Pressurization system for fire extinguishers

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6810964
  • Patent Number
    6,810,964
  • Date Filed
    Monday, December 17, 2001
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, November 2, 2004
    20 years ago
Abstract
A fire extinguisher includes a gas generator for pressurizing a suppressant. The generator includes an ignition cord within a flexible tube extending within an interior of an extinguisher bottle. Advantageously, there is additional generant between the tube and the ignition cord. The extinguisher may be manufactured as a retrofit of an existing hand-held supercharged extinguisher.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




(1) Field of the Invention




This invention relates to fire extinguishers.




(2) Description of the Related Art




There are a wide variety of fire extinguishing technologies and fire extinguisher constructions. These include propellant-actuated extinguishers and extinguishers charged with compressed and/or liquefied gas. United States Military Specification MIL-E-52031D(ME)(5 Sep. 1979), the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety, identifies a hand-held and actuated vaporizing-liquid fire extinguisher. This exemplary extinguisher utilizes CF


3


Br (monobromotrifluoromethane) suppressant.




U.S. Pat. No. 3,228,474 of Huthsing, Jr. discloses a portable extinguisher operated by puncturing a gas cartridge to pressurize the extinguisher.




The basic features of an early propellant-actuated extinguisher are seen in U.S. Pat. No. 2,530,633 (Scholz). Scholz discloses a fire extinguisher wherein “a liquid extinguishing medium, such as methyl bromide, is expelled from its container by gas evolved from the burning of” a pyrotechnic charge. The charge is originally stored in a container, which includes electric squibs. The charge container is mounted in an upper end of the vessel within a “container cup”. Opposite the container cup, an outlet from the vessel is formed by an elbow fitting sealed by a rupturable diaphragm. Ignition of the pyrotechnic charge ruptures a lower wall of the charge container and vents combustion gases into the vessel. The combustion gases serve “as a gas piston acting on the surface of the liquid” rupturing the diaphragm which sealed the outlet and propelling the liquid out of the extinguisher.




The application of a propellant-actuated extinguisher to use in military vehicles is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,319,640 (Brobeil). Brobeil discloses an extinguisher in many ways similar to Scholz. The exemplary fire suppressant utilized is Halon 1301. The lower end of the extinguisher vessel is sealed by a rupturable diaphragm. A gas generating device is mounted atop the neck of the vessel. The exemplary gas generating composition is 62% sodium azide and 38% copper oxide.




Patent Cooperation Treaty International Application PCT/US00/05953 (published as WO 00/57959) discloses a hybrid fire extinguisher.




Patent Cooperation Treaty International Application PCT/US00/30726 (published as WO 01/34516), the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein, discloses a number of gas generation systems.




BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




One area of the invention involves the remanufacturing of a fire extinguisher. Advantageously, the remanufacturing may involve the conversion of a vaporizing-liquid extinguisher (preferably an expended one) to a propellant-actuated extinguisher. The cylinder or bottle is preferably reused as is the major portion of the discharge assembly. There may, advantageously, be a degree or cleaning or reconditioning of any reused components and assemblies. To the reused discharge assembly portion, there is added a portion including an elongate flexible gas generating component and means for igniting the component. The elongate flexible nature of the generator is advantageous to permit it to be inserted through the typically narrow opening in the bottle. Advantageously, the reused portion of the discharge assembly includes a lance previously utilized to puncture a seal to initiate discharge and, in the remanufactured condition, puncturing a seal and also actuating a firing pin to trigger a primer as the igniting means.




Other aspects of the invention involve the resulting fire extinguisher as well as fire extinguishers sharing construction details and operating parameters but not necessarily having been remanufactured from the previous conditions. In preferred implementations, the suppressant consists essentially or in major part of heptafluoropropane or a similar agent. The combustion gasses from the gas generator provide pressure and heat and diffuse into the suppressant and discharge the suppressant from the extinguisher. This combination may make the suppressant perform more similarly to a halon system than if the suppressant were merely squirted out under a cold supercharged mode (e.g., as if driven by a piston).




The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is a longitudinal partial cross-sectional view of a fire extinguisher remanufactured according to principles of the invention.





FIG. 2

is a longitudinal cross-sectional view of an upper portion of the fire extinguisher of FIG.


1


.





FIG. 3

is a longitudinal cross-sectional view of a firing pin housing and gas generator subassembly of the extinguisher of FIG.


1


.





FIG. 4

is a longitudinal cross-sectional view of the upper portion of the extinguisher of

FIG. 1

in a discharging condition





FIG. 5

is a longitudinal cross-sectional view of an alternate fire extinguisher upper portion.





FIG. 6

is a longitudinal cross-sectional view of the upper portion of the alternate extinguisher in a discharging condition.











Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.




DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




An exemplary preexisting U.S. Army halon super-pressurized hand-held fire extinguisher has a pressure cylinder described in MIL-E-52031D as containing a supercharged agent at 380 psig at 68° F. The cylinder is 13.5 inches long, holding 2 pounds, 14 ounces of agent at maximum charge. Service rating for the cylinder is 500 psia having an internal volume of 80 cubic inches. A safety seal disk is set to burst at 1050 psia plus or minus 100 psia, thus protecting the cylinder from overpressure. The cylinder outlet port is well described in

FIG. 1

of the MIL-E-52031 specification. The valving head, hose, swivel, handle lever, and safety pin are not defined in the specification except for operational test.




At one level, I have sought to reuse the existing cylinder of such an extinguisher. At another level, I have sought reuse or adapt additional components.





FIG. 1

shows one example of a remanufactured extinguisher


20


comprising a rigid metal cylinder or bottle


22


having a central longitudinal axis


500


. The exemplary cylinder is formed from a body piece having a generally cylindrical sidewall


24


and a unitarily formed first end


26


. In the orientation shown, the first end is a lower end and an upper end portion


28


of the cylinder is sealed to the body such as via welding. The cylinder interior contains a charge of suppressant


30


. Exemplary suppressants are a 2.5 pound. charge of NOVEC 1230™ (dodecafluoro-2-methylpentan-3-one), 3M Specialty Materials, St. Paul, Minn. or FM200 (heptafluoropropane), Great Lakes Chemical Corp., West Lafayette, Ind. A discharge head assembly


32


is mated to the cylinder at an outlet port formed in the upper end portion


28


. The discharge head assembly is connected to a discharge conduit assembly


40


formed including an exemplary metal tube


41


. Near the downstream end of the tube, there is secured a discharge horn formed as an exemplary frustoconical sleeve


42


. Inside the upstream end of the horn, a “v-shell” or foraminate mixing nozzle


44


may also be mated to the downstream end of the tube. Within the cylinder, an elongate gas generator assembly


50


depends within the cylinder and extends in a convoluted path to facilitate the assembly


50


having an extended length greater than any linear span of the cylinder interior. In combination, the gas generator assembly


50


, discharge assembly


32


, and the discharge conduit assembly


40


constitute a gas generator and discharge assembly.




The discharge head assembly includes a main body element


60


(

FIG. 2

) which may be machined from metal (e.g., brass) to which are mounted fixed and moveable handle portions


62


and


64


, the latter of which is mounted for rotation about a transverse pivot axis


501


. In a preferred use attitude of the exemplary embodiment, the fixed handle portion


62


is configured (e.g. shaped, dimensioned and positioned) to be gripped by the fingers of a user's hand while the moveable portion


64


is simultaneously engaged by the palm of the hand to allow the hand to apply a compressive force between the handle portions to shift the moveable handle portion toward the fixed handle portion from the relative position of

FIG. 2. A

lance


70


having upper and lower ends


72


and


74


is carried by the body element


60


. An exemplary lance is machined from heat-treated alloy steel. An upper end portion of the lance extends through an aperture in the upper end of the main body element proximate the handle


64


. The lance has a flange


76


, the underside of which is supported against the upper end of a coil spring


80


encircling an intermediate portion of the lance within a compartment


82


of the element


60


. The lower end of the spring rides atop the upper surface of a washer


91


, itself atop the upper surface of a gasket


90


(e.g., an elastomer such as ethylene propylene or nitrile rubber). The washer and gasket combination is sandwiched between a lower shoulder of the compartment


82


and an upper rim of an end plug


94


(e.g., of corrosion-resistant steel) having an externally threaded neck engaged to an internally threaded lower end opening of the body element


60


. The plug


94


is L-sectioned, having a lower shoulder flange at the base of the neck. A centrally apertured cap


100


(e.g., of cadmium plated steel) has an internally threaded lower portion mated to an externally threaded neck portion of the cylinder outlet port. Proximate the cap central aperture, an upper end flange of the cap compressively sandwiches the end plug's flange between itself and the outlet port rim via respective gaskets


110


(e.g., an elastomer such as ethylene propylene or nitrile rubber) and


112


(e.g., PTFE).




The outlet port neck is additionally internally threaded to receive a corresponding centrally apertured, externally threaded end plug


120


(e.g., brass or bronze). Sandwiched below the end plug


120


is a seal assembly comprising a centrally apertured body


124


(e.g., of two copper disks) and a metallic sheet seal element


126


(e.g., a brass diaphragm soldered between the disks) extending across the aperture. The foregoing discharge head assembly components may advantageously be identical or similar to those of the underlying extinguisher being remanufactured. The dip tube assembly of the existing extinguisher may, however, be preferably replaced, modified, or augmented.

FIG. 2

shows this having been replaced by an entirely new gas generator assembly


50


. The assembly


50


includes a metal (e.g., machined brass) housing


140


having a flared upper end portion


142


sandwiched between the seal body


124


and an upwardly-directed lip at the base of the throat of the cylinder outlet in the cylinder upper end portion in a similar fashion as was secured a similarly-dimensioned portion of the replaced dip tube.





FIG. 3

shows further details of the exemplary generator assembly The housing


140


has a generally cylindrical upper body portion depending from the end


142


to a shoulder


144


. A neck


146


further depends from the shoulder. A percussion primer


150


(e.g., a conventional #209 shotshell primer) is carried within an upwardly open bore of the shoulder. At the bottom of the bore is a centrally apertured web defining a flash hole. Below the web and within the neck is the proximal end of a generant subassembly. The generant subassembly includes a flexible polymeric outer tube (e.g., TEFZEL™ ETFE of E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., Wilmington, Del.)


160


extending from an open proximal end


162


to a closed (e.g., crimped and/or heat-sealed) distal end


164


. Within the neck


146


, the outer surface of the tube


160


is crimped to contact with the neck inner surface. Within the tube


160


within the neck


146


, a hollow tubular ferrule


170


(e.g., of mild or stainless steel) extends. With the neck crimped around the ferrule, the ferrule has an outer surface compressed against the tube inner surface to frictionally retain the adjacent end portion of the tube within the neck. Within the tube


160


and optionally within the ferrule


170


there extends an ignition cord element


180


(e.g., ITLX, having a flexible sheath


181


and a pyrotechnic charge


182


contained therein). This may extend for most if not substantially all of the length of the tube. A charge of an additional gas generant propellant


184


(e.g., a hybrid composite propellant such as ammonia nitrate phase stabilized with an oxidizer (e.g., potassium perchlorate)) may be disposed in the annulus between the ignition cord


180


and the tube


160


. The primer


150


is positioned in sufficient proximity to the upper end of the ignition cord (or any intervening transfer charge) so that ignition of the primer


150


may, through the flash hole, in turn induce ignition of the cord


180


.




To trigger the primer


150


, a firing pin


200


is provided within the body


140


. The exemplary firing pin is advantageously formed of metal (e.g. turned from heat-treated alloy steel). The firing pin has a head


201


having a lower striker tip


202


. A stem


204


extends upward from the head to an upper end


206


. Adjacent the upper end, the firing pin is initially held in a first, elevated, position via a shear pin


210


extending transversely through an aperture in the stem


204


and, at its ends, embedded in a plug


216


force fit within an upper end portion of the housing


140


. The plug


216


has a cruciform cross section transverse to the axis


500


to create four longitudinal passageways parallel to the axis. A coil spring


220


is compressed between the lower end of the plug


216


and the underside of the firing pin head to bias the head downward.




In operation, the user removes the safety pin


222


and grips the handles


64


and


62


to draw the two together. This depresses the handle


64


causing it to pivot downward until an underside of its interior contacts the upper end


72


of the lance


70


. Further actuation drives the lance downward, compressing the spring


80


. The lower end of the lance first punctures the seal


126


and then contacts the upper end of the firing pin. The force exerted on the firing pin is sufficient to shear the pin


210


whereupon relaxation of the spring


220


drives the firing pin downward until its tip


202


impacts the primer


150


and sets off the primer, in turn setting off the ignition cord


180


and the additional generant (if any)


184


. The generated gas rapidly charges the extinguisher and raises the pressure within the cylinder. The elevated pressure drives the suppressant through apertures


240


in the generator housing. The suppressant may thus flow along a discharge path


502


into the interior of the housing


140


from which it progresses further upward around the firing pin through vertical passageways between the arms of the end plug


216


to the interior of the head element


60


and therefrom through a discharge plenum


230


, the discharge conduit and out the nozzle/horn.





FIGS. 5 and 6

show an alternate extinguisher construction in which the lance


70


′ has been further modified for additional valving functionality. An inner cylindrical surface of the gasket


90


′ (backed-up by washer


91


′) is in sealing engagement with the outer cylindrical surface of the lance below the flange. A channel


250


extends centrally upward from its lower end


74


and exits at the upper surface of the flange


76


. A seal


252


(e.g., an elastomeric grommet) is in sealing engagement with the outer cylindrical surface of the lance above the flange. In an initial elevated position, the upper surface of the lance is held engaged to the lower surface of the grommet


252


via the spring


80


. Upon actuation and ignition, engagement of the seal


90


′ with the lance, combined with presence of the channel


250


diverts the exiting suppressant along a discharge path through the channel


250


to the discharge plenum


230


(FIG.


6


). During discharge, the handle portion


64


may be released whereupon the spring


80


will return the lance to its elevated position. In the elevated position, the grommet


252


seals the upper end of the channel


250


resisting further discharge. This leaves the extinguisher in an at least temporarily supercharged condition. The handle portion


64


may then again be pivoted downward, disengaging the flange upper surface from the grommet


252


and reestablishing a full discharge flow. In the at least temporarily supercharged condition, there may well be some minor leakage. Such leakage may be desirable to prevent over pressurization as it may merely be desired to allow the user to temporarily (e.g., for a few seconds) interrupt flow so as to allow the user to make an efficient use of the available suppressant in extinguishing a fire. The leakage may be through the channel


250


or may be between the gasket


90


′ and the lance or may be via other means such as an additional pressure relief valve (not shown).




An exemplary pressure relief valve (not shown) may be incorporated into the sidewall of the valve body element


60


adjacent to the spring


80


in the compartment


82


. An exemplary cracking pressure for such valve is in the 400-450 psi range. The valve acts to safe the bottle in the event, for example, the unit is exposed in a fire causing the suppressant to boil or resulting from an auto-ignition event.




Although key uses are in military vehicles (e.g., land vehicles and aircraft) the extinguishers may also be useful in buildings with high value electronics, commercial aircraft, commercial marine, and other specialty applications. Although the extinguishers are advantageously constructed by rebuilding existing vaporizing-liquid fire extinguishers (especially discharged extinguishers) the present teachings are, to varying degrees, applicable to entirely new construction. When expended, the present extinguishers may potentially be themselves remanufactured.




Among possible variations in extinguisher construction are:




a duplex fire extinguisher utilizing a double bottle allowing two independent pressurizing/discharging events;




use of alternate discharge conduit assemblies (e.g., including alternate nozzles, etc.);




use of the ignition components in other than hand-held extinguishers;




use of a hand lever-actuated, trip-sear, hammer striker and firing pin to trigger the percussion primer (e.g., as in rifle bolt strikers);




use of a delivery valve that remains locked until a threshold pressure (e.g., 400 psi) is achieved within the cylinder (e.g., via a pressure-actuated piston or diaphragm which will lock and unlock the valve poppet);




use of a hand lever-actuated, fixed-rate delivery rate, o-ring sealed lever-lift, pintle valve (to the extent that the valve does not seal the suppressant prior to use, a precision seat and seal set are not required);




use of an initiator or squib as the igniting means in place of the percussion primer so as to provide a more automated initiation (e.g., a fully automatic electrical operation initiated responsive to heat sensors to protect the crew if they are unable to actuate the extinguisher manually); and/or




a visible and tactile indicator on the valve cap allowing rapid determination of the operational status.




Among alternative suppressants are:




low vapor pressure fluorocarbons such as:




methoxy-nonafluorobutane;




dodecafluoro-2-methylpentan-3-one;




perfluorohexane; and




perfluoroheptane; and




aqueous solutions, including those containing additives such as:




ammonium or potassium phosphate salts;




potassium salts such as those containing phosphate, acetate, bicarbonate, carbonate, bromide, iodide; and/or




various surfactants.




One or more embodiments of the present invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, many of the features of the illustrated embodiments may be recombined to produce other embodiments or may be adapted for use with a variety of existing or future extinguisher constructions, suppressants, propellants, and the like. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.



Claims
  • 1. A fire extinguisher comprising:a bottle having an interior and at least an outlet; a fire suppressant contained by the bottle when the extinguisher is in a pre-discharge condition; and a gas generant and discharge assembly extending through the bottle outlet and secured there to and comprising: a source of gas for pressurizing the suppressant at least when the bottle is in a discharging condition comprising: an ignition cord having a sheath and a pyrotechnic charge contained within the sheath and extending from a proximal end to a distal end; a flexible tube surrounding the sheath at least along a major portion of a length thereof and extending from a proximal end to a distal end; a gas generant charge contained between the tube and sheath; and means for igniting the ignition cord; and an outlet, through which the suppressant is discharged when the extinguisher is in the discharging condition.
  • 2. The fire extinguisher of claim 1 wherein:the means for igniting comprises a percussion primer having a primer charge and an operative end in close facing relationship to the proximal end of the ignition cord effective to ignite the ignition cord; the gas generator and discharge assembly comprises: a first handle portion positioned to be gripped by the fingers of a user's hand and a second handle portion positioned to be simultaneously engaged by a palm of said hand and mounted to be shifted toward the first handle portion responsive to a compressive force applied by the hand; firing pin mechanism mounted for spring-biased movement between an initial position and second position in which an operative end portion of the firing pin mechanism contacts the percussion primer with effective momentum to trigger the primer.
  • 3. The fire extinguisher of claim 2 wherein:the firing pin mechanism comprises: a spring loaded firing pin initially held in its initial position by a sacrificial element against the spring-bias force; and a lance shiftable between its initial position and its second position by said movement of the second handle portion, the shift of the lance rupturing the sacrificial element to release the firing pin.
  • 4. The fire extinguisher of claim 3 further comprising a seal, initially between the lance and the firing pin and initially sealing the bottle interior from an external environment and mounted so as to be ruptured by the shift of the lance.
  • 5. The fire extinguisher of claim 4 wherein the gas generator and discharge assembly further comprises a rigid metallic firing pin housing having: a distal end portion containing proximal end portions of the ignition cord and flexible tube;an intermediate portion holding the primer in press fit relation; and a proximal portion at least partially containing the firing pin; and wherein a discharge path for the suppressant extends through at least one lateral aperture in the firing pin housing and, therefrom, through a proximal end of the firing pin housing.
  • 6. The fire extinguisher of claim 5 wherein in the pre-discharge condition the pressure within the bottle is lower than 70 psi and the ignition cord pyrotechnic charge and the gas generant charge are, in combination, effective to at least temporarily elevate the pressure within the bottle to between 300 and 450 psi.
  • 7. The fire extinguisher claim 1 wherein the suppressant consists in major mass part of heptafluropropane, and has a total mass of less than 7 pounds.
  • 8. The fire extinguisher of claim 7 wherein the total mass is 2-3 pounds.
  • 9. The fire extinguisher of claim 7 wherein a minimum bottle diameter between the interior and the outlet is no more than 0.5 inch.
  • 10. The fire extinguisher of claim 9 wherein the ignition cord has a length of between 1 and 3 feet.
  • 11. The fire extinguisher claim 1 wherein the ignition cord has a length of at least one foot.
  • 12. The fire extinguisher of claim 1 wherein the suppressant comprises 2-3 pounds of dodecafluoro-2-methylpentan-3-one.
  • 13. The device of claim 1 wherein the suppressant consists essentially of at least one fluorocarbon.
  • 14. A fire extinguisher comprising:a bottle having an interior and at least an outlet; a fire suppressant contained by the bottle when the extinguisher is in a pre-discharge condition; and a gas generant and discharge assembly extending through the bottle outlet and secured there to and comprising: a source of gas for pressurizing the suppressant at least when the bottle is in a discharging condition comprising: an ignition cord having a sheath and a pyrotechnic charge contained within the sheath and extending from a proximal end to a distal end; a flexible tube surrounding the sheath at least along a major portion of a length thereof and extending from a proximal end to a distal end; a gas generant charge contained between the tube and sheath; a percussion primer having a primer charge and an operative end in close facing relationship to the proximal end of the ignition cord effective to ignite the ignition cord; a first handle portion positioned to be gripped by the fingers of a user's hand and a second handle portion positioned to be simultaneously engaged by a palm of said hand and mounted to be shifted toward the first handle portion responsive to a compressive force applied by the hand; firing pin mechanism mounted for spring-biased movement between an initial position and second position in which an operative end portion of the firing pin mechanism contacts the percussion primer with effective momentum to trigger the primer; and an outlet, through which the suppressant is discharged when the extinguisher is in the discharging condition.
  • 15. The fire extinguisher of claim 14 wherein:the firing pin mechanism comprises: a spring loaded firing pin initially held in its initial position by a sacrificial element against the spring-bias force; and a lance shiftable between its initial position and its second position by said movement of the second handle portion, the shift of the lance rupturing the sacrificial element to release the firing pin.
  • 16. The fire extinguisher of claim 15 further comprising a seal, initially between the lance and the firing pin and initially sealing the bottle interior from an external environment and mounted so as to be ruptured by the shift of the lance.
  • 17. The fire extinguisher of claim 16 wherein the gas generator and discharge assembly further comprises a rigid metallic firing pin housing having:a distal end portion containing proximal end portions of the ignition cord and flexible tube; an intermediate portion holding the primer in press fit relation; and a proximal portion at least partially containing the firing pin; and wherein a discharge path for the suppressant extends through at least one lateral aperture in the firing pin housing and, therefrom, through a proximal end of the firing pin housing.
  • 18. The fire extinguisher of claim 17 wherein in the pre-discharge condition the pressure within the bottle is lower than 70 psi and the ignition cord pyrotechnic charge and the gas generant charge are, in combination, effective to at least temporarily elevate the pressure within the bottle to between 300 and 450 psi.
  • 19. A fire extinguisher comprising:a bottle having an interior and at least an outlet; a fire suppressant contained by the bottle when the extinguisher is in a pre-discharge condition, wherein the suppressant comprises 2-3 pounds of dodecafluoro-2-methylpentan-3-one; and a gas generant and discharge assembly extending through the bottle outlet and secured there to and comprising: a source of gas for pressurizing the suppressant at least when the bottle is in a discharging condition comprising: an ignition cord having a sheath and a pyrotechnic charge contained within the sheath and extending from a proximal end to a distal end; a flexible tube surrounding the sheath at least along a major portion of a length thereof and extending from a proximal end to a distal end; a gas generant charge contained between the tube and sheath; and means for igniting the ignition cord; and an outlet, through which the suppressant is discharged when the extinguisher is in the discharging condition.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This patent application claims priority of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/256,010 entitled “PRESSURIZATION SYSTEM FOR FIRE EXTINGUISHERS” that was filed on Dec. 15, 2000, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein as if set forth at length.

US Referenced Citations (16)
Number Name Date Kind
2530633 Scholz Nov 1950 A
3228474 Huthsing, Jr. Jan 1966 A
3752234 Degginger et al. Aug 1973 A
4319640 Brobeil Mar 1982 A
4824146 Redfield Apr 1989 A
4998751 Paxton et al. Mar 1991 A
5219178 Kobari et al. Jun 1993 A
5224550 Bragg Jul 1993 A
5564743 Marchant Oct 1996 A
5697636 Orme et al. Dec 1997 A
5709406 Buchanan Jan 1998 A
5718294 Billiard et al. Feb 1998 A
5816330 Billiard et al. Oct 1998 A
5934705 Siddiqui et al. Aug 1999 A
5967550 Shirk et al. Oct 1999 A
6062143 Grace et al. May 2000 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number Date Country
WO 0057959 Oct 2000 WO
WO 0134516 May 2001 WO
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry
U.S. Military Specification MIL-E52031D(ME)(Sep. 5, 1979).
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60/256010 Dec 2000 US