Gas operated shotgun

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6382073
  • Patent Number
    6,382,073
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, December 5, 2000
    24 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, May 7, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
The invention concerns a gas operated shotgun made up of a barrel (11) a cylinder (12) attached to the barrel and a piston (13) moving in the cylinder and along the guide rod (16) between an advanced rest position and an active retracted control position for certain functional operations of the shotgun. The inside of the barrel communicates with the cylinder through at least one inlet (14) for of a part of the propulsion gasses due to the movement of the piston to the active retracted position. A protective flap (20) extends into the cylinder chamber towards the piston on the front of the same, which is placed in front of the gas entrance hole (14) in said cylinder chamber partially covering and protecting the guide rod (16) of the piston. The piston can also be furnished with a scraper (22) to clean the rod.
Description




The present invention regards the semi-automatic shotgun sector in general and in particular refers to a shotgun with a gas powered system to operate some of its functions.




It is well known that in shotguns having a gas operated system, a part of the gas projecting the cartridge is deviated, through at least one opening, leading from the barrel of the gun to a cylinder/piston unit attached to the barrel. The piston consequently moves in the cylinder due to the pressure of the gas, moving it from a forward rest position to a retracted position, engaging the action of a return spring. By moving into this retracted position, the piston exerts a pressure on a coupling and subsequently on parts which move back towards a tubular ammunition tank so as to carry out, as is well known, different functions such as the ejection of the fired cartridge shell, the re-arming of the firing mechanism and the feeding of a further, new cartridge from the tank to the cartridge chamber in the barrel.




The piston is usually centrally guided, through an interposed seal bushing, on a stationary rod which supports a cover for the tubular tank. The cylinder is closed, on the opposite end from the direction the piston moves when thrust by the gas, by an excess pressure valve placed around a coaxial stem to the guide rod of the piston.




However, in the known solutions the gasses which flow into the cylinder from the barrel and which may contain and/or carry impurities and dirt particles, come into direct contact with the guide rod and the seal bushing between the piston and rod. The result is that as the shotgun is operated, impurities and foreign particles tend to accumulate on the rod and in time hinder the correct functioning of the system, limiting the movement of the piston, causing wear on the bushing and jeopardizing the sealing capacity of the latter.




The present invention is aimed at correcting this inconvenience and disadvantage of the known technique.




It is in fact the aim of the present invention to propose a gas operated system for shotguns equipped with a means to prevent the flow of gas from the barrel to the cylinder coming directly into contact with the piston drive rod so that this rod is less subject to or completely free from deposits of impurities and dirt, and that nonetheless this dirt can easily be expelled from the cylinder.




Another aim of the invention is to propose a gas operated system for shotguns equipped with a means of scraping, which moves together with the piston and is able to remove the impurities from the guide rod of the piston so as to ensure optimum movement at all times of the latter and not jeopardize the action of the seal bushing.




A further aim of the invention is to achieve a gas operated system for shotguns of the type mentioned above in which there is at the same time a way of preventing the gas from coming into direct contact with the guide rod of the piston and a means of scraping in order to keep this rod clean, preventing any dirt particles from depositing.




These aims are reached in a shotgun with a gas operated system incorporating a protective fixed flap placed in front of the gas entrance from the barrel into the cylinder and partially covering the guide rod of the piston, and a scraper blade positioned and operating around the surfaces of the guide rod and which moves together with the piston along the rod itself.











More details of the invention will however become clearer from the description made in reference to the enclosed drawing, in which the only FIGURE shows a cross section of only some parts of the shotgun housing the improvements according to the invention.











The drawing shows a part of a barrel


11


of a shotgun with a cylinder


12


attached with a chamber


12


′ in which a piston


13


travels. The interior of the barrel


11


connects to the internal chamber of the cylinder


12


by means of a hole


14


so that a part of the propellant gas which forms on firing the cartridge flows, due to an operation of the piston


13


, from the barrel to the cylinder.




Furthermore piston


13


, in cylinder


12


, is centrally guided by the interposition of a seal bushing


15


, on a stationary rod


16


attached to a cover


17


closing a tank—not shown. Piston


13


, when idle, is held in the forward position by a return spring, not shown, but which acts in the direction of the arrow R in the drawing. Under the action of the thrust from the gas coming from the barrel, the piston moves back (towards the right in the drawing) to carry out the provided functions.




At the front (left in the drawing), the chamber of the cylinder


12


is closed by an excess pressure valve


18


, with bleeder holes.




This valve is held by a stem of valve


19


and usually kept in a closed position by an adjustable spring—not shown—acting according to the F arrow in the drawing. The stem of valve


19


is assembled concentrically on the guide rod


16


of piston


13


.




The gas operated system described above includes a protective flap


20


as an element of improvement which can be achieved as an extension of the valve stem


19


and which extends into the cylinder towards the piston, on the front of the latter. The protective flap


20


is positioned at the front of the entrance of the gas into the cylinder and partially covers the guide rod at an angle of about 180°.




The free end of flap


20


finishes in a deflector


21


facing radially towards the external.




Another improvement is that the system can include a scraper blade


22


encircling the external surface of the guide rod


16


and acting on this subsequent to the movements of the piston along the rod itself. For this purpose, and to the advantage of the system, the scraper blade is either made from, or carried by, the seal bushing


15


which slides together with the piston along the guide rod.




Summarizing, the effects of the protective flap


20


with the deflector edge are:




To prevent the stationary guide rod


16


from being directly exposed to the gas flow coming from the cylinder


12


which may contain and carry dirt liable to deposit on the rod itself;




To create turbulence in the gas flow inside the cylinder so as to encourage the expulsion of the dirt particles through the bleeder holes of the valve and from the normal discharge space


23


of the cylinder which is opened when the piston is at the end of its return stroke.




The effect of the scraper blade


22


is to make the seal bushing


15


self-cleaning, helping to remove and eliminate any impurities present on the guide rod


16


at each forward and return stroke of the piston to the rest position.



Claims
  • 1. Gas operated shotgun including a barrel (11) with an interior, a cylinder (12) attached to said barrel and having an internal chamber, a piston (13) moving in said chamber of the cylinder between a forward rest position and an active retracted control position for certain functional operations of the shotgun, where the inside of the barrel communicates with the internal chamber of the cylinder through at least one passageway (14) of a part of the propulsion gasses formed from a cartridge being fired from said barrel in said cylinder due to the movement of the piston from the forward rest position to the active retracted position, where the piston is guided centrally by an interposed seal bushing (15), on a stationary guide rod (16) coaxial to the cylinder and where said guide rod carries a stem (19) with an excess pressure valve (18) positioned to close the cylinder (12) on the opposite side to the one the piston is travelling towards during its active retracting stroke, characterised by a protective flap (20) which extends into the cylinder chamber towards the piston on the front of the same, which is placed in front of the gas entrance hole (14) in said cylinder chamber and which partially covers the guide rod (16) of the piston.
  • 2. Shotgun according to claim 1, where said protective flap (20) is an extension of the stem (19) of the excess pressure valve (18).
  • 3. Shotgun according to claim 1, where said protective flap (20) finishes in a deflector edge in proximity with the guide bushing of the piston when the latter in the rest position.
  • 4. Shotgun according to claim 1 where the protective flap (20) covers the guide rod at an angle of 180°.
  • 5. Shotgun according to claim 1 including also a scraper blade (22) which moves with the piston and which encircles and acts on the surface of the guide rod.
  • 6. Shotgun according to claim 5, where said scraper blade (22) is an integral part of the seal bushing (15) between the piston and guide rod.
  • 7. Gas operated shotgun made up of a barrel (11) with an internal section, a cylinder (12) attached to said barrel and having an internal chamber, a piston (13) moving in said chamber of the cylinder between an advanced rest position and a retracted active control position of certain operational functions of the shogun, where the internal section of the barrel communicates with the internal chamber of the cylinder through at least one inlet (14) for a part of the propulsion gas formed by the firing of a cartridge from said barrel in said cylinder because of the movement of the piston from the advanced rest position to the retracted active position, where the piston is guided centrally, through the interposition of a seal bushing (15), on a fixed guide rod (16) coaxial to the cylinder and where said guide rod has a stem (19) with an excess pressure valve (18) positioned to close the cylinder (12) on the opposite end to the one the piston moves towards during the active retraction stroke, characterized by a protective flap (20) which extends into the chamber of the cylinder towards the piston on the front of the same, which is in front of the entrance passageway (14) of the gas in said chamber of the cylinder and which partially covers the guide rod (16) of the piston, and a scraper blade (22) which moves with the piston and which encircles and acts on the surface of the guide rod (16).
  • 8. Shotgun according to claim 7, where said protective flap (20) is an elongation of the stem of the excess pressure valve, placed in front of the gas entrance hole in the cylinder and covers the guide rod along a part of its circumference, and where said protective flap (22) is an integral part of the seal bushing between the piston and guide rod.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
BS99A0113 Dec 1999 IT
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Number Name Date Kind
1846993 Destree Feb 1932 A
2186582 Gebauer Jan 1940 A
3443477 Kaempf May 1969 A
3601002 Janson Aug 1971 A
3618457 Miller Nov 1971 A
3945296 Hyytinen Mar 1976 A
3990348 Vesamaa Nov 1976 A
4085654 Panigoni Apr 1978 A
4324170 Healy Apr 1982 A
5429034 Badali et al. Jul 1995 A
5872323 Norton et al. Feb 1999 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number Date Country
714566 Nov 1941 DE
0634620 Jan 1995 EP