This application claims priority benefit of U.S. Ser. No. 15/204,657, filed Jul. 7, 2016, incorporated herein by reference.
This disclosure relates to the field of modifications to the firing mechanism of a firearm.
Disclosed herein is an example including a firing mechanism for a firearm. The firing mechanism comprising a receiver configured to be attached to a barrel, trigger, trigger housing, and having a cavity therein configured to accept a bolt. The firing mechanism comprising a bolt guide rail fixed to the inner surface of the cavity of the receiver. The firing mechanism also comprises a bolt sliding along a longitudinal axis on the bolt guide rail. Also disclosed is a change handle rotatably mounted to the bolt so as to rotate relative thereto about a vertical axis orthogonal to the longitudinal axis. The charge handle may be mounted to the bolt so as to longitudinally reposition therewith. The charge handle having a surface defining a cut therein, aligned with a slot in the bolt when the bolt is in a rearward position; and wherein the surface defining a cut in the charge handle is not aligned with the slot in the bolt when the bolt is in a forward position.
The firing mechanism may further comprise a timing lock arm engaging a surface defining a slot in the charge handle so as to prohibit rotation of the charge handle when the bolt is not in a most forward position (in battery).
The firing mechanism may further comprise a surface defining a T-slot in the bolt. The T-slot engaging a T-shaped protrusion mounted to the receiver so as to prohibit vertical and transverse movement of the bolt relative to the receiver.
The firing mechanism as recited may be arranged wherein the T-shaped protrusion is an I-beam rail removably attached to the receiver.
The firing mechanism may further comprise a firing pin movably attached to the charge handle so as to withdraw longitudinally within the receiver when the bolt is not in a most forward position.
The firing mechanism may be arranged wherein: the charge handle has a convex cylindrical surface with a vertical axis; and the bolt has concave cylindrical surface engaging the convex cylindrical surface of the charge handle allowing rotational movement of the charge handle relative to the bolt.
This disclosure relates to the field of new designs, modifications to firearm actions (firing/reloading mechanisms) and associated components. In particular, this disclosure relates to the field of actions and associated components for a firearm. This disclosure relates to actions and associated components for firearms including those firearms known as a Ruger 10/22.
Before continuing, an axes system 10 is disclosed in
The disclosure relates to actions and associated components for firearms including those firearms known as a Ruger 10/22. The term “10-22” or “10/22” for this disclosure is defined as the rifle manufactured by Ruger® at the time of invention. Similarly, the term “10-22 action” for this disclosure is defined as the action manufactured by Ruger® for the 10-22 rifle at the time of invention.
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The unit 20 shown in
The mag release 28 fits partially within the trigger housing 24 and pivots about pivot location 32 so as to selectively release spent cartridge magazines so as to allow insertion of a magazine with loaded cartridges. The pivot location 32 of the mag release aligns with pivot location 34 on the trigger housing and pivot pin 36 passes there through to allow the mag release 28 to pivot when pressed. The upper edge 38 of the mag release engages the magazine catch 40, which has a forward surface 42 that engages the magazine and holds the magazine within the magazine well of the receiver 30. A spring is shown which repositions the magazine catch 40 towards the magazine unless repositioned by pivoting of the mag release 28.
The trigger 26 fits within the trigger housing 24. The outwardly projecting portion of the trigger 26 is protected by the trigger guard 44 when connected to the unit 20. The trigger 26 pivots about pivot 46, which in one example is be a pin that passes through the surface defining the void 48 in the trigger housing 24. When the safety 50 is released, the trigger 26 is allowed to rotate or pivot when it is desired to fire the firearm. The trigger 26 is also coupled through the pivot 46 to a first seer 54, which engages the hammer 56. A second seer 58 is also coupled to the trigger 26 through a pivot 60, connected via another pin that passes through voids 62. The second seer 58 also engages the hammer 56. When the unit 20 is fired, the hammer 56 rotates about the pin 64, which passes through void 66 in the hammer 56 and void 68 in the trigger housing 24. A spring 70 engages the forward portion 72 of the trigger 26, as well as the hammer 56, to reposition the hammer 56 upward/forward when released by the seers 54 and 58 to engage the rear portion of a firing pin 74, repositioning it forward to engage the primer portion of a rifle cartridge 76. In one example, the cartridge is a rim fire, .22 caliber long rifle cartridge.
In many firearms, firing of the cartridge 76 would release the sliding bolt 78, repositioning the firing pin 74, and hammer 56 rearward/downward, whereupon the following (loaded) cartridge would be repositioned from the magazine into the firing location, whereupon activation of the trigger 26 again would fire this new (loaded) cartridge.
Utilizing a relatively heavy sliding bolt 78 maintains the sliding bolt 78 in a forward position following firing, to increase the muzzle velocity of the ejected bullet, which also increases accuracy of the firearm.
This assembly as shown in
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In particular, it is shown that the receiver 120 of this embodiment comprises an ejection port 122 in the transverse side of the receiver as well as a charge handle opening 124 through which the charge handle 126 extends. During operation a shaft 128 of the charge handle 126 slides along the surface defining the charge handle opening 124. Although the viewing angle in
In some examples, accessories are desired to be removably mounted to the firearm and thus an accessory attachment 160 which in this example is a Picatinny rail may be mounted to the upper surface 138 of the receiver 120 via fasteners 140 passing through the voids 142 in the accessory rail 136 and also through the voids 144 through the upper surface 138 of the receiver 120. These fasteners 142 may be threaded into threaded receiver voids 146 of an I-beam bolt guide rail 148 which will be discussed in more detail. The upper surface 150 of the I-beam bold guide rail contacts the upper inner surface 152 of the receiver 120 during assembly.
Also shown is a unique sliding bolt 154, comprising a T-slot 156 which engages an inverted T-shaped protrusion 158 in the I-beam bolt guide rail 148 and slides there along. These two structures function to allow longitudinal 12 movement of the sliding bolt 154 relative to the receiver 120 but to prohibit vertical 14 or transverse movement between these components.
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In one example the I-beam rail 148 is attached to the receiver 120 via fasteners 140. In other examples it is attached by other methods. In this rotational orientation, neither the charge handle 126 nor bolt 154 is permitted to reposition (linearly) relative to the receiver 120. In this firing position, actuation of the trigger as disclosed above will fire a cartridge and will not result in movement of the bolt 154.
When the charge handle 126 is repositioned longitudinally forward and rotated in the direction of travel 18 to the position shown in
To prohibit the charge handle 126 from rotating and binding against the bolt guide rail 148 while the action is being cycled, a timing lock 186 is utilized. Such a timing lock 186 as shown for example in
The timing lock 186 also serves as a detent when the charge handle 126 is rotated into battery. This function keeps the charge handle 126 from rotating out of battery when the firearm is fired or being transported.
The week side extractor(s) 214 (a-b) rests within a slot 216 and stabilizes the spent cartridge as it is removed from the chamber 162 and is held against the bolt 154 as the bolt 154 is moved rearward to eject the spent cartridge and load a new cartridge. The new feature of this embodiment involves there being no need for a notch in the barrel in that the weak side extractor retracts into the bolt when the action is closed. This functionality makes it possible for use of a factory Ruger 10/22 barrel.
The headspace bushing 134 as previously described is threaded into the receiver where the barrel 22 seats and compresses a spacer 136 which may be a rubber oh rain providing uniform tension to the shoulder 218. This spacer 136 and headspace bushing 134 allows for final adjustment of the head space and accounts for tolerance stack up in all mating parts. The action is completely assembled and the headspace bushing 134 is then threaded to a preset depth giving the final assembly an exact set from the barrel shoulder surface 220 as determined from the shoulder surface 218 to the bolt face.
Also shown in
While the present invention is illustrated by description of several embodiments and while the illustrative embodiments are described in detail, it is not the intention of the applicants to restrict or in any way limit the scope of the appended claims to such detail. Additional advantages and modifications within the scope of the appended claims will readily appear to those sufficed in the art. The invention in its broader aspects is therefore not limited to the specific details, representative apparatus and methods, and illustrative examples shown and described. Accordingly, departures may be made from such details without departing from the spirit or scope of applicants' general concept.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180010869 A1 | Jan 2018 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15204657 | Jul 2016 | US |
Child | 15677955 | US |