This invention relates to the sport of paintball. More specifically, it relates to equipment for playing the sport of paintball; namely, a feed elbow for connecting a paintball marker loader (i.e., a hopper) to a paintball marker.
The sport of paintball is played by two teams. A flag is located at each team's home base, which are located at opposite ends of the field. The object of the game is to “capture” the opposing team's flag before they capture yours. Players are armed with gas guns, that is, guns firing projectiles called paintballs under the force of compressed gas, called paintball markers (such sport gas guns are referred to herein interchangeably as “gas guns” or “markers”). If a player is hit with a paintball—a projectile filled or formed with a non-toxic “paint” fired by a marker of a player on the opposing team—the player that is hit is then eliminated from the game.
Projectiles such as paintballs are stored within a hopper (also referred to as a loader or magazine) that is connected to the marker. Paintballs travel from the hopper through at least one outlet passage into an inlet passage that leads to a breech of the paintball marker where they are fired toward a target. Because it is advantageous to hit as many opposing players as possible, hoppers typically hold a large quantity of paintballs, which feed into the marker (usually capable of automatic or semi-automatic fire). This process can cause paintballs to jam and sometimes break within the inlet or outlet passages or the breech. Further, because the sport of paintball is typically played outdoors on a field where players maneuver along the ground, dirt and debris frequently enter the breech, hopper, or feed passages. Because the game moves rapidly, there is little time for cleaning the marker; however, debris combined with damaged paintballs can severely damage a player's marker and severely hinder the player's experience if not cleaned.
Nevertheless, many paintball markers do not allow for easy and quick cleaning. In most conventional markers, the inlet passage through which paintballs move into the breech is stationary and is connected to a hopper outlet passage via threaded members. While this provides for a secure connection between the hopper and the inlet passage, it does not allow for easy cleaning of the breech because a player must completely remove (i.e., unscrew) the hopper outlet passage from the inlet passage to access the breech for cleaning.
Accordingly, there remains a need for a paintball marker component that maintains a secure connection between the hopper outlet passage and the inlet passage while allowing a player to quickly and easily clean the breech and feed passage.
The present invention provides an adapter for releasably connecting a hopper to a gas gun is provided. The adapter includes a body with a clamp ring securable to an outlet tube of the hopper. An inlet passage through the body of the adapter includes a clamp ring end in communication with the clamp ring and a breech end alignable with a breech opening of the gas gun. The adapter further includes a mounting element connected to the body. The mounting element includes an interior portion for receiving a segment of a rail system of the gas gun. A locking device is positioned adjacent the mounting element and is configured to releasably secure the mounting element to the rail system of the gas gun in a locked position.
The present invention further includes a method of releasably connecting a hopper to a gas gun. A clamp ring of an adapter is secured to an outlet tube of the hopper. A button end of a latch of the adapter is manually depressed, thereby configuring an interior portion of a mounting element of the adapter to receive a segment of a rail system of the gas gun. The adapter is slid along the rail system of the gas gun, and a breech end of an inlet passage of the adapter is substantially aligned with a breech opening of the gas gun. The button end of the latch of the adapter is then released, thereby securing the adapter to the rail system in a locked position, with the adapter breech end aligned with the breech opening of the gas gun.
The present invention also provides a method of releasing a hopper from a gas gun. A latch of an adapter which is releasably connecting the hopper to the paintball marker is actuated, thereby releasing the adapter from a rail system of the gas gun in an unlocked position. The adapter is slid along the rail system to disconnect a breech end of an inlet passage of the adapter from a breech opening of the gas gun.
The foregoing summary, as well as the following detailed description, will be readily understood in conjunction with the appended drawings which illustrate the preferred embodiments of the invention in the drawings.
Certain terminology is used in the following description for convenience only and is not considered limiting. Words such as “front,” “back,” “top,” and “bottom” designate directions in the drawings to which reference is made. Similarly, the terms “right,” “left,” “top,” “bottom,” “forward,” and “rearward” are from the perspective of a user operating a compressed gas gun. Rear or rearward means toward the user and forward means away from the user. This terminology includes the words specifically noted above, derivatives thereof, and words of similar import. Additionally, the terms “a” and “one” are defined as including one or more of the referenced item unless specifically noted. The phrase “at least one of” followed by a list of two or more items, such as A, B, or C, means any individual one of A, B, or C, as well as any combination thereof.
The preferred embodiments of the present invention are described below with reference to the drawing figures where like numerals represent like elements throughout.
Referring to
The locking device 24 of the feed elbow 10 further includes a housing 36 in communication with the mounting element 20 including a substantially longitudinal axis A (represented only in
The housing 36 further includes a channel (not shown) extending longitudinally along an internal surface of the housing 36 for receiving the locking element 50 of the latch 44.
A pair of guide members 56 extends within the interior portion 22 of the mounting element 20 of the feed elbow 10. The guide members 56 complement the shape of the interior portion 22 of the mounting element 20 and help secure the feed elbow 10 to the rail system 66 of the paintball marker 60 in the locked position, and help slide the feed elbow 10 along the rail system 66 in the unlocked position.
As illustrated in
The spring 42 is biased to maintain the latch 44 toward the open end 40 of the housing 36, thereby maintaining the button end 48 of the latch 44 extending from the housing 36 adjacent the open end 40 and the locking element 50 disposed within the aperture 58 of the mounting element 20 (as illustrated in
Manual depression of the button end 48 of the latch 44 moves the latch 44 toward the closed end 38 of the housing 36 which overcomes the spring bias and compresses the spring 42 toward closed end 38 of the housing 36. Such movement of the latch 44 causes the locking element 50 of the latch 44 to slide from the aperture 58 of the mounting element 20 into the channel (not shown) of the housing 36 to release the mounting element 20 from the rail system 66 of the paintball marker 60 to an unlocked position. More specifically, the locking element 50 is released from between the rails 68 of the rail system 66 of the paintball marker 60 to release the mounting element 20 to the unlocked position. The unlocked position is that in which the user can access the components for cleaning, etc.
While keeping the button end 36 depressed, the user slides the feed elbow 10 along the rail system 66 of the paint marker 60 either forward or rearward of the breech opening 62. A rearward position is represented in
After a user cleans the breech 64, the breech opening 62, and/or the inlet passage 14, the user (while keeping the button end 36 depressed) simply slides the feed elbow 10 back into the firing position, i.e., until the inlet passage 14 is substantially aligned with the breech opening 64 as illustrated in
The feed elbow 10 is preferably made from polymeric material, for example, polyurethane, nylon, or acrylonitrile butadiene styrene. The present invention, however, is not limited to such material, and the feed elbow 10 may be made from various plastics, resin, metal, or any other material suitable for performing the above-stated functions.
The rail system 66 of the paintball marker 60 may be of the Picatinny-type, the Weaver-type, or any other type that provides an adequate mounting platform for the feed elbow 10 (and hence, the hopper 70) of the present invention.
The feed elbow 10 of the present invention allows a user to quickly and easily clean the breech 64 without having to disassemble the unit. Thus, the present invention also allows a user to quickly return to firing the paint marker 60 at opposing players after cleaning. The feed elbow 10 of the present invention is adaptable for right or left-handed users.
While the preferred embodiments of the invention have been described in detail above, the invention is not limited to the specific embodiments described which should be considered as merely exemplary. Further modifications and extensions of the present invention may be developed and all such modifications are deemed to be within the scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/696,920, filed Jul. 6, 2005, which is incorporated herein by reference as if fully set forth.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60696920 | Jul 2005 | US |