The invention relates to a device for removing cartridge cases stuck in a die in accordance with claim 1.
Sports shooters and hunters often load empty cartridge cases, which brings not only financial benefits but also better results than factory-loaded ammunition. For reconditioning empty cartridge cases, a trimmer calibration device is already known from DE 10 2013 020 748 B3 which is used to process the interior and exterior dimensions of cartridge cases in a die body by means of a milling machine, which is also known as trimming. Firing a cartridge case usually leads to an increase in its diameter along its entire length, as well to a linear expansion of the cartridge case.
A reloading press for cartridge cases is known from DE 400 83 82 C2. DE 10 2004 04 64 62 A1 describes a combined setting and trimming die for reloading devices for cartridge cases. Reloading empty cartridge cases is also known from U.S. Pat. No. 3,204,518 A and U.S. Pat. No. 2,571,272 A.
The problem, however, that arises over and over again in all these devices, is that the cases are stuck in the calibrated die and can only be removed forcibly or not at all, wherein the die may be damaged and/or become unusable. This can cause great effort and trouble as well as added costs.
In general, cartridge cases to be filled should be calibrated by a die before reloading. As already mentioned, stuck cartridge cases are a major problem if they have to be removed from the calibrating tool, i.e. the die.
In particular, there is a risk of the cartridge case being deformed to a different dimension, wherein it is very difficult to remove the stuck cartridge case, in particular when the upper edge of the cartridge case is damaged. This may be caused by material fatigue after repeated reloading of the cartridges, or by an inferior quality of the material, a too-soft brass alloy or improper use. Even if the edge of the cartridge is not damaged, it is often impossible to remove the cartridge from the die.
Removing a cartridge stuck in a die by the known devices often fails in practice. The reasons for this are as follows:
The force to remove a stuck cartridge from the die exceeds the load capacity of the devices used, which usually ends up with the fixing screw being torn out of the thread of the bottom of the cartridge. The effort to remove said stuck cartridge is considerable and often causes the polished inner surface of the die to be damaged so that the die can no longer be used or only to a limited extent.
The salvage of dies according to the current state of technology is uncertain, and often fails due to the said reasons. After an unsuccessful attempt, it is very work-intensive to remove the cartridge from the tool, and the expensive die may end up being damaged, wherein it is often no longer suitable for further use, because the inside tolerances have changed. The calibration tolerances of a cartridge are extraordinarily small which has two fundamental reasons:
1. Safety of the rifle/pistol/revolver used and thus the safety of the persons operating this equipment.
2. The accuracy of the bullets which in many ways is also an absolutely necessary safety factor.
The task of the invention is, therefore, to create a device for safely removing cartridge cases stuck in a die without the die being damaged.
This task is solved by the characteristics stated in claim 1. Advantageous embodiments and further embodiments of the invention can be taken from the sub-claims.
The basic concept of the invention is to arrange a support plate and a lifting plate with a certain distance between them, wherein a die is screwed into the support plate to accommodate the stuck cartridge case to be processed. The die can be positioned against this plate by a male thread and, optionally, be fixed additionally by a lock nut. The lifting plate and the support plate can be moved further away from one another by drive members. Such drive members can be of the manual or electrical-automated kind. To move the lifting plate and the support plate further away from one another, preferred drive members are jack screws being screwed into the support plate and thus pushing the lifting plate away from the support plate. The lifting plate is provided with a pulling element with retaining members holding the cartridge case to be removed from the die on the lifting plate. If the lifting plate is now moved away from the support plate by means of the drive members, the die held onto the support plate also moves away from the cartridge case held on the lifting plate. The lifting plate thus has a passive lifting function.
The pulling element with the retaining members may comprise a thread as retaining member which is screwed into a case bottom of the cartridge case. In this way, the pulling element holds the cartridge case on the lifting plate and supports it there.
If the drive members described above comprise jack screws, the two jack screws can be screwed evenly to lift the lifting plate, wherein the lifting plate moves away from the support plate and pulls out the cartridge case from the die via the traction bolt in the case bottom. The die itself is retained on the support plate as described above. In this way, the pulling element holding the cartridge case is functionally released, so that the force can be transmitted to the case bottom without interruption and in an optimum way. Any tiny defects in the bore hole, such as an inclined bore hole, as well as material defects or quality problems play only a subordinate role. Said device thus protects the interior and exterior of the die. The support plate for retaining the die may be made of simple and inexpensive material.
An alternative to the above mentioned jack screws as drive members would be, for example, to separate the support plate and the lifting plate simply by means of a vice. Alternatively, the support plate could also be held in a vice, wherein the lifting plate and the support plate are pushed apart with the said jack screws.
According to another embodiment of the invention, the lifting plate and the support plate can be positioned relative to each other by means of guide pillars, so that the plates cannot be twisted against each other and the handling of the die saver in the fixed position of the plates is facilitated. The lifting plate is movable along the guide pillars relative to the support plate. It should further be noted that the screws for adjusting the distance between support plate and lifting plate may also be wing screws, so that no tool is necessary to operate the device.
According to an aspect of the invention, a device for pulling a cartridge case in a pulling direction out of an axial bore of a die, comprising outside a male thread for holding the die in a reloading press as seen from the axial bore, comprises a support plate for holding the die, with its axial bore aligned in the pulling direction and secured against movement in the pulling direction in a die bore, a lifting plate as seen in the pulling direction arranged at a distance before the support plate, on which a pulling element is arranged with retaining members aligned against the pulling direction, wherein the retaining members are executed to hold the cartridge case on an end of the pulling element opposite the lifting plate, and drive members to separate the support plate and the lifting plate in and/or against the pulling direction.
In one embodiment of the specified device, the retaining members may comprise a thread which can be screwed into the cartridge case.
In an additional embodiment of the specified device, the pulling element may comprise a screw with a screw head which is screwed into the lifting plate against the pulling direction.
In one special embodiment of the specified device, the drive members may comprise a jack screw screwed through the support plate in the pulling direction which is supported on the lifting plate, wherein the lifting plate may be moved in the pulling direction by screwing the jack screw into the support plate.
In another embodiment of the specified device, the drive members seen from the jack screw opposite the die may comprise another jack screw, screwed through the support plate in the pulling direction. Said jack screw is supported on the lifting plate, wherein the lifting plate is movable in the pulling direction by screwing the both jack screws into the support plate.
In another embodiment of the specified device, a distance between both jack screws and the die bore may be equal as seen at a right angle to the pulling direction.
In another embodiment of the specified device, at least one of the jack screws or all jack screws may be wing screws. Alternatively or additionally, the jack screw or also all jack screws may be aligned in the guiding direction.
In another embodiment of the specified device, the two jack screws and the die bore may be arranged in a plan view on the support plate and the lifting plate in the pulling direction along a straight line.
In an additional embodiment, the specified device may comprise a locknut which can be screwed on the male thread of the die to fix the die on the support plate. For this purpose, the locknut may be arranged optionally on a side of the support plate away from the lifting plate.
In an additional embodiment of the specified device, the support plate and the lifting plate may be held against each other while being guided in the pulling direction.
In one preferred embodiment of the specified device, the guiding element may comprise at least one linear rail, on which the lifting plate and the support plate are held while remaining movable relative to one another. In a particularly preferred embodiment, the guiding element may comprise at least four linear rails which are arranged symmetrically to the centre of the die bore. For this purpose, at least one linear rail may be attached to the support plate or the lifting plate.
The invention is described in more detail in the following using embodiments in combination with the drawing. It shows:
The same reference signs in the individual figures refer to the same parts and will only be described once.
The die 6 comprises in a manner known per se a central axial bore, into which a cartridge case 4 may be pressed for trimming and calibration purposes. If the cartridge case 4, however, is stuck in the central bore and cannot be removed easily, the die 6 with the cartridge case 4 stuck in it is useless. Usually, the bottom 8 of the cartridge case 6 protrudes from the die 6, so that the bottom 8 of the die 6 sticks out. This is where the device 2 described in the following fulfils its purpose of saving such a die 6 by pulling out the cartridge case 4 stuck in it in a pulling direction 10.
The device 2 comprises a support plate 12 which is arranged perpendicularly to the pulling direction 10 as well as a lifting plate 14 which is arranged perpendicularly to the pulling direction 10, both being arranged in relation to each other at a specified plate distance 16, as seen in the pulling direction 10.
The support plate 12 comprises a die bore 18 running in the pulling direction 10 with a female thread which is not shown in the figures, into which the die 6 can be screwed using a male thread 20 executed on the die 6 in a manner known per se. The die 6 is thus screwed into the support plate 12 with the bottom 8 of the cartridge case 4 pointing to the lifting plate 14. The figures show the die 6 screwed-in in accordance with this instruction.
The lifting plate 14 comprises a lag screw bore 22 running in the pulling direction 10 with a female thread which is also not depicted in the figures. A lag screw 24 arranged concentrically to the male thread 20 of the die 6 is screwed into this lag screw bore 22 against the pulling direction 10. An end of the lag screw 24 as seen against the pulling direction 10 is additionally screwed into the bottom 8 of the cartridge case 4. For this purpose, if the lag screw 10 is not executed as an appropriate tapping screw, a corresponding bottom bore 26 may be formed in advance or cut-in through the bottom 8 of the cartridge case 4. The lag screw 24 is thus used as pulling element to pull out the cartridge case 24, wherein the pulling element comprises a retaining member in the form of a screw thread. An alternative pulling element may be a gripper, for example.
In order to screw the lag screw 22 to the lifting plate 14, the lag screw may be fitted with a screw head 28 at the end opposite the cartridge case 4. Similarly, to increase the mechanical stability of the die 6, a locknut 30 may be screwed onto the male thread 20 of the die 6 and tightened against the support plate 12.
In the manner described above, the support plate 12 and the lifting plate 14 are held mechanically against each other via the die 6 and the cartridge case 4 held therein. In order to pull the cartridge case 4 out of the die 6 in the pulling direction 10, the support plate 12 and the lifting plate 14 must only be driven apart in or against the pulling direction 10, which could be realised with suitable drive members such as a vice which is not shown.
The present embodiment comprises the drive members with a first jack screw 32 and a second jack screw 34 which are screwed through the support plate 12 in the pulling direction 10 through a first jack screw bore 36 and a second jack screw bore 38 respectively. The two jack screws 32, 34 are arranged symmetrically to each other with the centre of the die bore 18 as the centre of symmetry.
For this purpose, the jack screws 32, 34 are screwed into the support plate 12 until a front end as seen in the pulling direction 10 touches the lifting plate 14. In this condition, the lifting plate 14 may be separated from the support plate 12 by continuing to screw the jack screws 32, 34 into the jack screw bores 36, 38, so that the above mentioned distance 16 of the plates increases, and the cartridge case 4 is thus pulled out of the die 6. Preferably, wing screws should be used as jack screws 32, 34, because they can be operated without a wrench. This, however, is not necessary. The jack screws 32, 34 may also comprise screw heads 35 which are moved using a suitable wrench.
When using the device 2 for pulling the cartridge case 4 out of the die 6, the support plate 12 should, as far as possible, always be parallel to the lifting plate 14 to prevent all screws acting in the device 2 from being tilted. This is guaranteed, on the one hand, by the said symmetrical arrangement of the jack screws 32, 34, so that the jack screws 32, 34 and the die bore 18 are arranged on a mutual line in the pulling direction 10 in a plan view of the device 2. The abovementioned locknut 30 is also an alternative or additional way of avoiding tilting.
In the device 2 in accordance with
In the device 2 of the
The guide pillars 40 may be fixed to the support plate 12 or the lifting plate 14, while the corresponding other lifting plate 14 or support plate 12 may slide along the guide pillars 40. Although not shown in the
The device 2 may be used in practice, for example, as follows:
First, the bottom bore 26 is drilled into the bottom 8 of the cartridge case 4 stuck in the die 6. A thread is then cut into the bottom bore 26 of the cartridge case 4 using a tap. The lag screw 24 is then guided through the lag screw bore 22 of the lifting plate 14 and screwed into the cut thread of the bottom bore 26 of the cartridge case 4. The two jack screws 32, 34 are then screwed into the corresponding jack screw bores 36, either on the support plate 12 in the
In short, the invention represents a simply opportunity to remove cartridge cases which are stuck in a die.
For the expert it is obvious that modifications can easily be made to the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2017 106 600.4 | Mar 2017 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2018/057823 | 3/27/2018 | WO | 00 |