The present disclosure relates generally to firearms and, in particular, to extraction systems for removing a cartridge from the firing chamber of the firearm.
Actions for modern firearms generally are designed to operate within tight tolerances within a receiver of their firearm while providing both quick response and reliable operation over a high number of firing cycles. Such actions generally include a breech bolt with a number of locking lugs formed into the bolt head thereof. For example, in M16/AR15/M4 type firearms, the bolt head can include seven lugs arranged in an eight-lug spacing interval, with the space for the missing lug generally being occupied by a pivoting claw-type extractor device.
An eight-lug spacing interval has been found to be advantageous for rapid-fire, auto-loading firearms in that the amount of bolt rotation needed to lock the action is reduced when compared to bolts with breech configurations having fewer lugs. Such reduced amount of rotation can result in shorter firing cycles and quicker action operation. In the typical bolt configuration for an M16/AR 15 auto-loading rifle, the eighth lug is generally removed to allow sufficient space for a pivoting extractor device to be used, fitting within a slot machined along the outer surface of the bolt and pivotable through the gap created by the removal of the lug. However, in addition to reducing the bolt head to seven lugs for locking the bolt into the barrel extension, removing a lug and forming the gap that accommodates the extractor can affect the structural integrity of the bolt head, and can result in an unbalanced locking force. In addition, the extra manufacturing steps involved in machining the extractor slot and machining/manufacturing the pivoting claw-type extractor device adds expense to the firearm.
Accordingly, there exists a need for a simplified extraction system that is addresses the foregoing and other related and unrelated problems in the art.
Generally described herein, the present disclosure relates to a simplified extraction system for removing a cartridge from the firing chamber of a firearm. The extraction system is mounted within the bolt head of the bolt of the firearm, the bolt head having a bolt face with a plurality of lugs formed about the bolt face and a cartridge recess extending axially inward from the bolt face. An extractor aperture will be formed along the bolt head extending radially outward through a selected one of the lugs, and a spring aperture will be extended axially through the selected lug and will intersect with the extractor aperture. The extraction system also includes an extractor that is slidably mounted within the extractor aperture and has a hook engaging portion for coupling with the cartridge. An extractor spring having an anchor portion received about the outer surface of the bolt and a cantilever spring portion inserted through the spring aperture and into a transverse hole in the extractor resiliently biases the extractor toward the cartridge recess and engagement with the cartridge therein.
The present disclosure also includes a bolt having an extractor configured for extracting a cartridge from a chamber of a firearm. The bolt includes a bolt head having a plurality of lugs proximate a bolt face, a cartridge recess extending axially inward from the bolt face, and an extractor aperture extending radially outward from the cartridge recess through a selected one of the plurality of lugs. The extractor is slidably mounted within the extractor aperture and is biased toward the cartridge recess, and includes a hook portion formed at its proximal end that projects into the cartridge recess and is configured to couple with a cartridge positioned within the cartridge recess. In addition, one or more ejectors can be received in the bolt and bolt head along an opposite side thereof from the extractor.
The techniques and structures employed to improve over the drawbacks of the prior devices and accomplish the advantages described herein will become apparent from the following detailed description of representative embodiments and the appended drawings and claims.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate and understand that, according to common practice, various features of the drawings discussed below are not necessarily drawn to scale, and that dimensions of various features and elements of the drawings may be expanded or reduced to more clearly illustrate the embodiments of the present invention described herein.
It is to be understood that the invention of the present disclosure is not limited to the specific devices, methods, conditions, or parameters of the representative embodiments described and/or shown herein, and that the terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments by way of example only. Thus, the terminology is intended to be broadly construed and is not intended to be unnecessarily limiting of the claimed invention. For example, as used in the specification including the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include the plural, the term “or” means “and/or,” and reference to a particular numerical value includes at least that particular value, unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. In addition, any methods described herein are not intended to be limited to the sequence of steps described but can be carried out in other sequences, unless expressly stated otherwise herein.
As generally described, the present disclosure relates to an extraction system for removing a cartridge or cartridge case from the chamber of the firearm, shown here as an auto-loading rifle. It is to be appreciated, moreover, that applications of the extraction system are not limited to auto-loading rifles, and may include bolt action or lever action rifles and the like, auto-loading or pump action shotguns and the like, and other varieties of pistols and firearms. As described below, the extraction system of the present disclosure can provide several significant advantages and benefits over other extraction systems and methods for removing a cartridge from the chamber of the firearm. However, the recited advantages are not meant to be limiting in any way, as one skilled in the art will appreciate that other advantages may also be realized upon practicing the present disclosure.
The bolt head 116 is shown in more detail in
As shown in
The bolt face 120 of the bolt 110 or bolt head 116 can have an annular portion 122 that immediately surrounds the cartridge recess 124 and a plurality of lug face portions 132 forming the forward surfaces of the lugs 130. In the illustrated embodiment, the annular portion 122 and the lug face portions 132 together form a substantially smooth and planar bolt face 120 that can seat against a complimentary axial face that surrounds the opening to the firing chamber and can seal the firing chamber during firing.
The bolt head 116 further includes an extractor aperture 140 that extends radially through the center of the lug 137 selected from the plurality of lugs 130, from an inner opening 142 in the cylindrical sidewall 128 of the cartridge recess 124 clear through to a top opening 144 in the outermost radial surface of the selected lug 137. In the embodiment illustrated in
The selected lug 137 that includes the extractor aperture 140 extending radially through the body of the lug can further include a spring aperture 150 that extends axially through the body of the lug and intersects with the extractor aperture 140. The spring aperture 150 can extend from a distal opening 152 in the lug face portion 132 clear through to a back opening 154 in the rearmost lug surface 134, as shown in
The bolt 110 can further include provisions for an ejector mechanism that cooperates with the extraction system to extract and eject the cartridge from the firing chamber of the barrel. In the illustrated embodiment, the ejector mechanism can be a spring plunger-type ejector located in one or more ejector holes 192 extending axially from the cartridge bearing surface 126 of the cartridge recess 124. As shown, the ejector mechanism can be located substantially radially opposite the inner opening 142 of the extractor aperture 140, so as to provide the maximum leverage for rotating and ejecting the cartridge around the extraction system. With an ejector mechanism that utilizes two spring plunger-type ejectors, the holes 192 for the spring plungers can be symmetrically located on either side of the radial line 193 that intersects with both the extractor aperture 140 and the centerline axis 112 of the bolt 110, as illustrated in
With reference to
The inner end 164 of the extractor 160 can further include features that allow the extractor 160 to engage the rim of the cartridge installed within the cartridge recess. These features can include a ramp portion 170, a hook portion 174 and an inner edge 172 located between the ramp portion 170 and the hook portion 174. The ramp portion 170 provides an angled bearing surface against which the base of the cartridge (not shown) can press to force the extractor 160 back into the extractor aperture and out of the way as the cartridge is being positioned within the cartridge recess. As the base of the cartridge nears the cartridge bearing surface, the rim of the cartridge will pass beyond the ramp 170 and inner edge 172 portions of the extractor 160 to align with the hook portion 174 on the opposite side of the extractor 160. This alignment allows the extractor 160 to spring back towards the centerline axis of the bolt, with the inner edge 172 of the extractor 160 sliding into an extractor groove located adjacent the rim of the cartridge, thereby capturing the rim of the cartridge and securing the cartridge into the cartridge recess.
In one aspect of the disclosure illustrated in
In another aspect of the disclosure shown in
Illustrated in
The cantilevered bar 188 of the removable extractor spring 180 connects with the anchoring loop 184 at the flex corner 185. When the anchoring loop 184 is secured around the outer surface of the bolt 110, the cantilevered bar 188 is free to pivot, bend or flex about the flex corner 185, with the length of the cantilevered bar 188 providing a greater amount of motion at the tip 189 for the same amount of spring constant produced at the flex corner 185.
The assembled extraction system 100 is illustrated throughout the various views provided in
In providing an extractor 160 that can fit within just one of the eight equally-spaced bolt lugs 130 in the idealized locking configuration for AR-type firearm, the extraction system 100 of the present disclosure can circumvent the heretofore unresolved issue in AR-type firearms of having to remove one of the bolt lugs 130 to make room for an extractor mechanism. As such, the extraction system 100 can provide a breach bolt 110 that is both stronger and more dynamically balanced, and can provide a simpler and more reliable extraction system as compared with conventional pivoting claw-type extractor devices.
As shown in
In the embodiment of assembled extraction system 100 illustrated in
In its normal unbiased and un-flexed position, the cantilever rod or portion 188 of the extractor spring 180 can be configured to position and orientate the slidable extractor 160 within the extractor aperture 140 so that the inner end 162 of the extractor 160 projects through the inner opening 142 and into cartridge recess 124, as shown in
The outward motion of the extractor 160 is made possible by the spring aperture 150 having a diameter that is larger than the diameters of both the transverse hole 166 and the cantilever rod 188, thereby allowing the cantilever rod 188 to move and flex within the spring aperture 150. The additional space provided by the difference in sizes between the diameter of the spring aperture 150 and the diameter of the cantilever rod 188 can be controlled to limit the radially outward motion of the extractor 160. In one aspect of the present disclosure, for instance, the diameter of the spring aperture 150 can be sized so that the extractor 160 moves radially outward just far enough for the inner edge 172 of the extractor 160 to become flush with the sidewall 128 of the cartridge recess 124. At this point the outer surface of the cantilever rod 188 can contact the inner wall of the spring aperture 150, limiting any further movement.
The radially outward motion of the extractor 160 with the extractor aperture 140 can continue until the rim of the cartridge passes beyond the ramp 170 and inner edge 172 portions of the extractor 160, thereby allowing the extractor spring 180 to push the extractor 160 back towards the centerline axis of the bolt until the inner edge 172 and hook portion 174 of the extractor 160 engage with the extractor groove and rim of the cartridge to capture and secure the cartridge with the cartridge recess.
Upon firing of the firearm, the extractor 160 continues to hold and secure the back end of the cartridge within the cartridge recess 124 as the bolt 110 rotates to unlock the lugs 130 and translates rearwardly to pull the cartridge out of the firing chamber, until the front end of the casing clears the chamber opening. At this point the one or more plunger ejectors 194 of the ejector system 190 can apply a pressure or force to the back surface of the cartridge that rotates the cartridge around the hook portion 174 of the extractor 160 and out an ejection port in the side of the receiver of the firearm. During the ejection cycle, the extractor spring 180 can operate to generally maintain the extractor 160 in its innermost position within the cartridge recess so that the hook portion 174 of the extractor 1650 can impart a substantially constant tension to the rim of the cartridge. After the ejection cycle is completed and the spent cartridge has been removed from the receiver of the firearm, the extractor spring 180 can continue to maintain the extractor 160 in its normal, innermost position so that the inner end 164 of the extractor 160 projects through inner opening 142 and into cartridge recess 124 in preparation for the next cartridge.
The extraction system 100 of the present disclosure can provide several significant advantages over other types of extraction systems currently available in the art, in addition to the elimination of the requirement to remove the eighth lug discussed above. For example, the general design of the removable extractor spring 180 can enable more consistent selection or tailoring of the spring force that is applied to extractor 160. By variation of the diameter of the wireform of the extractor spring 180, the material of the wireform, and the axial distance between the extractor aperture 140 formed through the selected lug 137 and the circumferential groove 158 formed into the outer surface 114 of the bolt 110, a desired amount of spring force can be to the extractor 160. In turn, the desired amount of spring force can translate into a desired ejection tension that is applied by the extractor 160 to the cartridge during the ejection cycle. In addition, the extractor spring 180 can apply the predetermined amount of spring force to the extractor 160 in a more consistent fashion and for an extended period of time because the material forming the extractor spring 180 can be operated more within its elastic limits than conventional coil springs.
In another aspect, the extraction system 100 of the present disclosure can be more cost effective to manufacture and assemble through the expanded use of basic manufacturing processes such as drilling, cutting and shaping. For example, both the extractor aperture 140 and the spring aperture 150 can be made by drilling into the selected lug 137 in the bolt head 116. Moreover, the extractor 160 itself may be simply and easily manufactured by cutting, drilling and then shaping one end of an appropriately-sized round bar stock. The extractor spring 180 can also be simply and easily manufactured through cutting and bending a wireform made from high strength spring steel.
Another embodiment 200 of the extraction system and extractor 260 is illustrated in
The firearm bolt 210 within which the extraction system 200 is used also may be modified in a corresponding manner, as shown in FIGS. 15 and 18-19, in that the inner opening 242 of the extractor aperture 240 formed into the sidewall 228 of the cartridge recess 224 can also be expanded to accommodate the pair of wing portions 278 extending from inner end 264 of the extractor 260 when the extractor is moved radially outward along and into the extractor aperture 240 by receipt of a cartridge in the cartridge recess of the bolt 210.
As with the previously-described embodiment, the extractor 260 is slidably movable with the extractor aperture 240 and is resiliently biased toward the cartridge recess 224 by the cantilevered rod 288 of the extractor spring 280, and which cantilevered rod 288 can be inserted into the transverse hole in the extractor body. In one aspect, the flared inner end of the extractor 260 includes the hook portion 274 having a width 276 that is greater than the depth of the cartridge recess 224. The wider hook portion 272 can assist in capturing and securing cartridges of a larger size within the cartridge recess, and can also help in distributing the extractor tension across a greater surface area of the rim of the cartridge during the ejection cycle.
Another embodiment 300 of the extraction system is illustrated in
Accordingly, it is to be appreciated that while the extraction system of the present disclosure has been described for use in an action of an M16/AR15 auto-loading rifle, the extraction system may also be suitable for integration into the fire control mechanisms and actions of other type of firearms.
The invention has been described in terms of preferred embodiments and methodologies considered by the inventors to represent the best mode of carrying out the invention. A wide variety of additions, deletions, and modification might well be made to the illustrated embodiments by skilled artisans without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, it is possible to use some of the features of the embodiments described without the corresponding use of the other features. Accordingly, the foregoing description of the exemplary embodiments is provided for the purpose of illustrating the principle of the invention, and not in limitation thereof, since the scope of the invention is defined solely be the appended claims.