The present disclosure relates to firearms, and more particularly to dry-fire practice equipment.
Dry fire practice involves manipulating and using the weapon without loading it. The technique is often used to simulate actual firing of the firearm when there is not a suitable place to practice with live ammunition. The user may handle, aim, pull the trigger, pull the slide and/or cock the firearm during such practice. Dry fire exercises are a versatile and safe way to practice with firearms and improve one's shooting skills. Historically safety or “dummy” rounds have been used to simulate proper loading, reloading, and quick trigger engagement after reloading. However it is laborious and time consuming to load the practice magazine and then have to retrieve the ejected safety rounds from the ground. Most pistols use magazines featuring a spring loaded follower. When the magazine is emptied, the follower engages a slide lock which prevents travel of the slide until a new, loaded magazine is inserted. While this functionality is useful for quickly reloading the firearm during live firing, it hampers practicing with the firearm because the operator must disengage the slide lock after insertion of a fresh magazine. If that magazine is empty the spring loaded follower prevents the disengagement of the slide stop. As mentioned above the historic use of safety rounds is problematic.
Some pistols, such as the Smith & Wesson M&P9c pistol (available from Smith & Wesson Corp. of Springfield, Mass.), contain a magazine safety. Such pistols cannot function without a magazine, preventing the most basic practice of cycling the slide to cock the firearm and then pulling the trigger. Using an empty magazine automatically locks the slide back with each cycle, which hinders the drill. Thus use of safety rounds is very inefficient.
Devices are known which facilitate using a firearm to practice.
U.S. Pat. No. 119,357, issued to A. C. Hobbs on Sep. 26, 1871, discloses a black cartridge containing no gun powered. The cartridge includes a rubber disk positioned at the rear of the cartridge casing. During dry fire practice, the Hobbs blank is chambered and the disk absorbs blows from the firing pin, allowing the user to simulate some firing actions.
Improvements on the Hobbs blank are known, such as the firearm snap cap disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,435,090 issued to J. E. Darrow on Jul. 25, 1995. The snap cap is also designed to be chambered and consists of a bore cleaning brush attached to a unit body having a diameter equal to the diameter of ammunition used with the firearm.
While the Hobbs blank, the Darrow snap cap, and other types of chamber-able simulated ammunition may be used during dry fire practice, such practice ammunition may be expelled prematurely if the firearm's round ejection mechanisms are simulated (e.g., pulling a pistol slide back when a practice round is in the chamber). Thus, practicing actuating the firearm slide, reloading the firearm magazine, and other techniques may be difficult and/or require multiple rounds of practice ammunition.
Other safety devices are known, such as the magazine block device disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,240,449 issued to N. E. Clifton on Jul. 10, 2007. The Clifton magazine block is designed to be inserted into a magazine and, when the magazine is loaded into a rifle, the magazine block occupies the loading chamber, thereby preventing live rounds of ammunition from being loaded while still allowing the user to practice with the rifle. Some designs of the Clifton magazine block impede full motion of the firearm slide and/or charging handle.
Given the foregoing, what are needed are devices which allow a user to conduct dry fire practice drills with a firearm, including magazine removal are reload exercises.
This summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts in a simplified form that are further described below in the Detailed Description. It is not intended to identify key features or essential features of the subject matter to be claimed, nor is it intended to be used to limit the scope of the subject matter to be claimed.
The present disclosure is directed to magazine block devices. Magazine block devices in accordance with the present disclosure may be used with pistols, rifles, and other firearms during dry fire practice, enabling a user to learn and maintain proper firearm handling skills without expending ammunition, thus reducing costs and increasing safety during such exercises,
In an aspect, a magazine block device is provided having a bullet-shaped body. The magazine block device is designed to be inserted into a magazine having an offset, spring-loaded follower. The magazine block device body includes two upper ridges positioned along to outer edge of the body. The upper ridges form a longitudinal channel through which the firearm breath face loading tab may pass without dislodging the magazine block device. The upper ridges contact the feed lips of the magazine, keeping the magazine block device in position.
Magazine followers are often angled, therefore the bottom portion of the magazine block device may comprise an offset lower ridge. The lower ridge is configured to evenly force the follower down a sufficient distance to prevent actuating the firearm slide lock. This allows dry fire practice of pulling the slide,
The magazine block device may also comprise one or more cutouts, protrusions, or other portions designed to help a user insert or remove the magazine block device from the magazine. In some aspects, the magazine block device may be inserted and removed from a magazine by hand, enabling the user to quickly prepare a firearm for dry fire practice and return the firearm to live, operational status by simply inserting a magazine containing live ammunition or removing the magazine block device from a magazine, reloading that magazine with ammunition, and loading the magazine into the firearm.
In an aspect, the magazine block device allows the user to dry fire practice with a semi-automatic pistol without having the slide lock engage. Because dry fire practice necessitates having the pistol or other firearm free of ammunition in the magazine as well as the chamber, the built in slide lock will always lock the slide in the rear, or open, position when the pistol is cycled, or re-cocked, to reset the trigger into the “fire” position. This requires the user to disengage the slide lock after every cocking cycle which is disruptive to dry fire practice techniques. Among other things, having to constantly disengage the slide lock after every trigger pull and recock cycle disrupts the hand position, target focus and mental concentration.
The slide lock is a feature in all semi-automatic pistols to alert the user when the magazine is empty or all rounds have been expended. After the last round in the magazine is chambered, the magazine follower rises to the top of the magazine, by spring pressure, until it engages the feed lips of the magazine body. When in this upper-most position, the magazine follower pushes up on the slide-lock of the pistol so that after the next shot and recocking cycle, the slide of the pistol engages this slide lock and holds the slide in its most rearward, or open, position.
In an aspect, a magazine block device prevents the slide lock from engaging by simulating a round in the feed position in the magazine. This pushes the magazine follower down low enough as to prevent engagement of the slide lock, allowing the slide to return to the closed, or locked, position. The user only need manually cycle the slide of the pistol after each “dry fire” trigger pull with the magazine block device installed, avoiding the extra, disruptive step of disengaging the slide lock.
Further features and advantages of the devices and systems disclosed herein, as well as the structure and operation of various aspects of the present disclosure, are described in detail below with reference to the accompanying figures.
The features and advantages of the present disclosure will become more apparent from the Detailed Description set forth below when taken in conjunction with the drawings in which like reference numbers indicate identical or functionally similar elements.
The present disclosure is directed to magazine block devices for dry fire practice. Devices in accordance with the present disclosure allow users of pistols, rifles and other firearms to conduct dry fire practice while having the firearm free of any ammunition in the magazine, as well as the chamber. Magazine block devices in accordance with the present disclosure prevent the firearm slide lock from engaging after every cocking cycle. Such devices also remain engaged within the device after each cocking cycle, even where such cycles are designed to expel chambered ammunition casings and/or dummy rounds.
Referring now to
Magazine block device 100 may be constructed out of any appropriate material including, but not limited to, a polymer, metal, wood, rubber, and/or combinations thereof. Magazine block device 100 comprises a body 102 and may be bullet-shaped, resembling the profile of the ammunition magazine block device 100 that replaces an ammunition round during dry fire practice. The cross section of body 102 is substantially similar to the cross section of such ammunition. Body 102 may include a curved front portion 110. Curved front portion 100 ensures that device 100 fits into magazines designed for bullets having similar profiles.
Two upper ridges 104 are positioned along the outer edge of body 102. Upper ridges 104 extend vertically from body 102. In some aspects, upper ridge 104 extends approximately two millimeters from the top surface of body 102. As shown in greater detail in
Two ridges 104 form a longitudinal channel 106 along the top surface of device 100. Channel 106 allows firearm loading mechanisms, such as a breach face loading tab of a pistol (see
Device 100 may be configured for use with spring loaded magazines having angled followers. Device 100 may further include a lower ridge 108 extending down from body 102 in order to contact the follower and maintain the follower in a position that will not actuate the firearm slide lock or other magazine reloading mechanism. In an aspect, lower ridge 108 extends approximately four millimeters downward and is offset relative to the longitudinal axis of device 100. This configuration, shown in
Front portion 110 may include one or more flanges 112 extending inwardly toward the longitudinal axis of device 100. Each flange 112 is raised slightly with respect to the surface of body 102 such that a user may push or pull against flange 112 in order to install or remove device 100 from a magazine. Flanges 112 may be positioned along other portions of device 100, such as upper ridges 104, body sides, and the like.
Device 100 may also comprise one or more cutouts, protrusions, or other portions designed to help a user insert or remove the magazine block device 100 from the magazine. In some aspects, the magazine block device 100 may be inserted and removed from a magazine by hand, enabling the user to quickly prepare a firearm for dry fire practice and return the firearm to live, operational status by simply inserting a magazine containing live ammunition or removing magazine block device 100 from a magazine, reloading that magazine with ammunition, and loading the magazine into the firearm.
In an aspect, body 102 may comprise pocket 114. A tool or other rigid member may be inserted into pocket 114 in order to aid in the removal of device 100 from a magazine,
As will be apparent to those skilled in the relevant art(s) after reading the description herein, device 100 may be configured to function with firearms using various types of ammunition (e.g., 9 mm, .308, .45ACP, 12ga., .22LR, 5.56x45 mm, 7.62×51 mm, .357 Magnum), having varying magazine designs (e.g., single column, staggered, internal box, detachable box, STANAG magazine) and the like. Device 100 may be configured to inhibit round loading mechanisms and/or casing ejection mechanisms apart from those shown and described herein.
Referring now to
Pistol 300 includes a hammer 302. Hammer 302 may be manually cocked or may be cocked by movement of a slide 308. Slide 308 has a breach face loading tab 310 configured to push a round 304 into a firing chamber 312 from a magazine 306. Before round 304 is loaded into chamber 312, round 304 is held in place within magazine 306 by a pair of feed lips 406 and a follower 404. Feed lips 406 constrain the motion of round 304 because follower 404 is spring loaded and forces round against feed lips 406. Slide 308 can freely move unless a slide lock 402 is engaged. Slide lock 402 is engaged when no rounds 304 or other objects remain in magazine 306, thereby allowing follower 404 to press against slide lock 402. Engaging slide lock 402 locks slide 308 into an open position. In order to move slide 308 from the locked position a slide lock release must be pressed by the user. Pressing the slide lock release is not part of a normal firing sequence; therefore avoiding such an action during dry fire practice is desired. Device 100 may be utilized in order to avoid such an action because device 100 prevents upward movement of follower 404, preventing follower 404 from engaging slide lock 402.
Detail view 401 shows tab 310 positioned near the rear of round 304. As tab 310 moves forward, it pushes round 304 out of magazine 306 and into chamber 312.
Detail view 501 shows follower 404 engaging slide lock 402 when follower 404 is not vertically constrained by round 304, device 100, or another object.
Referring now to
When follower 404 is in the position shown in
As shown in
As shown in FIG. GC, upper ridges 104 each contact a feed lip 406, maintaining the position of device 100. Lower ridge 108 pushes follower 404 downward, ensuring that it cannot engage slide lock 402 when the magazine shown in
Referring now to
Referring briefly to
Referring briefly to
Referring briefly to
While various aspects of the present disclosure have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example and not limitation. It will be apparent to persons skilled in the relevant art(s) that various changes in form and detail can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure. The present disclosure should not be limited by any of the above described aspects, but should be defined only in accordance with the following claims and their equivalents.
In addition, it should be understood that the figures, which highlight the structure, methodology, functionality and advantages of the present disclosure, are presented as examples only. The present disclosure is sufficiently flexible and configurable, such that it may be implemented in ways other than that shown in the accompanying figures.
Further, the purpose of the foregoing Abstract is to enable the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the public generally and especially the scientists, engineers and practitioners in the relevant art(s) who are not familiar with patent or legal terms or phraseology, to determine quickly from a cursory inspection the nature and essence of this technical disclosure. The Abstract is not intended to be limiting as to the scope of the present invention in any way.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Design patent application Ser. No. 29/479,014, filed Jan. 10, 2014, and entitled “Dry Fire Practice Magazine Block,” the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 29479014 | Jan 2014 | US |
Child | 14335158 | US |