1. Field of the Disclosure
The present disclosure generally relates to devices for selectively locking and releasing a magazine of an automatic or semiautomatic firearm, and to devices for holding the breech of a firearm in an open, blocked position for safety purposes.
2. Description of the Related Art
Firearm manufacturers are working to comply with the California Penal Code, Chapter 12.8 in regards to the Department of Justice position on assault weapons. Specifically, Article 2-978.20 (a) states that a “detachable magazine” means any “ammunition feeding device that can be removed readily from the firearm with neither disassembly of the firearm action nor use of a tool being required. A bullet or ammunition cartridge is considered a tool.”
In order to comply, a release mechanism for a magazine must involve the use of a tool. There are a number of devices that are marketed in California to make the weapons compliant with the above mentioned code. You can simply Google bullet button to see the primary ones selling. The most popular model only requires inserting any device into the center of the magazine catch device installed on the right side of the receiver to allow the operator to remove the magazine. Two others require that in order to drop the magazine, 1) you need to Allen wrench using nothing other than industry standard Allen wrenches to unscrew a set screw, thereby allowing for the removal of the magazine, 2) the other requires a simple small bladed screw driver or similar device to unscrew its set screw.
In any case, since there is nothing currently available to the public that requires the use of a proprietary tool to manipulate the magazine locking device, the Ca. DOJ will neither accept nor deny these devices are legal to use in the State of California, as it applies to the above mentioned law.
The present disclosure is directed to addressing one or more of the above issues.
It has been recognized that it would be advantageous to develop a magazine lock device that complies with the California Penal Code and other applicable regulations.
It has also been recognized that it would be advantageous to develop a magazine lock that is easy to use while also complying with the above-mentioned regulations.
It has also been recognized that it would be advantageous to develop a breech block system that can be used to hold open the breech of a firearm.
In accordance with one aspect thereof, the present application discloses a magazine lock for a firearm that includes a magazine latch, associated with a receiver of a firearm, having a socket with a shape, and having a catch that is moveable with respect to a first position in which the catch can extend into a slot of a magazine inserted into the receiver to prevent release of the magazine. A tool is provided, having a shape that matches the shape of the socket, and configured to engage the socket, rotation of the tool in the socket causing the catch to move toward or away from the first position.
In accordance with another aspect thereof, the present application discloses a breech block for a firearm having a barrel with a breech end, a bolt carrier, an upper receiver, a charge handle, a charge handle slot in the upper receiver, and a magazine well for receiving a magazine. The breech block includes a body, insertable into a top of a magazine, and insertable into the magazine well with insertion of the magazine. The body is extendable into the charge handle slot, thereby preventing the charge handle from being pushed to a forward position, and blocking the bolt carrier from feeding into the breech end of the barrel.
One embodiment of the present disclosure is a system for locking a firearm comprising a magazine catch, a tube nut attached to a portion of the magazine catch, a biasing member positioned between the tube nut and the magazine catch, and a housing. The magazine catch is configured to extending into a slot of a magazine inserted into a receiver or a firearm to prevent the release of the magazine from the receiver. The tube nut comprises a first engagement feature. The tube nut is positioned within the housing to secure the housing to the magazine catch. The system includes a tool configured to be inserted into the housing to engage the first engagement feature of the tube nut. Rotation of the tool engages the first engagement feature of the tube nut to rotate the tube nut with the rotation of the tool. The rotation of the tube nut permits the release of the magazine from the receiver.
The tube nut may include a second engagement feature. The housing may include an internal shoulder and a first selectively movable detent on the internal shoulder. The first detent may be biased in an upward position and configured to engage the second engagement feature of the tube nut to prevent rotation of the tube nut when the detent is in the upward position. The tool may be configured to be inserted into the housing to depress the first detent permitting rotation of the tube nut by engagement of the first engagement feature and rotation of the tool.
The tool may comprise an exterior shoulder configured to depress the first detent. The tool may comprise an interior shoulder configured to engage the first engagement feature of the tube nut. The first engagement feature of the tube nut may comprise a plurality of grooves and the tool may include a plurality of projections configured to engage the plurality of grooves. The second engagement feature may comprise a plurality of grooves on a lower shoulder of the tube nut. The housing may include a second selectively movable detent on the internal shoulder that is biased in an upward position. The first and second detents may each be configured to engage one of a plurality of grooves on a lower shoulder of the tube nut when the detents are in the upward position. The detents may selectively prevent the rotation of the tube nut within the housing. The housing may include a plurality of detents located equilaterally around the shoulder configured to engage a plurality of grooves on the tube nut to selectively prevent the rotation of the tube nut within the housing. The system may include a breech block inserted into a top of a magazine inserted into a receiver. A portion of the breech block prevents the movement of the charge handle of the firearm from a rearward position to a forward position preventing the firing of the firearm. A portion of the breech block may extend into a slot in the charge handle.
One embodiment of the present disclosure is a mechanism to selectively lock and release a magazine catch of a fire arm. The mechanism comprises a tube nut having an internally threaded shaft at one end and a projection at the other end. The projection includes an upper external shoulder having at least one first engagement feature and a lower external shoulder that includes at least one second engagement feature. The mechanism includes a housing having a cavity at a first end, an internal shoulder, and an aperture through the internal shoulder that extends to a second end of the housing. The housing includes as least one detent biased in a raised position on the internal shoulder. The tube nut is configured to be positioned within the cavity of the housing with the internally threaded shaft extending into the aperture. When positioned within the cavity of the housing, the lower external shoulder of the tube nut is positioned on the internal shoulder of the housing so that the raised detent engages the at least one second engagement feature selectively preventing the rotation of the tube nut within the cavity of the housing.
The mechanism may further comprise a tool having at least one first mating feature configured to engage the first engagement feature on the upper external shoulder and at least one second mating feature configured to move the at least one detent to a lowered position. The at least one second mating feature of the tool may comprise an external shoulder and the at least one first mating feature of the tool may comprise an internal shoulder. The at least second engagement feature of the tube nut may comprise a plurality of grooves in the lower external shoulder. The at least one first engagement feature of the tube nut may comprise a plurality of grooves in the upper external shoulder. The housing may include at least two detents biased in a raised position on the internal shoulder of the housing.
One embodiment of the present disclosure is a method of unlocking a magazine catch of a firearm receiver. The method comprises inserting a tool between a housing and a tube nut and depressing a biased device that selectively prevents a rotation of the tube nut within the housing. The method further comprises engaging a feature on the tube nut with a portion of the tool while depressing the biased device and rotating the tool while engaging the feature on the tube nut to rotate the tube nut within the housing and moving the magazine catch out of a groove in a magazine positioned within the firearm receiver. The rotation of the tube nut within the housing may permit a biasing member to be depressed permitting the magazine catch to move out of the groove in the magazine.
One embodiment of the present disclosure is a breech block for a firearm receiving having a barrel with a breech end, a bolt carrier, a charge handle having a slot, and magazine well for receiving a magazine. The breech block comprising a body configured to be inserted into a top of a magazine. Then a magazine is inserted into the magazine well of a firearm with the body inserted into the top of the magazine, a portion of the body prevents the charge handle from being moved to a forward position from a rearward position and prevents the bolt carrier from moving into a breech end of the barrel. A portion of the body of the breech block may extend into the slot in the charge handle.
These and other embodiments of the present disclosure will be discussed more fully in the description. The features, functions, and advantages can be achieved independently in various embodiments of the claimed invention, or can be combined in yet other embodiments.
Illustrative embodiments are described below as they might be employed in an apparatus for selectively locking a magazine within a magazine well of a firearm receiver and/or locking a charging handle and/or bolt carrier in a rearward non-firing position. In the interest of clarity, not all features of an actual implementation are described in this specification. It will of course be appreciated that in the development of any such actual embodiment, numerous implementation-specific decisions must be made to achieve the developers' specific goals, such as compliance with system-related and business-related constraints, which will vary from one implementation to another. Moreover, it will be appreciated that such a development effort might be complex and time-consuming, but would nevertheless be a routine undertaking for those of ordinary skill in the art having the benefit of this disclosure.
Further aspects and advantages of the various embodiments will become apparent from consideration of the following description and drawings. These embodiments are described in sufficient detail to enable those skilled in the art to practice the invention, and it is to be understood that modifications to the various disclosed embodiments can be made, and other embodiments can be utilized, without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. The following detailed description is, therefore, not to be taken in a limiting sense.
As noted above, in order to avoid the inclusion of a “detachable magazine” in a firearm, there is an incentive to design a magazine that requires the use of a tool to release. It is believed that the device disclosed herein is unique in nature by involving the use of a proprietary tool to manipulate the magazine locking device, as disclosed herein.
This device, composed of two parts, is the only one that does in fact require the use of a proprietary tool in order to adjust a tube nut on the magazine catch. Secondly, the coinciding breech block, described later, renders the weapon inoperable.
A selectively locking mechanism prevents the removal of a magazine from a receiver without the use of a tool to selectively unlock the locking mechanism. One embodiment includes an inner tube nut, which may include an engaging shape or feature on its outward face, can only be manipulated by a proprietary tool that has a mirror matching face or engaging feature to engage the tube nut, allowing for the tightening or loosening of the inner nut. Again, once the tool face engages the inner nut face with its unique design, the magazine is then locked into place by screwing down in the tube nut, thereby not allowing the magazine catch to move out of the way of the slot cut into the magazine that is engaged by the magazine release, and not possible to remove with anything other than a device with the exact design and shape of the tube nut that screws down the threads of the magazine catch. This part of the selectively locking system makes it impossible to remove the magazine without the corresponding tool.
An inner breech block installed into a regular magazine inserted into the magazine well of the lower receiver is locked into place with a selectively locking mechanism. When locked, it is impossible to fire a round from the weapon. The breech block when installed into a magazine that is subsequently locked within the receiver, makes the weapon incapable of functioning. The breech block blocks both the bolt carrier and the charging handle from being moved into a forward position. A portion of the breech block may extend up into the charging handle slot cut into the upper receiver. Since the breech block prevents the charging handle from being pushed to its forward position and blocks the bolt carrier from feeding into the locking lugs of the barrel extension, the firearm cannot discharge of a live round of ammunition.
A magazine that includes an inserted breech block that is selectively locked into the receiver may also prevent the circumvention of the magazine lock by scissoring open the upper and lower portions of the receiver. For example, the receiver of an AR-15® firearm includes an upper portion and lower portion that are pinned together. Some safety devices may be circumvented by removal of the rear pin and scissoring open the receiver. The present system locks the weapon and prevents circumvention by scissoring the receiver. The breech block of the system extends into the upper receiver so that the bolt carrier is held back to a point where half of the bolt carrier is in the upper receiver and half of the bolt carrier is the buffer tube of the lower receiver. The extension of the bolt carrier into the buffer tube essentially locks the lower receiver to the upper receiver and a single round may not be inserted into the chamber to be fired without removal of the breech block.
The housing 220 includes one or more detents 224 positioned around the internal shoulder 221 of the housing 220. The detents 224 may be inserted into the housing 220 through holes 226 in the end of the housing 220. Plugs 225 may be used to fill the holes 226 and prevent the detents 224 from being pushed out of the housing by tool 240. The detents 224 are biased to be in an upward position extending above the internal shoulder 221 of the housing 220. The detents 224 may be spring loaded. While in the upward or raised position, the detents 224 are configured to engage the second engagement feature 212 on the lower shoulder of the tube nut 210 to selectively prevent the rotation of the tube nut 210 within the housing 220. The second engagement feature 212 may be a plurality of grooves or recesses in the shoulder of the tube nut 210. The detent 224 may engage a single recess or groove selectively preventing the rotation of the tube nut 210 within the housing 220 while the detent 224 remains in the raised or upward position.
The detents 224 may be pushed into a recessed or lower position by an engagement feature 242 of the tool 240. The detents 224 may be spring loaded and an exterior shoulder 242 may be configured to depress the detents 224 when the tool 240 is inserted between the housing 220 and the tube nut 210. While the detents 224 are depressed the tube nut 210 may be free to rotate within the housing 220. Various anti-rotation devices may be used to selectively prevent the rotation of the tube nut 210 within the housing 220. The housing 220 may include a plurality of anti-rotation devices 224 positioned equilaterally around the interior shoulder 221 of the housing 220.
The tool 240 includes a first mating feature 241 that is configured to engage a first engagement feature 211 on an upper shoulder of the tube nut 210. The first engagement feature 211 of the tube nut 210 may be a plurality of grooves and the first mating feature 241 of the tool 240 may be a plurality of projections. The engagement of the first engagement feature 211 by the first mating feature 241 permits the rotation of the tube nut 210 by the rotation of the tool 240. The rotation of the tube nut 210 within the housing 220 is used to selectively lock or unlock the magazine latch 10 within a firearm 50. The tube nut 210 is tightened down against the magazine latch 10 preventing the movement of the magazine latch 10 away from a magazine 20 preventing the release of the magazine 20 from the firearm 50. The tube nut 210 may be rotated in the other direction until the magazine latch 10 may be pushed away from the magazine 20 removing the projection 11 from the groove 25 in the magazine permitting the magazine 20 to be released from the firearm 50. The shape, number, and configuration of the first engagement feature 211, second engagement feature 212, first mating feature 241, and engagement feature 242 are for illustrative purposes only as various shapes, projections, grooves, and/or recesses may be used to selectively rotate the tube nut 210 with the tool 240 as would be appreciated by one of ordinary skill in the art having the benefit of this disclosure.
Although this disclosure has been described in terms of certain embodiments, other embodiments that are apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art, including embodiments that do not provide all of the features and advantages set forth herein, are also within the scope of this invention. Accordingly, the scope of the present disclosure is defined only by reference to the appended claims and equivalents thereof.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61568145 | Dec 2011 | US |