The present invention relates to improved mounting mechanisms for gun sights for small arms which provides for simple and easy replacement.
Conventional gun sight attachments in the form of “dove tail” joints are generally employed in semiautomatic pistols and other small arms. Dove tail joints are usually machined in the pistol slide transverse to the gun axis, providing clamping of the sight in vertical direction with the sight prevented from lateral and transverse movement by the contact of the dove tail walls. This arrangement, while providing a solid coupling between the pistol slide and the annexed sight, is expensive because of the required close tolerances. Furthermore, such dove tails require special tools to assemble and disassemble the sights. Should the machined tolerances be inadequate, the shocks and vibrations of shooting inevitably will lead to the loosening and possible failure of attachment.
It is the object of the present invention to provide a gun sight attachment mechanism which makes the sight simple to assemble with and to disassemble from the pistol, with no special tools or skills required. The new mechanism is very simple, inexpensive, and permits alternative materials such as plastics to be employed for the gun sights. The new mechanism uses detent balls which lockingly register with sockets formed in the slide when engaged by a sliding lock pin. Detachment is achieved by removal of the lock pin.
For a more complete understanding of the present invention and its attendant advantages, reference should be made to the drawings in conjunction with the detailed description of the invention.
The gun sight mount of the invention includes a dove tail seat 10 formed on the front end of a pistol slide 11 provided with two lateral sockets 12, 13 machined in the shape of half cylinders to engage and retain the two steel detent balls 14, 15, and a back rest surface 16. A front bar sight 17 includes a transverse, cylindrical ball retention aperture 18, a longitudinal, axial, cylindrical channel 19 for reception of a locking pin 20 (solid pin or spring pin) and a rear access aperture 21 for insertion of a punch or a like simple tool for engaging and expelling the locking pin 20. The steel detent balls 14, 15 when engaged in their respective sockets 12, 13 secure the front sight bar to the slide by a detent action.
In accordance with the principles of the invention, the special dove tail seat 10, though somewhat similar in shape to a conventional dove tail groove, does not require tight machining tolerances. The retaining of the gun sight 17 in place is not provided by the friction generated by the dimensional interference between conventional dove tail groove and sight, but rather by the ball detents 14,15 engaging both in the sight 17 and in the dove tail seat. The sight 17, with the two detent balls inside in the ball retention aperture 18, is slidingly inserted in the dove tail seat 10 until it stops against the back rest surface 16. At this point, the sight 17, with the sockets 12, 13 perfectly aligned with the ball retention aperture 18, is ready to be secured in place by the insertion of the locking pin 20 in the longitudinal channel 19 and the consequent camming engagement with balls 14, 15 to cause a lateral shift of the balls 14, 15 into the sockets 12, 13 (
The advantages of the new front sight mounting mechanism include easy assembly and replacement of the sight without special skills or special tools, a hammer and punch being the only tools needed. Given the innovative mechanical retaining system, free of previously required tight tolerances and previously required related hard compression and stress of the two coupled parts (sight and dove tail), alternative comparative inexpensive materials for the sights, such as plastics, may be employed. Moreover, an assortment of sights, providing any desired different settings of the line of sight in windage and elevation, may be provided at low cost.
The principles of the invention may be adapted to usage in mounting a rear sight 30 having U-shaped sighting notch 29 and dovetail base 28 adapted to mate with transverse notch 27. With reference to
The different location of the notch 42 on the sight seat with respect to the corresponding notch 32 on the sight shifts the rear sight slightly to the right, when the two notches 32, 42 are assembled in registry. Similarly, notch 41, provides an increased shift to the right. Notch positions 44 and 45 are symmetrical with those of notches 42, 41 and provide for corresponding shifts to the left. In the illustrated mounting, there are five different selectable windage settings: two on the right, two on the left, plus the central “zero” position; however, it will be understood that variations may be obtained through different cylindrical arrangements of ball/notch diameter and position as may be desired. The rear sight can be kept firmly in place by insertion of a locking (or spring) pin 50 into transverse channel 52, to cam the steel ball 36 out from position 1 to position 2 (
It should be understood, of course, that the specific form of the invention herein illustrated and described is intended to be representative only, as certain changes may be made therein without departing from the clear teachings of the disclosure. Accordingly, reference should be made to the following appended claims in determining the full scope of the invention.
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