The present disclosure relates to a device for removing material such as carbon, lead, metals, and plastic contaminants from the bore of a firearm, and more particularly relates to a projectile having a fibrous cup filled with a dense, viscous paste or granulated material, wherein the material within the cup deforms in a radial, outward direction when the projectile is fired down the bore.
The statements in this section merely provide background information related to the present disclosure. Accordingly, such statements are not intended to constitute an admission of prior art.
Cleaning the bore of a firearm after use is generally required to prevent possible damage due to corrosion to the bore. It is often true that the task of manually cleaning a firearm is most undesirable when the condition of the firearm is most suitable for bore damage; for example at the end of an outing under inclement conditions. The task of manually cleaning the bore of a firearm is time consuming and may require disassembly of the firearm. Therefore there is a need among users of firearms for a convenient, quick, easily used and effective device for cleaning a bore of moisture, powder residue and foreign material which contributes to the corrosion within a bore until a more complete manual cleaning may be accomplished.
Embodiments are known in the art to propel material down the barrel of a firearm to clean the bore of the gun. These devices, however, rely on compacted wadding to sufficiently wipe down the inner wall of the bore as they travel therethrough. To fit within a shell capable of being fired from a particular firearm inherently requires that the wadding and other materials be compacted to be smaller in rough diameter than the bore they are intended to clean. This results in an ineffectively cleaning of the bore as portions of the bore are not wiped by the intended cleaning components.
Further, these devices also generally comprise stacked layers of wadding and other materials which are either pre-moistened with a cleaner or lubricant which reduces the shelf life of product.
An apparatus is disclosed including a bore cleaning device configured to clean a bore of a firearm. The device includes a propellant providing a force to push the projectile down the bore of the firearm, a fibrous cup, a dense material within the fibrous cup, and a frame including a bore forward disk configured to press against a bottom surface of the fibrous cup. The dense material includes one of a dense granulated material and a dense, viscous paste. The dense material is configured to deform and press radially outwardly against the cup as the propellant provides propelling force to the dense material.
One or more embodiments will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
An improved bore cleaning device is disclosed, including a frame and a fibrous cup situated in a bore-forward position to the frame, wherein the fibrous cup is filled with one of a dense granular material and a dense, viscous paste/viscous liquid material or both a dense granular material and viscous paste or liquid. In a bore-rearward direction to the frame, a propellant, once ignited, provides a sudden and dramatic propelling force to the frame, which, in turn, provides a similarly dramatic force to the cup located at the bore-forward position. The dense material in the cup, being one of a dense granular material and/or a dense viscous material, upon receiving the sudden and dramatic force, tends to flatten out. As a result of the initially stationary dense material tending to stay at rest, the accelerative force applied to the dense material causes the dense material to flow in a bore-rearward direction, thereby providing a radially outward force, pushing the fibrous material into intimate contact with the inside surfaces of the bore. This intimate contact between the fibrous cup and the inside surfaces of the bore, as the cup is being forced down the bore, wipes the inside surface of the bore, with contaminants being loosened and swept along the bore with the fibrous cup.
The fibrous cup can be used in isolation of other cleaning surfaces on the projectile, with the cup being the only cleaning surface in contact with the inside of the bore. In another embodiment, the frame can include additional cleaning features that continue to wipe the inside surface of the bore as the frame follows the fibrous cup down the bore. In one exemplary construction, the frame can include a disk at one terminal end of the frame, another disk at the other terminal end of the frame, and legs connected between the disks, wherein the legs are configured to bend when a propulsive force is applied to one of the disks. By wrapping or placing cleaning materials, such as scrubbing or wiping materials, around the legs that are configured to bend, the bending legs can include an outward/radial displacement that forces intimate contact between the cleaning materials and the inside of the bore.
Cleaning materials that can be wrapped or placed around the bending legs can include disk or cylinder shaped cleaning materials. One exemplary scrubbing material can be a fibrous pad rigid enough to hold its form when no propelling force is acting upon the scrubbing material and yet pliable enough to expand outwardly/radially by an exemplary 1-8 mm when acted upon by the bending legs.
A disk shaped or cylindrically shaped scrubbing pad can have a hole in the center for the bending legs, in an unbent or resting state, to be inserted therethrough in an assembly process for the projectile. In another embodiment, the scrubbing pad can additionally include a longitudinal slot, so that the scrubbing pad can be fitted through the slot over the bending legs. In one embodiment, the scrubbing material can be formed with an outer shape of a cylinder. In one embodiment, wherein the projectile is configured for use in a firearm having a rifled barrel, a plurality of longitudinal slots or notches can be cut in the outer surface of the cylindrical shape. These outwardly facing slots or notches form small corners in the material, permitting the scrubbing pad material in the small corners to penetrate into recesses in the rifling that would normally not be reached by a cylindrical pad without the notches or slots.
Referring now to the drawings, wherein the showings are for the purpose of illustrating certain exemplary embodiments only and not for the purpose of limiting the same,
Internal components of bore cleaning device 10 are illustrated with dotted lines. Shell case end portion 22 includes material of shell case 20 pressed into an end similar to ends of ammunition rounds, the end portion 22 holding the components of device 10 within shell case 20 until the device is fired or activated within a firearm. Components of the device include fibrous cup 30, frame 40, cleaning materials 50, 52, 54, 60, 62, and 64, and propellant 70. Frame 40 includes a first disk 42, a second disk 44 longitudinally containing the cleaning materials therebetween.
Fibrous cup 30 is a cup constructed of fibrous material. The material can include fibrous paper, recycled material, high temperature resistant material (capable of withstanding excess of 400 degrees F. or 200 degrees C.) and/or a durable/flexible tapered cup. The material can be selected to avoid condensation within the device. Cup 30 is filled with a dense granular and/or dense viscous material. Exemplary dense materials can include but are not limited to lead, zinc, iron, copper, colloidal suspensions, and metallic or ceramic pastes. Dense materials useful for the disclosed device ideally deforms as the device 10 transitions from an unfired state in the chamber of a firearm to a fired state speeding down the bore of the firearm. This deformation is created by the inertial forces inherent to the dense material. The dense material needs to deform in a rearward bore direction in relation to the cup, such that the deforming material pushes in a radially outward direction, pushing the fibrous cup against the inner surface of the bore of the firearm. This radially outward force against the cup forces the fibrous material of the cup to create intimate contact with the bore, such that the fibrous material scrubs and loosens debris from the inner surface of the bore.
Cup 30 of
Device 10 can include a rigid frame that is primarily configured to transfer force from expanding propellant 70 to cup 30. In the embodiment of
Frames for the present device can be constructed of many different materials, including but not limited to polyethylene and other common plastics.
The disclosure has described certain embodiments and modifications of those embodiments. Further modifications and alterations may occur to others upon reading and understanding the specification. Therefore, it is intended that the disclosure not be limited to the particular embodiment(s) disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this disclosure, but that the disclosure will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180120070 A1 | May 2018 | US |