The present invention relates to ammunition-holding magazines for firearms such as the M-16, AR-15 or any other magazine feed military or sporting rifle. More specifically, it relates to a magazine well extension to increase the speed and ease of exchanging magazines.
Rifle magazines hold a supply of ammunition and are supported on the rifle by a magazine holder which has an opening that receives the magazine. When the ammunition in the magazine has been used up, the spent magazine is removed and a new fully loaded magazine is inserted into the magazine holder. The magazine receiving holder is typically referred to as a magazine well.
Loading the magazine into the rifle's magazine well requires skill and practice. The magazine wells of most rifles are only slightly larger than the magazine itself making reloading challenging. Thus, there have been attempts to make magazine reloading easier and faster. Improvements include magazine well extensions which have a wider mouth opening and a funnel-like tapered body that acts as a guide to feed the end of the magazine into the holder well. Having a larger opening at the mouth of the magazine extension makes replacing magazines much faster which can be critical in tactical operations. Certain types of sport shooting also benefit from fast rifle reloading.
Magazine well extensions of the prior art require tools to attach the extension to the magazine holder. For example, the magazine well extension produced by the Arrendondo Accessory Company of LaVerna, Calif. is made in two halves and uses fasteners to secure the two halves together. As it is attached, the top rim of the extension clamps against the flared end of the rifle magazine well. Screws between the two halves are then tightened to secure the magazine well extension in place. However, this assembly requiring screws and tools is particularly inconvenient and counter-productive when there is a need to quickly exchange magazine well extensions to achieve different performance capabilities.
Interchangeability of automatic rifle components without the need for tools is known as applied to modular firearms in which the major rifle components slide together and lock into place. An example of this type of modular rifle is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,131,228 issued to Hochstraight et al. entitled “Modular Firearm,” however this firearm does not employ a magazine well extension and its magazine holder is affixed to the upper receiver and interchanged only to accommodate ammunition of different caliber. Because the magazine holder is a major component of the rifle, once the magazine well is removed, the firearm is no longer operative.
There is therefore a need in the art of firearms for an interchangeable magazine well extension which does not require tools to remove and attach and can be removed without destroying the operation of the firearm.
In order to meet the need in the art for an improved magazine well extension, the present invention has been devised. According to one embodiment of the invention, an easily exchanged magazine well extension has been created which does not require tool-driven fasteners to secure it in place. This is achieved by providing the rifle with machined slots on the bottom of the magazine well and a pin attachment point on the trigger guard. The magazine extension has upward facing rails received by complimentary magazine well slots. In addition, a captive pin and yoke assembly on the back of the extension engage the pin attachment point on the rifle trigger guard. At a third point of attachment, a forward extending lip on the well engages a groove on the front inside wall of the extension. When applied to the firearm, the extension rails are first pressed up into the well slots and then slid rearwardly in the slots until the well front lip is fully engaged with a groove in the front of the extension thus stopping further movement. The extension locks into place on the trigger guard captured by a pin and yoke fastening means which align simultaneously with the full engagement of the well lip and the extension groove. Once installed, the extension attachment is rigid and the magazine well and the extension openings are precisely aligned. This embodiment of the present invention is particularly adaptable to the military and sporting rifles which utilize a detachable magazine. Examples of such weapons are AR-15, AR-10, M-4, M-16 SCAR, SIG 556 and HK416.
More specifically, the Applicant has devised a magazine well extension accessory for a fully functional firearm having a magazine well and a trigger guard comprising a tapered monolithic hollow extension having a body with two openings, one at each end. A first opening at the top end of the body is dimensioned to closely match the magazine well opening of the firearm. A second opening for loosely receiving a magazine of ammunition at the bottom end of the body is larger than the first opening. Upward facing rails on opposite sides of the body adjacent the first opening are slidingly and matingly received by complimentary slots in the bottom of the firearm magazine well on opposite sides. The extension may be easily removed or reattached to rigidly secure said first opening in alignment with the magazine well opening in the firearm.
The extension is attached to the well at three places. A first attachment point comprises slots on the well which capture interfitting rails on the extension body as described above. A second attachment point located at the rear of the extension body includes a yoke having two opposing laterally disposed arms which retain a laterally slidable captive pin. The yoke and pin assembly releasably engage an outwardly extending tang on the trigger guard of the firearm having a lateral throughbore. The yoke arms are dimensioned to closely receive the trigger guard tang between them. When the pin is inserted into the tang throughbore, the extension is locked into place and becomes rigidly affixed to the firearm. A spring loaded detent mechanism captivates the pin to the extension. The third point of attachment is provided by the above-described lip and groove attachment at the front abuttment interface of the well and the extension. Thus, the slots/rails secure the extension laterally while the combination of the lip/groove engagement and the pin/tang assembly capture the extension vertically and longitudinally.
In this respect, before explaining at least one embodiment of the invention in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and to the arrangements of the components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced and carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology employed herein are for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting.
As such, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the conception, upon which this disclosure is based, may readily be utilized as a basis for the designing of other structures, methods, and systems for carrying out the several purposes of the present invention. It is important, therefore, that the claims be regarded as including such equivalent constructions insofar as they do not depart from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
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From the foregoing mechanical relations, it will be appreciated that a no-tools-needed attachment of a magazine well extension to a firearm has been achieved. The embodiments shown in
Thus it may be appreciated to those of skill in the art that the advantages of the invention have been achieved from the embodiments of the preferred invention shown. Also, it should be understood that there may be other modifications and changes to the present invention that will be obvious to those of skill in the art from the foregoing description, however, the present invention should be limited only by the following claims and their legal equivalents.
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