This invention concerns tools for forced entry of a building or a vehicle, primarily for forcing open doors and windows, the tools typically being used by law enforcement and military tactical teams, search and rescue teams and fire fighters.
Breaching tools are known, including those produced by Sweden Entry Tools of Malmo, Sweden. The tools are usually at least several feet long and are heavy enough to act as levers to pry open a door or other entry using a short head or prying end which is generally at right angles to the length of the tool. Sometimes the tools have been formed into a chisel shape at the other end, the end opposite the tool head, with some curvature to the chisel, also for prying purposes.
The breaching tool of the invention has a principal purpose of quickly and efficiently breaking through windows of buildings and automobiles and safely clearing glass fragments for entry. Another purpose is breaching of doors, primarily wood and plastic doors.
The tool has a tail end with a claw for pulling nails and other fasteners, and a head end that includes a sledge hammer at a lower side and “rake” at an upper side configured to scrape out broken glass from a frame of a car or building window. The rake element, which preferably comprises a series of teeth set in a curve or arc of about 90°, has a pointed end that can be used to penetrate doors.
In one aspect of the invention the subject breaching tool forms part of a kit with another breaching tool marketed by the assignee of this invention.
It is among the objects of the invention to provide a tool for efficient breaching of building and vehicle windows in emergency situations, and also allowing breaching of doors. These and other objects, advantages and features of the invention will be apparent from the following description of a preferred embodiment, considered along with the accompanying drawings.
The tool 10 illustrated in
As shown in the drawings, the tool 10 may be about 0.7 meter in length, or about 28 inches (or a range of about 26 to 29 inches), and includes a chisel tail end 12 which is curved as shown, preferably with a claw 14 for pulling nails and other fasteners. The forked tip providing the claw 14 does not interfere with the use of the chisel end 12 for other functions such as entering and prying via a narrow opening or slot, such as at the edge of a window or door, or breaking a wood frame or otherwise prying using the chisel. A tool shaft or handle 15 is secured to the tail end 12 (as by welding) and preferably has a knurled gripping surface as indicated.
At the head end of the tool, secured to the handle 15, is a sledge head or sledge hammer 16, shown in a position which can be considered the bottom side of the tool. The sledge hammer can be used to breach some doors, break glass from windows of dwellings, other buildings or vehicles, or to drive other breaching tools into position for breaching a door. The weight of the tool may be about 6.5 pounds, or in a range of about 5 to 7.5 pounds, and a large proportion of this weight is in the sledge head 16.
Also at the head end of the tool is a “rake” 18, preferably in the configuration shown. The rake has a pointed end 20 and a series of teeth 22, preferably in an internally curving or arcuate array as shown. The front or exterior surface of the rake 18 may be convexly curved as shown.
The tool 10 makes quick work of breaching windows or glass doors. The glass can be smashed using the sledge 16 or the pointed end 20 of the rake 18, or simply by pushing the head end of the tool through the glass. The teeth 22 of the rake allow for quickly cleaning out broken glass along the edges of the window or door, including laminated car or truck window glass or hardened window glass. The end 20 of the rake also helps penetrate plastic and wooden doors and some metal doors. With the upper end of the rake extending approximately at a 90° angle from the length of the tool, this provides a perpendicular striking force from the grip or shaft 15, thus maximizing power when striking the surface of a window.
As seen in the drawings, the tool 10 can have formed on the handle 15 loop eyes 24 for attachment of a sling to carry the tool.
The handle 15, sledge hammer 16 and rake 18 can be efficiently secured together by a hole (not clearly shown) in the back side of the sledge hammer into which the handle end is fitted, and the hammer being an upper side 26 with a slot 28 into which the rake is fitted. The handle is welded to the sledge hammer and the rake, and the rake is also welded to the sledge hammer.
The described tool can make up a kit with another breaching tool of the assignee of this invention, preferably the second embodiment described in copending provisional application Ser. No. 61/402,741, incorporated herein by reference. Together with the tool of the copending application, which can be about five pounds in weight, the tool of the invention makes up a complete door breaching kit, light and small enough to carry in a patrol car. The kit consisting of the two tools can be used for virtually any kind of door including ingoing and outgoing wooden and steel doors. In addition, the break and rake function provided by the tool 10 allows fast and easy penetration of windows of cars and buildings with cleaning of edge glass. The kit provides for fast and efficient entry of almost all doors and windows.
Dimensions of a preferred embodiment of the tool 10 are as follows:
The above described preferred embodiments are intended to illustrate the principles of the invention, but not to limit its scope. Other embodiments and variations to these preferred embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art and may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.
This application claims benefit from provisional patent application No. 61/402,742, filed Sep. 3, 2010.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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61402742 | Sep 2010 | US |