The present invention relates to firearm cartridges, and more specifically to the flash hole design of a cartridge used in a modern firearm.
An ammunition cartridge typically consists of a brass or steel case having a main chamber filled with a propellant such as smokeless powder and a bullet seated in the front of the case. A recessed pocket is provided in a rear face of the case to house a primer. At least one flash hole is provided in the wall separating the primer pocket from the chamber containing the propellant. When the primer is detonated, hot gas passes through the flash hole(s) and into the chamber to ignite the propellant. There are two styles of cartridges. A “Boxer” cartridge has one central flash hole approximately 0.060″ to 0.090″ in diameter and a primer pocket approximately 0.175″ in diameter. A “Berdan” cartridge has two diametrically opposing flash holes approximately 0.050″ in diameter.
In manufacturing, the flash hole is typically drilled or punched in the primer pocket from outside the cartridge towards the interior. This manufacturing operation occasionally results in a burr on the inside edge of the flash hole. Competitive shooters remove the burr with a special drill called “flash hole uniformer” to counter bore the flash hole from the inside of the cartridge.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
The present invention constitutes an improvement in a firearm cartridge. The cartridge may have a conventional upper chamber adapted to house gunpowder and a bullet, a lower pocket adapted to house a primer, and a flash hole extending there between. The lower pocket has a ledge disposed generally perpendicularly to the flash hole. The improvement comprises providing a flash hole that is formed with a perimeter wall having a generally convex curvature adjacent to the ledge of the primer pocket.
In order to create a generally convex curvature in the perimeter wall of the flash hole, various manufacturing techniques might be used, each resulting is subtle differences in the precise shape of the perimeter wall, though all resulting in the same general benefit described by this invention.
The simplest way to form a convex curvature in the flash hole perimeter wall is to use a drill with a concave profile at the tip. However, a generally convex curvature wall could also be formed by a lathe or mill, by cutting a profile which is stepped, such that a series of small discreet steps combine to create a generally convex form of the flash hole. Similarly, if a CNC lathe is used, such that tool movement is continuous while the part is turning, a generally convex curvature in the flash hole perimeter wall would be formed by a helical path of a scallop cut caused by the tool tip radius. Similarly, as chamfering is a common operation to remove a bur from a machined edge, a convex curvature of the flash hole perimeter wall could be approximated by creating a series of multiple chamfer cuts, each increasingly angled.
In incompressible flow (or gas flow at subsonic speeds of less than about Ma 0.7, where gas can effectively be modeled as incompressible), a constriction in pipe diameter will yield an increase in velocity, since mass flow rate along the pipe is theoretically constant. However, where there is compressible, or supersonic flow, as obtained from the detonation of a high explosive primer, a sudden constriction in a conduit will cause a choking condition or resistance that limits the flow of ignition gas through the constriction. It is believed that the amount of such resistance depends upon the shape of the constriction, particularly the inlet of the constriction. An opening entrance that is perpendicular to the axis of the conduit will cause a flow loss that is greater than the flow loss through a chamfered inlet which, in turn, will cause flow loss that is greater than a rounded inlet constriction. As these losses are examined in the context of supersonic flow of ignition gas in a firearm cartridge, the flash hole may be seen as a supersonic convergent nozzle, where the negative effect of the change from a large diameter to a small diameter on fluid flow may be mitigated by the shape of the constriction.
In order to allow the greatest and fastest flow of gas from the primer chamber to the powder chamber, it is therefore desired that the flash hole create the least amount of back pressure possible. To this end, it is proposed that the generally perpendicular intersection of the flash hole perimeter wall 32 and the primer pocket upper ledge 30 illustrated in
Further, and depending on the gas parameters, other profiles which are not round might be utilized to advantage. Parabolic, elliptical, power series, Von Karmen, Haack, or many other shapes might be optimum. And again, any of these profiles might swing through a full 90 degrees, but might also only swing through a reduced angle. Further, any of these general profiles might be approximated by a series of smaller facets, including steps, or scallops, or progressive chamfers, or other finite steps as may be created depending on the cutting tool used to create the general profile. For instance, if the flash hole were cut on a CNC lathe using a cutter that had a small radius at the cutter tip, the general trumpet shaped profile of the flash hole would actually be made up of a series of overlapping scallops that followed a helical path to create the generally convex shape. Similarly, while the use of a single conical chamfer is known in the art to remove a bur or to soften a sharp edge, utilizing a series of two or more chamfers could create a series of ever steeper conic surfaces, such that the final profile approaches a trumpet shape, but is actually made up of multiple concentric conic surfaces.
As illustrated in
Not shown, but illustrated in concept in previous illustrations cited above are the various curves which could be used to create curved transition shoulders or walls, including but not limited to circular arcs, elliptical arcs, parabolic arcs, power series arcs, Von Karmen profile or Haack profile arcs, or other mathematically defined curves.
It is contemplated that the foregoing convex perimeter wall of the flash hole may be formed with a drill, or end mill, or by a single point cutter in a lathe. The tip of the tool could have a concave curved surface which corresponds to any of the profiles described above, such that the drill can be used to drill or mill, or otherwise cut the various flash hole profiles into a cartridge or into a flash nipple. Alternatively, the convex perimeter wall of the flash hole could be formed by tools that have other tip shapes, however the tool position is controlled during the cutting process such that a series of many small cuts results in multiple facets along the perimeter wall for the flash hole, and whose blended shape is substantially convex.
U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/858,219 filed Jul. 25, 2013, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/341,034 filed Jul. 25, 2015, are both hereby incorporated by reference herein as if fully set forth in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62166345 | May 2015 | US | |
61858219 | Jul 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14341034 | Jul 2014 | US |
Child | 15164379 | US |