1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a hand firearm, especially a pistol.
2. Prior Art
Large-caliber pistols as rule comprise a locked breech in which the movably seated barrel is locked to the breech in the rest position. This lock is not released until the projectile has left the barrel and the breech together with the barrel has moved back a short distance as a consequence of the recoil. In known hand firearms, the control of locking and unlocking is frequently effected by control slope or enclosed control cams provided on the barrel and by corresponding control elements that are either formed directly on the butt or are mounted as separate inserts in the butt. However, the manufacture of enclosed control cams is technically complex and therefore associated with correspondingly high manufacturing costs. Even manufacturing control elements formed directly on the butt is complicated and correspondingly cost-intensive. Likewise, even the assembly of inserts inserted into the butt with control elements arranged thereon requires a great expenditure of time and cost as well as a large amount of professional knowledge on the part of the assemblers. In addition, a replacement of parts that have become unusable due to wear or destruction is assembly-intensive, time-consuming and very expensive in the case of such inserts, since all the inserts have to be replaced.
Hand firearms are also already known in which the control element cooperating with a control boss on the barrel is designed as a so-called multifunctional lever (breakdown lever, slide stop lever). Even this design is cost-intensive and expensive to manufacture. Moreover, breaking down the weapon with such a multifunctional lever is bothersome and therefore not very user-friendly.
The invention address the problem of creating a hand firearm of the initially cited type that comprises a simplified control mechanism for controlling locking and unlocking. This problem is solved by a hand firearm with the features as described herein.
In the hand firearm in accordance with the invention, control of locking and unlocking is effected via an open control curve on the barrel as well as via a control spindle replaceably arranged in the receiving bores of an insert. The impulse for the locking or unlocking procedures is supplied by the breech, movably guided on the insert, which is at first moved back by the recoil and is subsequently pushed forward again by a closing spring. The control spindle is an uncomplicated structural component, manufacturable, e.g., as a turned part in a simple and economical manner, that can be readily mounted and replaced rapidly and economically in the case of wear or destruction. The control spindle inserted in the insert can be readily and rapidly exchanged without great mounting expense and without special professional knowledge. Any wear can be compensated by using different diameters of the control spindle. Since the control spindle does not have to assume any further functions as a slide stop lever, breakdown lever or the like, the hand firearm can also be broken down in a simple and rapid manner. Even the open control curve provided on the barrel and cooperating with the control spindle does not require any great manufacturing cost, and can be manufactured in an economical manner. The control mechanism formed by the open control cam and the replaceable control spindle is not sensitive to contamination and assures a high degree of operational safety.
Practical embodiments and advantageous further developments of the invention are indicated in the following detailed description. Thus, the replaceable control spindle is set in a simple manner into the aligned receiving bores on two opposing side cheeks of the insert. This makes an especially simple assembly and disassembly possible.
In a preferred embodiment the open control cam cooperating with the control spindle is provided on a control boss on the bottom of the barrel. It comprises a sloping control surface that assures, together with the control spindle, the tilting of the barrel for unlocking the hand firearm during the rear movement of the breech. The control curve also comprises a stop surface parallel to the barrel axis for locking the barrel when the breech is closed.
In another advantageous embodiment the insert consists of two spaced-apart side cheeks connected to one another at their front ends by a lower connecting web. The insert is advantageously manufactured from a metal sheet, e.g., a steel sheet as a one-piece stamped bent part.
Other particulars and advantages of the invention result from the following description of a preferred embodiment, with reference to the drawings.
In FIGS. 1 to 3 the upper part of a hand firearm is schematically shown with insert 1, breech 2 movably guided on insert 1, and barrel 3. Insert 1, serving to guide breech 2 and to support and receive functional or operating parts such as, e.g., trigger sleeve, breakdown lever, control bolt, etc., is built into a known butt (not shown).
Insert 1, shown separately in
Barrel 3 shown alone in
The mode of operation of the control mechanism for controlling the locking and unlocking is explained in the following using
In
After the firing of a shot, breech 2 and barrel 3 at first move back a short distance together as a consequence of the recoil until control spindle 13 moves into sloping groove 25 and comes to rest on sloping control surface 24. Barrel 3 is then tilted downward, as a consequence of which breech 2 can continue its backward movement without being impeded and a reloading process can take place.
In
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04 002.132.1 | Feb 2004 | EP | regional |