The present invention relates to a safety and arming mechanism for munitions, and more particularly to munitions which are tube-launched, high-acceleration, high-spin, medium- or large-caliber rounds.
The premature detonation of munitions, including artillery rounds, bombs, missiles, and/or mortar shells during handling, shipping, or in storage creates a highly dangerous condition. Various safety and arming (S&A) devices have been proposed in the prior art for preventing accidental arming and premature detonation of munitions. A safety and arming device is now a required element of a munition to ensure that the munition is not armed and detonated prior to the intended time therefore. The safety and arming device is part of a munition's fuze and prevents arming of the fuze until certain conditions are met. Many safety and arming devices require two conditions or occurrences for operation and initiation of the fuze. The first condition utilized is typically setback acceleration, which is associated with the launching of the munition. Setback acceleration of the munition is a convenient condition to sense and measure. The second condition can be based on a number of different parameters, such as barrel escape velocity, timing, sensing and/or counting the turns or rotations of the munition, etc.
One early safety and arming device is the percussion fuze. A percussion fuze is normally held inoperative by a safety device which is released by setback forces developed upon launching a projectile. Such a fuze is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 1,652,635, to Pantoflicek, issued Dec. 13, 1927.
Another proposed safety and arming device includes a fuze wherein movement of a setback slider mechanism pivots a lever. The movement of the lever activates a timing mechanism. The timing mechanism releases a detonator carrier which is moved into an armed position. One such device is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 2,863,393, to Sheeley, issued Dec. 9, 1958.
Still another type of fuze device was proposed in which a slide mechanism responds to setback forces developed during sustained acceleration of a projectile to arm the fuze. Typical devices of this type are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 2,595,757, to Brandt, issued May 6, 1952; U.S. Pat. No. 4,284,862, to Overman et al, issued Aug. 18, 1981; and U.S. Pat. No. 4,815,381, to Bullard, issued Mar. 28, 1989.
Other examples of prior art devices that use the setback acceleration condition to arm a fuze include zig-zag gravity weights; escapement mechanisms, such as gravity weight drive escapements; successive falling leaves; and various combinations of such devices. More modern fuzes integrate such features in smaller packages, by employing micro-electromechancial systems (MEMS) based technology and processes, based upon lithographic techniques, or offshoot techniques such as plating, molding, plastic injection, and/or ceramic casting—examples of such applications of MEMS technology are disclosed in a series of patents to Robinson and Robinson et al., including U.S. Pat. No. 6,167,809, issued Jan. 2, 2001; U.S. Pat. No. 6,568,329, issued May 27, 2003; U.S. Pat. No. 6,964,231, issued Nov. 15, 2005; and, U.S. Pat. No. 7,316,186, issued Jan. 8, 2008. Such more modern fuzes comply with MIL-STD-1316 or STANAG 4187 standards, requiring that two unique and independent aspects of the launch environment must be detected either mechanically or electronically by the fuze, before the weapon can be enabled to arm itself; including set-back acceleration, rifling-induced spin, gun- or launch-tube exit, airflow, and flight apex. Further, such modern fuzes typically perform targeting functions, which can include electromagnetic or electrostatic target detection, range estimation, target impact detection, grazing impact detection, or timed delay. The best methods to accomplish these functions and provide the required S&A device depends on the characteristics of the weapon system, such as limitations on size, onboard power, desired configuration, and factors such as affordable cost, material selection and compatibility, and safety and reliability standards.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,964,231, incorporated herein by reference, discloses a MEMS fuze (hereinafter the '231 fuze) for medium caliber munitions, such as a 20-mm bursting projectile, designed to meet criteria such as being relatively inexpensive (on the order of several dollars when manufactured in large quantities); extremely small to allow maximum room for the most lethal payload practicable; extremely reliable, to perform under battlefield conditions; and preferably requiring no pre-launch power, since the battery typically does not activate until launch. The '231 fuze incorporates 3 major interlocks in its S&A device: (1) an initial motion of a setback slider in response to acceleration; whereby, the setback slider removes a setback lock lever tab from an arming slider's setback lock catch (a rather complex action), thereby freeing the arming slider; (2) which arming slider under urging of the spin imparted to the projectile, moves part way to arming; whereupon it is impeded by a catch tab, against a command lock catch face within the arming slider; (3) electronics within the fuze, i.e. the fuze circuit, initiates a pre-programmed signal, a signal which may be timed, based upon rotation count, or other desired criteria, to fire a piston against a rocker piston tab, which moves a lock rocker assembly in a complex three dimensional manner, to move the catch tab so as to free the arming slider to continue its motion into the armed position. Once in the armed position, a continuous fire initiation path is established and once the electronics initiate firing, the projectile will explode. Such a continuous, MEMS fire initiation path is disclosed within U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,055,437, and 7,069,861, both to Robinson, et al., issued Jun. 6, 2006 and Jul. 4, 2006, respectively, and both of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
As shown in FIG. 15 of U.S. Pat. No. 6,964,231, there is an inflection point, the pivot bend, located at the middle of the three dimensional lock rocker assembly, which is a stress point that has sometimes failed in prototype samples. A prototype '231 fuze has a footprint of approximately 10×10 mm, a relatively large footprint; a rather complex means whereby an independent setback slider initially frees an arming slider; a certainly complex three dimensional lock rocker assembly which finally releases the arming slider to proceed to its armed position, all of which are certainly significant advantages versus conventional (non-MEMS-based) fuzes of the prior art; but there still exist problems in size, reliability, complexity, and cost, regarding the optimum possible fuze, to meet the stated criteria.
The present invention is an ultra-miniature electro-mechanical, MEMS, safety and arming (S&A) device for gun-launched munitions, i.e. projectiles, that has a footprint of approximately 7×10 mm, and a lower profile or side elevation than the prior art, the '231 fuze, such that it is over 30% smaller by volume. Further, the present invention, eliminates the complex three dimensional lock rocker assembly of the '231 fuze, replacing its functionality with a simple, two dimensional, stop and release mechanism, described below. These and other changes are provided in the present invention, which maintains the full safety functionality of the prior art, in a physically smaller, simpler, more reliable, and less costly device.
The invention is capable of performing safety and arming functions for any munition which is fired from a rifled, tube launcher, which creates an environment of launch acceleration and spin. Such munitions include, but are not limited to: 25 mm High Explosive Airburst (HEAB) Munitions, for systems such as XM25 Integrated Airburst Weapon System; 25 mm Point Detonating Munitions, for systems such as M242 Bushmaster Chain Gun (Bradley Fighting Vehicle); 30 mm cannon caliber fuzes, for systems such as MK44 Bushmaster II Chain Gun, M230 Chain Gun (Apache Helicopter); 40 mm medium caliber fuzes, for systems such as M430A1, M433, M550, M549A1, M918TP for MK19 Machine Gun and M203 Grenade Launcher; 105 mm artillery fuzes; 155 mm artillery fuzes, for systems such as Precision Guided Kit, M762A1 and M767A1 Electronic Time Fuzes; High-explosive dual purpose grenades; submunition grenades and mines; fuzing functions in rockets and missiles.
Specifically, the present invention is comprised of a MEMS assembly composed of four (4) layers, the first layer containing an explosion initiator assembly, which is electrically connected to the fuze circuit and which contains two spot charges. The first spot charge is initiated by the fuze circuit to clear a stop and release mechanism, i.e. a mechanical interlock, as described below. The second spot charge is initiated by the fuze circuit to initiate the firetrain that results in detonation of the projectile, such as and similar to the firetrain disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,055,437, mentioned above.
The second layer is a cover assembly, which focuses and transfers the force of the first and second spot charges to a third layer containing the MEMS S&A mechanism assembly. The MEMS S&A mechanism assembly contains a setback slider which in its normal, pre-firing position extends perpendicularly from and forward of the center of the arming slider, so as to block the motion of the arming slider. Upon firing of the projectile, the setback slider is deflected downward under the firing acceleration and is compressed and depressed into a track, or channel, within the arming slider, nesting and being locked within the arming slider (removing the 1st S&A interlock); such that, the arming slider, with the added mass of the setback slider now contained therein, and with an eccentric center-of-gravity, will respond to the urging of the projectiles spin to slide within a track, generally perpendicular to that of the setback slider, toward its armed position. As the arming slider moves towards its arming position the mechanical interlock mentioned above blocks its movement. The mechanical interlock is formed of a flexible arming slider latch arm extending from the arming slider, which latch arm impacts and is impeded by a safety catch located along the track within which the arming slider slides, stopping the arming slider prior to its armed position.
As mentioned above, upon receiving a command from the projectile's electronics, i.e. the fuze circuit, the first spot charge is ignited within the a cover assembly layer of the MEMS device, and the force therefrom is directed through the cover assembly, into a gas expansion chamber, within the MEMS S&A mechanism layer; wherefrom, the force is directed so as to push the flexible arming slider latch arm out of contract with the safety catch and into a recess within the arming slider (removing the 2nd S&A interlock); thereby, allowing the arming slider to continue to travel and lock in its armed position. Once the arming slider is locked into its armed position (removing the 3rd S&A interlock), a continuous fire initiation path, or firetrain, is established through the four MEMS S&A assembly layers, such that, as mentioned above, when the second spot charge in the first layer is initiated by the fuze circuit, the energy therefrom travels through the now continuous firetrain in the second and third layers and into the fourth layer, an output base, which contains an output charge. This energy from detonation of the output charge, in turn, will detonate an explosive acceptor charge external to the present MEMS device, the explosive acceptor charge, sometime called a relay, lead or booster charge, which will, in turn, ignite the warhead of the projectile.
In an alternative embodiment, detailed below, the functionality of the fourth layer is incorporated in the third layer, such that the third layer contains the S&A mechanism and the output charge. In this embodiment, a transfer charge within the third S&A mechanism layer, the same transfer charge included in the S&A mechanism layer in all of the other embodiments, is aligned adjacent to the output charge and separated therefrom by only thin membranes—such that when the three S&A interlocks are cleared, the firetrain will trigger the transfer charge, and the transfer charge will trigger the adjacent output charge; which will trigger the acceptor charge external to the S&A device. This alternative embodiment, further miniaturizes and simplifies the subject S&A device, leading to further cost savings and reliability.
If, for whatever reason, the setback slider is not fully depressed and locked into position within the arming slider, the arming slider will be physically blocked from moving into its armed position. If, for whatever reason, the first spot charge is not ignited by the fuze circuit, the arming slider will remain blocked by the arming slider latch arm and corresponding safety catch and will be blocked from moving into its armed position. If, for whatever reason, the armed slider does not move into its armed position, the firetrain between the second spot charge and the output base will not be established and any force released from the ignition of the second spot charge will be physically blocked from reaching the output base. Therefore, without each of these actions happening in sequence, the output charge will not be ignited and the warhead of the projectile will not be ignited.
The nature of the subject invention will be more clearly understood by reference to the following detailed description, the associated drawings, and the appended claims.
In the drawings, which are not necessarily to scale, like or corresponding parts are denoted by like or corresponding reference numerals.
A first embodiment of the invention is shown in
The safety of the safety and arming device of a fuze derives from the highly selective mechanical and electro-mechanical logic intrinsic to the design. As will be described, environmental stimuli of unique direction, threshold, sequence, and duration are necessary to effectuate the arming sequence in the mechanical logic. Environmental inputs that do not match the launch/dispense sequence result in one of two outcomes: a) the mechanical logic elements may partially respond to the inputs and then reset to their original “safe” (unarmed) position, or b) the mechanical logic elements may partially respond to the inputs and due to the out-of-sequence or improper nature of the inputs the mechanical elements may finish in a “failed safe” condition.
Description of the S&A Assembly and Explosive Train
The core of the inventive design is the miniature safety and arming mechanism 100, preferably fabricated using micro-machining or MEMS technology (e.g., lithography, plating and molding) to obtain the desired precision and tolerances, shown in plan view in
The inventive MEMS S&A assembly 9,
The MEMS mechanism layer 100,
The S&A frame 10,
Setback slider travel slot 18 guides and constrains the in-plane motion of the setback slider 21 as it progresses from a starting position straddling both the frame and the arming slider to an ending position when it is fully nested inside the arming slider 20. In the straddling position, shown in
The frame also incorporates a set of arming slider travel slot rack teeth 16 that engage with a similar set of rack teeth 26,
Additionally, the frame 10 incorporates a gas expansion chamber 15 that directs propellant gases coming from the command initiator bridge and command initiator spot charge 332,
Finally, a blind hole 333 in
The arming slider 20,
The setback slider 21,
The initiator board assembly 33,
Additional holes in the bottom dielectric layer give access to, and provide explosive loading volume for, two or more initiator bridges, with two bridge locations shown in
Firetrain initiator bridge circuit and fire train initiation spot charge 331 align with and fire into input explosive column 34, that is loaded inside a through-hole in the cover assembly 31, to initiate it.
Alignment holes near the corners of initiator board 33 line up with holes 13 in the S&A frame 10 and with holes in the other stacked components as shown in
The cover assembly 31 protects and mechanically constrains the MEMS S&A mechanism 30,
Output explosive assembly 32
When the arming slider 20 is in the armed position,
When the arming slider 20 is in the safe position,
Description of Second Embodiment, 3 MEMS Assembly Layers
In a second S&A mechanism embodiment 40,
To integrate the above-described variations of this second embodiment, other features from the first embodiment one are rearranged as well, specifically: rack teeth mesh 432 has been moved to the left compared to rack teeth 16 and 26 in the first embodiment; one of the through-holes 13 has been shifted to the side to become shifted alignment hole 431 in the second embodiment; the safe indicator symbol has been removed from the upper arm and the safe indication feature is now arming slider latch arm 44, visible through an observation port in a revised initiator board and cover assembly. The second-embodiment initiator board and cover plate (neither shown) relocate the signal traces 335, the initiator bridges and spot charges 331 and 332 and cover assembly holes 35 and 36 and the viewports 36 and 37 to align with the second-embodiment features described above. In addition, the output explosive assembly 32 is eliminated along with receptor charge hole 333 and its thin membrane because in the second embodiment the explosive firetrain develops and outputs in the plane of the MEMS S&A mechanism 40,
The safety and arming functions and logic of the second embodiment are the same as for the first embodiment.
Description of Third Embodiment, Rotating 3rd S&A Interlock
In a third embodiment,
In the configuration shown in
The rotor assembly, however, can become “enabled.” As in the first embodiment, the arming process of embodiment three begins with deflection of the setback slider 21 downwards into the arming slider and its subsequent latching. Then once the munition is out of the launch tube, the arming slider is free to move rightward under centrifugal acceleration induced by spin about the assembly spin axis,
Once enabled, the fuze circuit can fire the command initiator bridge and spot charge 332 to pressurize command initiator hole 35 to force an expansion of bellows 56, to rotate the bellows rotor assembly 55 counterclockwise from its first position, to disengage rotor head 54 from contact with modified arming slider 52, to allow the arming slider to continue to move rightward under a persisting centrifugal force due to spin about the spin axis 38, until the modified arming slider reaches its end of travel and latches in place in its armed position,
Operation
From the point of manufacture to the point of use the subject MEMS S&A will experience diverse dynamic and inertial inputs, for example as a result of handling in the factory, including, inspection, packaging, freight loading and transportation, storage, and logistical deployment. This will include impacts, accelerations, and a spectrum of vibrational inputs. The invention is designed to “reject” all such inputs and combinations of events, up to but not including the inputs of launch, by retaining the arming slider 20 in the safe position, and to “accept” the spectrum and sequence of inputs that occurs during launch by arming the weapon.
As described above, the S&A mechanical components of the first embodiment of the inventive device are disposed as shown in
The invention will reject vibrational inputs, so far as arming is concerned, because the arming slider is locked in two places by setback slider 21 (1st S&A interlock) and arming slider latch 24 with catch 14, and also because of the tensioned arming slider bias spring 284. The setback slider tends to reject vibrational input, so far as its releasing arming slider is concerned, because of the rack teeth 212 engagement with the frame rack teeth (zigzag slider track) 19, which will tend to dissipate vibrational energy, and also because of the compressive bias on setback slider spring 213, which will tend to keep the slider pressed against the frame at the top of its track 19.
The invention will also reject non-launch acceleration inputs such as impacts, so far as arming is concerned, again because the arming slider is locked in two places by setback slider 21 and arming slider latch 24 with catch 14 (2nd S&A interlock/safety lock), and also because of the tensioned arming slider bias spring 284 which will tend to restore a slightly displaced arming slider back to its safe position. The setback slider (1st S&A interlock) will also reject non-launch impacts or accelerations, so far as its releasing the arming slider is concerned, because of the rack teeth engagement with the frame as previously described, and as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,705,767. The zig-zag engagement mechanical-inertial delay therein described provides a certain amount of safety in that it takes a minimum sustained inertial input such as launch to successfully draw the slider 21 all the way down to its latched position. If not fully drawn down into the latched position, the setback slider will be pushed back towards its original locking position by the compression forces in setback slider reset spring 213, which can push the slider back up at least partway through the rack engagement, thus re-setting it for the next inertial input.
If the setback slider 21 were missing in the assembly, the arming slider would remain in the safe position even after a lateral applied acceleration rightward toward arming, because of the subsequent engagement of slider latch 24 against catch 14. If the lateral acceleration were a short impact, bias spring 284 would tend to draw the arming slider back to the fully out of line position.
During a normal launch event, and while in the gun tube, the projectile body in which the invention operates undergoes large setback acceleration in which all components of the projectile are set back axially toward the rear due to launch acceleration. The projectile body also undergoes an angular acceleration as it is spun up by the rifling in the gun tube. Once the projectile leaves the gun tube, the setback acceleration ceases but the spin continues at a more or less constant rate. The sequential action of setback, tube exit and spin are the environments the invention exploits to validate launch and mechanically arm the weapon.
During a normal launch event, with the MEMS S&A oriented as indicated in
In the configuration of
Upon tube exit, however, the forced engagement between rack 26 and rack 16 is discontinued, freeing the arming slider 20 from its 1st position, as shown in
This locking action of the arming slider latch 24 against the safety catch 14 comprises the second safety lock, or interlock, and prevents further advance of the arming slider. Upon removal of the 2nd safety interlock, and with continued centrifugal spin acceleration, the arming slider will travel across and latch in the “armed” position, meaning that the transfer charge cavity 29 is aligned with firetrain bridge and spot charge 331 at one end and with receptor charge hole 333 at another end.
Motion of the arming slider to the second locked position “enables” the second safety lock's “command lock release” function, by forming a stop as shown in
In this invention, the fuze actually performs a command second-safety-interlock removal, and continued spin-induced centrifugal acceleration is required to actually move the arming slider to its armed position. So it is true of this invention that all arming energy comes from the launch environment, because if spin is not present, the tension of bias spring 284 will draw the arming slider back toward a safe position, and the slider will not advance to an armed state.
If the command charge is functioned prematurely, for example while the arming slider is in its safe position, so that there is a big gap between latch 26 and catch 14, the pressurized gases in chamber 15 and exiting through nozzle 151 pass rapidly through the open gap and pressurize latch mechanism cavity 242, driving and deforming the arming slider latch 24 downward against the frame,
Fuze safety is enhanced by the requirement that the arming environments must occur in a specific sequence or order: first setback acceleration exceeding a particular threshold and duration, then rightward lateral acceleration due to spin, with spin continuing for some time. If spin or a sideways acceleration occurs before setback, the arming slider cannot advance because the setback lock (setback slider engaging both frame and arming slider,
If an imposed acceleration is of insufficient duration and magnitude, the setback slider will not be induced to travel all the way down its inertial-delay zigzag track and then go beyond, against spring compression forces, and latch at the end of travel, and the arming slider will remain locked in a safe position by the continuing engagement of the setback slider 21 between the setback slot 18 and setback slider slot 202. If the command charge functions prematurely, the arming slider fails safe because second safety latch arm 24 is not removed. If the command charge does not function, the situation is the same. If the arming slider advances to an armed position, but latch head 22 fails to latch into socket 12, then once the munition spin rate reduces sufficiently or stops, pre-tensioned bias spring 284 will retract the arming slider to a safe position.
The operation of the second alternative embodiment of the subject invention, as disclosed in
The operation of the third alternative embodiment device of
Fabrication and Assembly
The preferred method of construction is to fabricate setback and arming mechanism (SAM) 30 using MEMS wafer-based lithographic plating and molding technology to achieve a metal, preferably nickel, part with at least nearly vertical side walls, smooth planar features on top and bottom faces, and tight in-plane dimensional tolerances on the order of ±5 microns. A suitable MEMS micro-fabrication technique to form such metal parts would be LIGA (LIthographie, Galvanoformung, Abformung). An alternative method to bring down cost would be to use lithographically based mold tools (LIGA tools) to press or form a number of additional molds, for example of plastic, that can in turn be plated into with metal to form precision parts. If desired, the arming slider 20 and the setback slider 21 can be fabricated separately and joined during assembly. See
The frame 10 is preferably fabricated of metal and formed using similar lithographic-based plating and molding (LIGA) techniques. Alternative and more economic fabrication methods may include the use of LIGA or precision mold tools used as part of micro-die-casting, micro-injection molding or molding-and-sintering type technologies in structural materials such as steel, aluminum or tungsten. Fabricating the frame and the SAM of the same material reduces or eliminates changes to the working clearances due to differential thermal expansion and corrosion due to dissimilar metals.
The cover assembly 31 is preferably fabricated from a suitable non-brittle material that provides structural integrity and adequate explosive confinement for input explosive column 34 and command charge gases in hole 35, such as aluminum, steel, or structural plastic. It also provides a planar ceiling or cover to allow motion of the moving parts of the MEMS S&A assembly, the SAM 30, while constraining them in-plane with the frame. There is preferably a working clearance inside the assembly between the cover and the top of the SAM and between the substrate and the bottom of the SAM, to allow motion of the sliders.
The preferred method of construction assures good working clearance also between the working mechanism and features on the frame, such as the setback slider zigzag track 19 and the arming slider travel slot 11, on the order of 5 to 30 microns, but not so much clearance that the zig-zag track does not engage with the setback slider rack teeth 212.
The base 32 is preferably fabricated in metal such as aluminum or steel or possibly zinc, or suitable alloys not including copper that provide adequate explosive confinement for the output charge in cavity 334 as well as structural rigidity for the MEMS S&A assembly 9. If pins 8 are used to fasten the assembly, they are preferably welded to the base 32.
Initiator board 33 and edge card connector 336 is preferably fabricated of typical multi-layer circuit board materials.
Another alternative MEMS fabrication methodology utilizes new technologies, for example multi-pass precision metal stamping or bulk metallic glass forming, that can achieve the same results and dimensional resolution as the preferred LIGA-based methods produce and also achieve the intended results of the invention, including mechanism function, firetrain implementation, fuze circuit interface, etc. For example, the cover assembly 31 and output explosive assembly 32 could be fabricated using micro-mold and sinter or micro-die-casting type technologies. The frame 100 and substrate 111 could be fabricated as one homogeneous part using one of the above technologies as well.
Alternatively, the subject inventive device can be implemented at an arbitrary scale, for example at a scale that is larger than the typical feature sizes for micro-scale, lithographic fabrication techniques such as LIGA. Such a device would have all the same function and features, except that working clearances might be significantly larger or different than the microns or tens-of-microns scale of MEMS fabrication, allowing possibly for manufacture using “macro scale” or traditional technology to make the parts, such as stamping, die casting, molding and sintering, etc.
This application is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/434,093, filed on May 1, 2009 now U.S. Pat. No. 8,276,515, where both this application and the currently copending Ser. No. 12/434,093 application claim the benefit under 35 USC §119(e) of U.S. provisional patent application 61/049,585, filed on May 1, 2008, which provisional application is hereby incorporated by reference.
The inventions described herein may be manufactured, used, and/or licensed by the U.S. Government for U.S. Government purposes.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6167809 | Robinson et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6314887 | Robinson | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6321654 | Robinson | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6568329 | Robinson | May 2003 | B1 |
6964231 | Robinson et al. | Nov 2005 | B1 |
7055437 | Robinson et al. | Jun 2006 | B1 |
7069861 | Robinson et al. | Jul 2006 | B1 |
7530312 | Roesler et al. | May 2009 | B1 |
7552681 | Laib et al. | Jun 2009 | B1 |
7913623 | Fan et al. | Mar 2011 | B1 |
8276515 | Robinson et al. | Oct 2012 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61049585 | May 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12434093 | May 2009 | US |
Child | 13412915 | US |