This invention relates to the field of projectile loaders for feeding projectiles to, for example, compressed gas guns.
Paintball, a popular sport has developed over the years, which uses paintball markers (guns), which are guns utilizing compressed gas to fire projectiles. Some examples of paintball guns are those offered under the brand names 32 DEGREES™, EMPIRE™, DIABLO™, and INDIAN CREEK DESIGNS™, and others shown and described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,708,685; 4,936,282; 5,497,758; and U.S. application Ser. Nos. 11/183,548; 11/180,506; 11/150,002; 11/064,693; 10/313,465; 10/090,810, the entire contents of which are all incorporated fully herein by reference. Players use the paintball guns to shoot projectiles known as paintballs (projectiles and paintballs are used interchangeably herein). These paintballs are spherical, frangible projectiles normally having gelatin or starch-based shells filled with paint (coloring or dye). The shells break when impacting a target, allowing the paint within to splatter on the target. The sport of paintball is often played like capture the flag. A player is eliminated from the game when the player is hit by a paintball fired from an opposing player's marker. When the paintball hits a target such as a player, a mark or “splat” of paint is left on the player.
Paintball loaders (otherwise known as hoppers or magazines, and also referred to herein as “projectile loaders”) sit atop the markers and feed projectiles into the marker. These projectile loaders (the terms “hopper,” “magazine,” and “loader” are used interchangeably herein) store projectiles, and have an outlet or exit tube (out feed tube or neck). The outlet tube is connected to an inlet tube (or feed neck) of a paintball marker, which is in communication with the breech of the paintball marker. Thus, the loaders act to hold and feed paintball projectiles into the breech of a paintball marker, so that the projectiles can be fired from the marker.
Many loaders contain agitators or feed systems to mix, propel, or otherwise move projectiles in the loader. This mixing is performed by an impeller, projection, drive cone, agitator, paddle, arm, fin, carrier, or any other mechanism, such as those shown and described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,213,110; 6,502,567; 5,947,100; 5,791,325; 5,954,042; 6,109,252; 6,889,680; and 6,792,933, the entire contents of which are incorporated by reference herein. In a “gravity feed” or “agitating” loader, an agitator mixes projectiles so that no jams occur at the exit opening of the outlet tube. In a “force feed” or “active feed” paintball loader, the agitator (drive cone, carrier, paddle or any other force feed drive system) forces projectiles through the exit tube. Because it is desirable to eliminate as many opposing players as possible, paintball markers are capable of semi-automatic rapid fire. The paintball loaders act to hold a quantity of projectiles, and ensure proper feeding of the projectiles to the marker for firing.
Modern paintball loaders utilize projections, paddles, arms, carriers, drive cones, or other agitators to mix or advance paintballs. These agitators are operated by motors, which are usually electrical, and powered by a power source such as a battery.
One critical problem with current paintball loaders is when such loaders and the agitators in such loaders encounter a jammed paintball (such as when a paintball is jammed such as at an exit opening or cannot otherwise move), paintball breakage can occur. In addition, the motors may be damages if they cannot operate or become jammed.
Thus, there is the need for a paintball loader that can continue to operate, even when a paintball jam occurs, and that will not break paint or damage the motor of a paintball agitator when encountering a jam or other disruption in operation.
The present invention is a drive system for a paintball loader comprising a drive shaft rotatable about a central axis, a drive mechanism rotatable about a drive shaft, the drive mechanism including a first magnetic surface, a feed mechanism carrier adjacent the drive mechanisms including at least one magnetically attractable portion that is attractable to the magnet of the drive mechanism.
In another embodiment, the present invention is a drive system for a paintball loader comprising a drive shaft rotatable about a central axis, a drive mechanism attached to the drive shaft, the drive mechanism having a magnetically attractable portion, a feed mechanism carrier attachable to a feeder adjacent the drive mechanism and rotatable about the drive shaft, the feed mechanism carrier having at least one magnet that is attractable to the magnetically attractable portion of the drive mechanism.
In another embodiment, the present invention is a drive system for a paintball loader comprising a drive shaft rotatable about a central axis, having a magnet attached thereto, the drive shaft extending vertically through a hole in a feed mechanism carrier that is rotatable about the drive shaft, wherein the feed mechanism carrier has at least one magnetically attractable portion that is attractable to the magnet of the drive shaft.
In another embodiment, the present invention is a drive system for a paintball loader comprising a drive shaft rotatable about a central axis, having a magnetically attractable portion attached thereto, the drive shaft extending vertically through a hole in a feed mechanism carrier attachable to a feeder, the feed mechanism carrier rotatable about the drive shaft and having at least one magnet that is attractable to the magnetically attractable portion of the drive shaft.
In another embodiment, the present invention is a drive system for a paintball loader comprising a drive shaft rotatable about a central axis, a feed mechanism carrier connected to the drive shaft, the feed mechanism carrier having at least one sloped upper portion and a spring attached thereto, the feed mechanism carrier in contact with a feeder, a spring attached to the feeder, the spring contained and moveable within a spring guide.
In one embodiment, the present invention controls the rotation of a paintball feeder so that it will cease rotation and thereby not impart force on projectiles when they jam. It also resumes operation immediately upon clearing the jam. In another embodiment, the present invention allows the paintball feeder to rotate above jammed projectiles. In every embodiment disclosed below, the present invention is easily “retrofitted” so that it can be used with all existing styles of paintball loaders, including, but not limited to “force feed”, “active feed”, and “agitating” loaders.
As used herein, the term “binding element” refers to either a magnet or a magnetically attractable element. As used herein, a “magnetically attractable element” can be any element that is attracted to a magnet including, but not limited to, ferromagnetic materials such as iron, nickel, cobalt, neodymium, etc. As used herein, the terms “feeder”, “feed mechanism”, or “impeller” refer to any apparatus that impels, moves, pushes, agitates, or otherwise mixes projectiles within a loader or hopper, such as an agitator, arms, fins, paddles, paddle arms, spokes, drive cones, carriers, including, but not limited to, those shown and described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,213,110; 6,502,567; 5,947,100; 5,791,325; 5,954,042; 6,109,252; 6,889,680; and 6,792,933, the entire contents of which are incorporated by reference herein, and those used in commercially available paintball loaders such as the various HALO® brand paintball loaders, the EMPIRE RELOADER™ paintball loaders, and substitutes or equivalents thereof.
An exemplary paintball loader 10 is shown in more detail in
A first embodiment of a drive mechanism for a paintball loader according to the present invention is shown in
As shown in greater detail in
The feed mechanism 40 includes an opening 140 for receiving a screw 142. The screw 142 is preferably sized smaller than the opening 140, and is received in a threaded opening 144 in the upper portion 68 of the drive shaft 36. In this arrangement, the feed mechanism 40 is free to rotate about the screw 142. A bushing (or bearing) 146 and/or washer 148 may be provided for assisting free rotation of the feed mechanism 40. It is appreciated that a thinner diameter portion extension of the drive shaft 36 may extend though the opening 140, and may be affixed in place with a screw or other connection means.
When the motor 66 operates the drive shaft 36, the drive shaft 36 will rotate in either a clockwise or counterclockwise direction about the central axis 64. The binding element 32 and second binding element 138 will have a magnetic attraction to each other. Thus, when the drive shaft 36 rotates, the binding element 32 will impart (or have imparted upon it) a magnetic force (adhesion force) on the second binding element 138, that will rotate in tandem the feed mechanism 40 when there are no jammed paintballs in the paintball loader 10.
If a paintball jam is encountered, or if the paintballs cannot be agitated or otherwise moved for some reason, the drive shaft 36 will continue to rotate. With the feed mechanism 40 unable to continue rotation, the binding element 32 will rotate past the second binding element 138 of the feed mechanism 40 when the force of the motor 66 on the drive shaft 36 cannot overcome the force holding the feed mechanism 40 in place. In this manner, the motor 66 will not be damaged, and the feed mechanism 40 will not be forced to break or otherwise rupture paintballs that cannot be agitated.
Accordingly, the present invention provides for a magnetic clutch system. When the drive shaft 36 continues to rotate, the binding element 32 will again come into proximity to the second binding element 138. The binding element 32 and second binding element 138 can be positioned at any location on or about the drive shaft 36 or the feed mechanism 40 to permit the binding element 32 and second binding element 138 to come into proximity and be in position so that a magnetic attraction occurs between the binding element 32 and second binding element 138. As shown in
The second end 68 of the drive shaft 36 may include at last one or a plurality of binding elements 32, as shown in
In an alternate embodiment, as shown in
Alternatively, the plate 28 may be formed entirely from the material comprising the binding element 32, wherein the plate 28 may be entirely formed from a magnetic material, or entirely formed from a magnetically attractable material. The plate 28 may also be formed with the binding elements 32 fashioned as rectangular inserts, as shown in
According to this embodiment of the present invention, the feed mechanism 40 includes an impeller portion 42, and a base portion 44. The impeller portion has an opening 46 therethrough and the base portion 44 has an opening 48 therethrough. The openings 46, 48 are sized to accept a portion of the drive shaft 36, and to permit the feed mechanism 40 to freely rotate about the drive shaft 36. At least one binding element 50, preferably located on, formed in, inserted into, or affixed to the bottom surface 52 of the base portion 44.
In a preferred embodiment, the base portion 44 of the feed mechanism 40 may be formed as an open cylinder having an upstanding annular wall 54 and a floor 58, as shown in
In the embodiment of the drive mechanism 26 of the present invention, shown in
The binding element 32 of the clutch plate 28 is positioned to provide an attractive magnetic force when adjacent the binding element 50 of the base portion 44. It is appreciated that the binding element 32 and binding element 50 may be any combination of elements producing magnetic attraction between them, for example: binding element 32 is a magnet of a first polarity, and binding element 50 is a magnet of a second an opposite polarity; binding element 32 is a magnet, and binding element 50 is a magnetically attractable insert attractable to the magnet; and/or, binding element 32 is a magnetically attractable insert, and binding element 50 is a magnet.
The attractive magnetic force (also referred to herein as the “adhesion force”) between the binding elements 32, 50 is preferably such that when the drive shaft 36 rotates and turns the clutch plate 28, the magnetic attraction between the binding element 32 and the binding element 50 correspondingly rotates the base portion 44 of the feed mechanism 40, which in turn rotates the impeller portion 42 of the feed mechanism 40. If a spring 76 is used, the rotation of the base portion 44 will be translated to the impeller portion 42 via movement of the first spring contact wall 72 against the end 78 of the spring 76, as described in greater detail above.
When the binding element 32 and the binding element 50 are aligned, the rotation of the clutch plate 28 drives the feed mechanism 40 by magnetic attraction between the binding elements 32, 50. During operation, the projection 84 of the impeller portion 42 may encounter a stationary or jammed projectile 62. In that situation, when the force of a stationary, jammed, or slow moving projectile 62 upon the feed mechanism 40 overcomes the magnetic force between the binding elements 32, 50, the motor 66 will continue to rotate the drive shaft 36, which will turn the clutch plate 28. The binding element 32 of the clutch plate 28 will “slip” or otherwise move past the binding element 50 on the base 44. The clutch plate 28 will continue to rotate independently of the feed mechanism 40. During each rotation of the clutch plate 28, the binding element 32 will be magnetically attracted to the binding element 50 of the base 44 when the binding elements 32, 50 are in proximity such that they are magnetically attracted. When the feed mechanism 40 is free to again rotate (such as when the paintball stack is moving, or a jammed projectile 62 is dislodged) the binding element 32 will again attract the binding element 50, and the feed mechanism 40 will rotate to propel or otherwise mix projectiles 62.
Where a spring 76 is used as discussed in detail above, the binding elements 32, 50 should be selected such that the magnetic force (adhesion force) between the binding elements 32, 50 is strong enough to overcome the biasing force of the spring 76 on the walls 72, 74, yet will “slip” when the spring 76 is compressed or otherwise wound to a certain selected degree or amount. A paintball stack may form, for example, when a paintball marker to which a paintball loader is attached has indexed projectiles 62 in the outfeed tube and feed neck 22, but the paintball marker 12 is not being fired. Projectiles 62 back up forming a stack. When the projection 84 contacts the stationary paintball stack, the base portion 44 will continue to turn, by way of example, counter-clockwise, if the feeding direction is counter-clockwise. This will compress and increase tension in the spring 76 as the base portion 44 rotates relative to the impeller portion 42. However, it may be desired that the drive mechanism will slip (the adhesion force between the binding elements 32, 50 is overcome) when the spring 76 is compressed to a certain degree or amount, which may be a user selected degree or amount. For example, the binding elements 32, 50 may be selected such that, when the base portion 44 rotates a certain angular distance relative to the point of contact between the projection 84 and the paintball stack, the binding elements 32, 50 slip. This is shown schematically in
Released from the forces of the attraction between the binding elements 32, 50, the base portion 44 will unwind (in a clockwise direction in the example) as the spring 76 releases tension. A second binding element 32 may be positioned on the clutch plate 28, to “catch” or attract the base portion 44 as it unwinds, so that the spring 76 does not fully decompress. In this manner, tension is retained in the spring 76 for propelling projectiles 62 once the stack begins to move. In addition, the slipping action of the drive mechanism will not force, break or otherwise crush or rupture projectiles. A plurality of binding elements 32 maybe provided on a clutch plate 28. Each of the binding elements 32 will attract the binding element 50, as the clutch plate 28 rotates.
The operation of the novel drive mechanism of the prevent invention can be adjusted in several ways. For example, the force necessary to overcome the magnetic attraction between the binding elements 32 and 50 can be adjusted by utilizing magnets of varying magnetic strengths. The size of the magnets used for the binding elements 32, 50 can be varied. The distance between the clutch plate 28 and the bottom surface 52 of the feed mechanism 40 can also be varied, thus adjusting the interaction of the magnets and/or magnet and magnetically attractable inserts. A shim or other divider piece can be formed between the clutch plate 28 and the bottom surface 52 of the feed mechanism 40. In addition, the spring 76 can further be selected having a particular tension.
The number of binding elements 32, 50 can be varied, such as illustrated in
It should be appreciated that the drive system 34 operates as a clutch system to avoid or manage projectile jams, and to provide fine-tuning of paintball loader operation. If the feed mechanism 40 stops or slows its rotation relative to the rotation of the drive mechanism 26 and drive shaft 36 due to a jam, the system will not chop or otherwise break projectiles. Projectiles may back-up or otherwise block the outlet tube, and interfere with the rotation of the projections 84, which slows or stops the feeder 36. In the many loaders currently known in the art the feeder 36 continues to try to rotate with the force of the motor, and therefore, the projections 84 continue to try to impel projectiles through the loader. The continued impelling force from the feeder on the jammed projectiles can break the projectiles, the feeder 36, the impellers 39, and/or other parts of the loader.
In the present invention, when the feed mechanism 40 stops rotating, the force of the rotation of the drive shaft 36 on the clutch plate 28 overcomes the magnetic attraction between the binding elements 32, 50. This causes the feed mechanism 40 to move relative to, or slip past the base portion 44. The drive mechanism 26 no longer rotates the feed mechanism 40, which therefore, no longer rotates the feeder 36. Thus, the feeder impellers 39 stop moving against the stationary, jammed or blocked projectiles.
When the paintball jam is cleared (players often shake or jostle the hopper), and the feeder 36 and paintball feed mechanism 40 are free to once again rotate, the drive mechanism 26 binding element 32 will attract the paintball feed mechanism 40 binding element 50 and begin rotating the paintball feed mechanism 40 and the connected feeder 36 in conjunction therewith.
In another embodiment of the present invention, an entire surface of the clutch plate 28 may be formed as a binding element, such as a magnet or a magnetically attractable material. In addition, in another embodiment, an entire surface of the floor 58 of the base portion 44 may be formed as a binding element, such as a magnet or a magnetically attractable material.
In another embodiment of the present invention, shown in
A central portion 122 of the base portion 44 is adapted to rotate independently from the other portions of the base portion 44. The central portion 122 includes at least one binding element 124, which may be a magnet or magnetically attractable insert, positioned adjacent an annular wall 128 of the central portion 122. Binding element 120 and binding element 124 are selected so that they are magnetically attracted to each other.
The upper surface 130 of the floor 58 of the base portion further includes at least one binding element 132, which may be a magnet or magnetically attractable insert. Binding element 132 is selected so that it is magnetically attracted to binding element 124.
In the embodiments shown in
A cross section of the feed portion 40 of the feed device 26 is shown in
In addition, in an alternate embodiment, the clutch plate 28 can be eliminated, and the drive shaft 36 will act as the clutch system for the drive mechanism 26. Further, the central portion 122 can be eliminated, and the binding element 120 of the drive shaft 36 can be selected to directly magnetically attract the binding element 132 of the upper surface of the floor 130.
Having thus described in detail several embodiments of the present invention, it is to be appreciated and will be apparent to those skilled in the art that many physical changes, only a few of which are exemplified in the detailed description of the invention, could be made without altering the inventive concepts and principles embodied therein. It is also to be appreciated that numerous embodiments incorporating only part of the preferred embodiments are possible which do not alter, with respect to those parts, the inventive concepts and principles embodied therein. The present embodiments and optional configurations are therefore to be considered in all respects as exemplary and/or illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description, and all other embodiments and changes to these embodiments which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of said claims are therefore to be embraced therein.
This application claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/725,395, filed Oct. 11, 2005, the entire contents of which is incorporated by reference herein.
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