The invention pertains to the field of clay targets used primarily for trap, skeet and sporting clay shooting. More particularly, the invention pertains to a magazine into which clay targets are loaded for insertion into the carousel of a clay target thrower.
This application is an original first filing; no provisional, continuation or other document has been filed with the United States Patent & Trademark Office by applicant pertaining to this subject matter.
This invention was not developed with any type of government support. The government has no rights in applicant's invention.
In the sporting world, several different types of competitive shooting involving shotguns have emerged over the years including, trap, skeet, sporting clays and a variation of skeet and sporting clays administered by the Federation Internationale de Tir Aux Sportives de Chasse, or the “FITSC.”
In FITSC, strategically placed clay target throwers (called traps) set to simulate live game birds and animals; e.g., teal, rabbits, pheasant. Shooters on each layout or “parcour”, shoot in turn at various combinations of single and double clay birds. Each station or “peg” on a parcour will have a menu card that lets the shooter know the sequence of clay birds he or she will be shooting at (i.e. which trap the clay bird will be coming from).
In order to establish the parcour, the traps or throwers must be positioned and adjusted to throw the sequence of targets generally in the following simulations: rabbit, chandelle, overhead, trap (outgoing), crossing, teal (launched straight up into the air), and as an incoming bird. The targets are shot as singles and as doubles (double targets can be simultaneous, on report or trailing/following-“rafael” in FITASC terminology).
Courses are laid out with as many as 13 stations, sometimes as many as 16 or more where shooters may shoot at as many as 8 targets each and generally will throw a set of targets in order to see how the peg is to be “played” or shot.
Therefore, it takes as many as 234 clay targets just for a pair of shooters to complete shooting a 13 station course. If 50 pairs of shooters were to compete in one day, 11,700 clay targets would have to be thrown by 26 throwers in the 13 stations. It should be noted that the typical course, regardless of number of stations, includes 100 shots by each shooter, plus any broken clays or target “peeks” involving throwing the birds to view how the station is to be played.
The throwers are typically remotely actuated by a controller provided at each station. Atop the throwers are carousels which contain stacks of clay targets (also referred to herein as clays) such that when the carousel is actuated, it rotates the stacks and a clay is positioned to drop onto a plate where a spring actuated throwing arm is pre-positioned to engage the clay and throw it with a certain amount of stabilizing spin.
Presently, these carousels are hand loaded with clays, necessitating the transport of boxes of clays to the throwers so that a person may open each box, grab a number of clays from within and stack them in columns in the carousel positioned atop the thrower. This is a labor intensive effort and because clays are fairly fragile, some breakage of clays during the process is inevitable.
What is needed is a way to load these carousels with clays in a manner which is not only faster, but results in less breakage.
It is not uncommon to have clays “jam” in the carousel when actuated or break from being cocked as a result of improper stacking during the filling of the carousel. Further, it is difficult to determine if a clay has been cracked during refill of the carousel by hand; the realization coming upon the throwing of the target when it is ejected from the thrower in pieces. Hairline fractures cannot be readily seen, especially within a stack of several clays. If during hand loading of the carousel, several clays are dropped into place incorrectly or are in a cocked position when dropped onto the stack, undetected damage may be done to one or more clays.
What is needed is a better method of loading a carousel by minimizing the handling of the clay targets.
Another factor which affects the integrity of clay targets is exposure to heat, cold and moisture. Admittedly, most shooting courses attempt to protect their traps from the elements. However, it is not practical to move the traps indoors from their setup position daily for protection. Sometimes enclosures are used for the throwers in the case of trap and skeet ranges as the need to continually move the throwers does not exist. For sporting clays, the setup of throwers is continually changed, making the use of enclosures more cumbersome.
In such cases, coverings such as canvass, tarps, plastic or other temporary means are employed to protect the carousels of clay targets. These coverings are certainly less effective than stationary enclosures, and the deterioration of clay targets on sporting clay ranges is more problematic. What is needed is a means of protecting carousels and their targets more effectively on sporting clay courses.
As mentioned, the number of shooters visiting a sporting clays range during a competition or group “shoot” means that many targets will be used and consequently, reloading of carousels will be necessary. By the sheer numbers of targets consumed in a shoot, inevitably shooters must standby while others spend valuable time hand loading carousels. In the case of a jammed thrower, this can lead to disruption of the competition. Operators of such courses must urge shooters to resist intervening on their own to clear jammed throwers when forced to wait until maintenance personnel or mechanics arrive to clear the machines. By intervening, shooters create a safety hazard to themselves and others as they are typically not trained how to operate and maintain the throwers, creating a potentially dangerous situation and likely a violation of the course insurance policies.
What is needed is a more efficient means of reloading carousels during competitive shoots when time pressure is at its highest, as well as assuring that the potential for weak or cracked clays in the carousels is minimized. Such a solution will assure timely use of the course and minimize potential safety hazards.
To quantify the problem further, clay target manufacturers estimate premature target breakage as high as 5%. Reducing human handling of targets can reduce that percentage significantly.
Typically, clay targets of 108 mm diameter are used for most throws. In international competition, clays to 110 mm may be used. In other cases, clays as small as 90 mm or smaller can be used as targets. With these varying sizes, carousels must be configured to handle either the 108-110 mm size, or be reconfigured to handle 90 mm targets such that the targets are properly positioned to drop onto the throwing plate properly. As a result, courses must have carousels of more than one configuration in order to accommodate the various clay target sizes. What is needed is a solution to having to use differently configured carousels to throw clay targets of differing size. Expense and labor would each be saved by having a method or device which facilitates the throwing of multiple sizes of clays without having to reconfigure a carousel or replace it entirely with another trap so configured.
Applicant has devised a magazine to hold clay targets in such a configuration to allow direct insertion into a carousel thereby minimizing the amount of human handling. In doing so, the time required to load carousels is also reduced significantly.
The magazine which is the object of Applicant's invention is a substantially cylindrical container which holds the clays in a stack thereby reducing the amount of jostling and rattling during transport to a carousel as well as during loading. The act of inserting a single stack into the empty column of a carousel takes only a few moments compared to the insertion of a smaller number of clays into the carousel column and then repeating the procedure several times until the column is full. Further, the vulnerability to improper stacking, dropping the clays onto each other or otherwise cracking them is reduced by using Applicant's magazine.
Most if not all of the components of Applicant's invention may be fashioned from a variety of materials including wood, plastic, resin or metal. In the preferred embodiment, polyethylene, polyvinylchloride or other Ultra Violet light (“UV”) & water resistant, tough plastic is preferred.
Applicant's magazine may be loaded with clays by simply drawing the magazine down over stacked clays while in their shipping box in a simple, cookie-cutter manner, virtually eliminating the need for handling them. This aids in eliminating unnecessary handling and the potential for damage to the clays.
In one embodiment, the magazine is slidably inserted into a loading sleeve which has means to capture the clays in the magazine as clays are inserted. The loading sleeve captures the bottom clay in each stack, retaining it while both sleeve and magazine are lifted and placed above another stack of clays for insertion into the magazine. This is repeated until the magazine is filled. The loading sleeve is provided with a retention means such that when the effective bottom of a stack is reached, the retention means holds the bottom of the stack of clays so that both the magazine and the sleeve may be lifted for additional filling of clays or if already full, for insertion of a retention means in the actual magazine. When the retention means is inserted in the full magazine, the loading sleeve may then be slid off the magazine and another, empty magazine may be inserted into the loading sleeve and the process repeated until the desired number of magazines are filled.
A number of retention means may be used for the loading sleeve; e.g., a spring loaded “detent” having a level top surface and an angled lower surface can slide over clays as they fill the loading sleeve and hence the magazine, but when lifted, the level upper surface engages the bottom of a clay, thereby fixing it in a relative position within the sleeve and magazine, allowing the combination to be lifted and then set atop another plurality of clays to continue the filling process. While the shape of the detent described has a particular application in this regard, trying to provide a lifting surface in contact with the bottom surface of the last clay inserted, other configurations of detent; e.g., a ball detent or others, may also be utilized if the amount of force applied to the rim of the bottom clay in a horizontal direction is minimized. The larger the stack of clays, including the heavier, or larger diameter size will determine the effectiveness of other retention means.
In one embodiment of Applicant's invention, holes or slots are provided in the magazine wall for the purpose of allowing the points of the detents provided in the loading sleeve to project therethrough, allowing indexing of the loading sleeve to the magazine. Such indexing of said magazine and said sleeve further assists loading said magazine, further facilitating retaining the clay target stack in the magazine above the retaining means slot which may be then easily accessed. In this embodiment, when said retaining means is inserted into said magazine, the loading sleeve may be slid downward over the magazine slightly depressing and disengaging the detents from said magazine, and then rotated such that the loading sleeve may be lifted off the magazine with detents depressed, as said retaining means may interfere the removal of said sleeve by sliding it downward and off said magazine.
Another retention means may be a simple spring clip having a predetermined curvature or other shape allowing the clays to move the clip to the side, allowing the clay to slid up into the sleeve and magazine, but when the clay passes the clip, the clip springs back to a position which will retain the clay in addition to any of those atop it. A variation of this retention means is a clip which is proximate to the bottom of said sleeve and is actuated either manually or by a concentric sliding ring, after filling, in order to engage the lower surface of the bottom clay. Another spring clip so used may be slidably mounted on the side of the sleeve such that when slid over a slot in said sleeve, said clip engages the lower surface of the bottom clay.
The preferred embodiment of Applicant's magazine includes at least one window or sight slot which enables one to see how full the magazine is, both to aid the filling of the magazine, and also to indicate when the number of clays in the magazine is depleted, thereby signaling when the magazine should be refilled, “reloaded” or “recharged.”
Another feature of the preferred embodiment of Applicant's invention is the type of retention means used to keep the stack of clays inside the magazine after the loading sleeve is removed (assuming a loading sleeve is used). Because of the fragile nature of the clay targets, the amount of force applied to the bottom clay must be considered in the decision how best to secure the stack inside the magazine. For example, if a round pin were extended through the magazine walls underneath the bottom clay, two load bearing points would bear effectively the entire weight of the stack of clays, the vertical component of frictional force of the stack against the interior of the magazine being negligible. The two point contacts would see stress risers which could give rise to crack propagation in said bottom clay. To alleviate this problem, Applicant utilizes a U-shaped, flat retaining means distributing the stack weight along four flat surfaces (effectively), minimizing the aforementioned problem.
Consequently, proximate to the bottom of the magazine are provided four slots in which said retaining means is slid, thereby bearing the stack load within said magazine. In this embodiment, the bottom edge of the associated loading sleeve is relieved to provide access to the magazines retention means slots. In this embodiment, if a loading sleeve is used which employs the angled spring loaded detent, the sleeve is then slid slightly to depress the detent, then rotated sufficient to slide said loading sleeve up and off said magazine, thereby eliminating any resistance from said magazine's retaining means which may prohibit sliding the loading sleeve of the magazine in a downward direction.
In the case where a smaller diameter magazine is loaded with smaller clays, Applicant provides a spacer which can be slidably mounted at the top and or bottom of the carousel such that the clays are aligned with the lower part of the carousel and may be dropped to the lower plate in proper alignment with the throwing lever.
The spacer described above may be of multiple configurations including fully round, having “dog ears” spaced to engage the carousel column risers typically used to house the stack of clay targets, or even provided with cutouts to slidably engage said risers, thereby further assisting in the alignment of said magazine in said carousel.
In another embodiment of the present invention, the magazine which is sized to hold the 108 mm and larger clays, may have inserted therein a smaller magazine which is similarly loaded, said outside diameter of said smaller magazine aligned in said larger magazine by spacers proximately located at both ends of said smaller magazine and in communication with the inner diameter of said larger magazine. This too allows smaller magazines to be used in carousels configured to accept the larger diameter magazines, all the while keeping alignment proper to drop any sized clay onto said throwing plate.
By utilizing spacers, Applicant provides the means whereby smaller diameter clays may be thrown from carousels configured to hold that largest diameter clays, obviating the need to reconfigure the carousels or move other traps in place to throw said smaller clays. This feature of Applicant's invention provides savings in terms of time, money and labor in significant amounts. Applicant believes that this capability to utilize pre-loaded magazines of clay targets having differing diameters in a single carousel provides an innovative solution to enabling a single carousel to throw different diameter clay targets, but also enables a course to offer additional target combinations from that same station heretofore not possible from the same trap.
In another embodiment of Applicant's invention, a smaller sized magazine is inserted directly into the carousel of a trap, said magazine employing spacers to locate said magazine within the column risers of said carousel. The spacers may be integral to, removably applied or affixed to said magazine, in some cases said lower spacer may be provided with cut-outs to allow for handling access for loading and inserting said retaining means as well as placing said magazine inside said carousel.
In the preferred embodiment of Applicant's invention, a cap or lid is provided for placement atop the magazine when inserted into the carousel. By applying a lid, the amount of moisture to which the clays may be exposed to when left overnight in the carousel is dramatically reduced if the course is exposed to precipitation. In one embodiment, the cap may be rotatably and removably affixed to said magazine, and further, may be provided with a handle in order to lift and handle said magazine. In other embodiments, said handle may be integral to the magazine itself, absent any cap or lid.
While the loading sleeve facilitates the quick loading of the magazine all but eliminating contact between the clays and human hands, instances may occur where it is necessary to load the magazine by hand. This can also be accomplished with the same basic procedure, with reliefs in the bottom edge of the magazine sized to allow the insertion of fingers on either side to retain the clays therein while the magazine is lifted and placed atop another stack to be inserted into the magazine. In the end it will be necessary to lift the bottom clay sufficiently to allow insertion of the retaining means. In one embodiment of the present invention, Applicant utilizes a loading block which would facilitate the retention means insertion by placing the magazine over said block, said block provided with two raised areas upon which the bottom clay is engaged, thereby lifting said clay, enabling said retaining means to be inserted into said magazine.
In most of Applicant's embodiments, it should be noted that the inner diameter of all magazines are sized to allow the free sliding of clay targets inside said magazines while restricting cocking of any individual target or the stack. For a 108 mm clay target, the inner diameter of the associated magazine my be between approximately 109 mm and 110 mm. Similarly, a magazine inner diameter of between approximately 91 mm and 92 mm may accommodate a 90 mm clay target. Sleeves further allow the similar free sliding of associated magazines therein and are therefore appropriately sized. Similarly, magazines including embodiments using spacers are located within existing carousel column guides such that adequate space exists to removably insert the magazines therein, with the wall thickness of said magazines sized to accept the proper sized clay target for that carousel.
a is an isometric view of the retaining means of the invention of
a discloses retention means 65 pertaining to the invention as shown in
A variety of means for affixing said clips to either a magazine or a loading sleeve may be employed such as riveting, adhesive, threaded recess, clipping and more. Where a rivet is to be employed, the wall of said loading sleeve or said magazine may be recessed on the inner diameter such that said rivet may be captured therein. Similarly, a flanged, threaded barrel may be fitted in said recess to accept a threaded fastener, said fastener first penetrating said clip thereby affixing said clip when said fastener is screwed into said barrel. Said clips could further be retained on a ring removably or permanently affixed to said outer diameter of said magazine or sleeve, said ring held in a recess on the outer diameter of said magazine or sleeve, or adhered thereto by multiple means.
In
Bottom spacer 830′ may have a lower perimeter provided with one or more raised arcuate edges 840 and 840′ to allow finger insertion for loading and handling. Sight windows 850 and 850′ are located in wall 810 to provide an indication of how many clay targets, 860 remain in said magazine. In said embodiment, said window 850 is sized to reveal a smaller number of targets, up to perhaps 10, while said window 850′ is sized to reveal a larger number of said targets. To assist in locating said magazine 800 atop said plate 825, an indicating mark 870 may be included on spacer 830′ in order to be indexed to a second indicating mark 880 provided on plate 825.
Accordingly, it is to be understood that the embodiments of the invention herein described are merely illustrative of the application of the principles of the invention. Reference herein to details of the illustrated embodiments is not intended to limit the scope of the claims, which themselves recite those features regarded as essential to the invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20120261883 A1 | Oct 2012 | US |