The present invention relates to a mechanical self-percussion fuze for a non-gyratory ammunition, said fuze comprising a fuze body extending along a central axis between a distal end provided with a cap and a proximal end provided with a connector to assemble said fuze to an ammunition, said fuze comprising a firing pin disposed along said central axis, a primer provided in a primer holder arranged to be rotatably movable about an axis of rotation, parallel and off-centered with respect to said central axis between at least one storage position, in which said primer is off-centered with respect to said firing pin and an armed position, in which said primer is aligned with said firing pin and the pyrotechnical chain of the ammunition, and a mechanism provided with at least two safety devices coupled to said primer holder to keep said fuze in a safe state until at least two mutually independent physical phenomena linked to the firing of said round occur.
Mechanical fuzes for rounds are mechanisms having the main function of ensuring rounds are kept safe in their different life phases (storage, handling, transport, manoeuvres in operation zones, loading the ammunition and firing), then ensuring the operation of these rounds as soon as the required conditions are met, and this by way of purely mechanical safety devices. More specifically, at the time of firing the ammunition, the safety of the ammunition must be guaranteed from the time when it is loaded into a weapon to be fired, and up to a distance called “safety distance”, beyond which the fired round can no longer have any damaging effect on the personnel having used it. The fuze must further enable the operation of the ammunition (moving from the safe state to the armed state) from a distance called “certain weapon distance”. Yet, weapons are provided to fire different loads, making it possible to reach targets which are farther away or closer. These loads are characterised, among others, by a quicker or slower linear speed of the ammunition.
The development of safety standards applicable to rounds has shown the requirement of a dual storage safety device, which must only be able to be removed through the occurrence of two physical phenomena linked to the firing of the ammunition, but which are mutually independent (Stanag 4187). The effect of the linear acceleration of the ammunition linked to starting firing constitutes the first physical phenomenon which can be used to remove a first storage safety device. On weapons operating with rotation of the ammunition, the effect of the centrifugal force of the gyrating ammunition linked to the rotation speed in flight constitutes the second physical phenomenon which can be used to remove a second storage safety device. But, on weapons operating without rotation of the ammunition, therefore not generating the centrifugal force, it is particularly difficult to obtain a second storage safety device independent of the linear acceleration of the non-gyratory ammunition linked to starting firing.
Current mechanical solutions are of different types: implementation of a finger for the presence of the ammunition in the gun, detection of the flight deceleration of the ammunition or detection of the gas pressure in the gun. These solutions all have disadvantages linked to their implementation, their reliability, even their feasibility according to the type of fuze in question. Some of these solutions do not meet the standards on the independence of events to enable arming with the ammunition. Furthermore, these solutions are not satisfactory, given that they do not integrate an adaptive function which enables them to ensure a certain arming distance and a safety distance, which are fixed or constant, whatever the load at which the ammunition is fired.
Other mechanical solutions implement a wind turbine to utilise the effect of the aerodynamic force linked to the relative movement of the air, when the ammunition is in flight and achieve the second storage safety device. Publication FR 2 927 695 A1 describes one of these solutions, which is used to release a lock. However, this solution integrates no adaptive function. Consequently, the greater the load is, the quicker the lock will be released, and the shorter the certain and safety arming distances will be. There is, in this case, a high risk for personnel on the ground, if the fired round explodes at a short distance.
Publication WO 03/095933 A1 describes another solution of a fuze equipped with a wind turbine also used to release a safety lock. Upon starting firing, the wind turbine is unscrewed, rises, and releases the primer holder which can rotate and align the firing pin on the primer. As in the preceding example, this solution integrates no adaptive function. Publication U.S. Pat. No. 1,916,244 A describes a similar device.
Publication U.S. Pat. No. 2,644,398 A describes an electrical fuze comprising a wind turbine arranged to drive a generator provided to supply the detonator of the electrical fuze with current, and a friction clutch coupled to a clock. This old technology no longer meets the standards in force, and is very far away from the invention.
The present invention aims to overcome these disadvantages by proposing a fuze provided with an exclusively mechanical, reliable and efficient solution for keeping safe for a non-gyratory ammunition, which utilises the relative movement of the air with respect to the ammunition during its flight as a second physical phenomenon independent from the first physical phenomenon linked to the linear acceleration upon starting firing, this solution being applicable whatever the type of fuze, and having an adaptive function making it possible to guarantee a certain arming distance and a constant safety distance, whatever the load at which the ammunition is fired.
For this purpose, the invention relates to a fuze of the type indicated in the preamble, characterised in that it comprises a wind turbine arranged to be driven in rotation by the relative movement of the air with respect to the ammunition during its flight, and to generate the rotational torque necessary for the operation of said mechanism, which regulates the time necessary for the fuze to move from the secure state to an armed state, thus guaranteeing an expected safety distance, whatever the load with which the ammunition is fired.
The invention is advantageous in that it proposes the use of the relative movement of the air by a wind turbine to achieve the second storage security lock in the sense of the standard Stanag 4187 for a weapon which does not generate a centrifugal effect.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, said wind turbine is provided with a drive shaft, combined with the central axis of said fuze body and secured to said firing pin. Said turbine advantageously comprises blades which extend radially from a central zone, and the cap of said fuze comprises at least one axial air inlet orifice to the right of said central zone and several radial air flow orifices at the outlet of said blades to cause a rotation of said wind turbine in a direction of rotation.
Preferably, said fuze comprises a locking system arranged to, in the locked position, prevent the rotation of the wind turbine and keep the fuze in a safe state before firing the ammunition, and in the unlocked position, enabling the rotation of the wind turbine after firing the ammunition.
In the preferred embodiment of the invention, said locking system comprises an inertial socket associated with a return member, said inertial socket being slidingly mounted in the central axis of said fuze body, to be movable between said locked position, in which said inertial socket is subjected by said return member in a high position, and rotatably blocks said wind turbine, and said unlocked position, in which said inertial socket is moved into a low position under the effect of the linear acceleration upon starting firing, constrains said return member and releases the rotation of said wind turbine.
Said locking system can further comprise at least one axial indexing finger provided on one of the parts of said wind turbine or of said inertial socket and an axial orifice provided on the other of the parts of said inertial socket or of said wind turbine, said axial indexing finger being housed in said axial orifice, when said inertial socket is in high position in said locked position, to rotatably block said wind turbine.
Said locking system can also comprise at least one radial guiding finger, provided on one of the parts of said fuze body or of said inertial socket, and an axial groove provided on the other of the parts of said inertial socket or of said fuze body, said radial guiding finger being housed in said axial groove, when said inertial socket is in high position in said locked position, to rotatably block said inertial socket.
Said locking system can finally comprise a blocking element arranged to keep said inertial socket in a low position in said unlocked position. Said blocking element can comprise at least one ball in a lateral housing provided in one of the parts of said inertial socket or of said fuze body, and a lateral opening provided in the other of the parts of said fuze body or of said inertial socket, said ball being arranged to be moved between said lateral housing and said lateral opening when they face one another.
In the preferred embodiment of the invention, said fuze comprises at least one inertial lock arranged to link said primer holder to said fuze body, and keep said primer holder in the storage position, said inertial lock forming part of the other of said safety devices, which has the advantage of reacting to the linear acceleration upon starting firing.
Said fuze advantageously comprises at least one locking member arranged to link said primer holder to said fuze body and keep said primer holder in the storage position, said locking member forming part of one of said safety devices which has the advantage of reacting to the linear speed of the ammunition during its flight. Said locking member can comprise a ball in said primer holder, encased with a hemispherical footprint of said fuze body.
Advantageously, said fuze comprises a rotor superposed to said primer holder, and the drive shaft of said wind turbine comprises a motor pinion arranged to mesh a receiver pinion of said rotor and drive it in rotation about said axis of rotation.
Preferably, said rotor comprises a hemispherical footprint arranged to be positioned facing the ball in said primer holder and enable it to rise to release said primer holder.
Said primer holder and said rotor are advantageously coupled to one another by a coupling device on a determined angular sector, during which the rotation of said rotor drives the rotation of said primer holder moving from said storage position to said armed position. Said coupling device comprises a coupling finger provided on one of the parts of said primer holder or of said rotor, and a circular oblong space on the other of the parts of said rotor or of said primer holder. Said rotor is further provided to mesh a chronometric gear train arranged to regulate the movement of said rotor.
Advantageously, said fuze comprises a collar, secured to the drive shaft of said wind turbine, arranged to break under the effect of an impact transmitted by said cap and enable said firing pin to descend and ram said primer and initiate the pyrotechnical chain, leading to the destruction of the ammunition.
The present invention and its advantages will best appear in the description below of several embodiments given as non-limiting examples, in reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the embodiments illustrated, identical elements or parts have the same reference numbers. Furthermore, the terms which have a relative meaning, such as vertical, horizontal, right, left, front, rear, above, below, top part, bottom part, etc. must be interpreted under the conditions of representation of the invention according to the FIGURES. Moreover, the geometric positions indicated in the description and the claims, such as “perpendicular”, “parallel”, “symmetrical” are not limited in the strict sense defined in geometry, but extend to geometric positions which are close, i.e. which accept a certain tolerance in the technical field in question, without impact on the result obtained. This tolerance is, in particular, introduced by the adverb “substantially”, without this term necessarily being repeated before each adjective.
The invention particularly relates to non-gyratory ammunitions, which are rounds of extended shape along a central axis, being moved without rotating on themselves and are stabilised by feathering. Below in the description, the generic term “round” is used, which applies to any type of rounds, projectiles, rockets, and similar. The ammunition (not represented) is not described as such, as it does not form part of the invention. It mainly contains explosive loads.
The invention more specifically relates to the fuze which is assembled at the top of the ammunition. The fuze contains, in a known manner, a mechanical firing pin and a percussion primer containing a pyrotechnical component such as a detonator. It makes it possible, during the impact of the ammunition on a target, to initiate a polytechnical chain which will activate the explosive loads and cause the destruction of the ammunition.
In reference to the FIGURES, the mechanical self-percussion fuze 1 for a non-gyratory ammunition according to the invention comprises a substantially truncated fuze body 2, extending along a central axis A. The fuze body 2 is constituted of a base 3 provided with a connector 4 to be assembled to the ammunition and with a central housing 5 passing through to receive the top part of the ammunition and connect the explosive loads to the percussion primer. The fuze body 2 further comprises a cap holder 6 surmounted by a cap 7 able to be deformed in case of impact. The cap 7 is linked to the cap holder 6 by radial pins 8 through spaces 9 provided in the cap 7, or by any other equivalent assembly means.
The fuze 1 comprises a mechanical 10 with several safety levels to keep the ammunition in a safe state, until at least two mutually independent phenomena linked to the firing of the ammunition occur. The mechanism 10 is represented in
The top part of the mechanism 10 is mounted in the cap holder 6. The cap holder 6 comprises a central bore 20 of axis combined with the central axis A of the fuze, arranged to guide in axial rotation and in axial translation, the drive shaft 12 of the wind turbine 11. It also comprises an annular housing 21 under the wind turbine 11 to receive the inertial socket 13. The low part of the mechanism 10 is mounted in a safety device holder 22, itself mounted in the base 3 of the fuze.
The wind turbine 11, also called turbine 11 below, extends perpendicularly to the drive shaft 12 and comprises blades 23 which extend radially from a central zone 24 combined with the drive shaft 12. The blades 23 have a curved shape to generate a rotation of the turbine in the direction of the arrow R (
More specifically, in reference to
Under the effect of the linear acceleration, upon starting firing, the inertial socket 13 is axially retracted and moves from the locked position to the unlocked position, in which it is in the low position, constrains the return member 31 and releases the turbine 11 which can rotate. The locking system 30 further comprises a blocking element 36 arranged to block the inertial socket 13 in the low position when it is in the unlocked position. This blocking element 36 comprises a ball 37 provided in a lateral housing 38 of the socket and a lateral opening 39 provided in the cap holder 6. When the inertial socket 13 is retracted, it drives the ball 37 with it, and when the ball 37 arrives facing the lateral housing 38, it is housed there and prevents the socket from rising. Naturally, any other technical solution fulfilling the same blocking function in the locked position can be suitable.
The wind turbine 11 thus released is kept in its initial high position by a collar 40 projecting radially from its drive shaft 12 which bears on the cap holder 6, also keeping the firing pin 14 in the high position.
The primer holder 17 has a safety function and makes it possible to keep a primer 17′ off-centered or misaligned with respect to the pyrotechnical chain and to the firing pin 14. The axis of the pyrotechnical chain is combined with the central axis A. The primer holder 17 is associated with safety devices provided in the mechanism 10 to keep the ammunition in a safe state during phases of storing, transporting, handling and loading the ammunition in a weapon until starting firing, and even after starting firing over a predetermined safety distance. This position of the primer holder 17 is called a storage position. It is only after having detected and reacted to at least two ballistic firing events (linear acceleration of the ammunition and relative movement of the air with respect to the ammunition) that the safety devices provided in the mechanism 10 enable the primer holder 17 to be moved to align the primer 17′ with the firing pin 14 and the pyrotechnical chain. This position of the primer holder is called an armed position.
In reference to
In the example illustrated in
Upon starting firing, and under the effect of linear acceleration of the ammunition, the wind turbine 11 is released and the inertial lock 18 releases the primer holder 17 and simultaneously, the rotor 15. However, the primer holder 17 remains fixed, in the storage position, until the rotor 15 driven by the turbine 11 travels a determined angular course, and that a hemispherical footprint 45 provided in the rotor 15 is positioned facing the ball 42 housed in the primer holder 17, to enable it to rise and release the primer holder 17. Naturally, any other technically equivalent indexing means can be suitable.
The primer holder 17 is then coupled to the rotor 15 by a coupling device 46, such that the rotation of the rotor 15 drives the rotation of the primer holder 17 which moves from the storage position (
The operation of the fuze 1 according to the invention is described below.
Storage Position
In the storage position, such as represented in
Upon starting firing, such as illustrated in
In Flight to the Armed Position
The rotation of the wind turbine 11 creates the motor energy of the rotor 15 and transmits it to it via the drive shaft 12 of the turbine with which it meshes. The chronometric gear train 16 regulates the rotation movement of the rotor 15. The primer holder 17 is still kept in the storage position by the action of the ball 42 of the locking member 41, positioned in the hemispherical footprint 44 of the safety device holder 22 (
Upon Impact on a Target
The drive shaft 12 of the turbine 11, which is found to be combined with the firing pin 14, faces the primer 17′ which contains the detonator of the pyrotechnical chain. During the impact of the ammunition on a target, the deformation of the cap 7 makes the entire wind turbine 11 descend. The collar 40 which keeps the drive shaft 12 from the turbine and from the firing pin 14 at its initial height, is sized in order to remain integrated during the storage, starting firing and flight of the ammunition phases, but not to resist an impact on a target. Under the effect of the impact transmitted by the cap 7, the collar 40 breaks and enables the firing pin 14 to descend to ram the primer 17′ and initiate the pyrotechnical chain, leading to the destruction of the ammunition by explosion.
It clearly appears from the description, that the invention makes it possible to achieve the aims set. In particular, the relative movement of the air during the flight of the ammunition generates the motor torque necessary for the alignment of the primer holder 17 with the firing pin 14 and the pyrotechnical chain. The rotation torque transmitted by the wind turbine 11 is directly linked to the movement speed of the ammunition. Thus, when the speed increases, the torque increases, and the alignment time reduces. This kinematic chain enables the mechanism 10 to have the same safety distance and the same certain arming distance, whatever the load at which the ammunition is fired. Furthermore, the drive shaft 12 of the wind turbine 11 fulfils three functions: keeping the mechanism 10 in the safety position, transmission of the rotation torque to the primer holder 17 and percussion of the primer 17′.
The present invention is naturally not limited to the examples of embodiments described, but extends to any modification and variant which are clear for a person skilled in the art by remaining within the limit of the accompanying claims. Furthermore, the invention extends to any other non-gyratory ammunition or projectile, as an example, illumination rounds, etc.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2110056 | Sep 2021 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2022/068865 | 7/7/2022 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2023/046327 | 3/30/2023 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1916244 | Woodberry | Jul 1933 | A |
2644398 | Rabinow | Jul 1953 | A |
2748708 | Bertram | Jun 1956 | A |
2795190 | Harmon | Jun 1957 | A |
2817295 | Wylie | Dec 1957 | A |
3611943 | Popper | Oct 1971 | A |
3742854 | Donahue | Jul 1973 | A |
3842743 | Zittle | Oct 1974 | A |
6463855 | Zehnder | Oct 2002 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2927695 | Aug 2009 | FR |
20140073596 | Jun 2014 | KR |
WO-03095933 | Nov 2003 | WO |
WO-2023046327 | Mar 2023 | WO |
Entry |
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Written Opinion of the International Searching Searching Authority for PCT/EP2022/068865 (English translation) (Year: 2022). |
Machine translation of KR-20140073596-A (Year: 2014). |
Machine translation of FR-2927695-A1 (Year: 2009). |
International Search Report and Written Opinion, corresponding International Application No. PCT/EP2022/06885, mailing date Oct. 6, 2022. |