Small firearms, including pistols, assault rifles, and submachine guns, utilize and fire rounds (also known as cartridges and ammunition). Each round is substantially elongated and comprises a deep cylindrical cuplike case (also known as a shell casing and sometimes also a cartridge), usually of brass, which is filled with an explosive propellant. At its rear or closed end, the case has a rim or flange containing a primer; the front and opposite end of the case is open. A bullet, slug, or head, usually of lead (optionally jacketed) is partially inserted into the open or front end of the case, whereafter the case is crimped onto the bullet.
The rounds are usually held within and fed into the firearm from a magazine, also known as a clip. A detachable magazine has become dominant throughout the world. The term ‘magazine’ is broad, encompassing several geometric variations, including curved magazines. Most detachable magazines are similar, varying in form and structure, rather than in their general principles of operation.
Magazines usually take the form of an elongated boxlike container having a generally rectangular cross-section, which is attached to the underside of the firearm. Magazines are commonly made of aluminum alloys, plastic, steel, or a combination. They are usually closed on five sides and open on a sixth, upwardly facing, top, side, or end, and are substantially hollow. The top or open side has a rectangular end and includes two round-retaining members, known as feed lips. Magazines have an internal spring which urges a follower (blank shaped piece of plastic or metal) toward the open side. The follower in turn urges the rounds as a group up against the lips. The lips act as a stop for the rounds so that they are not expelled from the magazine.
Rounds are stacked or oriented in the magazine such that the longitudinal axes of the rounds are substantially parallel and perpendicular to the direction of travel of the spring and follower. Adjoining rounds are oriented side-by-side, i.e., the bullets of adjacent rounds are next to each other, as are the cases.
The rounds are usually stacked in the magazine, either in a single straight column (also called single-stacked) or in a staggered, zigzag, column fashion (also called double-stacked or high-capacity mags). The latter magazines, being wider, achieve higher round capacity compared to single-column magazines of the same overall length.
Commonly, in pistol magazines and in some submachine gun magazines, whether staggered or not, the space between the retaining lips is smaller than the case diameter of the rounds so that the two lips of the magazine hold the topmost round. Magazines of most assault rifles and submachine guns contain staggered rounds, and in contrast to the above pistol magazines, the topmost round is held in place by only a single lip. The latter (single-lipped) magazines are not relevant here.
Prior to use, a firearm magazine must be loaded (charged or filled) with rounds. When a magazine is being loaded, it is necessary to depress all previously loaded rounds to provide space below the lips so an additional round can be loaded inside. Each time another round is loaded the spring is further compressed, requiring more insertion force. When a magazine is fully loaded, the spring is fully compressed and exerts maximum upward force against the follower and rounds towards the lips.
Loading magazines is relatively time-consuming, tedious, and painful practice if done with bare fingers. Pain accumulates and intensifies as more rounds are loaded against the increasing spring pressure, thus slowing the loading process. When a user loads a plurality of magazines, much time is required, shortening reposing, training, or combat time. In combat circumstances, slow reloading can be life-threatening.
Straightforward bare finger loading of a magazine of the type having two lips retaining one round begins with the user placing a new round on top of the follower or an already loaded round in front of the lips. Then the user uses a thumb to force down the new round, and hence the round(s) below it, into the magazine sufficiently to make space below the lips to slide the new round rearwards below the lips to be retained by them. This procedure repeats until the magazine is full. Again, hereafter the term ‘magazine’ will mean magazines for ammunition which have two lips holding the topmost round.
To increase loading speed and decrease finger pain associated with loading magazines, numerous magazine loaders are known. Prior-art loaders are generally divided into two groups; loaders having no moving mechanism, which are the simplest and cheapest and least comfortable to use, and loaders having some moving mechanism which are usually better loaders.
Some relevant prior art loaders comprising no moving mechanism and a vertical round plunger are shown in the following patents:
All the above loaders are not comfortable to use and are cumbersome, slow, and require several operator steps to load a round.
Relevant prior art loaders having some moving mechanism and a vertical round plunger are shown in the following patents:
Pikielny shows a spring-loaded thumb-operated loader. Newman shows a large and cumbersome spring-loaded lever-operated loader comprising many parts. Williams also shows a spring-loaded thumb-operated loader with an odd and unfriendly construction. Switzer also shows a large spring-loaded lever-operated loader comprising many parts. Origoni shows a spring-loaded thumb-operated loader comprising many parts. Switzer 386 also shows a large spring-loaded lever-operated loader comprising many parts. Knowles also shows a large spring-loaded lever-operated loader comprising many parts. Both Howard patents also show a spring-loaded thumb-operated loader. Mears also shows a spring-loaded lever-operated loader comprising many parts.
All the above loaders and Faifeer infra, who shows a large spring-loaded thumb-operated loader comprising many parts, use a vertical round plunger and are more advanced than the non-mechanism loaders described first above but are still relatively large, comprising several parts, and either thumb-operated or lever-operated.
Other prior-art loaders do not have a vertical plunger but rather a substantially horizontal plunger:
Musgrave shows a Z-shaped detachable loader that must be detached entirely from the magazine after each round is loaded and reinstalled back for the next round to be loaded. While it may facilitate loading, the necessity of attachment, sliding a new round in, and detachment makes its use inefficient, tedious, and awkward. It further lacks a structure which is comfortable for repeated use against the magazine's spring pressure, and is generally flimsy and delicate to use under field conditions.
Tal et al. show a popular universal magazine loader which we invented having a front metal plunger for pushing in the top-most round in the magazine, and a magazine aligner for aligning different magazines center in the loader behind the metal plunger. Loading a round involves moving the front plunger backward above the magazine and then forcing the loader down on the magazine to create a vacant space below the lips of the magazine so that a new round can be pushed down into the vacant space to its final position. This is an excellent and popular universal loader having a substantially horizontal plunger rather than a vertical plunger.
The following loader has a vertical plunger with additional issues:
Non-Patent Literature
This Archangel loader comprises four parts: (1) a box-like main body with a top having a hole and an open bottom and an integral vertical round-pushing plunger, (2) a shaped magazine pusher positioned inside the body, (3) a compression spring for pushing the magazine pusher down, and (4) a bolt having a head above the top of the body and a shaft that passes through the hole in the top of the body down through the spring and with its bottom screwed into the magazine pusher, inside the body. The spring is held in position by the bolt that runs through it; its bottom end is captivated by the magazine pusher and its top end to the inside of the loader
When the Archangel loader is positioned over a magazine and pushed down, the plunger pushes a round in the magazine down. Also as the body is pushed down, the magazine is supposed to push the magazine pusher and the bolt and hence the loader upward. However we have found that, prior to operation, the magazine pusher, the spring, and the bolt may easily and substantially move or wander sideways or rotate and thus may not operate reliably and accurately, causing the operation of the loader to fail because the magazine pusher will not engage the magazine properly. In addition, when each round is loaded in the magazine, the magazine pushes the magazine pusher—and hence the shaft of the bolt and its head—upward from the body and then back down. The user must keep their fingers clear of this bobbing bolt to avoid injury and interfering with operation of the loader during loading, and to avoid pinching when the bolt retracts back into the body of the loader. This loader also has a relatively large number of parts, which increases cost and creates less reliable operation.
In summary, some prior loaders for magazines are simple no-mechanism loaders that are relatively cheap but uncomfortable to use. Other prior loaders have more advanced mechanisms which are operated by a thumb, a lever, or by pushing down the entire loader. However the thumb-operated loaders cause thumb pain after short use, the lever-operated loaders are relatively large and comprise relatively many parts, and the push-down loaders may be unreliable or poorly designed. Lastly, while the Tal et al. loader comprises relatively many parts, it is most reliable and comfortable to use and sufficiently small.
Accordingly, several advantages of one or more aspects are to provide (a) a method and mechanism for allowing low cost, pocket-size, lightweight loaders line comprising relatively few parts yet efficient and comfortable to use, (b) a loader that is not thumb operated, as such are difficult, slow, and painful to use, (c) a loader that is not lever-operated, as such are larger in size and comprise many parts, (d) a loader which reduces the number of operation a user has to load a round, (e) a loader which is workable at relatively high speed with minimal fatigue to a user's fingers, and where no force will be exerted on a single finger, (f) a durable loader that is simple to operate in tough, varying, conditions, (g) a loader that can also be used to unload rounds from the magazine. Further advantages of one or more aspects will become apparent from a consideration of the drawings and ensuing description.
The present tool facilitates loading loose rounds, usually .22LR caliber and other small caliber rounds, into a firearm magazine. It basically comprises, in one aspect, three parts: a body with finger rests and a plunger tooth, a magazine pusher, and a spring. The body includes a rectangular opening sized to accept a magazine inside and two finger rests that extend from opposite sides of the body. A plunger tooth is positioned in the body above the rectangular opening and is sized to pass between the lips of the magazine to push down rounds in the magazine. The magazine pusher and the spring are arranged to lift up the loader after each round is loaded into the magazine. The pusher can be positioned adjacent the plunger and the spring is located between the pusher and the inner topmost part of the body. The dimensions of the rectangular opening are slightly larger than the cross-sectional dimensions of the magazine group for which the loader is made.
To load a round, the loader is inserted on the magazine and forced down so its plunger pushes the topmost round down into the magazine a sufficient distance to enable in a new round to be pushed in, rim first, until it meets the side of the plunger. Then the user reduces force on the loader to allow the spring-loaded pusher to lift and raise the loader up so that the plunger is cleared from the magazine and the partially inserted round can be forced further in to its final position in the magazine.
Plunger or tooth 18 (
A securing ring 36 on rear finger rest 14 enables a user to tie the loader to a belt loop, firearm, ammunition box, etc. to prevent loss.
The loader and pusher are preferably made of durable polymer material, as polyamide-6, produced by injection molding. The spring is preferably made of spring wire material. The magazine shown in
The loader is assembled by fitting the spring onto the pusher element and forcing both up into the bottom of the loader (spring first) and further upward in the cavity and slots of the tower until the pusher's ribs 30 pass and click over stops 28, whereupon the pusher is held in the loader.
To load a new round into the magazine the user completes the following operations: First the user fits the loader on the magazine in the neutral or unforced position. Then the user forces the finger rests down, thereby creating sufficient vacant space below the magazine's lips to partially insert a new round, rearwardly or rim first, into the partial vacant space. Then the user releases pressure on the finger rests to return the loader to the neutral or unforced position so that the user can push the round fully into the magazine.
To detail the above loading operation of a round into magazine 40 (
The user then pushes finger rests 14 down (
Next, the user releases pressure on finger rests 14 of the loader, allowing compressed spring 22 in the loader to force the loader up to clear the plunger from between the lips and clear a larger vacant space below the lips and to the rear of the partially inserted round (
The user repeats this loading process (force loader down, partially insert round, release pressure on finger rests, insert the round the rest of the way to final position) until the magazine is full. Then the user removes the loader.
Pusher element 20 and spring 22 provide a great benefit by making the loader self-raising loader when pressure on the finger rests is released, thus eliminating the need for the user to raise it manually. This allows the user, for example, to hold the magazine and loader in one hand—free from external support—while comfortably feeding rounds with the other hand. Loading is then quicker and smoother compared to virtually all prior-art loaders described above, excluding the one to Tal et al.
To unload rounds from the magazine, the user can sequentially and comfortably pushes the rim side of the rounds forward with small unloading tooth 34 shown in
The loader provides substantial assistance to a firearm user by enabling the user to safely, comfortably, and rapidly load a magazine without finger pain or injury. The loader is designed to be compatible with magazines for single-stacked .22LR caliber rounds. The range of magazines and round calibers may be extended or altered by changing the dimensions of the loader's parts and/or their arrangement. The loader can be altered under the methods and principles here described to load .25, .32, .380, 9 mm, 10 mm, .357, and .45 caliber magazine and others, though it is more comfortable to use with smaller caliber magazines and rounds. Alternately, such magazines can be loaded using the inventors' commercially popular and patented loaders, trademarked UpLULA and BabyUpLULA, briefly mentioned above.
There are many magazines in the market holding a single-round between both lips as mentioned far above; each is somewhat different in geometry, construction, and dimensions. Some of those magazines have an upper ledge or shelf 95, as exemplarily shown in
Loader 60 has a body 62 with a chamber 66 and a round plunger or tooth 68. Loader 60 also includes a magazine pusher element 70 having guide ribs 82 with protruding pusher stops 80 at the upper end of the ribs as shown in the exploded view of
The operation of loader 60 is similar to that of loader 10. The loader is self-raising once the user releases force on the loader. This eliminates the need to raise the loader up to clear tooth 68 from between lips 94 of the magazine. Since the loader body is relatively large, the user has a good grip on the loader for comfortable loading, using no finger rests.
The loader described operates on similar principles but may vary in form and shape according to the magazine it is designed to load. Thus, the elimination of the magazine pusher element is possible whenever a spring (one or more) can be designed to reliably engage the magazine (or its lips) and raise the loader as previously described.
The operation of loader 100 is similar to that of loaders 10 and 60 described above but here spring 122 engages a lip of the magazine directly. The loader is self-raising once the user releases force on the loader. This eliminates the need to raise the loader up to clear tooth 108 from between lips 134 of the magazine. The loader provides very comfortable loading.
The reader will see that we have provided an efficient, palm-size, comfortable, and safe self-raising magazine loader comprising few parts that can load magazines without any finger pain associated with pushing the rounds with the thumb into the magazine.
While the above description contains much specificity, these should not be construed as limitation on the scope but rather as an exemplification of several embodiments thereof. Many other ramifications and variations are possible within the teachings. For example, the loaders described can be altered to fit other magazines and calibers provided a suitable change in dimensions and construction is made in the loader to suit a magazine. E.g., the loader can be altered to load other pistol magazines and other 10/22 style magazines sold under the trademarks RUGER, BLACK DOG, CMMG, S&W, COLT, SIG-SAUER, WALTHER, and other existing and future .22LR AR/M16-style converted magazines, as well as virtually most other magazines on the market holding a single round between and by the lips.
The following are further examples of some additional variations and ramifications:
The magazine pusher element, pusher lock mechanism, and the tower and slots may be altered. The loader can be used with most magazines having a projecting side button. Many other types of pushers and bodies can be designed for the loader, either to adapt to specific magazines, specific calibers, and to provide finger rests, or to include other features.
The loader body may comprise more than one parts adapted to fit on a specific magazine.
The loader and its components may be made of separate or different plastic materials, or, alternatively, of other materials, such as aluminum or steel, or any combination thereof.
All numerical values provided are approximate; they can be changed to adapt to other magazines or round types and or calibers.
The loader may also be constructed to include insertable or movable spacer(s) to accommodate magazines of different dimensions.
Various other spring types or other mechanical means or methods may replace the compression spring mentioned; such can be an extension spring, a torsion-spring, a flat steel spring, flexible rubber, or a flexible polymer spring member. For example, a torsion spring fixed in the loader may replace the compression spring with one arm of the spring on the body of the loader and the second arm on the magazine pusher element or on the magazine, if no pusher element is used; where the spring is tensioned or charged when the loader is pushed down on the magazine, and can lift the loader up when the force is lessened; in this arrangement the magazine pusher may be arranged to rotate about an axes.
Alternatively, the magazine pusher element 20 and 70 or other may have a slot (rather than rib 30 or 82 shown) and the body 12 and 62 or other may have a rib (rather than slot 26 or 76 shown) sized and shaped to accept the slot in a mating manner so that the movement of the pusher element is guided by the mating slot and rib.
Spring holder 96 of
Accordingly, the scope should be determined, not by the embodiments illustrated, but by the appended claims and their legal equivalents.
This patent claims priority of our Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/826,767, Filed 2013 May 23.
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20140298704 | Niccum | Oct 2014 | A1 |
Entry |
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BlacksunTactical, “AA115 Promag Archangel Speed Loader for AA922 Nomad/Marauder Magazine”, May 14, 2012, YouTube, <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubUI-VGANKA>. |
Archangel Manufacturing/Promag Industries “Archangel 10/22 Magazine Loader AA115”, Sep. 10, 2012 South Gate, CA, USA. http://www.archangelmanufacturing.com/2012/09/10/aa115-archangel-1022-magazine-loader-black-polymer/. (Video clip at video clip at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubUI-VGANKA). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61826767 | May 2013 | US |