary ductility and hardness.
In order to enlarge the surface area of the rear, a pyramid-shaped hollow is preferably made at the bottom end of the rear part.
In order for the bullet to behave largely in a dimensionally stable manner, the ductility and hardness of the bullet material of the finished bullet lie within the orders of magnitude of the starting material in a preferred embodiment of the invention.
The bullet preferably has the caliber 9 mm*19 mm and therefore is very well suited for the ammunition of police, the military, and security forces.
A method according to the invention for producing a bullet is characterized in that a bullet blank having a cylindrical rear part and an open hollow cylinder at the nose end is produced from the starting material of the bullet in such a way that the wall thickness of the hollow cylinder continuously decreases from the rear end to the tip, and then the hollow cylinder is shaped into the ogive region by means of an orbital forming process, wherein the blank and the bullet are not subjected to thermal post-processing during the manufacturing. In an orbital forming process, the material hardness of the bullet blank is increased only insignificantly. Only in this way is the trajectory kept optimal. Thermal post-treatment means that the finally shaped bullet is thermally “treated” again, i.e., thermal post-treatment means a thermal treatment of the finally shaped bullet. The advantage of the orbital forming process is precisely that the material properties are defined during the manufacturing of the raw material and are not significantly changed by the processing, the bullet shaping.
The bullet blank is preferably produced by chip-forming processes but can also be produced in cold-forming or hot-forming processes.
The outside diameter D1 of the hollow cylinder at the tip is preferably produced in such a way that said outside diameter D1 is less than the diameter D2 of the hollow cylinder at the rear end. Thus, the hollow cylinder is conical. This simplifies the orbital forming process.
Therefore, the bullet according to the invention consists of a cylindrical rear part and an ogive region, which has a cavity. The wall thickness of the ogive or of the ogive region and the cavity resulting therefrom must be selected in such a way that the bullet is stable enough to ensure reliable feeding in the weapon and does not deform or splinter in a soft target (gelatin).
A bullet according to the invention preferably has the caliber 9 mm×19 and is identical to the associated operations ammunition, e.g., ammunition according to TR2009, in regard to weapon function and the trajectory of said bullet, and does not penetrate an SK1 bulletproof vest (standard according to technical guideline of the German police).
This bullet is principally intended for use by police, the military, and other security forces. However, civilian use is not ruled out.
The bullet blank is principally produced in chip-forming processes but can also be produced in cold-forming or hot-forming processes. The design of the bullet blank already contains the wall thickness progression of the ogive of the finished bullet. The wall thickness is characterized in that the wall thickness decreases toward the tip, which later is the region that experiences the greatest deformation.
The ogive is formed by means of an orbital forming process, which produces the desired shape without increasing the material hardness of the prefabricated blank excessively. The basic material structure is affected much less in the orbital forming process than in traditional forming processes. Therefore, the ductility and hardness remain within the orders of magnitude of the starting material. Because the blank already has a conical or ogival preliminary shape, the necessary forming work is reduced, so that the material hardness of the prefabricated blank is not increased.
The following is a description of what is understood by an orbital forming process. In orbital forming or in an orbital forming process, the workpiece, in this case the bullet blank, is inserted into a die, which fixes it in place from below. This die is clamped onto the fixed part of an orbital forming press. From above, the workpiece is cold-formed by means of one or more rotating dies in succession. The upper die is skewed by a certain angle from the axis of rotation of the upper die. This results in a rolling motion, under which the metal of the workpiece can flow into its new shape. Much greater deformation is possible by orbital forming than by deep-drawing or simple compression. Orbital forming is related to metal spinning. In contrast with metal spinning, however, much more complex shapes are possible. Orbital forming or an orbital forming process (sometimes also called radial riveting) is thus a cold-forming method in which the forming force acts only on a partial surface of the workpiece. By means of an orbital motion of the upper die on a rotationally symmetrical workpiece, large deformation can be realized with relatively low force application.
It is important that the bullet (or the bullet blank) is not subjected to thermal post-treatment during the manufacturing. In addition, the bullet does not have any predetermined breaking points. This means that the bullet blank 5 neither is subjected to a thermal post-treatment nor has predetermined breaking points after the chip-forming process or the cold-forming or hot-forming process. This is important for keeping the ductility and hardness of the finished bullet within the orders of magnitude of the starting material.
The starting material is a forgeable copper alloy, CuZn5—CuZn15, CuZn30—CuZn45, with or without alloying additions, that can be machined and can be cold-formed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2012 017 630.9 | Sep 2012 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/068356 | 9/5/2013 | WO | 00 |