The present invention relates to firearms, and more particularly to a firearm having a quick take-down coupling that releasably secures a rifle barrel to an upper receiver.
AR-15, AR Pistols, M4, M16 and similar prior art MILSPEC rifles cannot be quickly disassembled and reassembled where the rifle barrel connects to the upper receiver, a process which usually requires the use of specialized tools and a work-bench equipped with a vise. While there are some prior art systems that allow for in-field tool-less disassembly and reassembly of the barrel from the upper receiver, these systems are not effective or robust, are complicated to use, and do not allow for use of standard MILSPEC had guards and other accessories commonly used with these types of firearms.
This patent is for quick-take down firearms and methods of using quick-take down firearms.
In one non-limiting example, the quick-take down includes an upper receiver coupling configured to be secured to an upper receiver threading of the firearm, the upper receiver coupling including several rotationally offset gas tube tunnels extending through the upper receiver coupling; further includes a rifle barrel coupling configured to be secured to a barrel of the firearm; and further includes a sliding lock collar configured to be slid in a translational motion between a locked position and an unlocked position, the sliding lock collar biased to the locked position; when the sliding lock collar is in the unlocked position the barrel of the firearm can be removed from and installed on the upper receiver; when the sliding lock collar is in the locked position and the barrel is installed on the upper receiver the upper receiver coupling is secured to the rifle barrel coupling thereby securing the barrel to the upper receiver.
In one non-limiting example, a method of assembly for a quick take-down firearm includes: sliding a sliding lock collar in a translational motion to an unlocked position to release a plurality of locking elements from a locked configuration, in which the sliding lock collar is biased away from the unlocked position towards a locked position; next, while the sliding lock collar is held at the unlocked position, inserting a barrel of the firearm into an upper receiver of the firearm, in which an upper receiver coupling is secured to threading of the upper receiver, the upper receiver coupling comprising a gas tube tunnel extending through a body of the upper receiver coupling and a barrel coupling is secured to the barrel, next inserting the barrel into the upper receiver further comprises inserting a barrel pin of the barrel into a notch of the upper receiver threading, and inserting a gas tube of the barrel through the gas tube tunnel of the upper receiver coupling; and next, after inserting the barrel into the upper receiver, releasing the sliding lock collar such that it slides in the translational motion to the locked position to secure the upper receiver coupling to the barrel coupling.
The same reference numerals refer to the same parts throughout the various figures.
An embodiment of the quick detach facility for a firearm of the present invention is shown and generally designated by the reference numeral 500.
The firearm of
In the prior art, the barrel 12 was attached to the upper receiver 10 by inserting the end of the barrel 12 into the upper receiver's opening 16 until the barrel reference surface 28 contacted the reference surface of the upper receiver 22 and the pin 30 was fully seated in the notch 20. Next, a barrel nut (not shown) would be threaded onto the threads 18 of the upper receiver 10 to secure the barrel 12 in the opening 16. A handguard (e.g. such as handguard 14 shown in
Quick Take-Down Coupling Example
The body 36 of
The body 36 of
In other embodiments, tunnels are not necessary. For example, in some embodiments, the quick-take down system may be used with an AR Pistol or other firearm that uses direct blowback cycling, without the need for a gas tube or piston.
The body 36 of
The opening of collar 42 includes a recessed area terminating at shoulder 60 at one end of the collar 42. The recess is configured to contain the resilient element 40 shown in
The opening of collar 42 also includes a second recess at the other end of the collar 42. In this particular example, second recess is formed by ramped surface 62. When the collar 42 is biased away from the shoulder 56 of body 36, the ramped surface 62 acts on locking elements 38 to cause those elements to protrude into the openings 46 of body 36 (see
The barrel coupling 34 further includes several locking element receivers 76 spaced apart from one another and configured and located to receive portions of locking elements 38 during use. In the particular example shown, the locking element receivers 76 are depressions in the outer surface of the barrel coupling 34. In the particular example shown, the spaced apart locking elements 38 and locking element receivers 76 help to resist rotation or the movement or forces of the upper receiver coupling 32 relative to the barrel coupling 34 when the components are locked together.
The barrel coupling 34 further includes threads 78 on a portion of its outer surface. Threads 78 are not shown in
Example Method of Installation
The following is one example of a method of installing the quick-take down coupling shown in
The upper receiver coupling 32 may be installed onto the upper receiver 10 by threading the upper receiver coupling 32 onto the upper receiver threads 18 to a desired torque and such that one of the tunnels 54 of the upper receiver coupling 32 is adequately aligned with the opening 24 in upper receiver 10. Set screws or other fasteners may be inserted into openings 50 in body 36 to further secure the upper receiver coupling 32 to the upper receiver threads 18.
The barrel coupling 34 may be installed onto the barrel 12 by sliding the coupling 34 onto the barrel until the barrel ridge is partially or entirely received in recessed area 72, with the reference surface 28 of the barrel ridge coplanar or just proud of the end of barrel coupling 34 and barrel pin 30 adjacent or proximate the barrel coupling 34. Set screws or other fasteners may be inserted into openings 74 in coupling 34 to further secure it to the barrel 12.
A handguard and/or barrel nut (e.g. 80 in
Example Method of Use
The following is one example of a method of using the quick-take down coupling shown in
Protective cap 82 may be removed from the end of gas tube 26 and barrel 12.
Sliding lock collar 42 may be slid using a translational motion (e.g. non-rotational) back towards the upper receiver 10 to an unlocked position that releases the locking elements 38 inside of the upper receiver coupling 32.
While the sliding lock collar 42 is held at the unlocked position, the barrel 12 may be inserted into the upper receiver 10. The barrel 12 is inserted until the barrel reference surface 28 contacts the upper receiver contact surface 22, with the barrel pin 30 seated in notch 20. During insertion of the barrel, gas tube 26 (or a piston) is also inserted through one of the tunnels 54 in the upper receiver coupling 32 and into opening 24 in the upper receiver 10. Once inserted, the locking element receivers 76 of the barrel coupling 34 are aligned with the locking elements 38 of the upper receiver coupling 32.
Once inserted, the sliding lock collar 42 is released such that resilient element 40 forces the sliding lock collar 42 back to a locked position, causing the locking elements 38 to engage the locking element receivers 76, securing the barrel 12 to the upper receiver 10.
The barrel 12 may be removed from the upper receiver 10 using the same procedure in reverse.
Integrated Quick Take-Down Coupling
Barrel Extension with Quick Take-Down Coupling
In
The barrel 12 includes a central bore 524 that defines a forward rifled portion 526, a rearward chamber portion 528, and a barrel axis 530.
The upper receiver coupling 532 includes, from left to right, a body 536, latch/locking elements 538, shim 508, resilient element 540, sliding/movable lock collar 542, face plate 544, and screws 510. The resilient element 540 is shown in
The body 536 includes an opening 546 extending through it from one end to the other. At least a portion of the opening 546 includes interior threading 548 (see
The body 536 further includes latch passages/apertures 552 spaced around the body 536 each configured to receive latch/locking elements 538 (e.g. ball bearings) such that portions of the locking elements may protrude into the opening 546 of the body 536 when the upper receiver coupling 532 is in a locked configuration (discussed further below). As shown in
The body 536 further includes several tunnels 554 extending through the length of the body from one end to the other. The tunnels 554 are configured to allow passage of a gas tube or piston associated with the barrel 12 through the body 536 and into the opening 24 on the upper receiver. As shown in
In other embodiments, tunnels are not necessary. For example, in some embodiments, the quick detach facility may be used with an AR Pistol or other firearm that uses direct blowback cycling, without the need for a gas tube or piston.
The body 536 further includes a flange or shoulder 556 and openings 558, the purposes of which will be described further below. A shim 508 abuts the shoulder 556.
The sliding lock collar 542 of
The opening of collar 542 includes a recessed area terminating at shoulder 560 at one end of the collar 542. The recess is configured to contain the resilient element 540, with one end of the element 540 acting against shoulder 556 and the other end of the element 540 acting against shoulder 560 such that collar 542 is biased away from the shoulder 556 of body 536 towards the other end of the body 536.
The opening of collar 542 also includes a second recess at the other end of the collar 542. In this particular example, the second recess is formed by tapered inner surface/ramped surface 562 adapted to bear on the locking elements 538. When the collar 542 is biased away from the shoulder 556 of body 536, the ramped surface 562 acts on locking elements 538 to cause those elements to protrude into the openings 546 of body 536 (see
The face plate 544 includes a central opening 564 and tunnel portions 566 corresponding to the opening 546 and tunnels 554 of body 536. The outer diameter of the face plate 544 is of sufficient size so that when it is secured to the end of body 536 (e.g. using fasteners/screws 510 passing through fastener openings 568 in face plate 544 and into openings 558 in body 536), the face plate 544 limits the sliding movement of collar 542 away from the shoulder 556 of body 536.
The outer ring/barrel coupling 534 includes an opening 570 extending through it for receiving the barrel 12 of a firearm. In the particular example shown, the opening 570 includes a recessed area 572 (shown in
The barrel coupling 534 further includes several latch receptacles/locking element receivers 576 spaced apart from one another and configured and located to receive portions of locking elements 538 during use. In the particular example shown, the locking element receivers 576 are spherical depressions in the outer surface 514 of the barrel coupling 534. In the particular example shown, the spaced apart locking elements 538 and locking element receivers 576 help to resist rotation or the movement or forces of the upper receiver coupling 532 relative to the barrel coupling 534 when the components are locked together.
The barrel coupling 534 further includes threads 578 on a portion of its outer surface 514. The pitch, thread angle, and other characteristics (e.g. major diameter, minor diameter) of the threads 578 of barrel coupling 534 are the same or substantially the same as the pitch, thread angle, and other characteristics of the threads 18 of upper receiver 10. Because these thread characteristics are the same or substantially the same, barrel and/or handguard nuts or other connectors useable with the upper receiver threads 18 are also useable with the barrel coupling threads 578, meaning that handguards and other components that were usable with the upper receiver 10 can still be used with the firearm after installation of the upper receiver coupling 532 and barrel coupling 534 without necessarily requiring modification of those components or additional adaptors.
A forward portion of the opening 570 in the barrel coupling 574 defines a tapered inner surface 516 configured to closely receive the tapered outer surface 518 of the inner ring 506. The inner ring 506 has a cylindrical inner surface 520 configured to closely contact a selected portion of the barrel 12. The inner ring is a split ring having a rearward-facing gap 522 adapted to accommodate a range of barrel diameters. The tapered outer surface 518 of the inner ring 506 is a conical surface. In the current embodiment, the tapered outer surface 518 of the inner ring 506 has a taper angle offset from the barrel axis 530 of at least 1° and at most 20°. For an expected best preferred range of performance for AR-15, AR Pistols, M4, M16 and similar prior art MILSPEC firearm platforms, the tapered outer surface 518 of the inner ring 506 has a taper angle offset from the barrel axis 530 of between 1° and 10°. The tapered outer surface 518 of the inner ring 506 and the tapered inner surface 516 of the barrel coupling 534 have a common shape such that they have an extensive surface of contact. The tapered outer surface 518 of the inner ring 506 and the tapered inner surface 516 of the barrel coupling 534 have a common taper angle. The barrel coupling 534 has a rear shoulder surface 580 configured to bear against the barrel ridge/barrel shoulder 512, and the inner ring 506 has a forward bearing surface 582 configured for application of a rearward axial assembly force to advance the inner ring 506 into the space defined between the inner tapered surface 516 of the barrel coupling 534 and the outer surface 584 of the barrel 12. As is denoted by the force arrows in
In the current embodiment, the tapered outer surface 518 of the inner ring 506 has a self-holding taper angle. For the purposes of the specification, “self-holding” is defined as smaller tapers, like the Morse and the Brown & Sharpe, because, where the angle of the taper is only 2 or 3°, the shank of a tool is so firmly seated in its socket that there is considerable frictional resistance to any force tending to turn or rotate the tool relative to the socket. Thus, a positive locking device is not required to prevent slipping, which makes the use of set screws optional.
Example Method of Installation
The following is one example of a method of installing the quick detach facility shown in
The upper receiver coupling 532 may be installed onto the upper receiver 10 by threading the upper receiver coupling 532 onto the upper receiver threads 18 to a desired torque and such that one of the tunnels 554 of the upper receiver coupling 532 is adequately aligned with the opening 24 in upper receiver 10. Set screws or other fasteners may be inserted into openings 550 in body 536 to further secure the upper receiver coupling 532 to the upper receiver threads 18.
The shim 504, inner ring 506, and barrel coupling 534 may be installed onto the barrel 12 by sliding the shim 504, barrel coupling 534, and inner ring 506 onto the barrel until the barrel ridge 512 is partially or entirely received in recessed area 572, with the reference surface 28 of the barrel ridge coplanar or just proud of the end of barrel coupling 354 and barrel pin 30 adjacent or proximate the barrel coupling 534. The shim 504 is captured in the recessed area 572 between the barrel ridge 512 and the barrel coupling 534. A tooling ring can be used to exert rearward pressure on the forward bearing surface 582 of the inner ring 506 to securely seat the inner ring 506 within the barrel coupling 534. Set screws or other fasteners may be inserted into openings 574 in barrel coupling 534 to further secure it to the barrel 12.
A handguard and/or barrel nut (e.g. 80 in
Example Method of Use
The following is one example of a method of using the quick detach facility shown in
Sliding lock collar 542 may be slid using a translational motion (e.g. non-rotational) back towards the upper receiver 10 to an unlocked position shown in
While the sliding lock collar 542 is held at the unlocked position, the barrel 12 may be inserted into the upper receiver 10. The barrel 12 is inserted until the barrel reference surface 28 contacts the upper receiver contact surface 22, with the barrel pin 30 seated in notch 20. During insertion of the barrel, gas tube 26 (or a piston) is also inserted through one of the tunnels 554 in the upper receiver coupling 532 and into opening 24 in the upper receiver 10. Once inserted, the locking element receivers 576 of the barrel coupling 534 are aligned with the locking elements 538 of the upper receiver coupling 532.
Once inserted, the sliding lock collar 542 is released such that resilient element 540 forces the sliding lock collar 542 back to a locked position shown in
The barrel 12 may be removed from the upper receiver 10 using the same procedure in reverse, resulting in the condition shown in
In the context of the specification, the terms “rear” and “rearward,” and “front” and “forward,” have the following definitions: “rear” or “rearward” means in the direction away from the muzzle of the firearm while “front” or “forward” means it is in the direction towards the muzzle of the firearm.
The foregoing description is by way of example only and does not limit in any way the scope of the present invention, which is set forth in the following claims. Additions, deletions, substitutions, and other modifications to the systems and methods described above may be made without departing from the scope or spirit of the present invention. For example, it should be appreciated that the current invention is adapatable to other firearm platforms in addition to the AR-15, AR Pistols, M4, M16 and similar prior art MILSPEC rifles previously described. The current invention is suitable for use with bolt action rifles, lever action rifles, revolvers, and self-loading pistols. The current invention can be used with any caliber range, along with any fixed barrel firing system in any configuration.
This patent is a Continuation-in-Part of U.S. non-provisional patent application Ser. No. 15/657,958 filed Nov. 21, 2016 for a “Quick Take-Down Firearm,” which claims the benefit of U.S. non-provisional patent application Ser. No. 15/357,538, filed Nov. 21, 2016 for a “Quick Take-Down Firearm,” which claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application No. 62/314,758, filed Mar. 29, 2016 for a “Straight-in, rifle barrel attachment & detachment using a ball bearing positive lock,” the contents of both of which are incorporated in their entireties by this reference. U.S. non-provisional patent application Ser. No. 15/657,958 filed Nov. 21, 2016 for a “Quick Take-Down Firearm,” also claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application No. 62/433,696, filed Dec. 13, 2016 for an “Upper receiver and barrel designed with integrated, straight-in, positive lock coupling,” the contents of which are incorporated in their entirety by this reference.
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20190154389 A1 | May 2019 | US |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15657958 | Jul 2017 | US |
Child | 16243304 | US | |
Parent | 15357538 | Nov 2016 | US |
Child | 15657958 | US |