1. Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to handgun holsters, and more particularly relates to holsters that provide security against unauthorized withdrawal of a handgun.
2. Background Information
Police officers, security officers, and military personnel in a number of situations must be ready to withdraw and use a handgun in the line of duty at a moments notice. In an emergency situation, withdrawing the handgun must be done in a completely natural and unobstructed manner to increase the draw speed. The officer's life may depend on the speed with which he/she can withdraw the handgun. However, after the handgun is withdrawn, the situation may dictate other options or needs, requiring the officer to re-holster the handgun just as quickly. Current holsters do not meet this demand without some continued manipulation of security straps before the officer knows or has confidence that the weapon is secure. In this type of situation, the officer needs to be able to holster his/her handgun with one hand without looking at the holster and while maintaining eye contact with the suspect. During holstering, an audible click, tactile sensation or other affirmative sound or indication such as a beep, whistle, light emitting diode or vibration indicating that the handgun is secured in the holster, would be preferable.
The problem results when a suspect becomes an assailant, and attacks the officer and tries to gain access to his weapon. When this situation develops, it is of utmost importance that the officer maintains control of his/her handgun while simultaneously preventing the assailant access to the handgun. Many holsters have been designed to accomplish this purpose in a number of different manners. However, they all suffer a number of drawbacks. Some require two hands to release and secure the handgun. This is unacceptable. Some of them secure the handgun with a device, which can be difficult to release in a fast draw situation and therefore is a dangerous security mechanism. Some holsters secure the weapon in place from bouncing out of the holster, but are not designed to withstand the attack of an assailant, and would allow the gun to be taken from the officer by an assailant. Some holsters use electronic devices for fingerprint recognition and run the risk of malfunctioning or having a dead battery. Some holsters require the user to tilt or rock the handgun, or twist it before it can be released from the handgun. Such a maneuver must be practiced frequently in order to ensure that the wearer can perform it without mistake in an emergency situation. All of these methods of securing a handgun are problematic, and an improved security holster is needed which solves these problems.
For these reasons, it is an object of the invention to provide a security holster for a handgun which allows a handgun to be quickly inserted or withdrawn with one hand without looking at the holster, and which secures the holster to the officer without undue manipulation of straps or the handgun. It is a further goal of the invention that the security holster not allows an assailant to withdraw the handgun against the will of the officer. It is a further object of the invention to provide a handgun-securing holster that is easily released by a natural and fluid motion of the officer. It is a further object of the invention to provide a security holster that has an audible click, sound, vibration or visual affirmation that indicates to the user that the handgun is secured in the holster. Another object of the invention is to provide a security holster with a mechanism that allows the holster to withstand severe force without releasing the handgun until the releasing mechanism is activated. Another object of the invention is to require a minimum compression force that must be exerted on the security holster in order to engage and disengage the locking mechanism for a handgun.
These and other objects of the invention are accomplished by the security holster of the invention. The security holster is designed to be used with a handgun, and to be mounted on a user's belt, concealed carry harness or other mounting positions. The holster has an inner and outer side wall, which together define an interior cavity into which the handgun is placed. There is an open top portion of the holster, which is designed to receive the handgun, and from which the handgun is removed.
The security holster includes a locking means that is designed to engage a feature of the handgun with an audible indication alerting the user that the handgun has been locked in place. A tactile and or visual indicator is also possible. The locking means interacts with a handgun feature when the handgun is placed in the inner cavity of the security holster. The features with which the locking means can interact can include the ejection port of a semi-automatic pistol, the trigger guard of a revolver or semi-automatic handgun, the back of the slide of a semi-automatic pistol or other features, depending on the specific handgun for which the security holster is fitted. The locking means engages the handgun feature in order to prevent the withdrawal of the handgun without releasing the locking means.
The device also includes a releasing means, which is positioned adjacent to the trigger and trigger guard of the handgun. This releasing means is designed so that the user may activate and thereby release the locking means by flexure of the user's finger, such as an index finger. By basing the release of the locking means on flexure of the user's finger, the design is made difficult to circumvent by an assailant reaching into the holster with his/her finger and releasing the locking means. By requiring flexure of the user's finger to release the locking means, it is almost impossible for an assailant attacking from the front to reach in and release the handgun.
The device also includes a finger tube built into the side wall of the holster into which the user inserts a finger for activating the release means. Thus, the finger tube acts as a release tab protector. It serves the purpose not only of protecting the release tab from access by an assailant, but also protects the release tab from being accidentally depressed when an officer might be brushing against a building or rolling on the ground. The security holster is configured for one-handed insertion of a handgun. When the handgun is fully inserted and the locking means is engaged, the user is notified of this by an audible sound or click upon locking. In another preferred embodiment, the handgun may alert the user that the handgun is in the locked or unlocked position. When the locking tab is fully engaged in the ejection port, the security holster may emit a beep or activate a whistle, bell, light emitting diode (LED) or vibrator. Such an alert or indication would allow a user to know that the handgun is or is not secured and locked into position. Such knowledge might be invaluable depending on the specific circumstances of a security holster user. The handgun is retained until the locking mechanism is released by the releasing device, which is activated by the user depressing the releasing means by flexure of a finger, usually the index finger.
In one embodiment of the invention, the locking means is a generally rectangular block that engages the ejection port of a semi-automatic pistol. The locking means in this embodiment is a locking tab, which is attached to a metal plate that is itself attached to the holster. The metal plate is hinged, with the plate on one side of the hinge being rigidly attached to the holster, and the plate on the other side of the hinge being free to rotate back and forth. The hinged plate is referred to as the spring assembly. The part of the spring assembly mounted to the holster body is called the fixed plate. Attached to the fixed plate is a first arm on which the locking tab is mounted. The locking tab is configured to allow the unobstructed entry of the handgun into the holster to press against the slide of a handgun as the handgun is inserted into the holster, and to drop into place in the ejection port of a handgun when the handgun is fully inserted into the holster. To accomplish this, the locking tab has a sloping face that faces the open end of the holster and allows entry and passage of the handgun. The locking tab has a notch in the side, which faces the open end of the holster, which locks against an edge of the holster at a locking tab passage that extends through the holster body. A rebounding element requires that the handgun be pushed into the security holster with a minimum compression force thereby allowing the locking tab to drop into position in the ejection port. That same compression force is necessarily exerted against the handgun before the locking tab can be released.
A second arm of the spring plate assembly is attached to the first arm. The second arm includes a release tab, which is directly and operationally connected to the first arm and the locking tab. The release tab is configured to rest adjacent the trigger guard of the handgun when the handgun is fully inserted into the holster. The release tab also covers the trigger so that depressing the release tab does not activate the trigger. This feature prevents the handgun from being accidentally fired when it is in the security holster. Activation of the release tab is accomplished by the user flexing a finger, generally an index finger, when it is inserted into the holster adjacent the release tab.
The security holster of the invention thus provides for one-handed insertion of the handgun. During insertion of the handgun into the security holster, the locking tab admits the handgun and engages a feature of the handgun for retention of the handgun unless and until the locking tab is disengaged by the user pressing the release tab. The release tab is pressed by the natural flexure of the user's finger. In this way, the handgun can be removed from the security holster without looking at it, and by the user using only one hand. Features which can be added to enhance the embodiment of the security holster described above can include the locking tab being configured to make an audible click or affirmation when it engages with the handgun feature. The affirmation may be the activation of a beep, bell, whistle, vibrator or light emitting diode. The handgun feature can be the ejection port, a trigger guard, the back of the handle or any other appropriate feature of the handgun.
The spring plate assembly of the invention can take several different forms. In one embodiment of the security holster, the spring plate assembly includes a piano hinge between the fixed plate and the first and second arm. This connection is essentially a lever that is hingedly connected. The hinge runs parallel to a long axis of the security holster. In this embodiment, the hinge between the fix plate and the first and second arm includes a biasing device such as a spring.
In another version of the security holster, the spring plate assembly includes a torsion spring, which connects the fixed plate with the first and second arm. One feature of the holster of the invention can include the holster being made of a rigid material such as a sturdy plastic. Other materials could also be suitable such as leather or metal, or combinations of these materials. The locking tab can be configured so that the edge of the locking tab which faces toward the open end of the holster is sloping, which enables the handgun to slide under it upon insertion. The side of the locking tab which faces toward the barrel end of the holster is also notched, so that when the locking tab drops into the handgun feature such as the ejection port, the notch will engage the handgun feature and prevent the handgun from being withdrawn from the security holster past the locking tab.
One embodiment of the security holster includes a locking tab which is connected to the spring plate assembly by a floating connection, which allows the locking tab a certain limited freedom of motion in it's attachment to the spring plate assembly. This floating attachment allows force applied to the handgun to withdraw it to be transferred through the locking tab to the security holster. In this way, the security holster is much stronger in resisting this unauthorized withdrawal of a handgun than if the force of the withdrawal were applied to the spring plate assembly alone, through the spring plate assembly's connection to the locking tab.
Another embodiment of the security holster utilizes one or more springs which are biased upon insertion of a handgun. In some embodiments, the handgun must be inserted biasing the spring to a minimum locking compression before the locking tab is engaged. After the handgun is fully inserted and then released, the springs press the handgun toward the entry end of the handgun thereby engaging the locking notch of the locking tab against the holster body at the locking tab passage. In this configuration, to release and remove the handgun, the user first presses the handgun deeper into the security holster a small amount, then depresses the release tab.
One embodiment of the invention utilizes the finger tube in which the access of the finger tube is generally parallel to the long axis of the holster body. It encloses and covers the release tab, and may require the insertion of one third or more of a user's finger. The finger tube of the security holster can also be referred to as a finger receiving receptacle and it may be designed to allow a finger of the user to be inserted within it. The finger tube or finger-receiving receptacle thus protects the release tab from access or from accidental release.
One version of the security holster of the invention is configured so that the release tab and the locking tab are connected to each other by what amounts to a lever. The fulcrum of the lever is located between the locking tab and the release tab, and pressing on the release tab causes the locking tab to move in the opposite direction as the direction of pressure is applied to the release tab. This makes the lever a first class lever, which is defined as a lever in which the fulcrum is between the force and the load. The security holster has a long axis, which parallels the barrel of a handgun, which is inserted into it. One version of the security holster utilizes a lever that is positioned normal to the long axis of the security holster. The torsion spring may be utilized at the fulcrum of the lever, to press the locking tab towards the handgun. The locking tab of the handgun, which utilizes a first class lever as a release mechanism, can interact with features of the handgun such as the ejection port or the trigger guard.
A desirable feature of the security holster is the use of a rebounding device within the security holster. The rebounding device contacts the handgun as it is being inserted into the holster, and resists pressing the handgun into the holster. The handgun is pressed against the rebounding device for a sufficient distance and pressure, and when the required distance and force are applied, the locking tab engages the handgun feature. When the handgun is released, the rebounding device presses the handgun against the locking tab. The required insertion distance and insertion force can be adjusted on the security holster. In some situations, a low insertion force and/or distance may be desirable, and in other situations, a higher insertion force and distance may be preferred. These are accomplished by a force adjustment mechanism and a distance adjustment mechanism on the security holster.
The invention also includes a method for releasing a handgun from a security holster, which includes the step of; placing a user's hand on a handgun seated in the security holster with the user's finger over a release tab which is located adjacent to a trigger guard of the handgun. The next step is to push the handgun into the security holster a predetermined distance against a rebounding device in the security holster. The next step is for the user to flex their finger against the handgun release tab while that handgun is pressed against the rebounding device. Once the release tab is depressed, the next step is to remove the handgun from the security holster by continuing to depress the release tab momentarily while pulling straight back on the handgun handle so that the handgun is withdrawn from the security holster in a straight line. Other holsters are available as prior art, which require the withdrawal of the handgun to take an angled or compoundly angled path when exiting the security holster. These devices prove problematic in use, because in an emergency situation, the user forgets to utilize the angled, twisted or compound angled withdrawal path. Holsters with such a withdrawal method are dangerous for the officer, and become so secure that the user may be killed.
An alternative method for releasing a handgun from the security holster of the invention includes the steps of inserting a finger into the finger tube of the security holster, pushing the handgun into the security holster a predetermined distance against the rebounding device, the user flexing the finger inserted into the finger tube against the handgun release tab while the handgun is pressed against the rebounding device, and removing the handgun from the security holster while depressing the release tab. Each of these methods can be modified by the additional step of adjusting an insertion distance adjustment mechanism on the rebound device, which changes the required insertion distance that must be accomplished by the handgun against the rebounding device. An additional step to the above procedures can include adjusting an insertion force adjustment mechanism for changing the necessary insertion force that must be exerted by the handgun against the rebounding device. This allows a user to adjust the required insertion force between a maximum and a minimum allowed by the force adjustment mechanism. Another optional step in the methods listed above includes the step of actuating the release tab by flexing the users finger in a direction substantially normal to a plane of the security holster, which bisects the handgun barrel and the handgun handle.
The invention also includes a method of inserting a handgun into a security holster, which includes the steps of inserting the handgun into the security holster until resistance from a rebounding device is met, and pressing the handgun further against the rebounding device until a minimum insertion depression distance is met, at which point a locking tab of the security holster engages a feature of the handgun for locking engagement of the handgun. This method can further include the step of providing an auditory signal generating mechanism on the security holster for confirming that the handgun is secured in the security holster. The auditory signal can comprise a bell, beep, vibrator, clicker or other sound generating device.
Another method involved with the invention is a method of removing a holstered and secured handgun from a security holster. This includes the steps of placing a user's hand around a handgun handle when the handgun is holstered and secured in a security holster. The next step is placing a user's finger over the trigger guard area of the handgun, which is adjacent to a release tab of the security holster. The next step is pressing the handgun deeper into the security holster against the rebounding device until a minimum depression distance is achieved. At that point, the next step is depressing the release tab on the security holster by flexing the forefinger against the release tab, which is located over the trigger guard area of the handgun. This depression of the release tab disengages a locking tab from the feature of the handgun, thus allowing removal of the handgun. The next step is to hold the release tab down momentarily while removing the handgun from the holster in a straight line.
Still other objects and advantages of the present invention will become readily apparent to those skilled in this art from the following detailed description wherein we have shown and described only the preferred embodiment of the invention, simply by way of illustration of the best mode contemplated by carrying out my invention. As will be realized, the invention is capable of modification in various obvious respects all without departing from the invention. Accordingly, the drawings and description of the preferred embodiment are to be regarded as illustrative in nature, and not as restrictive.
While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative constructions, certain illustrated embodiments thereof have been shown in the drawings and will be described below in detail. It should be understood, however, that there is no intention to limit the invention to the specific form disclosed, but, on the contrary, the invention is to cover all modifications, alternative constructions, and equivalents falling within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the claims.
Several preferred embodiments and features of the security holster are shown in
The locking mechanism of this embodiment is referred to as a spring plate assembly 16. The spring plate assembly 16 includes three parts. The first part is a fixed plate 18, which is rigidly and permanently attached to a bulge in the holster body 12. The bulge in the holster body 12 forms a finger tube 46, which is an opening or finger-receiving receptacle between the handgun and the holster body 12, which allows insertion of a user's index finger. The fixed plate 18 is preferably metal, and Stainless Steel has proven to be a suitable metal for its construction. Opposite the fixed plate 18 is a first arm 20, which is rigidly attached to a second arm 24, both of which are attached by a hinge 30 to the fixed plate 18. The second arm 24 includes a release tab 26, which is semicircular in cross section and fitted to receive the index finger of a user, and lies over the trigger and trigger guard of a handgun 40 when it is fully inserted into the security holster 10. The second arm 24 and its components are rigidly attached to the first arm 20. The first arm 20 also includes locking tab mounting slots 32, locking tab mounting screws 34, and a locking tab 22 (which is shown in
As shown in
In one preferred embodiment of the security holster 10 of the invention, the security holster 10 is provided with one or more springs. A spring can be mounted on the trigger guard spring bracket 44, and/or could be mounted on the slide spring bracket 50, which was shown in
A second preferred embodiment of the invention is shown in
From the foregoing description, it will be apparent that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the following claims. While there is shown and described the present preferred embodiment of the invention, it is to be distinctly understood that this invention is not limited thereto but may be variously embodied to practice within the scope of the following claims.
This application is a continuation of the utility patent application titled GUN HOLSTER filed by Lowe et al. on Mar. 23, 2001 with application Ser. No. 09/816,764 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,886,725.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050035162 A1 | Feb 2005 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09816764 | Mar 2001 | US |
Child | 10886006 | US |