The present invention is related to a Safe, Silent and Ready to Send (SSRS) firearm assembly, preferably a handgun which combines the advantages, and eliminates the disadvantages, of each of the two main designs for handguns, revolvers and semi-automatic pistols (SAP's) into one product.
The main advantages of revolvers include that they are dependable, reliable, ready to fire when loaded and easy to operate. The main advantages of SAP's include increased capacity and a smaller, narrower frame making them easier to carry, especially when concealed.
The disadvantages of revolvers include that they are bulky, making them harder to carry, especially when concealed, and have a limited capacity, usually just six rounds. The disadvantages of SAP's include that they more difficult and time consuming to operate, requiring the extra step of operating the slide after loading and before firing. SAP's can jam when ejecting spent rounds or feeding the next round. SAP's also force the user to decide whether to carry the firearm ‘with or without’ a round in the chamber, ‘without’ causing a delay to operate the slide when deploying the weapon which can be critical in a defensive situation with an adversary, and ‘with’ carrying it with the hammer retracted, which can create safety concerns, with or without a safety mechanism, by enabling accidental firing.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 672,300 to Turnbull; U.S. Pat. No. 4,452,123 to Holtrop and U.S. Pat. No. 5,295,320 to Svennson are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety. None of these references have a truly “flat” loop, especially Turnbull, which is very bulky and similar to a standard revolver. Holtrop and Svensson also have many larger and complicated internal mechanisms making these difficult to adapt for a compact hand gun with rounds in handle. Svensson contains more than 20 moving parts, including gears, to engage the hammer and advance the loop, thereby making it more complicated and less reliable.
An embodiment of a flat loop revolving firearm assembly can have a trigger mechanism configured to rotate about a trigger central pin and move a loop advance lever and a hammer retractor lever, the loop advance lever disposed between the trigger mechanism and a flat loop, the hammer retractor lever disposed between the trigger mechanism and at least one hammer retractor bar. The at least one hammer retractor bar can be slidingly disposed between the hammer retractor lever and a hammer, the hammer retractor bar configured to slide and contact the hammer thereby rotating the hammer to a cocked position and releasing the hammer to fire a cartridge removably disposed in a firing position chamber. The flat loop can have a plurality of flat loop links, each link comprising an advancing lip and a chamber configured to revolve in parallel tracks into a firing position in response to motion imposed by the loop advance lever. A barrel can be aligned with the firing position chamber, and a gun stock can encase the entire flat loop revolving firearm assembly.
Another embodiment of a flat loop revolving firearm assembly can have a trigger mechanism configured to rotate about a trigger central pin and rotate a top sprocket to move a loop advance bar and a hammer retractor lever, the loop advance bar disposed between the top sprocket and a flat loop, the hammer retractor lever disposed between the trigger mechanism and at least one hammer retractor bar. The at least one hammer retractor bar can be slidingly disposed between the hammer retractor lever and a hammer, the hammer retractor bar configured to slide and contact the hammer thereby rotating the hammer to a cocked position and releasing the hammer to fire a cartridge removably disposed in a firing position chamber. The flat loop can have a sprocket retainer bar, the top sprocket, a bottom sprocket, and linked cartridges spanning between the top and bottom sprockets configured to revolve in parallel tracks into firing position in response to motion imposed by the loop advance bar. A barrel can be aligned with the firing position chamber, and a gun stock can encase the flat loop revolving firearm assembly.
Another embodiment of a flat loop revolving firearm assembly consists essentially of the elements listed above and may also include other elements that do not materially affect the basic and novel properties of the assembly. In yet another embodiment, a flat loop revolving firearm assembly consists of the elements listed above and nothing more.
The term “firearm” is defined herein as any weapon including but not limited to rifles, shotguns, pistols, handguns, and revolvers.
The SSRS flat loop revolving firearm (FLR) assembly disclosed herein eliminates the disadvantages described above and has all of the advantages of revolvers and semi-automatic pistols (SAP) by having a narrow frame, high capacity, readiness, dependability, and safety while carrying or storing when loaded. The FLR has the additional and significant extra benefit of increased range, power and accuracy. Instead of a round, fixed and bulky cylinder, as in a standard or traditional revolver, the FLR has a flat, narrower loop (see
The FLR has the dependability and reliability of a revolver as the loop cannot jam when feeding the next round, unlike the cartridge ejection and feeding system or magazine, of a SAP. Additionally, the FLR is safer to carry, store or keep bedside when loaded because the hammer is concealed and not retracted, which can prevent accidental firing with or without a safety mechanism.
With the round positioned in the rear of the unit (see
The SSRS FLR can be configured in various cartridge sizes, for example a small caliber (i.e. .22 LR, .22 Mag, .22 WMR or .380) pocket/purse carry gun, a mid-size (9 mm) general purpose and carry gun, a large caliber (.357 mag, .44, .45) full size gun, and alternately a shotgun or rifle. The FLR is safe because it has no magazine to jam. The user can carry the FLR without a racked round and without the hammer retracted, as in semi-auto pistols. The closed mechanism of the FLR is less susceptible to dirt and water and is more reliable. The FLR can have a permanent, interlocked firing sequence. The hammer is not exposed which prevents accidental firing from drops and strikes.
The FLR is silent in that there is no need to rack a round which makes noise. And, there is no need to use a safety which results in an audible “click”, though it can be added if preferred. The FLR is ready as-is, with no need to rack a round. There is less concern for a safety and therefore one less step to fire more quickly. The revolver has an increased capacity over standard 6-shooter revolvers.
The SSRS FLR sends a round down-range from the chamber that is positioned behind the rear of the barrel, not in middle of gun as with semi-auto pistols and traditional revolvers, and the FLR uses the entire barrel length to enable higher muzzle velocity for longer range, greater accuracy. The barrel can be rifled as-needed.
As seen in
The loop advance lever 18 sequentially engages with a flat loop link 36 in the flat loop 16, each link 36 having a chamber 28 configured to sequentially revolve into firing position in response to motion imposed by the loop advance lever 18. The flat loop 16 sequentially advances each adjacent chamber 28 into a firing position by sequentially aligning the chambers 28 with the barrel 26. The trigger mechanism 12 motion allows the loop advance lever 18 to engage the flat loop 16 only after the hammer retractor lever 20 provides sufficient sliding motion for the hammer retractor bars 24 to push the hammer 32 back and away from the top cartridge 30. The delayed motion of the flat loop 16 is a mechanical offset indexed by the travel distance between engagement points of the loop advance lever 18 and the flat loop 16. After the flat loop 16 moves the top chamber 28 into loading position, the top chamber is disengaged by a ramp (not shown) built into the stock (not shown) allowing a positive locking mechanism 42 to lock the chamber 28 in alignment with the barrel 26. This allows the hammer retractor bars 24 to continue to fully retract the hammer 32 with the flat loop 16 and chamber 28 secured in place. The cocking portion of the hammer retractor bars 24 sliding motion rotates the hammer 32 backwards until it reaches a cocked position. The firing portion of the hammer retractor bars 24 sliding motion permits the arc-shaped travel of the hammer 32 to slip under the hammer retractor bars 24 and the hammer 32 is released to strike a cartridge 30. The hammer 32 is configured to strike the cartridge 30 in either a rim fire or center fire position, according to the required application. The configuration depicted is for a rim fire .22LR caliber application. Additional embodiments can include a firing pin for center fire applications. A hammer pivot pin 24 is attached to the rear folding door (see
The barrel 26 can accommodate a .22LR cartridge or other cartridges as designed. The barrel 26 can be chrome lined for durability and rifled as per standard handgun specifications. Each chamber 28 holds one round and the configuration shown in
Essential to the flat loop revolver 10 is a flexible, flat, high capacity flat loop 16 that replaces the hard, fixed, bulky, low capacity (usually six rounds) traditional revolver cylinder. The flat loop 16 is configured to travel in parallel tracks and be as flat and thin as possible to save space within the grip of the flat loop revolver 10 while maintaining the required, strength, durability, safety and functionality for the application.
A blast containment ring 40 closes the small gap between the chamber 28 and barrel 26, to substantially reduce, if not totally prevent the fouling of the working parts of the flat loop revolver 10 by gases, soot, etc., most of which will in any case be expelled out of the barrel 26. An optional gas vent 43 may also be employed to further facilitate the expulsion of gases, especially in larger caliber models. The blast containment ring 40 also serves as a positive locking mechanism 42 which ensures that the hammer cannot be fully retracted and the unit fired unless the barrel 26 and chamber 28 are securely aligned.
The embodiment shown in
The flat loop 16 in
The flat loop revolver 10 can be manufactured efficiently with high quality using forged, machined parts, hardened steel, graphite lubrication optional. Parts can be interlocked, with unchangeable sequencing. Channeled parts make loosening out-of-specification impossible. A chrome lined barrel 26 is preferred.
Cartridges 30 can be inserted individually by hand or simultaneously with loading tool. The number of chambers can be sized to fit specified grip handle dimensions. The flat loop 16 can be removable or permanent and secured inside grip handle. Slotted guides (not shown) in sides of handle can be synchronized with chamber alignment for proper loading.
The flat loop 16 can be configured similar to a “watch band” or chain magazine configuration, and can incorporate rollers, bearings or low friction pins within handle enclosure walls. A grooved track (not shown) in the stock handle can secure the pins and maintain the flat loop 16 shape. The flat loop revolver 10 is differentiated by having a more compact mechanism that will fit better than all known grips of a handgun and with far fewer parts, thereby making it more reliable and dependable to operate and much less difficult and expensive to make and maintain.
Reference numbers in
A functioning sequence for the flat loop revolver can include these steps: Latches (not shown) disengaged, rear door 48 opened; chambers 28 loaded with cartridges 30; rear door 48 closed and latched; hammer block (optional—not shown) engaged; safety (optional—not shown) engaged; safety (optional—not shown) disengaged; trigger mechanism 12 pulled, engages hammer retractor lever 20 that slides the hammer retractor bars 24 to push hammer 32 away from cartridge; trigger mechanism 12 simultaneously pushes loop advance lever 18 until it engages with an advancing lip 38 which advances the flat loop 16; a blast containment ring 40, attached to the hammer retractor bars 24, closes and seals gap between the chamber 28 and barrel 26; the loop advance lever 18 disengages from the advancing lip 38; the blast containment ring 40 also acts as a positive locking mechanism 42 assuring alignment of cartridge and barrel; the positive locking mechanism 42 is held in place with spring as the hammer retractor bars 24 advance and fully retract hammer 32; a hammer block (optional) can be disengaged; the hammer 32, travelling on arc, slips below hammer retractor bars 24 and, driven by spring (not shown), strikes and fires round; trigger mechanism 12 is retracted as driven by return spring (not shown); the hammer retractor bars 24 pushes the top of the hinged hammer 32 over on return to original position; hammer retractor bars 24, hammer retractor lever 20, hammer 32 and trigger mechanism 12 return to original position; hammer 32 remains in contact with spent cartridge holding flat loop 16 in place; rear door 48 opened, empty shells extracted manually or with optional extractor; flat loop 16 returned to starting, original position.
The invention has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments without limit thereto. One of skill in the art would realize additional embodiments and improvements which are not specifically stated but which are within the meets and bounds of the claims appended hereto.
The present invention claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/947,258, filed Dec. 12, 2019, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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672300 | Turnbull | Apr 1901 | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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1243012 | Aug 1971 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62947258 | Dec 2019 | US |