The present invention relates to a 1911 style handgun.
1911 handguns are one of the most popular handguns, possibly of all times. The 1911 handguns (also commonly referred to as “Model 1911” or “M1911” et seq.) are commonly used for self defense and/or competition, and many parts are available to modify these firearms to an individual user's preferences.
However, the 1911 handgun is predominantly a design specifically used for shooting in the right hand. While the firearm can be fired by a left-handed individual, the user must either use it right handed or use the firearm in the user's left hand but suffer the unsafe and inconvenience of shell casings ejected from the right hand facing port flying in front of (or on occasion into) the user's head and line of sight.
Some left handed 1911 style handguns have been attempted. But the modifications have been significant and expensive and have not allowed much interchangeability in parts with right hand versions. In particular, none of the known versions allow the use of even one of the millions of military surplus and civilian magazines available in the marketplace today.
It is believed that because of these shortcomings there has not been a successful commercial launch of a left handed version of the 1911 in the marketplace today. Therefore, there remains a need in the art for an easily manufactured left hand 1911 that uses the same readily available magazines as the millions of right hand 1911 handguns combined with the safety aspects of shell casings being ejected away from the shooter.
A pistol having an ejection port in the slide, an extractor, and an ejector that are all reversed position for left-handed use. All other elements, including control surfaces and control contact points of the pistol remain the same. The reversed ejection port, extractor and ejector force ejected empty cartridges cases generally in the opposite direction from the user's face. Keeping the control surfaces and control contact points the same allows for use of standard magazines, e.g., right handed firearm magazines, which are plentiful and inexpensive. The combination of the reversed ejection port, extractor and ejector along with the use of the existing control surfaces and contact points has significant advantages over other pistols, e.g., any left handed 1911 pistols, which are complete mirror images forcing the use of non-standard magazines.
Thus, the present invention gives a left-handed user all of the advantages of a right handed pistol to a right handed user (e.g., ejects empty cases generally away from the face of the user) and provides all of the traditional functions of a 1911 pistol, and, is capable of using standard 1911 cartridge magazines.
Further areas of applicability of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description provided hereinafter. It should be understood that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating the preferred embodiment of the invention, are intended for purposes of illustration only and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
The present invention will become more fully understood from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The following description of the preferred embodiment(s) is merely exemplary in nature and is in no way intended to limit the invention, its application, or uses.
The present invention is directed to a hybrid left handed 1911 pistol for the left handed, left eye dominant user. The pistol illustrated is a semi-automatic 1911 pistol. However, the pistol can be any other pistol or firearm without departing from the scope of the present invention. The present invention eliminates the dangerous and distractive empty case ejections that are common to left handed users using right handed pistols. It also eliminates the need for expensive proprietary magazines and allows the left handed user to use standard, right handed magazines, which is yet another significant benefit of the present invention.
There is provided a hybrid left handed 1911 pistol shown generally at 10 capable of ejecting empty cartridge cases generally to the left, away from the face of the left handed user. This eliminates the dangerous problem of ejected cases being ejected into the face of the left handed user and also eliminates the distraction of empty cases being ejected across the sight line of the left handed user.
In general, standard right handed magazines are readily available. The hybrid left handed 1911 pistol 10 allows the use of these standard right handed 1911 magazines, which eliminates the use of expensive proprietary magazines that would only work in true mirror image left handed pistols.
Referring to the present invention in general, in operation, the standard magazine is the device that carries the cartridges and when inserted into the grip opening in the frame directs the cartridges to feed into the barrel's chamber. There are millions of these in common usage. The cartridge is the assembly that contains the primer, powder, case and bullet. The primer is the enclosure which contains the explosive compound which when struck ignites the powder and begins the process whereby the bullet leaves the firearm's barrel. The case is the component that holds the primer, powder and bullet, the bullet being the projectile that leaves the firearm's barrel. The frame is the main component of the firearm assembly; it holds all of the firearm parts together. Also called the receiver. The ejector is the component that is attached to the frame that causes the empty case to be thrown from the firearm, via the ejection port. The extractor device pulls the empty case from the barrel when the slide is retracted. The slide is the portion of the firearm assembly that contains the barrel, firing pin and ejector; it moves when the firearm is fired to create the motion required to cycle the firearm, ejecting the empty case and loading a fresh cartridge into the barrel's chamber. The chamber is the void in the barrel where the unfired cartridge resides prior to being fired. And the slide stop is the component which locks the slide in the fully rearward open position when the magazine is empty of cartridges. The magazine follower activates the slide stop into the upward position. This forces the end of the slide stop into a recess in the slide, locking it into position.
Referring to
The hybrid left handed 1911 pistol assembly 10 also has a safety 40 and a left side slide stop 42, both of which are standard. The safety 40 on the left side can be manipulated by the left hander's thumb, and, the slide stop 42 can be manipulated by the user's trigger finger. The slide stop 42 is part of a slide stop assembly shown generally at 44 including a slide stop protrusion 46 adjacent a magazine follower 48 of the magazine 16, all of which are standard. A tab 51 of the slide stop 42 selectively engages a notch in the slide and a standard recess 50 formed on the slide 20.
The slide rail slots, the slide stop cut, and a slide stop relief cut remain the same as in the right handed firearms.
The slide stop assembly 44 remains the same as in the right handed firearms. This allows the standard right handed magazine 16 to perform its function to lock the slide 20 in the rearward position when the magazine 16 is empty. This is a standard feature of the 1911 pistol and must be maintained for proper operation in its manual of arms. A standard depressible magazine release button 64 is also provided to release the magazine 16 for removal from the grip portion 14 of the frame 12.
The left side position of the pistol assembly 10 controls are better for manipulation by the left handed user because the left hander's trigger finger can operate the magazine release button 64 and the slide stop 42 generally without having to change the user's grip on the hand grip portion 14 of the handgun 10. This has significant safety and grip stability advantages. In contrast, almost all right handed users of original right handed controls for conventional handguns must release their grip to effect these control movements because the controls are on the left side.
In order to accommodate left handed operation, the present invention includes particular adjustments to the frame 12, slide 20 and other features as will now be explained in more detail.
The frame 12 has a pair of apertures 52 located on the opposite side of the top of the frame 12 relative to right handed pistols. The pair of apertures 52 are provided toward the top of the frame 12 to receive and hold posts of an ejector 54. The slide 20 is provided with a rear slide stop 56 area having an opening to a channel 57 formed in the slide 20 to retain the ejector 54. The ejector 54 and first channel 57 are mirror image reversed relative to right handed pistols to allow left side ejection. This combination of features has significant benefits over conventional systems.
Preferably, the firing pin stop 34 also includes a recess 35 mirror image to the right hand firearms.
The slide 20 is also mirror image reversed on the upper portion of the slide, e.g, upper 90%, except for the barrel and barrel bushing cuts. These remain the same as the right handed firearm and are not reversed. An ejection port 58 (see
An extractor 60 is also provided, which generally pulls the cartridge back on the slide 20 and ejects spent cartridges. The extractor 60 is retained in the slide 20 by the rear slide stop 56 section. A second channel 62 is provided in the rear slide stop area 56 to receive the extractor 60. The Extractor 60 is mirror image reversed to allow for left side ejection. The firing pin stop 34 and rear slide stop area 56 are also mirror image reversed to allow containment of the extractor 60 and to accommodate the reversed ejector 54.
The combination of all of these features creates a unique design with the necessary functions for safety and comfort for the left handed operator, while maintaining the affordability of utilizing standard magazines.
The present invention is not limited to 1911 pistols. Other models, side arms, pistols, handguns, firearms, magazines and etc of any kind incorporating left handed features according to the invention and/or compatible with various magazines and/or caliber cartridges are contemplated without departing from the scope of the present invention.
Referring to the Figures generally, and most particularly to
The description of the invention is merely exemplary in nature and, thus, variations that do not depart from the gist of the invention are intended to be within the scope of the invention. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/066,582, filed Oct. 21, 2014. The disclosure of the above application is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1618510 | Browning | Feb 1927 | A |
2744448 | Allen | May 1956 | A |
3477162 | Morse | Nov 1969 | A |
6345463 | Baer, Sr. | Feb 2002 | B1 |
6347569 | Butler | Feb 2002 | B1 |
6722074 | Farrell | Apr 2004 | B1 |
9341429 | Reavis, III | May 2016 | B1 |
20120291324 | Bandini | Nov 2012 | A1 |
20130019510 | Kemmerer | Jan 2013 | A1 |
20140224114 | Faxon | Aug 2014 | A1 |
20140338243 | La Vigne | Nov 2014 | A1 |
20150219413 | Karimullah | Aug 2015 | A1 |
Entry |
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John Caradimas, M-1911 Pistol History, downloaded Jul. 6, 2016, internet pubication, entire document, found here: http://www.m1911.org/full_history.htm. |
1911Forum.com, left handed 1911 thread, downloaded Jul. 6, 2016, internet publication, at least comments #3 and #6, p. 2, found here: https://forums.1911forum.com/showthread.php?t=218619. |
The High Road, 1911 left hand slide, downloaded Jul. 6, 2016, internet publication, at least TRX's disclosure, p. 1, found here: http://www.thehighroad.org/archive/index.php/t-626264.html. |
Corporate Author, 1911 Government Schematic, The Internet Archive Wayback Machine, found here, https://web.archive.org/web/20130827022122/http://www.midwayusa.com/General.mvc/Index/Schematics˜Gov1911, shows this schematic dating from Aug. 27, 2013, pp. 1-3. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160109207 A1 | Apr 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62066582 | Oct 2014 | US |