The present invention relates generally to an improved safety valve for toy air guns, and, more particularly, to an improved safety valve that makes more efficient use of compressed air generated by the toy guns.
Toys and other devices that discharge projectiles by release of a compressed or stretched spring or other means to compress air are well known and are disclosed in earlier patents. Safety valves are also known. By way of example, U.S. Pat. No. 1,441,975, for a “Pneumatic Toy Pistol” issued in 1923 to Edelin purports to disclose an air gun where compressed air is created by a piston being driven in a cylinder by an expanding compressed spring, and includes a valve and a BB-like projectile in a barrel. The valve includes a first stationary tube having an opening, the first tube being located at the top end of the cylinder, and a second tube slidable in the first tube and also having an opening. The opening in the second tube is misaligned with the opening in the first tube when the valve is closed and the two openings are aligned when the valve is open. Alignment of the openings is accomplished when a nut located at the top of the piston engages a spring biased pin attached to the second tube. Typically, the valve is biased closed. Engagement occurs when the piston reaches the end of its upward movement in the cylinder such that the open valve allows a blast of compressed air from the cylinder to exit through the valve, impinge on the projectile and cause its discharge.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,343,850 for a “Double Shot Projectile Launcher” issued in 1994 to Steer purports to disclose a double barrel launcher using a bellows for generating a blast of compressed air. The path of the compressed air is determined by manipulation of a trigger that operates a slide valve. The slide valve aligns openings to clear an air path to one of two projectile supporting launch tubes. The air path is blocked when the slide valve misaligns the openings to the launch tube.
A safety valve appears in a patent issued to Nin and D'Andrade, U.S. Pat. No. 5,515,837, granted in 1996, and entitled “Safety Nozzle For Multi-Shot Projectile Shooting Air Gun,” and in U.S. Pat. No. 5,529,050, also issued in 1996 to D'Andrade entitled “Safety Nozzle For Projectile Shooting Air Gun.” The '837 and '050 patents purport to describe a toy air gun safety valve for firing soft foam darts where the valve does not open unless the dart inserted into a launch tube has a predetermined shape that matches a configuration of the valve to enable the dart to push the valve to an open position. The '837 patent also discloses a revolving launch tube magazine, a series of spring biased pins on the magazine with one pin besides each of the launch tubes, a second valve in the form of a hinged flap, and a trigger. Pulling the trigger discharges a dart and rotates the magazine to align another tube of the magazine in front of a pressurized air tank. When the magazine revolves, a spring biased pin on the magazine next to the tube extends outward to swing the hinged flap from a closed position to an open position whether or not the launch tube is loaded. Compressed air generated by the air gun passes through the second valve and then through the safety valve in an axial direction.
Two more recent patents to Bligh, Mead and Brown, U.S. Pat. No. 7,287,526 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,481,209, both entitled “Toy Projectile Launcher With Slidable Outer Cylinder and Stationary Inner Compression Member,” the later patent being a divisional of the earlier patent, purport to disclose a safety valve for an air gun. Moving a slide generates a blast of compressed air and, once actuated, the air flows to the valve in an axial direction. A recently published U.S. Application, No. 2011/0146645, for a “Toy Air Gun” listing Chor-Ming Ma as inventor, purports to disclose a fixed multiple barrel device with a piston and cylinder arrangement. A pressure chamber is located at the front end of the piston and cylinder arrangement, and a rotatable disc is located in the pressure chamber with a single port that is indexed with each discharge to move to the next barrel. Compressed air created by the piston enters the pressure chamber and exits axially through the single port.
These patents and application and the devices disclosed are of some interest, however, they do not teach an efficient safety valve.
In accordance with the present invention, an advantageous method and system are described in the form of an improved safety valve for air guns that allows a blast of compressed air to enter the valve from the side, laterally or radially instead of axially as is the case with existing safety valves. The improved safety valve is more efficient, simply constructed, structurally robust, compact, easily operated and relatively inexpensive.
Briefly summarized, the invention relates to an improved safety valve for toy air guns including a housing having a valve chamber and an air inlet port, the housing for mounting a source of compressed air, and a valve element mounted in the chamber of the housing, the valve element having a front section, a rear section and a wall separating the front and rear sections, the front section having structure for engaging a projectile inserted in a launch site of the toy air gun, the valve element being movable in the valve chamber by the projectile in a direction parallel to the longitudinal axis of the valve element from a closed, forward position to an open, rearward position, the rear section for cooperating with a spring, the spring for biasing the valve element from the rearward position to the forward position, and wherein when in the rearward position the valve element communicates the source of compressed air through the air inlet port with a projectile in the associated launch site, and a blast of compressed air from the compressed air source is received by the valve element from the air inlet port in a direction lateral to the longitudinal axis of the valve element, the blast of compressed air flowing through the front section structure forward of the separating wall.
The invention also relates to a method for making a toy air gun with an improved safety valve including the steps of forming a housing with a barrel section for receiving a projectile, a grip section, and a structure forming a chamber and a front valve seat, mounting a piston and a drive spring in the grip section of the housing, mounting a handle to the piston and a trigger to the housing, forming an air inlet port between the grip section and the chamber, forming a valve element having a longitudinal axis, a front section having a configuration for engagement of a projectile inserted in the barrel section and for enabling the passage of a blast of compressed air from a direction lateral to the longitudinal axis of the valve element, a rear section seating one end of a biasing spring, and a wall separating the front and rear sections, mounting the valve element in the chamber of the housing adjacent to the air inlet port to move between forward and rearward positions and to receive a blast of compressed air in a direction lateral to the longitudinal axis of the valve element, and mounting a biasing spring between the housing and the separating wall of the valve element.
For the purpose of facilitating an understanding of the invention, the accompanying drawings and detailed description illustrate embodiments thereof, from which the structures, construction and operation, processes, and many related advantages of the embodiments may be readily understood and appreciated.
The following description is provided to enable those skilled in the art to make and use the described embodiments set forth. Various modifications, equivalents, variations, and alternatives, however, will remain readily apparent to those skilled in the art. Any and all such modifications, variations, equivalents, and alternatives are intended to fall within the spirit and scope of the present invention defined by the below listed claims.
Air guns are well known as shown by the above-mentioned earlier patents and published application. Also well known are safety valves, such as the safety valve described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,515,837, mentioned above. The safety valve disclosed in the '837 patent includes a movable valve element with protrusions and a center pad that plug openings in a fixed wall, the openings in the wall and the valve element defining an air path to a projectile to be discharged. The air path begins at a cylinder port located where the piston ends its travel in the cylinder. The air path continues to the safety valve so as to approach the safety valve from an axial direction that is parallel to the direction of valve element movement between open and closed positions. The valve element includes a configuration that will not unblock the wall openings until a projectile with a predetermined shape for engaging the specially designed valve element is inserted into a projectile tube or barrel to push the valve element away from the wall.
The projectile and valve element arrangement is a safety measure to prevent undesirable objects from being loaded and discharged by the air gun. The projectile with the matching shape to the valve element pushes the valve element against a biasing spring and places the projectile near the fixed wall and its openings and in operative communication with the cylinder, piston and spring combination which is the compressed air source. After the trigger of the air gun is activated, a blast of compressed air from the source flows to the safety valve and to the projectile and moves them both. It is noted that with the axial movement of the compressed air against and around the valve element and through the wall openings, energy is dissipated and a relatively large pressure drop results even before the blast of compressed air reaches the projectile to cause discharge. Therefore, the arrangement is inefficient, and a major advantage of the present invention is that this inefficiency is obviated.
Referring now to
The barrel section 14, or more broadly the launch site section, is shown loaded with a projectile, such as a dart 62 made of NERF™ brand foam, a solid, spongy cellular material. Loading or inserting the dart 62 into the barrel section 14 causes the valve element 20 to be pushed from a closed, forward position, shown in
The valve element 20, enlarged, is illustrated in
The dart 62 has a tubular configuration including a ring shaped rear wall 102,
When the valve element is in the open, rearward position, air is able to enter laterally relative to a longitudinal axis 104,
In the alternative, the valve element may assume another configuration. Illustrated in
Also in the alternative, another embodiment may be use in a multiple barrel air gun as disclosed in detail in a co-pending application entitled “Air Path And Safety Valve System For Toy Launchers,” application Ser. No. 13/420,855 on Mar. 15, 2012, where the embodiment which is similar to that shown in
The upper section of the grip portion 18,
In operation, the user inserts the dart 62 into the barrel section 14 causing the valve element 20 to be pushed rearward to the open position and compress the biasing spring 54, as shown in
Discharging the dart occurs by the user pulling the trigger rearward to pivot the tab from the notch so as to allow the compressed drive spring to expand and rapidly move the piston upwards. A blast of compressed air is created ahead of the surging piston 32 and enters the inlet port 42 and passes through the front section of the valve element in a direction lateral to the longitudinal axis 104 of the valve element and lateral to its direction of movement. The blast of compressed air moves forward to the loaded dart and causes the dart's discharge as shown in
After the valve element is moved to the forward position, the wall 84 of the valve element abuts the forward valve seat 98. Thereafter, should the user again cock the air gun and activate the trigger, but not insert a dart, the next blast of compressed air is released slowly with insufficient pressure to impact significant velocity to any improvised projectile not having a proper configuration, another safety feature of the present invention. In the alternative, a rear valve seat may be formed in the structure around the chamber 16.
Other types of projectiles besides foam darts may be used, such as BBs, balls or pellets, with appropriate modification to the internal mechanisms of the gun apparatus. The toy air gun may also be reconfigured as a launch site apparatus for foam discs, foam washers or resilient bands. Thus, the barrel section may be reconfigured and more properly termed a launch site section. It will be understood by those with skill in the art that the design of the launch site section is a function of the projectile being used. Also in the alternative, the gun apparatus may be made of metal or a combination of metal and plastic.
It is noted that throughout this description, words such as “forward”, “rearward”, “upward”, “downward”, “upper”, and “lower”, as well as like terms, refer to portions or elements of the gun apparatus as they are viewed in the drawings relative to other portions or in relationship to the positions of the apparatus as it will typically be held and moved during play when operated by a user, or to movements of elements based on the configurations illustrated.
The toy air gun apparatus may include, in the alternative, a projectile magazine, a cartridge, a cassette or a canister loaded with multiple projectiles to load the projectiles, sequentially, into a firing or discharge position. The air gun apparatus disclosed in detail above provides for easy cocking in a simple, efficient and safe manner, and yet the air gun has a robust, but relatively simple structure that may be produced at a reasonable cost.
The present invention also includes a method 200,
From the foregoing, it can be seen that there has been provided structure and features for an improved safety valve for a toy air gun apparatus and a disclosure for the method of the making the toy air gun apparatus. While particular embodiments of the improved safety valve have been shown and described in detail, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made without departing from the present invention in its broader aspects. Therefore, the aim is to cover all such changes and modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the claimed invention. The matters set forth in the foregoing description and accompanying drawings are offered by way of illustrations only and not as limitations. The actual scope of the invention is to be defined by the subsequent claims when viewed in their proper perspective based on the prior art.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130239939 A1 | Sep 2013 | US |