This invention relates to apparatus for mounting an accessory device to a rail, and more particularly to a quick attachment/quick release rail clamp mount for a longitudinal rail which may be carried by a gun.
It is often useful to mount an accessory device, such as a light beam generator, to a rail that may be secured to or otherwise carried by a gun. When the rail is carried by a gun, it is of utmost importance that the mounting apparatus, which interfaces the accessory device and the rail, be firmly clamped or otherwise firmly secured to the rail, while at the same time it is desirable that the rail clamp mount be quickly and easily securable to and removable from the rail.
Against this background, the present invention provides apparatus for mounting an accessory device to a longitudinal rail, such as a rail carried by a gun parallel to the longitudinal axis of the gun's barrel, the mounting apparatus being quickly and easily clampable to and removable from the rail. According to one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a rail clamp mount apparatus for mounting an accessory device to a longitudinal rail, comprising: a mount base adapted for securing the accessory device thereto and including a first rail-engaging surface; a clamping member carried by the mount base and including at least one second rail-engaging surface opposed to and transversely spaced from the first rail-engaging surface; a cam mechanism mounting the clamping member to the mount base for imparting transverse movement to the clamping member when actuated; and an actuator for the cam mechanism.
In the preferred embodiment, the clamping member is generally U-shaped, the U of the clamping member having a base section and two longitudinally spaced-apart legs extending from the base section, the legs respectively including at the ends thereof two of the second rail-engaging surfaces. The clamping member is preferably somewhat elastic, and includes a center section between the legs and extending from the base section of the U, the center section including a third one of the second rail-engaging surfaces. The center section preferably is transversely shorter than the legs whereby the two second rail-engaging surfaces at the respective ends of the legs engage the rail before the third second rail-engaging surface at the end of the center section engages the rail when the first rail-engaging surface engages the rail and the cam mechanism is actuated.
The cam mechanism of the preferred embodiment includes a circular member rotatably engaging a circular bore in the clamping member and eccentrically rotatable with respect to the mount base. The cam mechanism includes a shaft rotatably secured to the mount base and engaging the circular member for eccentrically rotating the circular member. The actuator includes a handle having an end secured to the shaft for rotating the shaft with respect to the mount base. The handle is rotationally disposable in a first position with the second rail-engaging surfaces disengaged from the rail when the mount base is applied to the rail with the first rail-engaging surface engaging the rail, and the handle is rotationally disposable in a second position for engaging the second rail-engaging surfaces against the rail.
The longitudinal rail to which the preferred embodiment of the present invention may be clamped, may be of a type commonly known as a Picatinny rail including a wedge-shaped surface longitudinally extending along one side of the rail and another wedge-shaped surface longitudinally extending along the other side of the rail. The preferred first rail-engaging surface of the present invention is configured for matingly engaging one of the wedge-shaped surfaces of the rail, and each of the second rail-engaging surfaces is configured for matingly engaging the other of the wedge-shaped surfaces of the rail. Each of such first and second rail-engaging surfaces is preferably generally V-shaped in cross-section and may include a longitudinal groove along the nadir of the V.
The novel features believed to be characteristic of the present invention, together with further advantages thereof, will be better understood from the following description considered in connection with the accompanying drawings in which a preferred embodiment of the invention is illustrated by way of example. It is to be expressly understood, however, that the drawings are for the purpose of illustration and description only and are not intended as a definition of the limits of the invention.
Turning to
Rail mount structures such as the rail structure 24 are well known in the firearms art, each rail 28 typically comprising a series of longitudinally spaced-apart ribs 34 separated by transverse slots 36 (see also
Although the rail clamp mount 26 of the present invention is shown as being secured to a rail 28 typically mounted to long arms, the rail clamp mount 26 may also be secured to a rail unassociated with a gun, or to a rail which is integral with: the frame of a firearm such as a handgun, or a rail which may be removably secured to the handgun beneath the handgun's barrel and forwardly of its trigger guard. Such rails for handguns, both integral with the frame and removably attachable to the handgun, as well as lights adapted for being removably attached to such rails, are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,276,088 and 6,378,237, both issued to John W. Matthews and Paul Y. Kim and assigned to the assignee of the present invention, which patents are incorporated herein by reference.
Each rail is configured with oppositely outwardly directed wedge-shaped surfaces (in cross-section) longitudinally extending along each side of the rail. In the case of the rail 28 with longitudinally spaced-apart transverse ribs 34, the wedge-shaped surfaces 38 and 38′ longitudinally extend along the respective ends of the ribs 34 as illustrated in
Turning to
Also projecting from the platform 42 is a transverse protuberance 50, preferably a rectangular bar 50 having a width (in the longitudinal direction) slightly smaller than the transverse slots 36 in the rail 28, for being received by one of the slots 36 as shown in
The mount base 40 carries a clamping member 52 having at least one second rail-engaging surface opposed to and transversely spaced from the first rail-engaging surface 46 of the mount base first wall 44. In the preferred embodiment, the clamping member 52 is generally U-shaped with two legs 54 generally perpendicularly extending from the base section 56 of the U, and is further configured with a center section 58 extending from the base section 56 of the U and situated preferably midway between the two legs 54. The center section 58 of the clamping member 52 includes a circular bore 60 through the plate's thickness, the center of the bore 60 preferably equally spaced from the legs 54.
The clamping member 52 resides in a passageway 62 of the mount base 40 formed between two flanges 64 extending outwardly from the mount base second wall 48, offset from the platform 42 and preferably substantially parallel to the plane of the platform 42. The passageway 62 has a height dimension (separation between the flanges 64) and a longitudinal dimension slightly larger than the respective thickness and length dimensions of the clamping member 52, for permitting the clamping member 52 to be retainably slidable within the passageway 62 and partially through a longitudinal opening 66 through the mount base second wall 48 (the passageway 62 and the longitudinal opening 66 are shown in phantom in
The clamping member 52 is mounted for transverse movement within the mount base 40 by a cam mechanism including a circular member or disk 68 rotatably residing in the clamping member bore 60, and a shaft 70 eccentrically securing the disk 68 to the mount base 40, the shaft extending through bores 72 through the flanges 64 and secured at each end by a throw lever or handle 74. The shaft 70 comprises two half-shafts 70a, 70b secured together by a headed screw 76 through a bore in one half-shaft 70a and a threaded bore 80 in the other half-shaft 70b. Each of the half-shafts 70a, 70b comprises a three-portion construction, each portion preferably being integral with the other two portions. The first portion 82 of each half-shaft 70a, 70b is configured for being fixedly retained within a mating opening 84 in the ends of the respective arms 86 of the U-shaped handle 74; in the example shown, each first portion 82 and the mating opening 84 are rectangular. Each of the second portions 88 of the half-shafts 70a, 70b is circular and rotatably fits in the respective flange bores 72. Each of the third portions 90 of the half shafts 70a, 70b is configured for mating with an off-center opening 92 in the disk 68 for eccentrically rotating the disk 68 in the clamping member 52 when the shaft 70 (comprising the aligned and screw-connected half-shafts 70a and 70b) is rotated about the shaft axis s which coincides with the centers of the two flange bores 72. In the example of the preferred embodiment, the third portions 90 of the half-shafts 70a, 70b are rectangular in cross-section and the off-center opening 92 in the disk 68 comprises a slot 92 into which the rectangular third portion 90 is keyed.
During assembly, the half-shafts 70a, 70b are arranged in their respective throw handle openings 84 (with the handle's arms 86 straddling the mount base 40), flange bores 72 and disk slot 92 such that the slot 92 is longitudinally oriented and inwardly disposed (i.e., between the passageway opening 66 and the center of the disk 68) when the throw handle 74 is in its unactuated position with the clamping member 52 retained substantially within the passageway 62 of the mount base 40. A pair of pins 94 may be fixed to the mount base 40 (e.g., inserted in apertures 96 in flanges 64) for contacting the base 56 of the U-shaped clamping member 52, for restraining the clamping member 52 against rotation about the disk 60 when the throw handle 74 is in its unactuated position.
It may be appreciated that the handle 74 may be rotationally urged or thrown about the axis s of the shaft 70, for rotating or pivoting the shaft 70 about such axis, from an unactuated position (in a clockwise direction as viewed in
As represented in
In use, an accessory such as a light beam generator 30 (
The assembled rail clamp mount 26 is applied to the rail 28 with the actuator handle 74 in its unactuated position as shown in
After the rail clamp mount 26 is applied to the rail 28 as described, the handle 74 is thrown, i.e. the handle 74 is pivoted about the shaft axis s from its unactuated position shown in
The disk 68 rotates within the clamping member bore 60 as the disk 68 eccentrically rotates about the shaft 70, causing the clamping member 52 to move in the passageway 62 between the flanges 64 and parallel to the plane of the platform 42. The rotational position of the disk 68 with respect to the shaft 70 is such that the clamping member 52 (along with its second rail-engaging surfaces 57) is in its farthest spaced transverse position from the first rail-engaging surfaces 46 when the handle 74 is in its unactuated position. The clamping member's two rail-engaging surfaces 57 at the ends of the legs 54, which transversely protrude slightly with respect to the rail-engaging surface 57 at the clamping surface member's center section 58 as shown in
When the handle 74 is rotated to its actuated position as shown in
As the eccentrically rotating disk transversely moves the clamping member 52 toward the rail 28 with the two outer rail-engaging surfaces 57 urged against the rail's wedge-shaped surfaces 38′, continued transverse movement of the clamping member center section 58 (until the handle 74 is in its fully actuated position as shown in
In the preferred embodiment, the elastic nature of the clamping member 52 is provided by its generally U-shaped configuration being fabricated of a high strength elastic material such as titanium. The V-shaped first and second rail-engaging surfaces 46 and 57 preferably each include a longitudinal channel or groove 59 (see
The rail clamp mount 26 may be quickly and easily released from the rail 28 by throwing or rotating the throw handle 74 from its actuated position to its unactuated position, thereby reversing rotation of the shaft 70 and the eccentric disk 68, whereby the clamping member is caused to transversely move back into the passageway 62 of the mount base 40.
The symmetrical features of the various operational components of the rail clamp mount 26 permit the components to be assembled for ambidextrous operation. For example,
Thus, there has been described a preferred embodiment of a rail clamp mount that may be quickly and easily firmly secured to a longitudinal rail, such as a rail carried by a gun, and that may be quickly and easily released from the rail. Other embodiments of the present invention, and variations of the embodiment presented herein, may be developed without departing from the essential characteristics thereof. Accordingly, the invention should be limited only by the scope of the claims listed below.
This application is a continuation application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/727,100 entitled “RAIL CLAMP MOUNT” filed Mar. 18, 2010 now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,941,960, which is a continuation application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/646,870 entitled “RAIL CLAMP MOUNT” filed Dec. 27, 2006 now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,712,242, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110173866 A1 | Jul 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12727100 | Mar 2010 | US |
Child | 13077128 | US | |
Parent | 11646870 | Dec 2006 | US |
Child | 12727100 | US |