Not Applicable.
This invention relates to the field of firearms and ammunition.
Various manufacturers have produced lever action repeating rifles for well over a century. Generally, these rifles operate by thrusting the lever, located beneath the rifle, in a downward motion, which expels the spent shell casing or the unfired rifle cartridge. Raising the lever to its original position loads a new cartridge into the chamber, ready to be fired.
Two types of ejection systems are most common—side ejection and top ejection. Side ejection lever action repeating rifles have the advantage of accommodating a riflescope mounted directly above the receiver, just ahead of the stock of the rifle, the conventional and most functional position for a riflescope, directly in front of the shooter's eye. Top ejection rifles are unable to accommodate a riflescope mounted in this position since the fired shell casings and unfired full cartridges are ejected upward from the rifle receiver and back over the shooter's shoulder. Various remedies, such as side-mounted and forward-mounted scopes, are available, but have not become popular by any means.
Until recently most lever action rifles, such as the Winchester Model 1894, were considered short-range guns, accurate up to approximately 100 yards. Accuracy at this distance is near the upper limit of capability of a shooter with normal eyesight using open sights. In the past few years improved ammunition has become available for these guns that has increased the accuracy to a range of up to 300 yards. Accuracy with these rifles at ranges beyond 100 yards requires a riflescope.
Accordingly, there is a need for a method of changing the direction of cartridges and shell casings ejected from top ejection rifles to a more nearly horizontal path away from the rifle, and a method of mounting of a riflescope in the conventional manner described above.
Buffum (U.S. Patent #D270, 078) discloses a cartridge case deflector attachable to the receiver of a rifle, intended to be used for deflection of shell casings only. This invention is intended to stop the upward motion of the shell casing by expenditure of its kinetic energy, after which the shell casing would fall vertically due to gravity and would not have the capability of the present invention, viz: the ability to cause a full cartridge or a shell casing to be redirected horizontally away from the rifle. This invention does not incorporate a scope mount component in its design.
Householder (U.S. Pat. No. 7,493,720) describes a spent cartridge case deflector that can be attached to the upper receiver rail or to the carrying handle of a semiautomatic or automatic rifle that has a side ejection port. It has a pivoting deflector plate that can be positioned down over the side ejection port to direct ejected cartridge casings toward the ground. This invention cannot be attached to the side of a rifle receiver and positioned directly above the receiver, nor is it capable of redirecting spent shell cases and full cartridges horizontally away from the rifle. This invention does not incorporate a scope mount component in its design.
The present invention is a cartridge and shell casing deflector and scope mount comprising a vertical flat surface for attachment to the left side of the receiver of a top ejection lever action rifle, a deflecting component comprised of three deflection elements, and a scope mount component with two scope mounting rings.
Both the ejected cartridges and the ejected shell casings make contact with two of these deflecting elements and by which contact are deflected from a vertical and rearward trajectory to a trajectory slightly above horizontal and in a direction to the right of the rifle as viewed from the shooter's position.
Previously, most top ejection rifles could not accommodate a top-mounted riflescope installed conventionally above the receiver and placing its focal lens near the shooter's eye, the desired position. Alternatives such as side-mounted and front-mounted scopes have functional and aesthetic drawbacks and, as such, have had only limited acceptance.
The present invention, combining a cartridge and shell casing deflector with a scope mount, solves this shortcoming of these types of rifles by deflecting the spent shell casings and unfired cartridges away from the position above the receiver of the rifle where the riflescope would ideally be located, and by providing a method of mounting the riflescope in the desired position, directly above the receiver.
All references to the drawings, such as “front”, “rear”, “left”, and “right”) are from the position of the shooter, with the rifle in the shooting position.
The present invention is a combined cartridge and shell casing deflector and scope mount for attachment to a lever action top ejection rifle. It is comprised of three main components: an attachment surface, shown as a flat plate 1 (
The deflection portion 8 (
The scope mount consists of two scope mount uprights 11 (
As an unfired cartridge is extracted from the chamber this upward and rearward rotation causes contact with the primary deflection element 4a at the narrowest part of its shell casing, that part being just rearward of the bullet (projectile). The primary deflection element forms the forward edge of the deflector and is shaped in a curve 4a. The radius of this curve is identical to, or nearly identical to, the radius of the arc described by the cartridge's contact point with the primary deflection element as it rotates around its fulcrum, the extraction pin. This contact deflects the front of the cartridge to the right, and as the cartridge continues its upward and rearward rotation, past the vertical position, the base of the cartridge is released from the extraction pin in the breech bolt. The base of the cartridge then rises due the rotational kinetic energy of the cartridge and makes contact with the secondary deflection element 5 and this contact propels the cartridge away from the rifle to the right on a trajectory somewhat above the horizontal.
Empty shell casings are ejected form the rifle in a similar manner except that the shell casing makes contact with the primary deflection element 4a immediately behind the point where its taper, or neck-down, begins. As the shell casing rotates around the extraction pin fulcrum and is then released, its base makes contact with the secondary deflection element 4 and is deflected to the right and at an angle somewhat above the horizontal.
The invention is constructed such that the centers of the scope mount rings are positioned directly above the centerline of the rifle receiver and at a height that provides adequate clearance from the bottom of a mounted riflescope for the ejected cartridges and shell casings.
The preferred method of attachment of the invention would be using metal screws to attach it to the left side of the rifle receiver, but other methods are not excluded. Depicted in
This invention is of three pieces and all could be stamped from sheet metal or extruded, or otherwise formed from a variety of metallic or non-metallic materials.
While a particular form of the invention has been illustrated and described, it will be apparent that various modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the invention, while specifically designed for lever action rifles, could be modified for use with other types of top ejection rifles.
This application claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/473,280, filed on Apr. 8, 2011 and U.S. Utility patent application Ser. No. 13/440,620, filed on Apr. 5, 2012, that was published and abandoned. This Utility Patent Application also claims benefit of Provisional Patent Application No. 62/051,976 filed Sep. 18, 2014.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62196734 | Jul 2015 | US |