This invention concerns improvements on a pump gun of the type disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 278,324 in the name of W. H. Elliot and produced by Colt.
The gun taken into consideration comprises mainly a barrel with a cartridge chamber, a cartridge magazine tube arranged under and parallel to the barrel, a carrier made to receive a cartridge from the magazine tube and to carry it up to the cartridge chamber, a breech block moving between a retracted open position and a forward closed position of the cartridge chamber, a firing pin on board of said breech block, a hammer associated with a control trigger and turning between a cocked and a firing position on said firing pin, a breech block retaining lever in a retracted position, a cocking slide moving between a forward rest position and a retracted work position to produce the movements of the breech block, the rotation of the hammer in the cocked position and the transfer of a cartridge from the magazine tube to the carrier to send it to the cartridge chamber following a successive forward movement of the breech block, and a closing lever associated with the cocking slide and designed to lock the breech block in the forward closed position of the cartridge chamber.
However in such a gun, the components of the loading mechanism of a cartridge into the cartridge chamber, cocking hammer and firing are all connected to and depend on the hammer. So, in particular, when for various reasons the cartridges require to be removed from the magazine to prevent the gun being used, and so as not to have to fire each individual cartridge until the magazine is empty, the hammer has to be cocked and released each time, taking care to accompany it carefully against the rear of the breach block so that it does not strike the firing pin. In this way however the risk of accidentally or however inadvertently firing a cartridge cannot be excluded.
One objective of this invention is to avoid such a risk and therefore to enable the cartridges to be unloaded from the pump gun without necessarily having to use the hammer.
Another aim of the invention is to propose a pump gun like the one referred to above, but with some of its components improved, to facilitate loading of each cartridge into the barrel and for a more reliable and safe use of the gun itself.
These objectives and implicit advantages which derive from them are achieved, according to the invention, with an unloadable pump gun in compliance with the preamble of claim 1 and characterized by a longitudinally stationary cartridge stop lever, interacting with said cocking slide and susceptible to rocking movements on an intermediate pin between an operating interception position of a first cartridge in the magazine when the cocking slide is in the retracted position and an idle release position of the same cartridge from the magazine when the cocking slide is in the forward position.
The invention will however be explained more in detail in the continuation of this description made in reference to the enclosed diagrammatic drawings, in which:
As shown, the gun comprises a receiver 10 which holds a cocking and firing mechanism and to which are fixed a barrel 11 with cartridge chamber and a magazine tubel2, located under and parallel to the barrel and made to contain several cartridges 13 inserted through an opening 10′ provided in one side of the receiver.
Said firing mechanism comprises: a breech block 14 holding a firing pin 15, an extractor 16 and a firing pin stop 17; a hammer 18 with relative control trigger 19; a carrier 20; a stop lever 21; and a cocking slide 22 connected to the breech block by means of an action lock 23, and where the hammer, trigger, carrier and stop lever are assembled on a trigger plate 10aassociated with the receiver 10.
In detail and considering the barrel as the front of the gun, the breech block 14 moves in line with the barrel between a forward, closing, thrust position of a cartridge 13 into the cartridge chamber of the barrel 11 and a retracted opening position of the cartridge chamber, of expulsion of the fired cartridge shell and cocking of the hammer. The movements of the breech block from one position to the other are set by the cocking slide 22 by means either of the action lock 23 or by hand. When the breech block is in the closed position, said action lock 23 rests against a fixed shoulder stop 10″ with the help of a spring 23′—
Also of important is the fact that the breech block has a front appendix 14′—
The firing pin stop 17 on board the breech block 14 is provided to hold the firing pin in a retracted inactive position until the breech block is in a forward position and the firing pin has to be hit by the hammer in order to fire a cartridge present in the barrel cartridge chamber.
The hammer 18 can turn on an axis 24 between an active position on the firing pin and a cocking position, in which it is stopped by a latch 25 integral with the control trigger 19 and engaging with a cocking tooth 26 of the hammer.
The carrier 20 oscillates on a pin 28 and is moved by the breech block action lock 23 and in relation to the position of the hammer 18 between a lowered position to receive a cartridge 13 from the cartridge magazine 12 and a raised position to guide the cartridge towards the cartridge chamber of the barrel 11. When the breech block is forward, the carrier 20 is in the lowered position on a level with the exit of the magazine 12; when, on the other hand, the breech block is retracted to cock the hammer, the carrier 20 is moved into the raised position. The carrier 20 has two lateral indents 29 which engage alternately with a locking means, such as a ball spring 27 or something similar—
The stop lever 21 is assembled on a respective pin 30 carried by the trigger plate 10a to be longitudinally stationary, but rocking on said pin between an intercepting, working position of a first cartridge in the magazine 12 and an inoperative release position of the same cartridge from the magazine. This stop lever 21 is positioned below the carrier 20 and is associated and interacting with the cocking slide 22. The latter is guided in the receiver 10 and manually movable along the cartridge magazine 12 between a forward rest position, in which the breech block is in the forward closed position, and a retracted work position, in which it moves the breech block back, causing the hammer to move into the cocked position and the carrier 20 to lift up.
At its rear, free end, the cocking slide has a slot 31 by means of which it engages with the action lock 23 associated with the breech block 14 and made to block the latter in the closed position of the cartridge magazine.
The cocking slide 22 has also a longitudinal slot 32 with two ribs 33 on an intermediate part of the length of the opposite sides, into which a stop protrusion 34 integral with the end facing forwards of the stop lever 21, fits and is guided. Said stop protrusion 34 has a front surface 35 facing towards the cartridge magazine, two wings 36 on its sides and two sloping surfaces 37 on its rear side.
The stop lever 21 is stressed by two, different strength, flat springs; a first spring 38, the weaker, placed between the trigger plate 10a and the latch and tending to move the latter upwards into a working position; a second spring 39, the stronger, positioned between the stop lever and the cocking slide 22. The latter spring 39 is present only to come into contact with the rear part of the cocking slide 22 when the latter is moved forward, so as to annul the action of the first spring 38 and allow the protrusion 34 of the stop lever 21 to lower into an inoperative position. The spring 39 is on the other hand unimportant when it is in line with the slot 32 of the cocking slide 22.
The front surface 35 of the stop protrusion 34 is made to stop and hold the cartridges in the magazine; the lateral wings 36 are provided to interact with the ribs 33 on the sides of the slot of the cocking slide 22 so as to move the protrusion 34 of the cartridge stop lever 21 higher; the sloping surfaces 37 behind the protrusion are there to interact with a shoulder 40, also inclined, formed on a cross-piece near the rear end of the longitudinal slot 32 and separating the latter from slot 31 connecting the cocking slide 22 to the action lock lever 23.
When the cocking slide 22 is in the forward rest position and the breech block 14 is in the closed position of the cartridge chamber, and thanks to the second spring 39, the protrusion 34 of the cartridge stop lever 21, is lowered without intercepting the first cartridge in the magazine, by means of the inclined shoulder 40 which engages the inclined surfaces 37 at the rear of the stop protrusion 34. In this position, the carrier 20 is in a lowered position and can receive a cartridge from the magazine and if the hammer has been turned previously in the cocked position it is possible to release it to fire a cartridge present in the barrel—
The stop lever 21, thrust by the first spring 38, is on the other hand raised into the operating position, with the protrusion 34 protruding over the cocking slide 22, when this cocking slide is fully retracted in the breech block 14 retracted position to open the cartridge chamber and to re-arm the hammer. So, the stop protrusion 34 with its front surface 35 intercepts and holds the cartridges in the magazine 12—
To discharge the cartridges from the magazine without firing them, simply cock the hammer—
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BS2005A000005 | Jan 2005 | IT | national |