This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application Ser. No. 62/762,755, filed 2018 May 18 by the present inventor, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
This application relates to firearms, and more specifically to lights on firearms used to illuminate an area in which the firearm's muzzle is pointed.
It will become apparent in the following text that the “Firearm Light Accessory for Brightness Control” (hereinafter “accessory”) may be used on flashlights, headlamps, etc. Nevertheless, the focus of this application is on the accessory's use on firearm lights as such use is more likely to occur in dangerous situations.
The applicant has discovered no prior art equivalent to the accessory as claimed in this application.
A firearm light is usually an aftermarket item added to the firearm. A pump-action shotgun may be retrofitted with a replacement forearm, sometimes called a forestock, with the light being an integral feature of construction. Such lights help the user to move around and identify objects in the dark. Unlike a hand-held flashlight, the light being attached to the firearm allows the shooter to use both hands to aim and fire.
Despite the merits of firearm lights, there are several disadvantages. The glare of a beam of light on a wall, vehicle, etc., can make it difficult to see into a dark area beyond. Also, any light bright enough to be useful will degrade night vision. Moreover, the light can drive away game from hunters or attract unwanted attention to persons in combat or other such peril. Some firearm lights can be set to a lower intensity and prolong battery life, but that does little to relieve the disadvantages just mentioned.
Numerous devices with colored filters are available for firearm lights. In darkness, a colored beam of light is not as noticeable to humans as a white beam having the same intensity. Colored beams are even less visible to most animals of interest to hunters.
However, even colored beams will degrade night vision and be undesirably noticeable in darkness unless their intensity is low. Therefore, a firearm light accessory enabling control of the brightness of the beam of light would be advantageous.
At least one embodiment of the accessory provides a relatively simple and inexpensive way to control brightness of a colored beam or white beam emitted from a firearm light.
The drawings depict an embodiment of the accessory comprising three basic components. The first basic component is a see-through lens cover having a spring-assisted hinge connecting its cap to its base. Such covers fit over the bezel of a rifle scope or camera lens. The second basic component is a transparent colored disk (20). The third is an iris (12) like one in a microscope or camera, with a lever (14) to adjust its aperture. In addition to the basic components, the iris is sandwiched between clear protective disks.
The accessory may be produced from a colored filter device similar to the lens cover described in the previous paragraph. Such devices have a colored disk set into the cap instead of a clear disk. However, see-through lens covers are available in many more sizes than colored filter devices. It may benefit anyone wishing to build the accessory that the drawings and text herein feature a see-through lens cover and colored disk.
Numerals regarding
Construction
In constructing several of the accessories, the inventor devised a simple and accurate way to cut adjusting lever slot 16. That is to fasten a high-speed, rotary power tool with a cutting wheel to one jaw of a bench vise and fasten a clamping fixture to the other jaw. The fixture holds lens cover base 18 in the correct orientation relative to the cutting wheel. The vise is gradually closed until a limiting block prevents the cutting wheel from advancing. At that point, the slot is the correct length.
A seal fixed over the adjusting lever slot helps protect the slot from entry of debris or leakage of light. That seal is simply a strip of rubber or the like with a slit for the adjusting lever. The seal is omitted from the drawings for clarity.
To determine the exact position of the slit, the seal is held in place and marked from inside the lens cover base through the lever slot. A blade can be fashioned in the correct length to cut the slit by breaking off a corner of a single-edged razor. Two locking pliers work well for that. A tool for cutting rounded ends on the seal can be made from a hole punch with half its cutting edge ground away.
Transparent colored disks can be ordered from observatory supply companies. Clear disks or various materials for making them can be ordered on the internet. Hole saws suitable for cutting the disks generally have an inside diameter about 1 to 3 millimeters less than the outside diameter.
The accessory is assembled with adhesive, which should present little difficulty to a person having ordinary skill in the art. Nevertheless, the builder is cautioned to ensure that adhesive does not foul any moving parts of the iris.
Operation
To regulate the light passing through the iris aperture, the user operates iris aperture adjusting lever 14. The lever enables selectively reducing or enlarging the iris aperture, reducing when moved towards the hinge and enlarging when moved away.
Transparent colored disk 20 casts the colored beam when lens cover cap 10 is closed. The white beam is cast when the cap is open. To open the cap, the user pushes forward slightly on the cap's projecting tab. The spring-assisted hinge quickly opens the cap and holds it aside.
As night vision improves, the user decreases the amount of light passing through the accessory. Eventually a small spot of colored light on the ground will be sufficient for moving around. In most cases, for more light the colored beam is enlarged. If use of the white beam is warranted, the iris aperture is generally reduced first. Then the white beam, when employed, can be dim enough as to disrupt night vision little more than the colored beam had.
On occasion it will be helpful to quickly switch from the colored beam to bright white to temporarily blind and disorient an animal or human threat. Many firearm lights have a strobe setting which greatly enhances that effect.
The accessory enables the user to control brightness a beam of light emitted from the firearm light, either a colored beam or white. It will be apparent that at least one embodiment of the accessory provides advantages over the most nearly similar devices available.
Advantages of the accessory include reducing glare, preserving night vision, and reducing the possibility of hunters being detected by game or persons in armed conflict being detected by adversaries. The success of a hunt or someone's life may depend on these advantages.
Numerous embodiments, improvements, additions, etc., may be envisioned. The accessory may be produced in numerous sizes and shapes and from various materials. Disks of various colors can be removably attached with a slotted rigid collar, a grooved flexible collar, a clamping ring, etc. Adjusting lever slot 16 can be sealed with a sliding closure of the type commonly used on flashlight switches.
Shutters such as those in ship's lights for Morse code communication can be used for brightness control. The light beam intensity can be controlled in a way similar to some aviator's/submariner's penlights issued in the 1960's. That is with a curved, sliding, colored filter and a curved, sliding, opaque shield. The filter and shield are inside a hemispherical protective housing. A hooded, hinged flap may control brightness. The hood and flap can be oriented to direct the light beam towards the ground.
The iris, shutter, or other mechanism for adjusting the light beam can be controlled by an electric circuit. This embodiment would be useful for larger lights such as those on crew-served military ordnance. The light beam adjusting mechanism can be built into a light as an integral part of the light's construction.
Details in this application should not be construed as limitations on the scope of the accessory described, but as an exemplification of one embodiment. Accordingly, the scope should be determined not by the embodiment presented herein, but by the appended claims and their legal equivalents.
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