The present invention relates to toy guns capable of shooting soft projectiles upon the release of stored compressed air. The invention more particularly, although not exclusively, relates to firing shells which can store a charge of compressed air for use, or integrated with such toy guns.
Toy guns capable of firing soft projectiles upon release of compressed air are known. These comprise pump-action or other mechanisms for forcing a jet of air against a projectile to cause it to be fired from the toy gun. The various known firing mechanisms are complex and costly to manufacture and can be unreliable in use. Furthermore, rapid-firing toy machine guns cannot generally exploit compressed air firing due to complexities associated with recharging a store of compressed air.
A compressed air firing shell for a toy gun overcomes or substantially ameliorates at least one of the above disadvantages and/or more generally provides an improved means of storing and releasing a charge of compressed air to fire soft projectiles from toy guns.
There is disclosed herein a compressed air firing shell for a toy gun, comprising:
a firing chamber for receiving a soft projectile;
a pressure chamber adapted to store a high-pressure charge of air therein;
a release port from the pressure chamber to the firing chamber;
an activation member; and
a piston within the pressure chamber and sealing the release port and adapted upon triggered activation of the activation member to unseal the release port thereby allowing the charge to pass from the pressure chamber to the firing chamber to effect firing of the soft projectile therefrom.
Preferably, the firing shell further comprises an inlet valve via which pressurised air can enter the pressure chamber to provide said charge of air.
Preferably, said inlet valve is incorporated into the activation member.
Preferably, the activation member comprises a pin biased by a spring into a sealed position, the pin adapted to move against the spring and away from the sealed position upon application of external air pressure thereto to enable charging of the pressure chamber.
Preferably, the activation member comprises a cylindrical housing within which the spring is located, the piston sliding upon the cylindrical housing.
Alternatively, the piston can slide upon an inner surface of the pressure chamber.
Preferably, the firing shell further comprises protection means for preventing the firing of items other than a soft projectile having an elongate cavity from the firing chamber.
Preferably, the firing shell further comprises an elongate firing tube extending into the firing chamber and through which air passes from the release port, the elongate tube adapted to fit within an elongate cavity of the soft projectile.
Preferably, the elongate firing tube comprises a bleeder opening nearby the release port, and protection means comprise a sliding disc surrounding the elongate firing tube and movable between a first use position whereat air exiting the bleeder opening enters the elongate cavity of the soft projectile causing it to be fired, and a second non-use position whereat air exiting the bleeder opening is trapped behind the sliding disc.
Preferably, the firing shell further comprises a light spring biasing the sliding disc into the second position, the sliding disc adapted to compress the light spring upon interaction with the soft projectile.
Alternatively, the protection means comprises vents in the firing chamber adapted to surround the soft projectile.
Alternatively, the protection means comprises a base cylinder adjacent to the release port and adapted to surround a portion of the soft projectile.
There is further disclosed herein a charging mechanism when used with the above-disclosed firing shell, the charging mechanism comprising a charging cylinder containing a volume of air, the charging cylinder comprising a seal for sealing the volume of air against the exterior of the firing shell, reduction of said volume upon interaction with the firing shell pressurising the volume to thereby open the inlet valve so that air from the volume enters the pressure chamber to charge the pressure chamber.
Preferably, the volume is adapted to at least partially receive the firing shell to cause said reduction in volume.
Preferably, the seal is adapted to allow air to flow into the volume upon extraction of the firing shell from the volume.
The charging mechanism can further comprise a check valve adapted to allow air to flow into the volume upon extraction of the firing shell from the volume.
The charging mechanism can further comprise a base upon which the charging cylinder is mounted, a lever mounted to the base and adapted to bear down upon the firing shell for insertion thereof into the volume.
Alternatively, the charging mechanism can comprise a charging piston adapted to slide into the charging cylinder to cause said volume reduction.
There is further disclosed herein a toy gun incorporating the above-disclosed firing shell.
Preferably, the toy gun comprises a trigger-activated firing pin adapted to strike the activation member to effect said triggered firing activation.
Preferably, the firing shell is formed integrally with the toy gun.
Alternatively, the toy gun is adapted to receive the firing shell in removable fashion.
There is further disclosed herein a toy gun adapted to receive, or having integrally formed therein a multitude of the above-disclosed firing shells.
The toy gun might comprise an integral charging cylinder from which pressurised air is charged into each firing shell.
The toy gun might further comprise an advancing mechanism for aligning each charging shell with the charging cylinder.
There is further disclosed herein a toy bullet chain comprising a plurality of articulated links, at least one of the links housing the above-disclosed firing shell.
There is further disclosed herein a combination of the above toy bullet chain and the above-disclosed charging mechanism, the charging mechanism comprising a cradle configured to support a link of the chain as the charging piston slides into the charging cylinder.
Preferred forms of the present invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
In
At the back of the pressure chamber 12, there is an activation member 11 which comprises a pin 22 located within a cylindrical housing 21. The pin 22 is biased to the left by a captured coil spring 23 which surrounds it. At the right end of the cylindrical housing 21, the pin 22 passes through an aperture which is slightly larger than its own diameter. Air can pass around the pin through this aperture. However, spring force applied by spring 23 causes the pinhead (not numbered) at the right-most end of the pin to seal against the aperture. At the left-most end of the pin 22, there is another pinhead (again not numbered) which slides freely within the cylindrical housing 21 and air can pass around it.
Surrounding and sliding upon the outer surface of the cylindrical housing 21 is a piston 13. The flat right hand surface of the piston 13 can bear against the release port 14 to seal the pressure chamber 12. A small O-ring can be provided around the release port to maintain a good seal with the piston 13.
In order to charge the pressure chamber 12 with compressed air, it is necessary to increase air pressure behind (to the left of) the valve 11. When the pressure differential across the valve 11 is sufficient to overcome the force of spring 23, the pin 22 will move to the right and air will flow past it into the pressure chamber 12. When the pressure differential has equalised with the spring force, the valve 11 will seal. Air can leak around the outer surface of the cylinder 21 from within the piston 13 to pressurise the pressure chamber 12. Increased pressure within the chamber 12 forces the piston 13 to seal against the release port 14.
When a firing force F is applied to the left end of the pin 22, the right pinhead will lift from the aperture around the pin at the right end of the cylinder 21 and pressurised air within the piston 13 will escape to atmosphere past the pin toward the left. This rapid reduction of pressure within the piston 13 results in a pressure differential across its flat (right) face causing the piston to move to the left and break the seal at the release port 14. As a result, the charge of compressed air within the pressure chamber 12 escapes rapidly through the release port 14 and into the elongate firing tube 15 to cause the projectile 16 to fire from the shell 10.
The pressure chamber 12 can be charged by pushing the firing shell 10 into a charging cylinder 24. Such a charging cylinder is shown in
The firing shell 10 is intended to fire safe soft projectiles 16. In order to prevent children from firing other dangerous objects such as pen caps, marbles, pencils and batteries for example various protection means are provided. Examples of these are illustrated in
In
An alternative embodiment is depicted in
A similar embodiment is depicted in
A simple toy gun 29 embodying the invention is depicted in
Although not depicted, a rapid-fire toy machine gun for example, could include a magazine loaded with a plurality of pre-charged firing shells 10. Alternatively, a bullet chain loaded with pre-charged firing shells 10 could be machine-fed into a firing bay of a toy machine gun.
In the above examples, the activation member 11 also functions as an inlet valve via which the pressure chamber 12 is charged. However, separately formed inlet valves are also envisaged.
A resilient flap 43 surrounding the activation member 11 can cover one or more inlet apertures 44. Upon increased external pressure, air is allowed to flow through the inlet apertures 44 as indicated by the arrow in
In each of the above embodiments, the piston 13 is mounted upon the activation member 11. An alternative, the piston might be adapted to slide upon the inner surface of the pressure chamber 12. Such an example is shown in
In this embodiment, a broader piston 13′ slides within the pressure chamber 12 and is adapted to bear and seal against a projecting release port 14′. This ensures that a volume of air remains to the right of the piston within the pressure chamber 12 at all times. The piston functions in exactly the same manner as does the piston 13 of the previous examples, but there is some loss of efficiency due to the increased surface area of the piston upon which the pressure differential across it takes effect.
As a further alternative, a toy gun could be provided with an inbuilt charging facility similar to charging cylinder 24 and activated upon pump action for example.
A toy gun 45 for firing a multitude of soft projectiles is depicted in
Rather than forming a charging mechanism integrally with a toy gun (single shot or multi-projectile), a further style of stand-alone charging mechanism is envisaged. An example is illustrated in
Each of the links 47 is configured to receive a firing shell 10. Each firing shell 10 may be pre-loaded with projectiles 16.
The charging cylinder 24′ is formed into a cradle 50 across which the chain can be draped with one link 47 supported by the cradle at a time. The cradle 50 might be supported by legs 49 to a base 33′ as shown in
The cradle 50 houses a charging cylinder 24′. Rather than inserting the firing shells 10 into the charging cylinder, the shells press against a seal 48 at the left end of the charging cylinder 24′. A charging piston 46 slides into the charging cylinder 24′ to reduce its internal volume 32 as indicated by the dotted lines in
The figures depict a cap ring 30 locating a seal 31 which seals against the external surface of the charging piston 46 to maintain pressure. The charging piston 46 may incorporate a check valve (not shown) to ease its extraction from the charging cylinder 24′.
The internal structure of the charging piston 46, charging cylinder 24′ and seals 3 and 48 are typically the same as those incorporated into the toy gun of
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