The present disclosure relates to firearms, and more particularly to a handguard for clamping mounting on an existing firearm.
The publication WO 2013/010516 A1 discloses an arrangement to exchange and lock the barrel of a long gun with a handguard which is elastically deformed by a bolt and nut device, which is oriented perpendicular to the center plane of the gun and has cam-like surfaces which co-operate with the surface of the handguard. When threaded into one another, the cam-like surfaces press the handguard towards the center plane and fix it on the weapon. The device consists of a plurality of small parts and has to be demounted totally in order to change the handguard; the threads are in danger to get dirty or otherwise compromised.
Similar devices are known from the U.S. Pat. No. 10,436,549 B1, the US 2019/0170476 A1 and the U.S. Pat. No. 7,523,580 B1. The contents of these documents, as well as the contents of the U.S. Pat. No. 7,538,580 B1 and the U.S. Pat. No. 9,032,658 B2, mentioned below, are incorporated by reference into this application and description for all jurisdictions where this is possible.
For numerous rifles (carbines), in particular those of the types mentioned, handguards (also often referred as forearms) have been known for many years as independent parts and are available on the market, which fulfill the most varied wishes. It is therefore assumed as a given present disclosure relates to a handguard adapted to a firearm, which thus geometrically and functionally fits the weapon, so that it can be used with the handguard according to the disclosure. As a general technological background, the following can be briefly stated:
On the one hand, handguards form a grip area for the free hand—the target hand—of the shooter and allow the user to grip the firearm without directly contacting the barrel, which becomes hot during use. On the other hand, a handguard protects the barrel from blows, dirt, etc. and can be used as a mount for a variety of accessories, such as rifle scopes, residual light amplifiers, flashlights, laser pointers, and much more.
The handguard can be understood as a kind of extension of the housing of a rifle in the barrel direction. In order to improve the precision of a rifle, the handguard must therefore be connected to the case as rigidly as possible relative to the barrel and therefore also relative to the housing. However, the barrel must be able to swing “freely” when the shot is fired.
The barrel is usually fastened to the housing by means of a travelling nut, which is usually designed as a union nut and bolted to the housing. The travelling nut presses the barrel against a radially projecting shoulder of the housing.
From the prior art, a number of possibilities to couple a handguard to the housing are known for AR-15-type rifles, whereby very often a circumferential clamping, i.e. tangential to the axis of the handguard, is carried out, which in the following, if nothing else results from the context, is also referred to as the reference axis when the term “axial direction” is used. In most cases, a bracing against the barrel direction, i.e. against the upper housing, is realized by means of a separate, second clamping device of its own.
The desire remains for quick disassembly/assembly of the handguard, whether in use or for maintenance purposes. Furthermore, the disassembly and assembly process should be able to be carried out as simply as possible. Special tools are often required, which of course have to be carried separately. Often, as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 9,032,658 B2, for example, the tangential clamping is done by screws, which clamp the handguard tangentially to the travelling nut. There, an additional locking against shifting of the handguard in the axial direction is achieved by partial engagement of the screws in the grooves of the travelling nut provided for this purpose.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,538,580 B1 follows a similar approach, which prevents the handguard from being displaced in the axial direction by a tangentially displaceable locking bolt.
As a rule, a number of components are required to form a clamping at least in the tangential direction. Securing and pretensioning the barrel in the axial direction, preferably also via a clamping device, would also be desirable in order to form as rigid a connection as possible between the housing and the handguard.
What is needed is a handguard clamping device, which secures the handguard against displacement relative to the housing and at the same time ensures a rigid connection to the housing. Such a clamping device should use as few components as possible, be easy to handle, easy to maintain and relatively simple in design.
The present disclosure is directed to handguards for firearms, including rifles for mounting on a barrel or a barrel nut of an existing firearm, where the barrel or barrel nut has an annular groove. In one example the handguard includes a handguard housing having a housing axis, the handguard housing defining a slit running radially thereto, and further defining a through-opening running in a transverse direction, where the through-opening is a long hole having an outline comprised of two semicircles with a first axis and a second axis parallel to the first axis, with a rectangle located in-between; and a clamping device for mounting in the through-opening of the handguard housing. The clamping device in turn includes a lever that defines a lever axis and that includes a center element having a recess in a center area of the center element, the center element extending along and surrounding the lever axis and having a threaded section at a first end portion and a lever arm at a second end portion, where a conical shaft section is provided at the second end portion that widens towards the lever arm and is configured to contact a corresponding conical clamping surface of the handguard housing; and a nut having an internal thread that matches the threaded section of the first end portion of the center element; such that when the handguard is in its assembled state, the lever is disposed in the through-opening of the handguard housing in a plane normal to the handguard axis, the nut is screwed onto the threaded section thereby narrowing the slit, and an angular position of the lever about the lever axis is such that the center element contacts the annular groove of the barrel or barrel nut.
In the description and in the claims “before” or “in the front/forward” is used as the direction towards the muzzle of the barrel, “in the back/back” as the direction towards the stock, “down/downward” as the direction for the lock towards the magazine, and “up/upward” as the direction away from the magazine. The terms “center plane of the weapon,” “barrel bore,” “barrel axis,” “barrel core,” etc. have the usual meaning that the person skilled in the art attaches to them in the prior art. “Left” thus refers to the center plane of the weapon, “from left” corresponds to a movement, actuation, exertion of force in the direction of the center plane of the weapon, starting from a starting position to the “left” of it, etc. After a shot has been fired, the lock is moved “to the rear” under the effect of the gases and then “to the front” again under the effect of a closing spring, etc.
The present disclosure relates to a handguard for a rifle (or carbine), which may also be called handguard clamping or only clamping, especially for weapons of the rifle type M4/M16/AR15. The clamping device according to the disclosure and its variants are not limited to rifles, carbines, etc., but can also be adapted for use in pistols. The improvements provided by the handguards of the disclosure and their effects/advantages are listed below.
In the figures, everything that concerns the handguard 1 without the clamping device was marked with “1n,” analogously, everything that concerns the clamping device 2 was marked with “2n.”
An annular groove 131 is provided in the travelling nut 13; the lever 21 partly lies in this annular groove and in this illustration is cut in the area of its center element 26. A long hole running in the transverse direction 52 is provided in the housing 11, whose cross section has circular end sections, and two parallel long hole axes 191, 192 running in the transverse direction 52. These axes lie in a plane normal to the vertical 52.
The structure itself is as follows: The lever 21 is pushed with its threaded end forward through the long hole 19, the nut 28 with its conical nut section 282 directed towards the weapon, screwed on and secured against loss by means of the spring-loaded safety ring 281. By screwing on the nut 28, a longitudinal slit 17 of the housing 11 or the spacer 12 in the area of the lever 21 is changed in its width and provides for pretensioning and adjustment with the conical sections 22 of the shaft and 282 of the nut.
The clamping device 2 shown in detail in
A nut 28, shown in
By rotating the lever arm 27 in the mounting position (see
An equally important aspect of the handguard of the present disclosure in terms of its design is the formation of the long hole 19 shown in detail in
The assembly is carried out with the lever 21 in the “OPEN” position up to the stop on the “Upper,” then the nut 28 is tightened, narrows the gap 17 and thus fixes the housing 5 to the travelling nut 128. This situation is essentially illustrated in
In
Thus, the disclosed handguard allows tangential and axial clamping of the handguard at the same time.
In the exemplary embodiment shown, the outer diameter of the nut 28 is selected so that a part of the weapon, preferably the bolt carrier (not shown), can be used to loosen the nut 28. This means that the bolt carrier 28 with its slit-shaped opening, which allows the hammer or striking piece to pass through, can be used to unscrew the nut 28. A “half inch” width of the nut head is therefore particularly preferred.
Further embodiments concern the loss protection of the clamping device, already explained, by the annular groove 25 on the lever 21 in conjunction with the safety ring 281, which reduces the risk of the nut completely unscrewing and thereby decreases the risk of loss.
A person having ordinary skill in the art with the benefit of the present disclosure could readily modify the embodiments disclosed herein to other types of rifles and firearms without extensive or complex testing. The materials to be used are the same as in the prior art; the processing or the manufacturing processes to be chosen are also the same.
In the description and in the claims, the terms “front,” “back,” “top,” “bottom” and so on are used in the common form and with reference to the object in its usual position of use. This means that in a weapon the muzzle of the barrel is “in front,” that the lock or sled is moved “back” by the explosive gases, etc. Transverse to a direction means substantially a direction turned by 90° to it, unless otherwise indicated. Special reference is made to the various coordinate systems 51—barrel direction, 52—transverse direction and 53—vertical (with the weapon in the stop position as usual), drawn and described in the figures for better orientation.
It should also be noted that in the description and in the claims, indications such as “lower area” of an object means the lower half and in particular the lower quarter of the total height, “lowest area” the lowest quarter and in particular an even smaller part, while “center area” means the middle third of the total height (width-length). All these indications have their common meaning, applied to the intended position of the object under consideration, unless otherwise indicated.
In the description and in the claims “substantially” means a deviation of up to 10% of the indicated value, if it is physically possible, both downward and upward, otherwise only in the meaningful direction; with degrees (angle and temperature) this means±10°.
All quantities and percentages, in particular those used to delimit the scope of the disclosed handguard, as far as they do not concern the concrete examples, are to be understood with a tolerance of ±10%, thus for example 11% means from 9.9% to 12.1%. In the case of designations as in the case of “a solvent,” the word “a” is not to be regarded as a numerical word, but as an indefinite article or as a pronoun, unless the context indicates otherwise.
Unless otherwise indicated, the term “combination” or “combinations” stands for all types of combinations, from two of the components concerned to a plurality or all of such components; the term “containing” also stands for “comprising”.
The features and variants indicated in the individual embodiments and examples may be freely combined with those of the other examples and embodiments and, in particular, used to identify the invention in the claims without necessarily taking along the other details of the respective embodiment or respective example.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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19216891 | Dec 2019 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2020/083075 | 11/23/2020 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2021/121877 | 6/24/2021 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7523580 | Tankersley | Apr 2009 | B1 |
8931196 | Larue | Jan 2015 | B1 |
9032658 | Geissele | May 2015 | B2 |
10436549 | Taylor et al. | Oct 2019 | B1 |
10775129 | Kincel | Sep 2020 | B1 |
20150377584 | Chvala | Dec 2015 | A1 |
20190162503 | Keeney | May 2019 | A1 |
20190170476 | Hiler, Jr. et al. | Jun 2019 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2013010516 | Jan 2013 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report for PCT/EP2020/083075, dated Jan. 29, 2021. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20230020437 A1 | Jan 2023 | US |