Small firearms, including pistols, assault rifles, and submachine guns, utilize and fire rounds (also known as cartridges and ammunition). Each round is substantially elongated and comprises a deep cylindrical cuplike case (also known as a shell, casing, and sometimes also a cartridge), usually of brass, which is filled with an explosive propellant. At its rear or closed end, the case has a rim or flange containing a primer; the front and opposite end of the case is open. A bullet, slug, or head, usually of lead (optionally jacketed) is partially inserted into the open or front end of the case, whereafter the case is crimped onto the bullet to secure it in the case.
A magazine or clip usually holds a number of rounds and feeds them into the firearm. Detachable magazines have become dominant throughout the world. The term ‘magazine’ is broad, encompassing several geometric variations, including box, curved, and drum magazines. Most detachable boxed and curved magazines are similar, varying in form and structure, rather than in their general principles of operation. Drum magazine usually store rounds differently than boxed and curved magazines. All magazines have a catch, usually a hole, dent, or protrusion, to enable it to be locked and retained on a designated firearm.
Non-drum magazines usually take the form of an elongated container having a generally rectangular cross-section, which can be removably attached to the magazine well of the firearm. They are commonly made of aluminum alloys, plastic, steel, or a combination. They are usually closed on five sides and open on a sixth, upwardly facing, top, side, or end, and are substantially hollow. The top or open side has a rectangular end and includes two round-retaining members, known as feed lips. These magazines have an internal spring which urges a follower or pusher (a shaped piece of plastic or metal) straight up toward the open side. The follower in turn urges the rounds as a group up against the lips. The lips of magazines act as a stop for the rounds so that they are not expelled from the magazine.
Some magazines, like the popular .22LR (Long Rifle) ‘BX’ magazines made by Sturm Ruger and Co. (Ruger), of Southport, Conn., and sold under Ruger's trademark 10/22, have an internal rotatable drum which holds rounds in 1, 5, or 10 elongated indents or grooves in the drum. The rounds are arranged in equally spaced grooves parallel each other along the circumference of the drum, bullets pointing forward. The drum feeds each round toward the lips by force from an internal coiled spring. When a top-most round is ejected or unloaded from the magazine, the drum turns a notch and feeds a new round between the lips.
In non-drum magazines, rounds are stacked or oriented in the magazine such that the longitudinal axes of the rounds are substantially parallel, and perpendicular to the direction of travel of the spring and follower. Adjoining rounds are oriented side-by-side, i.e., the bullets of adjacent rounds are next to each other, as are the cases. The rounds are usually stacked in the magazine, either in a single column (also called single-stacked), like other popular .22LR (Long Rifle) ‘BX-25’ magazines made by Ruger, or in a staggered, zigzag, column fashion (also called double-stacked or high-capacity magazines).
Commonly, in pistol magazines, whether staggered or not, and in most .22LR and similar small caliber rifle magazines and drum magazines, such as Ruger's 10/22 BX magazines, the space between the retaining lips is smaller than the case diameter of the rounds so that the two lips (rather than a single lip) of the magazine hold the topmost round.
Prior to use, a firearm magazine must be loaded (charged or filled). When a magazine is being loaded, it is necessary to depress the follower and all previously loaded rounds to provide space below the lips so that each additional round can be inserted. Each time another round is loaded the spring is further compressed, requiring increased manual force by the user. I.e., when rounds are loaded with one's bare hands, the press-down force required increases as more rounds are loaded one at a time against the spring's force (which forces the rounds toward the lips). Some drum magazines use a flat coiled spring which presents constant force to the loader rather than increasing force, yet loading effort remains.
When a user loads a large number of rounds or many magazines the force required will actually cause finger pain, which will increase with the number of rounds loaded. Loading a magazine of the type having two lips which retain a single top round begins with the user placing a new round, case first, on top of the follower, in front of the lips. Then the user uses a thumb to force down the new round and the follower below it into the magazine to create sufficient space below the lips to slide the new round rearward over the follower and below the lips to be retained by them.
To load subsequent rounds, this procedure repeats, except that the user places each new round to be loaded on top of the last-loaded or top round and forces down the new round, the previously loaded round(s), and the follower, to make space below the lips to slide the new round rearward over the last-loaded round and below the lips.
The user repeats this procedure until the magazine is full.
Hereafter the term ‘magazine’ will mean box-type magazines and drum magazines which have two lips retain the topmost round.
To increase loading speed and decrease finger pain associated with loading magazines, numerous magazine loaders were developed. These are generally divided into two main groups: loaders having no moving mechanism, which are the simplest and cheapest and least comfortable to use, and loaders having some moving mechanism, which are usually superior.
Some prior art loaders which have no moving mechanism are shown in the following table:
The above loaders are cumbersome, slow, and least comfortable to use.
Loaders with No Moving Mechanism—Non-Patent Literature
Mag-Pal magazine loaders (manufacturer unknown) are two single-part loaders having no moving mechanism; one is designed to load Ruger's 10/22 factory magazines and the other is designed to load aftermarket 10/22 magazines. Both are not lockable to the magazine. The loader for Ruger mags has an angled round plunger, the other one has a straight round plunger. These loaders are pushed down on top of each respective magazine to have the plunger force a top-most round into the magazine to provide a vacant space below the lips of the magazine. The user needs to lift up the loader for each inserted round. These loaders have no self-rising plunger, they are flimsy when on the magazine and awkward to operate. Both loaders can be seen at: https://www.speedbeez.com/product-category/mag-loaders/22lr-long-guns/mag-loaders-ruger-10-22/
ADCO of Woburn Mass. Super-Thumb ST4 magazine loader has no moving mechanism with a straight non-rising plunger and is designed to load 10/22 aftermarket magazines much like the loader described above, with all its weaknesses. https://www.adcosuperthumb.com/st4-extended-magazine-loader/
More advanced prior art loaders have moving mechanisms and are divided into two groups: those which are lockable in some way to the magazine, and those which the magazine sits inside the loader on an adjustable ledge, protrusion, or similar, or the magazine is just fitted in, unlocked.
The above loaders have a moving mechanism for assisting loading and they are coupled to a magazine yet are not locked to it, i.e., the magazine's catch is not used. Their drawbacks are as follows: some of these loaders require adjustment to fit the magazine in prior to loading; most of them are large in size and cumbersome to operate, and the simplest ones are also cumbersome to operate; thus, no single loader is perfect in construction, operation, and comfort of loading.
Loaders with Moving Mechanism—not Lockable—Non-Patent Literature
ARCHANGEL Manufacturing/Promag Industries, South Gate, Calif., USA, makes an “Archangel 10/22 Magazine Loader AA115”. It includes a flimsy push-up mechanism designed to load 10/22 aftermarket magazines. It is not lockable to the magazine and has a vertical round plunger. It sits loosely on the top of the mag making it unstable and very uncomfortable to use. https://www.archangelmanufacturing.com/aa1151022loader
The following loaders have a moving mechanism and are lockable to the magazine using the magazine catch; therefore, these loaders fit a relatively narrow and selected range of magazines that have a matching magazine catch.
The above lockable loaders have either a spring-loaded thumb or finger loading mechanism, or have a lever, shaft, or rotatable knob loading mechanism. Some include a hopper for holding rounds. Their disadvantages are listed further below.
The Faifer loader has no leverage means to ease loading, its linear spring-loaded movement is prone to friction with side thumb force, it has a fairly large housing to contain the magazine and allow long linear movement of the plunger and spring in its bore, and further it is far from suited and constructed to load Ruger's 10/22 .22LR magazines.
Further, a Speed Beez loader (aka a Lever Loader), made by Speed Beez, 13901 N. 73rd Street, Suite 207. Scottsdale Ariz., website https://www.speedbeez.com/product/glock-9 mm-magazine-loader-lever-loader is a lockable loader designed to load Glock 9 mm magazines. It has a rear plunger for pushing down the top-most round into the magazine and a front pusher for pushing the round backward when the rear plunger is lifted up. The loader has an axis of rotation up and between the rear plunger and the front pusher with a scissors-like lever operating movement and a closed tunnel for dropping new rounds in. The drawbacks of this loader are numerous: its closed tunnel construction hides its internal mechanism which makes it difficult to correct malfunctions; pushing the tip of the bullet with hard plastic can form a deformation in a leaded bullet; its two-way scissors-like operation by two fingers against increasing force from the magazine' spring is uncomfortable; it has no self-rising plunging mechanism, and the loader is large and bulky.
https://www.speedbeez.com/product/glock-9 mm-magazine-loader-lever-loader/Movie clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P43nH9rgBu4
Further to the loaders listed in Table 3 above, listed below are lockable loaders which are designed specifically for the .22LR 10/22-type magazines. These include several large loaders, each with a hopper to hold fifty or so bulk .22LR rounds:
1. Champion 10/22 mag loader—http://www.championtarget.com/shooting_gear/magazines_loaders/loaders.aspx
2. McFadden Lightnin' Grip 10/22 loader—http://www.mcfaden.com/product-p/lightnin-grip.htm
3. Butler Creek Hot Lips 10/22 loader—https://www.butlercreek.com/magazine-loaders/hot-lipssteel-lips-loader
4. Ram-Line/Champion 10/22 loader—http://www.ramlinestocks.com/images/sr_40430.jpg
All the lockable loaders of Table 3 and the four above are physically large, i.e., they are not pocketable. Those with a hopper have a relatively complex loading mechanisms which are known to dent delicate .22LR shells and also get stuck. Those with a curved or straight round recess are also very large and have a high-friction, inefficient loading mechanism which is also known to get stuck.
In summary, insofar as we are presently aware, all prior-art lockable loaders are large and unpocketable, are complex and difficult to operate, are unreliable in operation (they can get stuck), may dent delicate shells or tips of bullets, and/or have an open construction where the top round is not viewable and unexposed at all times for lower reliability.
Accordingly, several advantages of one or more aspects of our loader are as follows: (a) a lockable loader provides decreased loading discomfort when loading rounds in magazines of the type having two lips which retain the topmost round, (b) a simple mechanical mechanism provides a low cost, pocket-size, lightweight loader, (c) a loader has relatively few parts, is efficient, reliable, simple, and comfortable to use, (d) a loader has an open top construction where the top-most round is viewable and exposed at all times, (e) a loader does not get stuck and does not dent delicate .22LR cal. case shells, and (f) a loader is adapted to load Ruger's 10/22-type factory magazines, and other mags of similar caliber and construction. Further advantages of one or more aspects will become apparent from a consideration of the drawings and ensuing description.
The present loader facilitates loading ammunition rounds, especially relatively small caliber loose rounds like the .22LR caliber, into a firearm magazine. It basically comprises, in one aspect, a body designed to attach to a magazine with a magazine catch and a tiltable or pivotable spring-loaded press which is coupled to the body and which includes a pivotable round plunger. The body is fitted and locked to the magazine with its lock fitting in the magazine's catch hole(s) or pin(s). The press with its plunger is then pivoted down so that the plunger passes between the lips of the magazine to push the topmost round further into the magazine to create a vacant space above the topmost round. A new round can then be inserted in the magazine, rim first, until it meets the plunger. Then the user releases the press to allow it to lift and raise the plunger with the press so that the plunger is cleared from the magazine and the partially inserted round can be nudged or slid slightly further in to its final position in the magazine.
Pin 54 also passes through a torsion spring 56 encompassed by the locker (
Shaped tiltable press 30 is positioned over press holder 14, somewhat encompassing it, and partly over the open top side of the body. The press is hinge-coupled at its lower or rear side to press holder 14 of the body by pin 50. Pin 50 provides an axis of rotation, which is held at both ends by distal and inline through holes 32 in respective ears portions at the back and at opposite sides of the press. Pin 50 passes through holes 16 in ears 15 of press holder 14. A torsion spring 52 encompasses pin 50 and has an upper arm positioned at a bottom or inner side of press 30 (
Note that Ruger's 10/22 .22LR factory magazines have a substantially unique lip construction which requires an angled push to load a new round. Plunger 34 is thus angled at 25° counterclockwise from vertical in this first embodiment, as seen in
The loader's body, press, and locker are preferably made of durable glass-fibered polymer material, such as polyamide-6, and is preferably produced by plastic injection molding. The springs are preferably made of spring wire material and the pins and plunger are made of metal for strength. Plunger 34 is flat and substantially thin, being molded over during the plastic injection process; its width is slightly less than the distance between lips 64 of the magazine, enabling it to pass between them when the press is pushed down (
Operation—
To use the loader to load rounds into a magazine without requiring fatiguing repetitive finger force, the user first fits loader 10 (
Once the loader is fitted and locked by the front and rear pins of the magazine, the user presses press surface 36 to force the press from an up or top position angled relatively widely from the top of hollow body 12 to an angled down or lower or closed position relatively close to hollow body 12. The user holds this position (
Hence plunger 34 has traveled between lips 64 of the magazine and has pushed in, with its bottom surface, the magazine's follower or rotated an internal drum, if any, (both not shown), or has pushed in a topmost round and all rounds below or next to it, if any, further into the magazine. Hence, a vacant space is formed below lips 64 and above the follower or topmost round, thus completing the first stage of the loading.
The user then slides a new round 70 rearward into the vacant space, case 72 first, until the case meets or hits plunger 34 inside the magazine (not shown), thus completing the second stage of loading.
While case 72 of the round is partially below lips 64, the user releases pressure on press surface 36, allowing press 30 and its plunger 34 to rise up (due to the force from spring 52), clearing the plunger from the magazine. The magazine's internal spring (not shown) and follower or drum (not shown) push up (or rotate the round(s) in a drum magazine) until the case of the newly inserted round engages the magazine lips from the bottom and holds, completing the third stage of loading.
The user can now easily push or nudge the newly and partially inserted round with a finger fully rearward into the magazine along the underside of the lips to its final rear position below the lips, as shown in
The user repeats this loading process (force press down, partially insert a new round, release pressure on the press, slide the round fully rearward) until the magazine is full. Use of the loader eliminates the need to use fatiguing or increasing finger force to push the follower and any rounds above it down.
Releasing the loader from the magazine is simply done by simultaneously (1) pressing the locker's release surface 46 with a thumb, so that hole 44 clears rearward from rear pin 68, while (2) pushing the locker up with the thumb away from the magazine, or by pushing release surface 46 and moving the loader backward to release pin 66 from hole 20, and then pulling the loader up.
Locking the loader on the magazine and using the spring-loaded press element provides great benefits by allowing the user, for example, to hold the magazine and loader in one hand, free from external support, while comfortably feeding rounds with the other hand. In this embodiment, loading the Ruger's 10/22 .22LR caliber magazine is quicker, smoother, and more comfortable than using all prior-art loaders designed to load such magazines of which we are aware. Further, the loader described is extremely reliable in operation as it is virtually impossible to have rounds or loader get stuck while loading, unlike most prior-art loaders. Still further, the loader is lightweight, pocketable, very durable, and possibly the smallest of all known 10/22 magazine loaders.
The loader is designed to be compatible with Ruger's 10/22 factory .22LR caliber BX drum and high-capacity magazines. The range and types of magazines and round calibers may be extended or altered by changing the dimensions, arrangement, plunger angle, plunger tip, and configuration of the loader parts. For example, the loader can be easily designed to have a vertically moving press and plunger (not a 25° movement) to enable loading other commercially available 10/22-type .22LR magazines with somewhat different lips and inner lips construction, made by host of manufacturers. Further, the loader can be altered under the methods and principles here described to load 0.177, 0.25, 0.32, 0.380, 9 mm, 10 mm, 0.357, and .45 caliber magazine and others, though it is more comfortable to use with smaller caliber magazines and rounds.
One or more additional embodiment(s) of the present loader can be provided to load AR15-type .22LR converted magazines, such as the S&W M&P magazine 80 (
The reader will see that we have provided a magazine loader which is locked to the magazine for comfortable operation and has a friendly self-rising round's plunger. The user can load multiple magazines without any thumb pain associated with directly pushing a new round into the magazine. The loader comprising few parts is highly reliable, comfortable to use, palm-size, light weight, and easy to operate. Further, the predominantly open and exposed space above the magazine and lips permits flawless and smooth loading sequence whereby the user can see all parts involved in the loading process at all times.
While the above description contains many specificities, these should not be construed as limitation on the scope but rather as an exemplification of several embodiments thereof. Other ramifications and variations are possible within the teachings. For example, the loader(s) described can be altered to fit other magazines and calibers provided a suitable change in dimensions and construction is made in the loader to suit a magazine. E.g., a loader can be altered to load almost all pistol magazines as well as other 10/22 type magazines and a variety of predominantly .22LR AR15-style converted magazines. Further, a loader can be altered to fit and load virtually all other magazines on the market holding a single round between and by both magazine lips.
The following are further examples of some additional variations and ramifications:
The loader body may be adapted to lock on AR15 .22LR caliber magazines where the mag catch is on a side of the magazine. There may be made several different bodies all adaptable to connect to a single upper loading mechanism whereby a user can buy one loading mechanism and several different bodies alternating the loader part between the body parts by attachment according to needs.
The geometry and design of the plunger and/or its tip may change to be operate best with this and other loader designs.
The loader and its components may be made of separate and or different plastic materials, or, alternatively, of other materials, such as aluminum or steel, and any combination thereof.
All numerical values provided are approximate; they can be changed to adapt to other magazines or round types and or calibers.
The loader may also be constructed to include insertable or movable spacer(s) to accommodate magazines of different dimensions and or geometries.
Various other spring types or other mechanical means or methods may replace the torsion springs mentioned; such can be an extension spring, a compression spring, conical spring, a flat steel spring, flexible rubber, or a flexible polymer spring member.
Accordingly, the scope should be determined, not by the embodiments illustrated, but by the appended claims and their legal equivalents.
This patent issued from an application that claims priority of Provisional Application Ser. No. 62/739,974, Filed 2018 Oct. 2.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4464855 | Musgrave | Aug 1984 | A |
4570371 | Mears | Feb 1986 | A |
4689909 | Howard | Sep 1987 | A |
4719715 | Howard | Jan 1988 | A |
4739572 | Brandenburg | Apr 1988 | A |
4827651 | Conkey | May 1989 | A |
4829693 | Holmes | May 1989 | A |
4888902 | Carter | Dec 1989 | A |
4939862 | Brandenburg | Jul 1990 | A |
4970820 | Miller | Nov 1990 | A |
4993180 | Upchurch | Feb 1991 | A |
5249386 | Switzer | Oct 1993 | A |
5301449 | Jackson | Apr 1994 | A |
5355606 | Origoni | Oct 1994 | A |
5377436 | Switzer | Jan 1995 | A |
6178683 | Williams | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6189254 | Steitz | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6219953 | Bentley | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6286243 | Hinton | Sep 2001 | B1 |
D477047 | Springer | Jul 2003 | S |
6817134 | Newman | Nov 2004 | B2 |
D503960 | Robert | Apr 2005 | S |
7257919 | Farley | Aug 2007 | B1 |
7383657 | Pikielny | May 2008 | B2 |
7487613 | Taylor | Feb 2009 | B2 |
7637048 | Tal | Dec 2009 | B2 |
8065830 | Twardy | Nov 2011 | B2 |
8356441 | Meinel | Jan 2013 | B2 |
9212859 | Tal | Dec 2015 | B1 |
9618286 | Plate | Apr 2017 | B1 |
20030046854 | Urchek | Mar 2003 | A1 |
20130061505 | Faifer | Mar 2013 | A1 |
20130232843 | Bajuelo | Sep 2013 | A1 |
20140033592 | Fiorucci | Feb 2014 | A1 |
20150316341 | Aguilar | Nov 2015 | A1 |
20170051992 | Cottrell | Feb 2017 | A1 |
20170067707 | Zivic | Mar 2017 | A1 |
20180058785 | Hefer | Mar 2018 | A1 |
Entry |
---|
Champion 10/22 Mag Loader—http://www.championtarget.com/shooting_gear/magazines_loaders/loaders.aspx, 2019. |
McFadden Lightnin' Grip 10/22 loader—http://www.mcfaden.com/product-p/lightnin-grip.htm, 2019. |
Butler Creek Hot Lips 10/22 Loader—https://www.butlercreek.com/magazine-loaders/hot-lipssteel-lips-loader, 2019. |
Ram-Line / Champion 10/22 Loader—http://www.ramlinestocks.com/images/sr_40430.jpg. |
https://www.speedbeez.com/product/glock-9mm-magazine-loader-lever-loader/ (Includes Movie clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P43nH9rgBu4). |
Archangel Manufacturing/Promag Industries, South Gate, CA, USA, “Archangel 10/22 Magazine Loader AA115”. https://www.archangelmanufacturing.com/aa1151022loader. |
Speedbeez https://www.speedbeez.com/product-category/mag-loaders/22lr-long-guns/mag-loaders-ruger-10-22/. |
ADCOSUPERTHUMBhttp://www.adcosuperthumb.com/st4-extended-magazine-loader/. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62739974 | Oct 2018 | US |