The present invention relates to a method for lifting at least one firing safety detent of a warhead carried by a projectile, as well as a projectile implementing said method.
It is known that certain aerial bombs are provided with a non-detachable external wind wheel, which is set into aerodynamical rotation when said bombs are falling to the ground and is used to arm the warhead of said bombs. In a particular embodiment of a mine disclosed in the document DE 3322 926 A1, a wind wheel is provided on the outside of the body of the mine so as to be able to rotate about the axis of said body.
Regardless of their arrangement, such external wind wheels generate significant drag and they are also vulnerable. The result is that the arming devices with an external wind wheel cannot be used for projectiles other than bombs, for example for missiles.
Furthermore, for example in the documents U.S. Pat. No. 1,793,567, GB 550897, U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,552,318, 6,481,354, FR 2566892 and FR 2927695, devices for arming projectile fuses are known that comprise a wind wheel inside said fuses. Such internal wind wheels are therefore protected inside the fuse and they do not exert any negative influence on the aerodynamics of the projectile. Nevertheless, they require the production, in said fuses, of an internal circuit for the intake and circulation of air in order to set them into rotation; furthermore, such a circuit limits the performance of the arming device.
The object of the invention is to overcome these disadvantages.
To this end, according to the invention, the method for lifting at least one firing safety detent of a warhead disposed in the fuselage of a projectile, with said method implementing a wind wheel driven in rotation by the airflow surrounding said projectile during its flight, is noteworthy in that:
Therefore, the vulnerability and the aerodynamic drag of such a wind wheel, which is mostly located inside the fuselage of the projectile, are reduced, without adversely affecting the performance of said wind wheel and without requiring the production of a circuit for circulating air inside said projectile.
The projectile according to the present invention and which comprises a fuselage that houses the following:
Said arming device can comprise a movable block driven, from the wind wheel, by means of a bevel gearing device, and said movable block can be moved by a screw driven in rotation by said bevel gearing device.
It can be seen that, in this way, the bevel gearing device and said block drive screw allow the speed of rotation of the wind wheel to be increased so as to obtain the required progressivity for the displacement of said block.
Preferably, the axis of said screw displacing said movable block is at least substantially orthogonal to the axis of the wind wheel.
In one advantageous embodiment, a controllable coupling device is provided on the rotary shaft of said wind wheel so as to allow said wind wheel to be decoupled from the rest of said arming device, and a contactor is used for controlling said coupling device, said contactor being actuated by an element of the arming device, preferably the block, when said arming device has inhibited the action of the safety device.
Thus, after lifting the firing safety detent, the wheel can be caused to idle so as to further reduce the aerodynamic drag that it generates.
Furthermore, in order to allow the handling, maintenance, transportation, etc. of the projectile, it is advantageous for said projectile to comprise detachable mechanical means for blocking said movable block.
The figures of the appended drawings will be useful for understanding how the invention can be produced. In these figures, identical reference numerals designate similar elements.
The missile 1, shown in
As schematically shown in
The wind wheel 5 comprises a shaft 6, having an axis X-X, inside the fuselage 2 and extended by a worm screw 7, meshing with a gear 8, so as to form a bevel gear at 90°. Thus, the axis Y-Y of the gear 8 is orthogonal to the axis X-X of the wind wheel 5. Furthermore, the axis Y-Y of the gear 8 can be, as shown in
A body 9 is also located inside the fuselage 2, with a safety device 10 being mounted inside said body so as to prevent the firing of the warhead WH. A block 11 is movably mounted in the body 9, which block supports a component 12 capable of acting on the safety device 10 so as to inhibit the action thereof. The block 11 is engaged with a screw 13 which is rigidly connected to the gear 8, coaxial therewith and meshes with a thread 14 of said block 11.
Furthermore, a pin 15 loaded by a spring 16, which is kept compressed by a key 17, is capable of blocking the block 11 in the body 9.
When the missile 1 has to be launched, firstly the key 17 is removed so that the spring 16 ejects the pin 15 and so that the block 11 in the body 9 is no longer blocked (see
Following such aerodynamic setting into rotation of the wheel 5, the screw 13 is in turn driven in rotation about its axis Y-Y by the bevel gear 7, 8 and, by its cooperation with the thread 14, it displaces the block 11 and the component 12 towards the safety device 10.
The progressive advance of the block towards the safety device 10 depends, among other parameters, on the speed of the missile 1, the aerodynamic performance of the wheel 5, the gear ratio between the worm screw 7 and the gear 8 and the pitch of the screw 13 and of the thread 14. Given the distance that the block 11 has to cover so that its component 12 inhibits the safety imposed by the device 10, the time for lifting this safety is therefore perfectly defined.
After the safety is lifted by the component 12, it can be advantageous, for aerodynamic drag reasons, for the wind wheel 5 to be decoupled from the block 11 so as to idle. In this case, a controllable coupling device 18 is provided on the shaft 6 between the wind wheel 5 and the worm screw 7. In order to control this coupling device 18 during decoupling, a contactor 19 is thus disposed in the body 9, with the position of said contactor corresponding to the end of the time for lifting the safety by the component 12 (see
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
12 00381 | Feb 2012 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR2013/000029 | 1/30/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2013/117829 | 8/15/2013 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1234358 | McCandlish | Jul 1917 | A |
1793567 | Teitscheid | Feb 1931 | A |
2779277 | Smith | Jan 1957 | A |
2943569 | Wolfe | Jul 1960 | A |
2989920 | Kendall | Jun 1961 | A |
3170403 | Heilprin | Feb 1965 | A |
3382805 | Swaim | May 1968 | A |
3552318 | Briggs | Jan 1971 | A |
3779194 | Kahn | Dec 1973 | A |
3973501 | Briggs | Aug 1976 | A |
4027593 | Campagnuolo et al. | Jun 1977 | A |
4567828 | Campagnuolo et al. | Feb 1986 | A |
6481354 | Heck et al. | Nov 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
3322926 | Jan 1985 | DE |
2193191 | Feb 1974 | FR |
2566892 | Jan 1986 | FR |
2927695 | Aug 2009 | FR |
103182 | Jan 1917 | GB |
550897 | Jan 1943 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20150114248 A1 | Apr 2015 | US |