This invention relates to rifle and gun barrels. More particularly, this invention relates to special adaptations of and configurations of rifle and gun barrels for sound suppression.
Commonly configured gun and rifle silencers include series of baffles, vanes, and walls arrayed about the path of a fired bullet at or near the muzzle of the firearm. Such baffles, vanes, and walls commonly form sound reflection chambers which open radially inwardly at the weapon's bullet conveying bore or channel. Portions of a sonic blast generated upon firing the weapon enter such chambers and are reflected, producing sound suppression. Such silencer chambers commonly exclusively reflect portions of the sonic blast radially inwardly toward the axial bullet passageway. Such exclusive radially inward reflection of the sonic blast undesirably diminishes the ability of the suppressor to reduce the intensity of the portion of the sonic blast which emits from the weapon's muzzle.
The instant inventive sound suppressing gun barrel solves or ameliorates problems and deficits noted above by specially configuring the barrel of a gun barrel or rifle barrel to include specialized sonic blast diverting “U” channel structures.
The instant inventive sound suppressing gun barrel may comprise modifications, as specified below, of a conventional gun barrel or may comprises a specialized cylindrical screw-on barrel extension or silencer attachment. In accordance with the instant invention, such alternative screw-on and removable silencer or barrel extension is considered to constitute a gun barrel or a muzzleward segment of a gun barrel.
A first structural component of the instant inventive sound suppressing gun barrel comprises a bullet channel having a breachward end and having a muzzleward end. The breachward end of the bullet channel may be configured in the manner of a conventional rifled bullet accelerating bore. In the preferred embodiment, the muzzleward end of the bullet channel incorporates specialized sound suppressing structures described below.
A further structural component of the instant inventive sound suppressing gun barrel comprises at least a first “U” channel which is rigidly and structurally positioned radially outwardly from the bullet channel. In the preferred embodiment, the at least first “U” channel has a breachwardly positioned web, such web having and communicating with a pair of gas conveying arms. One of such gas conveying arms preferably comprises a gas receiving arm or first gas conveying arm which extends muzzlewardly from a circumferential end of the web, and the other arm of such pair of gas conveying arms comprises a gas emitting or second arm. Such second arm preferably co-extends muzzlewardly along the first arm from the oppositely circumferential end of the web. Preferably, the breachward wall of such web faces muzzlewardly and is arcuately and concavely curved.
A further structural component of the instant inventive sound suppressing gun barrel comprises a gas intake port which opens the at least first “U” channel at the muzzleward end of such channel's gas receiving arm or first gas conveying arm. In the preferred embodiment, the intake port further opens at and communicates with the muzzleward end of the bullet channel for conveying portions of sonic blast gases from the muzzleward end of the bullet channel into the first arm of the at least first “U” channel.
In operation of the instant inventive sound suppressing gun barrel, explosively compressed gases traveling muzzlewardly along the bore of a rifle barrel and immediately behind a fired bullet may radially outwardly expand to enter the at least first “U” channel's intake port. Instead of reflecting radially inwardly, such gases advantageously travel breachwardly along the at least first “U” channel's gas receiving arm until such gases reach such arm's breachward end. The web component at the arm's breachward end turns such compressed gases counter-circumferentially and substantially 180° to travel muzzlewardly along the at least first “U” channel's second gas conveying arm. Such breachward and muzzleward passages of the compressed gas along the paired arms of the at least first “U” channel efficiently suppresses and reduces the magnitude of the sonic blast which emits from the weapon's muzzle.
In a preferred embodiment, the instant inventive sound suppressing gun barrel further comprises a gas output port which further opens the at least first “U” channel at a muzzleward end of such “U” channel's second gas conveying arm. Such output port suitably opens radially outwardly at a ceiling component which covers both “U” channel arms. Suitably, such output port may alternatively open radially inwardly toward the bullet channel.
Further preferred structural components of the instant inventive sound suppressing gun barrel comprise a plurality of second “U” channels, each second “U” channel preferably being configured substantially identically with the at least first “U” channel. In a preferred embodiment, the at least first “U” channel and such plurality of second “U” channels are evenly circumferentially arrayed about the bullet channel.
The invention's “U” channel components may be provided in combination with conventional wall and baffle formed sound suppressing chambers. For enhanced length and consistency with bullet spin, the “U” channels' arms may extend helically about the bullet channel.
Accordingly, objects of the instant invention includes the provision of a sound suppressing gun barrel which incorporates structures, as described above, and arranges those structures with respect to each other in manners described above, for the achievement of the beneficial functions described above.
Other and further objects, benefits, and advantages of the instant invention will become known to those skilled in the art upon review of the Detailed Description which follows, and upon review of the appended drawings.
Referring now to the drawings, and in particular to Drawing
Referring simultaneously to
Referring simultaneously to
A first gas conveying arm 30 communicates with and extends muzzlewardly from the circumferential end 54c of the web 54, and a second gas conveying arm 14 similarly communicates with and co-extends with arm 30 muzzlewardly from the web's counter-circumferential end 54cc. The preferred arcuately curved muzzleward face of the web 54 provides for a smooth counter-circumferential flow of gases from arm 30 into arm 14.
Referring in particular to
Gas exiting bore 9 at ports 36 travels breachwardly along arm 30 and reaches the circumferential end 54c of web 54. The concave and muzzlewardly facing wall of web 54 turns such gas in the circumferential direction about bullet channel 9 and toward the web's counter-circumferential end 54cc. Upon reaching end 54cc, such gas progresses muzzlewardly along the at least first “U” channel's second gas conveying arm 14. The radially outer ends of the first and second gas conveying arms 30 and 14 are preferably closed by the circumferentially extending ceiling 2, such ceiling having radially inner surfaces such as inner ceiling surface 15 which overlies the second arm 14. A muzzleward extension of barrel 26 correspondingly forms a floor of arm channel 14.
Upon reaching the extreme muzzleward end of the second gas conveying arm 14, the explosively driven gas is reflected by end wall 20, and such gas suitably ejects radially outwardly through an outlet port 10. Alternatively, as shown in the helically configured
As indicated by comparison of
In the
Longitudinally extending walls 31, 13, 62, 66, 64, 74, 76, and 78 span between the radially inner gun barrel forming wall 26 and the radially outer ceiling 2 to partition and form the several arms of the at least first and plurality of second “U” channels. Such walls preferably form and define the “U” channels in an evenly spaced circumferential array, and such walls preferably volumetrically bias each “U” channel so that its gas receiving first arm has a larger interior volume than that of its counter-circumferentially adjacent second gas conveying arm. As indicated in
Referring to the alternative configuration of
While the principles of the invention have been made clear in the above illustrative embodiment, those skilled in the art may make modifications to the structure, arrangement, portions and components of the invention without departing from those principles. Accordingly, it is intended that the description and drawings be interpreted as illustrative and not in the limiting sense, and that the invention be given a scope commensurate with the appended claims.