The invention relates to a manually manipulable test mirror for gun care, which has a light-reflecting mirror surface. The invention further relates to an arrangement of a gun and such a test device. Additionally, the invention relates to the use of such a test device with guns.
When a gun is fired, residue and/or fouling are produced inside the gun, for example in the barrel or in the chamber. Guns must therefore be cleaned regularly and then inspected to make sure they are clean. Typically, inspections or searches for damage or dirt particles inside a firearm are carried out visually. In most cases, when a firearm is assembled, its construction prevents a person from viewing the inside of the barrel or the chamber. As a result, damage or dirt particles can go unnoticed, which adversely affects the reliability, safety and longevity of the firearm.
Known from the prior art, therefore, are electronic means, for example, which enable the interior of a firearm that is hidden from view to be inspected. A flashlight from Hoppe's Guncare uses an angled lighting device to illuminate the gun barrel from the inside with a beam of light (https://www.waffenpflege-shop.de/hoppes-bore-light.html, retrieved on 22 Mar. 2018). In addition, MARTI Waffen AG offers an inspection camera with which images from a camera can be transmitted from the end of a connecting cable measuring 4.5 mm in diameter and 1 m in length to a hand-held display held by the user (https://www.waffenmarti.ch/shop/waffenreinigung/waffenreinigung-diverses/produkt/10639-topshot-lauf-inspektionskamera-durchmesser-4-5 mm-1m-laenge.html, retrieved on 22 Mar. 2018).
One disadvantage of this prior art technology is that the test to determine whether the gun barrel and/or the chamber has/have been successfully cleaned requires considerable technical equipment. And this equipment must be carried along on a hunting trip, for example. Furthermore, the dependence on electrical, charged energy storage batteries adversely affects the availability of the test device.
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide a means with which, after cleaning a gun, a user can visually inspect the locations in the gun that are not visible to the naked eye and without auxiliary means.
A further object of the invention is to provide a test means for use after cleaning, which is characterized by high reliability and availability and by a simple design with a minimum number of components and thus by a light weight.
The invention is a manually manipulable test mirror for gun care which has one or more light-reflecting mirror surfaces. The mirror surface(s) or a region surrounding or encompassing said surface(s) (mirror surface region) is (are) configured to be inserted at least partially into an opening in the gun, for example an opened chamber. The mirror surface can thereby be placed in an operative optical connection with a hollow space inside the optionally freshly cleaned gun to illuminate the hollow space, for example the barrel bore. Light that strikes the mirror surface, for example daylight or light from a flashlight or some other external light source, can be directed into the hollow space, which is thereby illuminated. At the other end of the hollow space, for example at the open end of the barrel, the gun user can visually inspect the weapon for cleanliness. A test device of this type may serve as a supplement to cleaning and care kits for guns.
The configuration of the mirror surface or the mirror surface region with a slender and/or elongated shape is particularly advantageous. This enables the test device to be held in the narrow opening of a chamber or a gun barrel. The slimmer the test device is, the more easily it can be used to illuminate inaccessible corners and angles inside the gun. Moreover, due to the elongated shape of the mirror device, the available reflective surface is large enough to reflect or deflect sufficient ambient light or daylight. By maximizing the amount of mirror surface on the test device, a correspondingly maximized quantity of daylight or light generated by an external light source can be directed into the hollow space of the gun to be examined.
An exemplary, particularly simple embodiment of the invention consists in the implementation thereof as a preferably single-piece mirror rod, in which a carrier body in the form of a rod includes the structurally integrated mirror surface. The mirror rod is expediently configured as having a cuboid or other prismatic shape, which results in a substantially flat longitudinal side for an effective mirror surface, without optical distortions in the mirror effect.
In another exemplary embodiment, the one or more mirror surfaces are recessed or embedded in a frame body, or are encompassed, bordered, surrounded, or held therein, and are thereby protected by said frame body. One longitudinal side of the frame is open toward the mirror surface, for example slotted. Expediently, the mirror surface is an integrated component of a mirror substrate (mirror surface carrier body).
According to one aspect of the invention, the device frame is subdivided into a handle portion and a mirror portion, with the mirror substrate being situated exclusively in the mirror portion. The attachment of a hanging eye or some other fastening element, preferably at the unattached end region of the handle portion, facilitates hanging and fastening of the test device on external transport and holding devices.
The reflective surface or mirror surface may be the surface of the mirror substrate itself or may form an inner layer within the mirror substrate. The mirror portion and the handle portion may be integral parts of the preferably single-piece frame. The frame may be cast (for example by a plastic injection molding process) and/or milled. An end-face frame opening, through which the mirror substrate can be moved longitudinally into and out of the frame, makes it possible to replace mirror substrates when the mirror surfaces thereof become soiled or damaged. This makes use of a particular aspect of the invention, according to which the frame is configured as a hollow rail that is open on one longitudinal side, and the mirror substrate can be inserted into and removed from the cavity in said hollow rail and can be held therein by way of friction. Alternatively or additionally, the mirror substrate may be inserted from above, i.e. for example through the longitudinal opening in the hollow rail, into the receiving groove in the frame, and fastened therein by gluing. For this purpose, at least one boundary wall of the hollow rail or one contact wall between the hollow rail and the mirror substrate has an adhesive layer for producing an adhesive bond with the mirror substrate.
Independent intellectual property protection is further claimed for a testing arrangement that includes a gun and an optical test device having at least one light-reflecting mirror surface, wherein the mirror surface is inserted at least partially into a gun opening and is placed in operative optical connection with a bore or some other hollow space of the gun, for the illumination of said hollow space with daylight or with an artificial light source. The scope of the invention further includes the use of a test device having a mirror surface to illuminate the interior of a gun, in particular a gun barrel and/or chamber, with ambient light or with other light deflected and/or reflected by the mirror surface.
In a preferred refinement of such use, the test device is rotated, preferably about a symmetry axis and/or center axis, to illuminate the interior of the gun, in particular the gun barrel and/or the chamber. In this way, both the barrel bore and the chamber can be illuminated up to all boundary walls.
According to
The mirror portion 102 of frame 110 is configured as a hollow rail having a U-like profile in cross-section, with the resulting cavity being usable as a receiving groove 112 for receiving a mirror substrate 200 with mirror surface 201. Ambient light 500 (cf.,
Mirror substrate 200 with mirror surface 201 is recessed in mirror portion 102 of frame 110 and is held on its opposing longitudinal sides by a first profile arm 114 and a second profile arm 116. The first profile arm 114 and the second profile arm 116, together with a center bridge 113 connecting these arms, form a cross-sectionally U-shaped hollow rail with the receiving groove 112 formed therein (cf.,
To hold mirror substrate 200 in receiving groove 112 of the hollow rail, an inner wall groove 130 (cf.,
Provided the length 121 of receiving groove 112 is dimensioned with an additional tolerance relative to total mirror length 210, the open width 117 at the inner end of receiving groove 112 can be realized. According to one exemplary embodiment, the length of the receiving groove is 50 mm. Open width 117 can be used for replacing mirror substrate 200 if mirror surface 201 becomes soiled, for example, by inserting a tool, e.g. a screwdriver, into open width 117 and then bracing the tool against an end edge of receiving groove 112 in the manner of a lever, so that the mirror substrate can be forced (“pried”) out of receiving groove 112.
According to
In an alternative, structurally simplified embodiment of the invention according to
In a further alternative, structurally further simplified embodiment of the invention according to