Noise suppression devices are useful they because reduce sound and smoke produced by the firing of a bullet so as to assist in concealing the position of a shooter. Typical noise suppression devices rely on the sequentially linear placement of baffles, see for instance US Patent Application Publication No. 2012/0291614 by Koumbis on Nov. 22, 2012, at
The suppressor works by relying on the reflective properties of sound and gas expansion. With extended travel over time, energy is dissipated, lowering temperature and pressure, which translates to sound loss and slower gas velocity. The key is to increase the duration of the traveling gas. When a bullet is fired there is an explosion of gun powder. The bullet is propelled down the barrel bringing with it escaping gas. As the bullet passes by a diverter, the gas is immediately forced into the suppressor channels. The channels are formed from nested baffles which are tubes mounted concentrically and held in place at one end by a grooved plug to accommodate the tubes. There are two or three tubes inserted into the plug end nearest to the muzzle and one or two plugs inserted into the plug end farthest from the muzzle. The tubes are fixed in place with a slight gap to allow the escaping gas to be diverted into the chamber and then to pass back and forth through the tubular channels. The gas reflects backwards and forwards with each turn through the channels, in a fashion similar to sound echoing within canyon walls. It is the nesting of baffles which increases the duration of traveling gas while reducing the overall length of the suppressor.
In another embodiment, the rifle noise suppressor has two threaded ends, one of which is threaded onto a muzzle end of a rifle barrel, and the end of the cylindrical chamber farthest from the muzzle end can be screwed into a rifle barrel extension. The purpose of the barrel extension is to improve shooting accuracy by adding balance to the weapon.
Three drawings, described as follows:
In
Affixed to the end of the conical chamber 2 nearest to the muzzle is a diverter 8. The diverter directs the gas escaping from the explosion of firing the bullet into the chamber 2. The chamber 2 has two opposing plugs (shown below). At the end nearest to the muzzle, the plug is grooved to accept two or three tubes, which tubes run the length of the chamber 2, less a small gap to allow gas to travel into adjoining tubes. At the end farthest from the muzzle, the plug is grooved to accept one or two tubes, which tube(s) run the length of the chamber 2, less a small gap to allow gas to travel into adjoining tubes. The three to five tubes are concentrically and longitudinally arrayed. The bullet 5 is shown proceeding out of the muzzle for perspective.
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Calculation of noise and smoke or gas, reduction reveals that the length of the barrel impacts suppression. Greater suppression can be achieved with longer barrels, all other factors being equal—meaning that there is more noise and more smoke with shorter barrels. Shorter barrels are favored in close quarters, in areas where concealment is a very high priority, and when the weapon must be carried long distances so as to reduce weight. My invention promotes shorter barrels by reducing the length of the conical chamber which contains the suppression device.
Of note, the length of the conical chamber along the longitudinal axis of the rifle barrel is no more than three inches. The same degree of suppression is achieved with concentrically and longitudinally oriented baffles as described here, compared to sequential baffles of approximately twice this device's length.
An important advantage of the suppression device is that the shorter device will not impact the speed of the bullet as much as the longer devices currently deployed which rely on sequential baffles. In essence, my invention re-directs the noise and smoke through the concentrically and longitudinally arrayed baffles in the conical chamber. Through dispersion, reduced noise and smoke escape from the muzzle of the rifle.
The above description of the preferred embodiment of the present invention has been presented for the purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings. It is intended that the scope of the present invention not be limited by this detailed description, but by the claims and the equivalents to the claims.
Provisional Application No. 61/889,326 filed Oct. 10, 2013. None. None. None.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61889326 | Oct 2013 | US |