NOT APPLICABLE
NOT APPLICABLE
NOT APPLICABLE
Live firing is the best way to practice drawing and firing a weapon. The practice process builds muscle memory, and helps the shooter develop proper techniques of delivery and complete weapon control. There are several negatives of this type of practice. Using ammunition is an ongoing expense, and measures have to be taken to practice with safety. This could mean traveling to a firing range, providing safety equipment for the shooter and possibly others, and allotting special time in the schedule for the practice session.
Dry fire practice is a good substitute for live fire practice. Dry firing is another process of building muscle memory whereby a firearm, especially a pistol, is drawn, aimed, and fired without using live ammunition. This enables the practice of firing a weapon to proceed smoothly and accurately without all of the said negatives of live fire practice. Because no live ammunition is used, there is no ongoing expense, there is no need to use safety equipment, a special shooting environment is not necessary, and practicing can be accomplished in much less time.
Dry firing also allows the shooter to practice in the actual environment where the weapon may need to be used for protection such as in the home. With complete safety, actual shooting scenarios can be practiced in and around the home.
Practicing at the range can also be improved. When live fire is practiced at the range, the novice shooter usually has to spend a significant amount of time and expend a lot of ammunition getting accustomed to the report and recoil of the weapon. Before live practice begins, some dry fire practicing can be done. This gets the novice shooter accustomed to the trigger feel before having to deal with the recoil and the report of live firing.
A major negative factor occurs with most methods of dry firing because when a semi-automatic weapon is live fired, it resets its firing pin and is ready to be fired again until the magazine is empty. The shooter's hands remain in the firing position, and just the trigger finger and the trigger are employed. With normal dry fire practice, after the first activation of the trigger releasing the firing pin, the shooter must remove a hand from the weapon and ratchet the slide back in order to reset the firing pin. The shooter can then let the trigger return the to its unfired position. The weapon is then ready for another trigger activation. This must be done each time a shot is simulated. Doing this teaches improper muscle memory because it is not at all what happens during actual live fire.
Another negative for standard dry fire practice is that there is concern as to wear and tear on the constant releasing of a weapon's firing pin without it having the cushioning effect of the firing pin striking a round of ammunition.
There are some devices or systems that aid in dry fire practice, but none of the patented devices or systems address the “hands-free” trigger reset problem or the firing pin use problem.
Some patented training systems incorporate computer graphics into the training scenario. Other patents address the duplication of a weapon's recoil, laser marking of “shots”, projecting images onto a screen, etc.
Here are a few examples of weapon training patents:
Negative qualities of these devices or systems are that they are either user intensive and/or expensive to purchase, but most significantly they do not allow a shooter to use a fully functioning weapon that he may already own. There is also a learning curve or training necessary to use these systems, but most of all, none of the patented devices or systems address the “hands-free” trigger reset problem and the possible firing pin damage problem of normal dry fire practice.
There is therefore a need for a dry fire training device that uses a fully functioning weapon and allows for precise muscle memory training, is simple to operate, prevents the firing pin of the fully functioning weapon from being damaged, and provides for safe on-site home training. All references to this device are for use in a fully functioning weapon, not a practice weapon.
The invention that is to be described accomplishes the most important aspects of dry fire training: no live ammunition is used providing safety and no on going expense, convenience of practicing in the home environment where the protective, fully functioning weapon would most likely be used, no involved disassembling and reassembling of any of the fully functional weapon's components, the realistic feel of the trigger during the firing process and the trigger reset, precise muscle memory training using only the trigger finger motion, and does not negatively affect the fully functional weapon's firing pin. This invention also helps the novice shooter train with his weapon before he has to deal with the recoil and the report of firing live ammunition. This invention is simple to use, provides realistic feel of the trigger operation, produces a sound that simulates the release of the weapon's firing pin, and does not require any alterations to the fully functional weapon such as disassembling and reassembling of any parts of the weapon. No previously patented device attempts to solve these problems of “hands-free” trigger reset or possible firing pin damage with a fully functional weapon. Neither do they address these problems of dry fire practice by addressing these situations through the weapon's magazine compartment. This invention simply slides into the magazine compartment in the weapon's handle, and practice can begin. It requires no alteration to the weapon before or after practice. This new device functions completely independent of the weapon's firing pin.
An additional point of safety is that the base plate, which is always visible to the shooter and trainer, is painted a bright orange color to identify the safety of device from a magazine that could contain live ammunition. There is no way that this device can mechanically accommodate any live ammunition.
I. The assembled device has been activated by the weapon's trigger mechanism at the upper end of lever 5. The lever 5 has been moved back, the compression spring 7 has been compressed between the lever 5 and the back of the magazine case 1, and the detent reed 8 has been moved through its activation point against the set screw 3 providing the tactile response and the audible response thus simulating the release of the weapon's firing pin. The slotted base plate 4 is shown at the lower end of the magazine case 1.
II. The assembled device has had its lifter 11 engaged so that the lever 5 has been moved back to allow the lever 5 to be positioned behind the weapon's trigger mechanism providing for ease of engagement into the weapon's magazine's compartment. After the lever 5 is in its working position, the shooter pulls the lifter 11 back to its resting position. If desired, a spring could be added to the device which would insure that the lifter 11 would return back to its resting position.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4657511 | Saunier | Apr 1987 | A |
4725235 | Osborne | Feb 1988 | A |
4737106 | Laciny | Apr 1988 | A |
4804325 | Willits | Feb 1989 | A |
5451162 | Parsons | Sep 1995 | A |
5993215 | Kotsiopoulos | Nov 1999 | A |
20110047847 | Hughes et al. | Mar 2011 | A1 |
20110306020 | Peterson | Dec 2011 | A1 |
Entry |
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“SIRT Training Pistol,” GlockStore, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4zMv9syZY44, Aug. 23, 2010. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20140193778 A1 | Jul 2014 | US |