Marksmanship is a foundational skill required of military personnel, enforcement personnel, and any civil servant entrusted with a firearm. Great emphasis is placed upon the acquisition and maintenance of marksmanship skill, especially for military and law enforcement personnel. A marksmanship instructor is a shooter's first and best resource for the acquisition and maintenance of this vital skill. The marksmanship instructor faces many demands upon his/her time and abilities. In modern military and law enforcement firing ranges, each instructor typically oversees multiple students. Time on the firing range and ammunition for training is limited and expensive. Any deficiencies in a particular shooter's performance that require a disproportionate amount of an instructor's time to diagnose and remediate takes instruction away from other trainees. Reshoots and retries consume both valuable time and ammunition. Furthermore, a shooter that cannot demonstrate proper marksmanship at the range quickly enough is in danger of being removed from the firing line and forced to repeat more basic training, incurring yet more expense.
The marksmanship instructor is tasked with teaching his/her students the fundamentals of marksmanship in the safest, quickest and most effective way possible. The Armed Services have identified several marksmanship fundamentals including aiming, breath control, trigger squeeze and steady position. If a shooter is not accurate, he/she is usually deficient in one or more of these fundamentals. However, the root cause of a shooter's poor marksmanship is not always readily apparent even to an experienced instructor. The difficulty and danger of close observation of the shooter at the live fire range, the small physical differences between acceptable and poor weapon handling, and the extremely transient nature of firing events force instructors to very often rely solely on the most heuristic measure of performance available to them: the fall of shot. A poor fall of shot, however, is only the symptom of poor marksmanship. The marksmanship instructor often cannot determine in which fundamental the shooter is lacking solely from their fall of shot. Therefore, marksmanship instructors need something to aid them in monitoring marksmanship fundamentals. Technology that can mitigate these inherent difficulties and expose the root causes of poor marksmanship will increase the marksmanship instructor's efficiency, effectiveness and analytic capability and is consequently of great value to both the instructor and the student.
The Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division (NAWCTSD) recently invented a system to provide a marksmanship instructor with a set of technological tools to allow him/her to more effectively and quickly diagnose and remediate poor shooting at the live fire range. This invention was granted U.S. Pat. No. 10,024,631 on Jul. 17, 2018 (This patent is herein incorporated by reference and is not admitted to be prior art). The invention, among other things, captures video of the sight picture without affecting the shooters view through the sight. The patented system captures aimpoint data through a Rifle Combat Optic currently used by the Marine Corp. However, Army and Law Enforcement trainees are provided primary marksmanship instruction over iron sights. Thus, there was a need for a device that is capable of capturing aimpoint data through an iron sight.
The present invention is directed to a method for providing a, with the needs of the method enumerated above and below.
The present invention is directed to a device to capture data and video through a weapon's iron sight during live fire, wherein the iron sight has a rear aperture assembly and is able to adjust iron sight elevation, the weapon having a line of sight. The device includes a camera, camera body, and a beamsplitter assembly. The camera body contains a printed circuit board assembly, image sensor, device controller and an adjustment arm. A camera body adjustment arm is mountable on the side of the iron sight assembly such that the camera body can be adjusted to the weapon line of sight in a horizontal/windage direction. The printed circuit board assembly includes orientation sensors, a shock sensor, an image sensor and a device controller. The beamsplitter assembly splits the light and images to the image sensor and to the shooter's eye without disrupting the shooter's view of a target. The image sensor captures video of the image sent from the beamsplitter assembly. The device controller collects data from all the sensors including the video from the image sensor and sends the data and video to a computer.
It is a feature of the invention to provide a device to capture data and video through a weapon's iron sight during live fire, wherein a shooter's view of the target is not disrupted, obstructed or modified. Furthermore, the device does not affect a shooter's aimpoint and allows normal elevation and windage adjustments.
It is a feature of the invention to provide a device to capture video and data through a weapon's iron sight during live fire, wherein the weapon is not modified and the device may be installed in seconds.
These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following description and appended claims, and accompanying drawings wherein:
The preferred embodiments of the present invention are illustrated by way of example below and in
As shown in
The camera body 200 may be attached to the rear aperture assembly 52 in a multitude of ways, as shown in
As shown in
In a typical iron sight assembly 50, in order to allow for adjustment in the vertical/elevation direction, the rear aperture assembly 52 is not rigidly attached to the iron sight body 51. Referring to
Shown in
When introducing elements of the present invention or the preferred embodiment(s) thereof, the articles “a,” “an,” “the,” and “said” are intended to mean there are one or more of the elements. The terms “comprising,” “including,” and “having” are intended to be inclusive and mean that there may be additional elements other than the listed elements.
Although the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain preferred embodiments thereof, other embodiments are possible. Therefore, the spirit and scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description of the preferred embodiment(s) contained herein.
The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States of America for governmental purposes without payment of any royalties thereon or therefor.