The innovation relates to pistols with a safety trigger essentially comprising a trigger lever supported or located in a housing and arranged in a trigger region formed between the housing and a trigger guard, and a safety lever which is pivotally mounted in the trigger lever, the safety lever interacting with a catch in the housing.
Such safety triggers are primarily intended to enable rapid firing. The pistol is secured without touching the trigger. Often, such safety devices interact with the firing pin and drop safety device via the trigger rod.
A safety trigger, which is already known from the DE patent 485 710 from Sauer & Sohn and still present in more recent pistols, comprises a safety lever which is arranged behind the trigger lever and comprises a small projection oriented in the firing direction and projecting through a recess in the trigger lever and preventing a movement of the trigger lever in the blocking position. For release, it must first be pressed by the shooter's trigger finger. In the event of rapid grasping of the pistol or in the case of bad positioning or unfavorable shape of the trigger lever, the small projection is not sufficiently actuated and no shot can be fired. In addition, the projection causes painful pressure points on the trigger finger during repeated firing, due to its small area. Also, when wearing tactical gloves or winter gloves, often the safety lever cannot be moved sufficiently, thus keeping the safety active and rendering firing impossible.
In an improved construction, U.S. Pat. No. 5,402,593, the safety lever forms an extension of the trigger lever. In this case, a joint is arranged between the trigger lever shortened by half of its height and the safety lever adjoining it downwards. The mutually facing ends of the two trigger elements form a positioning stop in the blocking position, however, in the firing position they form a gap, in which the trigger finger may possibly get stuck, when the trigger is released (trigger reset) and the complete forward movement of the trigger can be prevented. This has happened frequently in the case of using gloves.
It is the object of the innovation to avoid all disadvantages of the previously known safety triggers, in particular the disadvantages of the U.S. Pat. No. 5,402,593. The safety trigger should be safe, easy to operate, ergonomically optimal and absolutely reliable.
According to the invention, this is achieved in that the safety lever is arranged in front of the trigger lever, extends over the entire clear height of the trigger region and is supported in the trigger lever in such a way that it forms a two-armed lever. This causes the trigger finger to immediately locate the safety lever, with or without the use of gloves, to reliably actuate it and to be not tucked in upon release of the trigger lever—trigger reset. Thanks to the two-armed lever, the safety lever cannot be actuated by the inertia of its mass. In an advantageous embodiment, the two arms of the safety lever form a first upper contact surface and a first lower contact surface on their rear side facing the trigger lever, and the trigger lever has an associated second upper contact surface and a second lower contact surface. In the blocking position, the upper contact surfaces abut on each other and, in the release position, the lower contact surfaces abut on each other. Thus, the two relative end positions of the safety lever are clearly defined by the large distance from the pivot axle.
In a further developed embodiment, the safety lever forms a rearward extension which passes through a longitudinal slot of the trigger lever and which also has a cross hole for the pivot axle. The pivot axle is located on both sides of the extension in the trigger lever and accommodates the middle part of a leg spring. The multiple function of the pivot axle simplifies construction and assembly. At the rear end of the extension, a shoulder is formed for blocking engagement in a latch in the housing.
One advantageous detail is that the leg spring is supported with one leg on the upper edge of the slot and with the other leg on the upper edge of the extension. Thus, the safety lever is held in the locked position with a defined force and the extension is held in the latch in the housing.
Alternatively, or additionally to the contact surfaces on the rear side of the safety lever, the lower edge of the extension may be shaped in such a way that, in the blocking position, it rests on the lower edge of the slot.
Finally, the front side of the safety lever, on which the trigger finger engages, can be ergonomically optimized. It is concavely curved over its entire height in side view and is convex in the cross-section. The entire height may also be rectilinear or shaped as desired by the shooter. The innovation according to the invention leaves sufficient scope.
The innovation will be described and illustrated in the following by means of Figures of an exemplary embodiment, in which:
In
The safety lever 13 consists of a finger rest 24 and a rearwardly projecting extension 20 which passes through the longitudinal slot 15 in the trigger lever 11 and forms at its rear end a shoulder 21 for engagement in a catch 14 in the trigger region 9. In the secured position, the extension 20 abuts on the lower edge of the longitudinal slot 15 with its lower edge 19 and thus blocks the trigger lever 11.
An eye 23 with a bore 18 for receiving the second axle 12 is formed approximately in the middle of the safety lever 13, near the transition from the finger rest 24 to the extension 20. The eye 23 is surrounded by the middle part of a leg spring 33. Its upper leg 34 abuts on the upper edge 16 of the longitudinal slot 15, its lower leg 35 abuts on an upper edge 22 of the extension 20.
The finger rest 24 of the safety lever 13 forms a two-armed lever with the two lever arms 25, 26, with respect to the second axle 12. The upper lever arm 25 extends upwards up to the housing 1 and has an upper first contact surface 27 on its rear side. Here, the lower lever arm 26 is somewhat longer and stronger than the upper lever arm 25. It forms a lower first contact surface 28 on its rear side. Corresponding second contact surfaces 29, 30 are formed on the trigger lever 11. Here, the lower contact surface 30 does not abut, neither in
The functions are described with reference to
At the transition from the finger rest 24 to the extension 20, the safety lever 13 has a recess 38 for receiving the leg spring 33, which is delimited by a surface 39, on which abuts the lower leg 35 (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
GM90/2016 | Apr 2016 | AT | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1395141 | Reising | Oct 1921 | A |
4691461 | Behlert | Sep 1987 | A |
5402593 | Lenkarski et al. | Apr 1995 | A |
6223460 | Schmitter et al. | May 2001 | B1 |
6499243 | Herzog | Dec 2002 | B1 |
6843013 | Cutini | Jan 2005 | B2 |
7373752 | Bubits | May 2008 | B2 |
7500327 | Bubits | Mar 2009 | B2 |
D597626 | Krieger | Aug 2009 | S |
7690144 | Fagundes de Campos | Apr 2010 | B2 |
7810268 | McGarry | Oct 2010 | B1 |
8250799 | Duperry | Aug 2012 | B2 |
9222745 | Kallio | Dec 2015 | B2 |
9291416 | Wurkner | Mar 2016 | B2 |
9726449 | Spinner | Aug 2017 | B2 |
20030213159 | Cutini et al. | Nov 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
485710 | Nov 1929 | DE |
Entry |
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Austrian Search Report from Austrian Utility Model Application No. GM 90/2016, dated Oct. 24, 2016. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170299305 A1 | Oct 2017 | US |