The present invention relates generally to underwater activities and, more particularly, to spear guns for use in fishing and underwater hunting.
Conventional spear guns, such as those utilized in scuba diving, typically comprise a frame having a longitudinally elongated body fit at a rear end with a grip and a trigger. The trigger is pulled to launch a spear attached to a front end of a shaft, mounted slidingly on the elongated body of the frame. The rear end of the shaft is usually connected to a string line for retrieval of the spear and any prey that may have been snagged by the diver.
The propulsive force of the spear is provided by a pair of cables made of an elastic material that are stretched and hooked onto the shaft of the spear when the diver loads the gun, then the spear is released when the trigger is pulled, converting the elastic energy accumulated by the elastic cables into kinetic energy in the spear shaft.
The kinematic mechanism that enables the diver to shoot the spear by means of the trigger generally comprises a lever hinged onto the frame and presenting a latch element at one end that engages in a notch at the proximal end of the spear shaft when the spear on the gun is loaded so as to withstand the pulling force exerted on the shaft by the elastic cables. During the movement used to load the spear gun, the proximal end of its shaft abuts against a radial appendage on the lever, thereby inducing its rotation, as a result of which, in addition to the latch element engaging in the notch on the shaft, the opposite end of the lever elastically engages within a seat in the trigger formed on the side opposite its operating arm. The disengagement of the lever from the trigger, which is induced by a finger pulling on its operating arm, causes the shaft to be released from the latch element on the lever and the propulsive force of the elastic cables prevails. A kinematic chain of this type is shown, for instance, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,904,132.
In the spear fishing guns of the known type, the kinematic chains used to operate them, such as the one described above, do not allow for any adjustment of the stroke of the trigger and of the effort needed to pull it. In the event of the scuba diver's finger being scarcely sensitive due to limited experience, or for contingent reasons such as the use of very thick gloves, the spear may be released by accident if the stroke of the trigger is short. In other words, the problem of graduating the effort required to pull the trigger and/or adjusting the trigger's stroke is strongly felt and has yet to find a simple and safe solution.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a device for releasing a spear shaft of a spear gun for scuba diving or the like that allows the effort required to pull the trigger and/or the operating stroke of the trigger to be graduated in accordance with a selected diver's characteristics and needs.
A particular object of the invention is to provide a device of the aforementioned type wherein the force required to pull the trigger and/or the trigger's stroke can be adjusted quickly and easily by means of a kinematic chain that is not particularly complex from the point of view of its manufacture and assembly.
These objects are achieved with a device for releasing the spear shaft of a fishing gun for scuba divers according to the present invention, wherein the latch element is formed on a first lever, the front end of which is pivotally connected to a threaded stem fixedly attached to the frame of the gun and lying parallel to its longitudinal axis and elastic means are provided for keeping the first lever in a resting position, corresponding to the situation when the gun is not loaded, wherein the latch element abuts against a first shoulder integrally attached to the frame and is axially aligned with the spear shaft when it is prepared for loading on the elongated body of the frame. The trigger comprises an elastically-tensioned abutment portion for the front end of the first lever and extending forward from a convex upper surface intersecting a concave surface at an edge that traces a first circular trajectory as the trigger is rotated. A second lever pivotally connected to the frame at a point situated behind the latch element and below the front end of the first lever is also provided, the front end of the second lever being movable along a second circular trajectory intersecting the first circular trajectory. An arm of the second lever extends to intersect the trajectory of the spear shaft when the gun is loaded, whereby during the axial movement to load the spear, the spear shaft abuts against the latch element first, displacing the first lever from its resting position and occupying a loaded position wherein the latch element engages in the shaped recess in the shaft, and then it abuts against the arm of the second lever, making the latter rotate until it abuts against the first lever on at the latch element, simultaneously bringing its front end up against the convex surface of the trigger. The front end of the first lever is slidingly connected to the threaded stem, whereby the first lever is adjustably displaceable in the longitudinal axis direction to enable a variation in the point where the first lever rests on the second lever and the consequent force with which the front end of the second lever rests against the convex surface of the trigger.
A specific, illustrative device for releasing a spear shaft of a spear gun, according to the present invention, is described below with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Still other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of the preferred embodiments.
Hereinafter, the adjectives “front” and “rear” refer to the orientation of the gun and refer to the left and right ends, respectively, as the spear gun appears in the figures. The adjectives “upper” and “lower” are used in an absolute sense and refer to the axis of longitudinal symmetry of the gun: the shaft and spear point are placed in the upper part of the gun, i.e. above its axis of symmetry, while the trigger is conventionally positioned in the lower part of the gun.
The illustration of the fishing gun for scuba divers is restricted to the elements comprising the release device according to the invention. The swivel pins for the articulation of the various component parts and the abutment elements for the moving parts are consequently only shown schematically, said pins and abutment elements being integrally attached to the gun frame, which is not shown in its entirety because it is structurally well-known to a person skilled in the art.
Referring now to the drawings and, more particularly, to
In particular, the lever L2 and the trigger L3 have a flattened shape and lie substantially in the vertical plane of symmetry of the gun, passing through its longitudinal axis X, while the lever L1 comprises two symmetrical elements (only one of them shown in the figures), lying parallel to the plane of symmetry of the gun, the distance between them corresponding to at least the thicknesses of the lever L2 and of the trigger L3 so that the latter two elements can move without interfering with the movement of the lever L1.
The bushes S1 and S2 support a freely-revolving longitudinal threaded stem 10, the rear end of which (facing towards the right in the figure) is threaded inside and screws into a corresponding threaded hole in a transverse hub 11 from either side of which there project two transverse, symmetrical pins C1 (only one of which is shown in the figures) around which the two parallel and adjacent elements forming the first lever L1 are integrally articulated.
For the sake of simplicity, reference is made hereinafter to a single pin C1 as if the lever L1 consisted of a single element, a condition which may in fact constitute an alternative embodiment of the invention.
The axis of the threaded stem 10 lies substantially along the vertical plane of symmetry of the gun. Between the two bushes S1 and S2, the threaded stem 10 is provided with ring-shaped ribbing 12, the knurled lateral surface of which extends from the bushes S1 and S2 and enables the scuba diver to turn the threaded stem 10, thereby screwing or unscrewing its end in the threaded hole in the hub 11 and consequently displacing the axial position of the transverse pin C1 in the two directions indicated by the double line F1. In FIGS. 1 to 5, for instance, the pin C1 occupies its rearmost position, whereas in
The lever L1 is hinged around the pin C1 at its front end (on the left in the figure), whereas it is fitted at its rear end with a freely-revolving wheel 14. The upper side of the rear end of the lever L1 terminates with a surface 13 designed to be pushed up against a shoulder S6, which is integrally attached to the gun frame. When in contact with one another, the surface 13 and the shoulder S6 define the end of the stroke of the lever L1 in its leftward-turning angular displacement, corresponding to the resting position of the lever L1, when the gun is not loaded.
The rear end of the second lever L2 is connected to the swivel pin C2, which is positioned to the rear of the wheel 14 and on a slightly lower level than the pin C1. The anticlockwise rotation of the second lever L2 is restricted by a shoulder S4. The pin C2 is wrapped with the turns of a spring M2, which terminate with two arms 15 and 16. The lower arm 15 is retained by a pair of fixed striker plates S5, while the upper arm 16 rests up against the wheel 14 of the lever L1, consequently pushing the surface 13 towards the shoulder S6. An upward-facing bracket 20 extends from the rear end of the second lever L2, the purpose of which will be explained with reference to the subsequent figures.
The front of the trigger L3, revolving around the pin C3, has a front concave surface 51, on which the scuba diver's finger comes to bear, a cylindrical and convex surface 39, whose axis coincides with that of the pin C3, and an upper-rear concave circular surface 38 with a radius of curvature equal to the distance between the axis of the pin C2 and the front end 18 of the lever L2. At a suitable angle of leftward rotation of the trigger L3, the concave circular surface 39 overlaps the trajectory T2 traced by the end 18 of the lever L2 as it moves rightwards. In said position of the trigger L3, the edge 40 common to the surfaces 38 and 39, which traces the trajectory T3, coincides with the point T, where the trajectories T2 and T3 intersect each other.
The clockwise rotation of the trigger L3 is restricted by a ledge 19 thereof resting up against the hub 11. There is also a spring M3 wrapped around the pin C3, with a lower arm 21 that pushes the trigger L3 to turn clockwise towards its end of stroke, wherein the ledge 19 rests up against the hub 11. The upper arm 22 of the spring M3 rests elastically against the lower edge of the lever L1, co-operating with the spring M2 in pushing the lever L1 into its endmost anticlockwise position, at which the surface 13 lies in contact with the shoulder S6.
The lower end 23 of a stem 24 is housed, with an angular slack, in a seat 41 in the lever L2, the upper end 25 of said stem being retained between striker plates S7 and S8. When the device according to the invention is in the resting position, shown in
On the underside of the rear end 31 of the shaft 30 an elongated recess 33 with tapered sides 34 is formed, the purpose of which will be explained later on.
To load the gun, the shaft 30 is pushed along the gun in the direction of the arrow F2 so that its rear end 31 rests up against the wheel 14 of the lever L1, as shown in
As shown in
As it continues in its displacement in the direction of the arrow F2, the shaft 30 forces against the bracket 20, inducing the rightward rotation of the lever L2 until it reaches the end of its stroke, shown in
In the final position of the shaft 30, shown in
As the lever L2 turns to the right, driven by the rear end of the shaft 30, its front end 18 slides along the upper rear surface 38 of the trigger L3 making the trigger turn anticlockwise and overcoming the force of the spring M3, until the front end 18 of the lever L2 passes beyond the point 40, thus enabling the trigger L3 to return to the position shown in
The leftward axial tensile force coming to bear on the shaft 30 in its loaded position (
It should be noted that the rightward rotation of the lever L2 results in an upward displacement of the stem 24, the upper end 25 of which extends above the striker plates S7 and S8, thus enabling the string line connecting the shaft of the spear to the gun to be hooked to said end 25.
To adjust the device, i.e. to adjust the effort needed to pull the trigger L3, reference is made to the positions shown in
Supposing now that the threaded stem 10 is screwed down into the threaded hole in the hub 11, by means of an action taken on the knurled ring 12, until the hub 11 reaches its forwardmost position, as shown in
It is easy to demonstrate that, moving the position of the pin C1 leftwards increases the torque needed to pull the trigger L3 by overcoming the torque of the friction generated by the force with which the end 18 of the lever L2 presses against the surface 39 of the trigger L3.
Moreover, since the upper rear part of the ledge 19 is convex, the leftward displacement of the point of contact entails a clockwise angular displacement of the lever L3 so the angular displacement required for the trigger to release the shaft 30 also increases.
Let R be the force exerted by the shaft 30 on the wheel 14 and R1 the component applied to the lever L2, the resulting moment will be M1=R1*b1, where b1 is the lever arm consisting of the distance of the line of action of the force R1 from the axis of rotation of the pin C2.
The moment M1 is balanced by the moment M2=R2*b2, where R2 is the force applied by the end 18 of the lever L2 on the surface 39, and b2 is the corresponding lever arm with respect to the axis of the pin C2.
To make the trigger L3 turn, it is consequently necessary to overcome the torque M3=R3*b3=f*R2*b3, where f indicates the coefficient of friction between the elements 18 and 39, and b3 is the radius of curvature of the circular surface 39 concentric to the axis of the pin C3. In other words, the torque that the scuba diver needs to exert on the trigger to make it turn is M4=R4*b4, where R4 indicates the force applied by the scuba diver's finger on the front surface 51 of the trigger L3 and b4 indicates the arm of said force with respect to the axis of the pin C3.
Thus, R4=R1*f*b1*b3/(b2*b4), where the only variable is the arm b1, which increases when the hub 11 is shifted leftwards, as seen in the figure, i.e. towards the front end of the gun, when the threaded stem 10 is screwed into the threaded hole in the hub 11.
It is consequently possible to vary the force required to pull the trigger, between a minimum (
It should also be noted that, when the force needed to pull the trigger is increased, the angular displacement required for the trigger to succeed in releasing the shaft 30 also increases because the extent of the sliding action of the end 18 over the surface 39 before it reaches the edge 40 of the trigger L3 is also greater.
The effect of the above-mentioned adjustment is obviously maximized when the spear shafts associated with a given gun are used, but it also allows for different shafts to be used, even if their cavity 33 differs slightly in shape or position.
Various modifications and alterations to the present invention may be appreciated based on a review of this disclosure. These changes and additions are intended to be within the scope and spirit of the invention as defined by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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FI2006A000172 | Jul 2006 | IT | national |