This invention relates to firearms, and more particularly, to muzzle loading firearms.
Muzzle loading rifles have an essentially closed breech at the rear of the barrel, so that powder and bullets must be loaded at the muzzle or forward end of the barrel. A typical muzzle loading rifle has a barrel with a breech plug attached to occupy an enlarged rear bore portion of the barrel at the breech end. In some rifles, the breech plug is permanently attached. In others, the breech plug is removable to facilitate pass-through cleaning of the bore.
An existing removable breech plug employs a finely threaded body that screws into the rear of the barrel, with 10-15 turns to secure it in place. This provides safety against hang fires and facilitates removal for cleaning. However, the fouling associated with muzzle loading rifles can clog the threads as gases and particles are forced into the threads during firing, this can freeze up the plug, and require undesirability great torque to remove the plug, through the many rotations required.
The present invention overcomes the limitations of the prior art by providing a muzzle loading firearm. The firearm has a barrel with a bore on a bore axis, and the barrel has a muzzle end and a breech end. A frame is connected to the barrel, and has a breech face. The frame moves between an open position in which the breech face is away from the breech end of the barrel, and a closed position in which the breech face abuts the breech end of the barrel. A breech plug is removably attached to the barrel. The breech plug including a seal element closely received by the bore. The seal element may be a set of piston rings that are received in a circumferential groove about a forward end of the plug, or may be a cup at the forward end, with a forward rim that flares under pressure to provide a gas seal.
The rear portion of the barrel is occupied by a breech plug 52. The breech plug is a generally cylindrical body with a nose portion 54 that is stepped to closely fit in the initial portion 40 of the breech plug chamber 36. Most of the length of the plug is provided with helical threads 56, or an alternative fastening element that provides extreme resistance to axial extraction forces, such as generated by firing a shot. The plug has a flange 60 that is larger in diameter than the threaded portion, and which rests against the shoulder 46 when installed, as shown. The rear or breech end portion of the breech plug has a hexagonal profile portion 62, in the shape of a bolt head that may be engaged by a socket wrench for removing and replacing the plug. A flat rear face 64 of the plug's hex portion is flush with the plane defined by the breech end of the barrel.
The nose portion 54 defines a circumferential groove that receives a set of three metal piston rings 55. The rings provide a tight seal against the sidewall of the breech plug chamber 36, so that threads will be protected against incursion of gas and debris. In an alternative embodiment, also discussed in detail below, a cup seal may be provided, the cup having an cylindrical sidewall extending to an open end in the forward direction and closely received in the chamber, so that the pressure generated by discharge tends to flare the cup, sealing against gases escaping rearwardly.
The breech plug defines a central bore having a primer pocket 66 at the breech end, a flash passage 70 from the primer pocket through most of the length of the plug, and a narrow passage 72 from the flash passage to the nose 74 or forward face of the plug. The primer pocket is generally cylindrical, to fit a standard primer for a muzzle loading rifle, with an enlarged diameter at the rearmost portion to closely accommodate the typical flanged primer. The breech plug includes a pin 75 that protrudes a short distance, radially from the periphery of the flange.
As shown in
An extractor 80 is a solid body with an L-shaped form. It has a short leg 82 with a rectangular cross section that closely fits the slot 76, and a long leg 84 that has a cylindrical form, and which is closely received in a bore 86 in the lower lug that extends axially, parallel to the bore axis 22. The free end of the short leg of the extractor is formed with a curved lip that partly defines the primer pocket, with the same shape as the surface of revolution that defines the pocket. Thus, when the extractor is in the rest position shown, a primer in the pocket is closely received on all sides without substantial gaps, so that it is physically supported against rupture. Together, the rear face of the extractor leg 82 and the hex face 64 entirely encircle the primer pocket.
The extractor 80 is movable rearward to an extracted position, so that its lip draws a primer in the pocket partially from the pocket, in response to opening of the rifle action, by a linkage (not shown.) The extractor leg 82 inserts in the plug slot only when the plug is in one selected orientation, and prevents plug rotation while in that position. This aids against mis-installation of the plug, and the risk that a plug may work its way out of position during shooting. (or is not installed properly)
The breech element 24 is shown in the closed position in solid lines, and has a breech face 90 that abuts the barrel breech 16 and plug face 64 when closed. This provides a rear surface to fully enclose the primer pocket. A bore in the breech element along the bore axis 22 receives a firing pin 92 that is struck by the hammer 26 to fire the rifle, forcing a tip of the pin into a primer, which sends ignition gases through the plug bore, to ignite gun powder in the barrel. The breech element is shown in the open position (in which the extractor extends to eject the primer) in dashed lines 24′. The extractor is removable to allow removal of the breech plug.
As shown in
Accordingly, the dimensions of the groove and rings provide that the stack of three rings is less than the groove width, and the interior of the rings fit loosely on the inner diameter of the groove. This avoids the rings being tensioned open, which would spread their gaps, and allow gases to pass. Also, the looseness allows any eccentricity of the plug thread axis with respect to the bore axis to be tolerated. Further, by the rings being able to shift axially between the rear face and forward face of the groove, the pressure of firing will cause them to abut the rear face, immediately providing a seal that has a strength proportionate to the gas pressure.
The loose rotatabilty of the ring stack with respect to the plug also provides that the rings are not providing excessive friction or suffering excess wear when the plug is screwed in or removed. If the rings were fixed to the plug, a point on the ring would follow a long helical path that corresponded to the total length of the thread. That length would be the circumference of the threaded portion times the number of turns. With the loose rings, the path traveled is less by one or two orders of magnitude, and is only the axial length of the threaded portion. Moreover, the effort of installation is reduced by this feature, because the advantage provided by the screw works to easily overcome the friction provided by the rings' snug fit in the bore.
In an alternative embodiment, the three separate split rings may be replaced by a single multi-turn closely wound helical coil. This is a McFarland-style seal employed in the gas pistons of military rifle actions. This avoids the possible blow-through of gasses via the ring gaps. Such a coil would require that at least the rear face be ground flat and square, so that it provides a seal under pressure against the rear shoulder of the plug groove in which it is received.
The cup is attached to the plug by a press friction fit. The breech plug has a boss turned on the forward end with an annular groove to accept a mating receptacle in the sealing cup.
In the preferred embodiment the cup is formed of a soft material such as brass, but it may be formed of any of a wide variety of materials that can withstand the heat and pressure of firing, and provide the flexibility for an effective seal. High temperature polymer composites such as those in the polyethylene family of plastics and PTFE and its variants are believed to be suitably robust and flexible. The use of either a cup or piston rings is intended for firearm barrels that lack rifling, or those with rifling that does not extend fully to the breech of the barrel.
While the above is discussed in terms of preferred and alternative embodiments, the invention is not intended to be so limited. For instance either seal type may be used in conjunction with alternative breech plug attachment methods, including multistart threads, interrupted threads, and rifle bolt concepts.
This application is a divisional application of U.S. Ser. No. 11/334,002, filed Jan. 17, 2006, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,814,694, entitled “MUZZLE LOADING RIFLE WITH BREECH PLUG HAVING GAS SEAL FACILITY”, and is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110005116 A1 | Jan 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11334002 | Jan 2006 | US |
Child | 12883510 | US |