The invention refers to a safety system for repetition rifles provided, with a tubular magazine for storage, below and the barrel parallel to it, of ammunition and, more specifically, to a hammer disarmer for said repetition rifles operated by alternate linear movement of the frontal actioning fore-end (pump action).
In repetition rifles that are operated by movements of the frontal fore-end, while there is ammunition in the magazine, an alternate linear movement of the actioning fore-end will be sufficient to eject the fired cartridge case lodged within the chamber, subsequently feeding a new cartridge into the chamber and leaving the hammer armed for the next shot, which will only depend on trigger action.
Transportation and handling of this model of repetition rifles constitutes particularly constant danger, since they are very liable to cause accidental shots. When the user stops firing the rifle, the user must to remember to manually disarm the hammer, simultaneously pressing the trigger. This required safety operation implies a certain risk; the hammer may slips from the finger if it has been lubricated or if the person does not have the required movement coordination.
An example of a safety device corresponds to patent U.S. Pat. No. 5,910,003, by Kleinpaul, which refers to a locking device for guns, more precisely to a locking device that prevents the use of a revolver, a pistol or the like, either by unauthorized or untrained people, for instance children, comprising a cylindrical locking pin housed in a housing cavity made in a suitable part of the revolver, having one operable head portion apparent on the external surface of the revolver and an opposite end portion, and a substantially helicoidal groove cooperating with a retention pin, the device locking the revolver when, upon operation with a suitable key, said locking pin translates inside its housing cavity projecting one of its ends outwards said housing cavity in order to co-operate with the striking surface so that said projected end obstructs hammer striking movement.
The device is locked when one of the two opposite ends of the locking pin is projected out of its respective housing cavity and cooperates with a given striking surface, and otherwise the device is unlocked when none of the two opposite ends of the locking pin is projected out of its respective housing cavity and cooperates with a given striking surface.
Preferentially, said operable head portion apparent from the external surface of the revolver has connective means to engage with a suitable key only, and cooperates with said locking pin. Positioning means are designed to establish the two correct positions that the device can assume, “locked” or “unlocked”.
In one preferred embodiment of the referred invention this locking pin is housed in a cavity in the rear portion of the hammer.
In an alternative embodiment of the referred invention, this locking pin is housed in a cavity in the rear upper portion of revolver frame.
Instead, the object of the present invention is not a lock, but rather a device used to avoid the initially mentioned risk of accidental shots in repetition rifles when a cartridge is housed in the chamber of the barrel and the hammer is armed. The disarming of the hammer is simple and safe, since it only depends on exerting a slight finger pressure on the head of the disarming device that protrudes from the frontal concave portion of the upper face of the hammer. This light and local pressure determines the release of the hammer, whose spring pushes it to the position where its movement is safely interrupted shortly before percussion. To fire the rifle, the user must only arm the hammer with the thumb to its firing position, which is made by the usual slight pressure on the trigger.
The hammer disarming device, object of the invention, will be better understood by the description below with reference to the attached figures, where:
The safety device is basically constituted of a cylindrical disarming pin formed by three portions of cylindrical section with different diameters. The first one is the actuation head 2, the second a short section 3 with a frontal incision 4 and the third one is the elongated main body 1 with smaller diameter.
The disarming pin is inserted in a hole of the hammer 7 with portions of different diameters, which meet to those of the corresponding portions of the disarming pin. Said hole in the hammer 7 is practically tangent to its turning axis 9.
Before the pin is introduced, a small helicoidal spring 6 is inserted in the portion of the hole with intermediate diameter below the elongation 3 of the actuation head 2.
The disarming pin is kept in the correct position in the hammer 7 by the small crosswise pin 5 laterally inserted in the hammer to interact with the plane frontal depression 4 of said pin.
The lower part of the hammer has a plane face, where the lodging hole of the disarming pin 1 emerges and where the lower end can of the disarming pin 1, in this way, act on the upper face of the small disarming lever 12 that is, hinged to the lower back portion of the hammer. In front of and above the edge of the disarming lever, the round face of the hammer is provided with two notches 10 and 11 that interact with the upper edge 19 of the trigger 16, and that fit in the notches according to the position of the hammer.
As shown in
When the curved disarming head 2 is slightly pressed downwards (
In
In all figures, the safety device lock 14 of the hammer 7 is represented in a position that does not interfere with the movement of the hammer and therefore the use of the gun. This lock is solely provided to avoid the use of the gun by unauthorized persons.
When the hammer is armed, the upper edge 19 of the gun 16 fits into the lower notch 11 of the hammer 7, adjacent to the edge of the disarming lever 12.
The user, intentionally pulling of the trigger 16 to the end of its course, forces its edge 19 to release from its interference with the notches 11 and 10 of the hammer 7, allowing its free rotation under the impulse of the corresponding spring 15 to its impact with the firing pin 22, causing the shot.