In hunting, the simplest way to ensure the hunter an opportunity to shoot a target is maintaining a motionless position while keeping the rifle in a ready to fire position. Due to the length of time a hunter may be in the field waiting for a target, an additional concern is fatigue and gun stability that can affect the safety of the hunter. In prior art, hands-free mechanisms have attempted to address this issue by creating attachable slings and strap systems that are not easily removable or do not provide adequate stability to the butt of the gun to prevent the gun from slipping.
It is known by those skilled in the art that the visual acuity of most wild game, especially turkeys, is such that small positional changes by the hunter can startle the game being hunted. With the time and patience necessary to be an effective hunter, having an open shot only to alert the game to your presence can be a frustrating reality.
The positioning of the gun in prior art does not fully eliminate the need to further lift the gun to sight a target, which does not fully address the motionless aspects hoped to be achieved. The complicated strap and attachment systems can become cumbersome and potentially belie the safety of the hunter should an event occur that would require the system to be removed quickly. Other concerns in the current state of the art pertain to hunters that suffer from disabilities that prevent them from using prior inventions effectively.
The present invention fulfills a much needed improvement of the prior art, comprising a means for stabilizing a firearm in a ready to fire position while allowing the hunter's hands to remain free. The advantageous embodiment of the current invention allows the firearm to not only be stabilized about the gunstock but to be held in a position in which aiming requires minimal movement by the hunter. This hands-free feature allows the hunter to utilize game calls without sacrificing firearm stability or game call quality while easily returning to a sighting position with minimal movement.
Disabilities affecting the fine motor skills of the hands can prohibit avid hunters from continuing in the sport. The present invention can be easily used in the field by a hunter with such disabilities allowing those individuals the opportunity to safely reclaim a sport to which they were previously devoted. Additionally, the one maneuver release of the current invention allows for quick detachment of the device and adjoined firearm when not in use, further addressing safety and ease of use, as compared to prior art.
In the following description, numerous specific details and options of the present invention are set forth in order to provide a more thorough understanding of the claimed invention. It will be appreciated, by one skilled in the art that the Hands-Free Long Gun Stabilizer of the present disclosure may be practiced without such specific details or optional components and that such description are merely for convenience and as such solely selected for the purpose of illustrating the invention. Reference to the figures showing embodiments of the present invention are made to describe the invention and do not limit the scope of the disclosure herein.
The Hands-free Firearm Stabilizer 50 is essentially comprised of a curved component 10, a rear connection point 12, a detachable connection point 14, a shoulder securing means 16 and a gunstock securing means 20.
The curved component 10 constructed of metal, wood, polymer or equivalent substances, comprises a rearward end 11, a forward end 13 and a shoulder arc 15 as shown in
A gunstock securing means 20 having a first end 21 and a second end 22 is perpendicularly affixed at the first end 21 to the forward end 13 of the curved component 10 via a screw, permanent weld, adhesives or similar means. The gunstock securing means 20 being a concave projection of sufficient width and length to accommodate the convex comb of a standard gunstock 40 and maintain the firearm in an essentially perpendicular position relative to the hunter. In an alternative embodiment, the curved component 10 and the gunstock connection means 20 could be detachable, allowing the hunter to detach the firearm from his/her shoulder without releasing the shoulder securing means 16.
As demonstrated in
As attached, the invention 50 can additionally stabilized with the hunter's knee or additional stabilizing equipment such as kneepads currently known in the art, as demonstrated in
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