Guns using pneumatic force to propel a projectile are well known. Typically, a volume of compressed gas, such as carbon dioxide gas, is suddenly released into a barrel that contains the projectile. The expansion of the released gas propels the projectile through the barrel at relatively high velocity. In the recreational sport of paintball, the projectile is spherical and frangible, and contains a colored liquid or gel material which leaves a mark on the target upon the projectile's impact with the target. Such guns are referred to as paintball markers.
A typical paintball marker design has a body which houses and interconnects several pneumatic components. The body may contain a number of bores that communicate with each other. One bore may contain and distribute pressurized gas. Another bore (that is parallel to the other) may contain a compressed gas storage chamber, as well as mechanisms for filling the storage chamber with gas and releasing gas from the storage chamber to fire a projectile. Yet another bore may contain mechanisms for loading and launching the projectile. Electrically operated pneumatic flow distribution devices are added that are sequentially energized by a timing circuit, to enable the loading of a projectile and to release compressed gas to fire the projectile.
Conventional paintball marker designs have sought to provide reliable and consistent performance in loading and firing paintballs. Such attempts, however, have resulted in designs that may be overly complicated, leading to questionable reliability as well as higher manufacturing costs.
The embodiments of the invention are illustrated by way of example and not by way of limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawings in which like references indicate similar elements. It should be noted that references to “an” or “one” embodiment of the invention in this disclosure are not necessarily to the same embodiment, and they mean at least one.
In this section we shall explain several preferred embodiments of this invention with reference to the appended drawings. Whenever the shapes, relative positions and other aspects of the parts described in the embodiments are not clearly defined, the scope of the invention is not limited only to the parts shown, which are meant merely for the purpose of illustration. Also, the references made below to spatial orientation, such as “forward”, “backward”, “left”, “right”, “above” and “below”, should be viewed as relative terms and not absolute terms.
The embodiments of the invention are directed to pneumatically powered projectile launching devices that have reduced parts count, thereby saving materials and making the device easier to assemble and maintain, without compromising on performance and reliability.
The chamber B is sized to hold a volume of compressed gas needed to launch a projectile 114. An opening 118, to fill the chamber B with compressed gas, is located, in this example, at the rear end of the chamber B. At its forward end, opposite the rear end, there is another opening 117 through which a bolt 103 extends. The size and shape of this opening 117 is designed to mate with the outside surface of a middle portion 104 of the bolt 103, to yield an interface that prevents meaningful leakage of compressed gas from the chamber B past the outside surface of the bolt 103. At the same time, the interface allows the bolt to move back and forth in its longitudinal direction, as described below, which in effect changes the volume of the chamber B.
The bolt 103 has a backward facing working surface 120. A working surface as understood here is generally transverse to a longitudinal axis of the component (here, the bolt 130), but the entire surface is not required to be perpendicular to the longitudinal axis. The working surface of a component is designed to be subject to pneumatic pressure, from a compressed gas, for moving the component.
With the bolt 103 in its full backward position as shown, a breech region is located forward of the bolt and into which the projectile 114 has seated. In this embodiment, the projectile 114 passes from outside the body 101, through an opening above the bolt 103, and into the breech region, once the bolt has moved back to its full backward position. This seating of the projectile 114 may be accomplished by a projectile magazine that is feeding projectiles sequentially into the breech region. A barrel 113 of the device is located forward of the breech region and into which the breech region opens. Launching the projectile 114 calls for the bolt 103 moving forward to push the projectile 114 from the breech region into the barrel 113, and then, through application of pneumatic force of the released compressed gas, shooting the projectile out of the barrel 113 in the forward direction. An example configuration of the bolt that can achieve this launching sequence is described next.
The bolt 103 has a back portion 131 in which the backward facing working surface 120 is formed at the rear end. The back portion in this example is cylindrical. Next, further forward (in the direction the projectile 114 is launched), there is a middle portion 104 which has an outer diameter that is greater than that of the back portion 131. The length of the middle portion 104 is designed in view of the size of the breech region and the projectile 114. Located further forward of the middle portion, the bolt 103 also has a front portion 132 having a greater outer diameter than that of the middle portion 104. One or more gas passages or gas channels 128 are formed in the front portion 132, where at least the majority of each of the passages 128 is inside the bolt and not on its longitudinal, outside surface (as indicated by the dotted lines). Each passage connects an opening in a forward facing surface of the front portion 132, to an opening in a backward facing surface of the bolt that is located between, or at the junction of, the middle and front portions of the bolt.
The device in
The valve 121 may be normally closed, in this example thereby closing off the chamber B when the middle portion 131 of the bolt 103 is in position against the opening 117 as shown. The valve 121 may then be manually actuated by a trigger being pulled by the user of the device. Alternatively, the valve 121 may be a solenoid valve that opens in response to a timed, electrical trigger signal.
Using the arrangement in
Note that to bring the bolt 103 back to its cocked or full backward position, the bolt may be biased backwards, by a mechanical spring (not shown) that has the force needed to push or pull the bolt back (once the pressure in chamber B has dropped to a sufficiently low level).
Turning now to
The piston 106 has a forward facing first working surface 204, and a backward facing second working surface 205, where the latter is spaced forward of the working surface 204 as shown. The piston 106 also has a forward facing third working surface 206 that is spaced forward of the surface 205 as shown. The surface 206 is located within chamber B, while the surfaces 204 and 205 are located within chamber A. An electromechanical transducer 210 is also located in the body 101, in this example directly behind and in line with the longitudinal axis of the piston 106, and is coupled to move the piston 106 forward to the open position in response to a launch trigger signal.
In one embodiment, the piston's forward facing first working surface 204 has essentially equal area as the backward facing second working surface 205. This, together with a pair of o-ring seals, in this example fitted to the outside surface of the piston 106 inside the sleeve, one behind the surface 204 and one in front the surface 205, which prevent meaningful leakage from chamber A, help maintain the piston 106 in position even if the device were to, for example, be dropped by the user and hit the ground. The equal force applied in the forward and backward directions (on the two working surfaces 204, 205) simultaneously by the compressed gas (received through the channel 123) tends not to apply any net longitudinal force to the piston 106. Forward movement of the piston 106, in this embodiment, is therefore only caused by the transducer 210 being actuated, in response to an electrical launch signal (trigger signal), pushing the piston 106 from behind the working surfaces 204, 205.
Opening the gas path causes the release of compressed gas from chamber A into chamber B. As chamber B fills up with the compressed gas, pressure on the forward facing working surface 206 of the piston increases and eventually pushes the piston 106 back to its closed position (closing the opening 118, see
Turning now to
In the embodiment of the invention depicted in
The chamber C is to hold a volume of compressed gas needed to apply pressure on the forward facing working surface 305, to move the bolt 305 to its full backward position. The source for this compressed gas may be the same as that provided through the fitting 124, via a gas channel 333 formed, in this example, within the body 101. Thus, in this example, chambers A and C are at the same pressure of compressed gas, by virtue of being run off the same pressure regulator. Alternatively, chambers A and C can be run at different pressures, perhaps using multiple regulators.
It should be noted that the forward facing working surface 305 of the bolt should be sized or balanced, relative to the backward facing working surface 120 of the bolt (which is used to do the work in moving the bolt forward), to not resist too much the forward movement of the bolt when launching the projectile, yet enable a sufficiently rapid recoil of the bolt to, for example, support rapid, semiautomatic firing. The manner in which compressed gas is routed to the chamber C as depicted in
Although being a function of the pressures that are applied to chamber A and C, the area of the backward facing working surface 120 of the bolt should be greater than that of the forward facing working surface 305 so that the compressed gas being released into chamber B can efficiently launch the paintball 114 without encountering too much resistance in the opposite direction.
Before describing operation of the embodiment in
As an alternative to the floating pin design, the rear end of the piston 106 may extend back into the coil assembly such that no separate pin is needed. The piston 106 can alternatively be biased by a mechanical spring in its backward (closed) position. In yet another embodiment, the surfaces 204, 205 of the piston have a sufficiently different area (including different diameters) that allows the piston to remain in the closed position, without having to use a mechanical spring and without having to attach the piston to the pin 309. Thus, if surface 204 were larger than surface 205, then whenever the device is put under pressure, i.e. in this case the chamber A is filled with compressed gas, the piston will be kept in its default, closed position until the transducer 210 is actuated by a trigger signal. The surfaces 204, 205 may be designed so that the piston remains closed (when the pressure is on in chamber A), even if the user allows the device to fall to the ground by accident.
Turning now to
In response to pulling the trigger, a circuit board sends current though the coil and energizes the coil. The point in time at which this current is sent to the coil can be adjusted. The coil once energized moves the coil pin 309 forward which, in this embodiment, after closing a small gap, pushes against the rear end of the piston 106. This in turn causes the piston 106 to progress further into chamber B, thereby opening the gas passage between chamber A and chamber B. This is depicted in
With the passage between chambers A and B now closed, the pressure in chamber B works to move the bolt forward as it continues to expand in a chamber whose volume is increasing. This is depicted in
The bolt continues to move forward under pressure of chamber B to close the breech and load the paintball into the barrel 113. Once the distance needed to close the breech has been met, the bolt 103 which has been designed with a smaller back portion 131, allows the compressed gas in chamber B to expel, as depicted in
Although pneumatic force (e.g., generated using compressed gas from a relatively small canister for a paintball marker, not shown) is used in the embodiment of the invention shown in
The invention is not limited to the specific embodiments described above. For example, even though all of the figures above show a paintball as the projectile, most if not all of the concepts described above may be adapted for pneumatically launching other types of projectiles, such as lead pellets. In another instance, the coil assembly 413 and piston 106 could be positioned vertically within a trigger frame of the device, rather than horizontally, or in-line, with the chamber B and the bolt 103. This may help shorten the length of the device. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the claims.
This patent application is a divisional of application Ser. No. 11/624,895, filed on Jan. 19, 2007, entitled PNEUMATICALLY POWERED PROJECTILE LAUNCHING DEVICE. An embodiment of the invention is directed to pneumatically powered projectile launching devices, such as paintball markers. Other embodiments are also described.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11624895 | Jan 2007 | US |
Child | 13008725 | US |