The present disclosure relates generally to a system and tools for cleaning firearm components, including a bolt and bolt carrier, for firearms such as an M4, M16, AR15 and other rifles and carbines, for example; more particularly to a single cleaning tool adapted to scrape deposits from the surfaces of a bolt, a bolt carrier and firing pin of a such a firearm.
Carbon and other residue from gunpowder and from firearm discharge reactions accumulate on firearm components over time, with deleterious effects on cleanliness, performance, and longevity of the firearm. Firearm discharge residue accumulates on various firearm components that require disassembly of the firearm and subassemblies to access and clean the firearm. Even then, carbon and other discharge residue tend to be tenacious and difficult to remove. Some firearm components typically need to be scraped with a hard scraping tool to have discharge residue effectively removed, but this must be done without scratching or damaging the firearm components themselves. Various firearm components also have complex shapes that make cleaning discharge residue a challenge. For example, the bolt and bolt carrier of a 5.56 or 7.62 cartridge M4, M16 or AR15 sytle rifles have complicated shapes, such as the concave shape of the nose of the bolt, the complementary housing of the bolt carrier and the external surface of the elongated firing pin that have proven to be persistently difficult to clean effectively. A number of specialized scraping tools have been introduced to clean firearm components, but have had substantial shortcomings. See, for example, US Patent Application Publication No. US 2012/0186127, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Although prior art bolt scraping tools can be useful and may be advantageous for certain applications, they suffer from drawbacks. One significant drawback is that a prior art bolt scraping tool may be adapted for scraping only the outer surface of a weapon bolt, whereas the bolt carrier into which the bolt slides can also benefit from a scraper contoured to fit the inner surfaces of the bolt carrier. The incorporated reference discloses both a bolt scraping tool and a bolt carrier scraping tool, as two separate tools.
An improvement in the scraper art is a unified cleaning tool adapted to scrape the outer surfaces of a bolt, the inner surfaces of a bolt carrier and the outer surface of a firing pin of such a firearm.
Briefly described, a unified bolt and bolt carrier cleaning tool in accordance with the present invention comprises a generally cylindrical body having a female bolt scraper arrangement formed at a first end thereof and a male bolt carrier scraper arrangement formed at an opposite end thereof. The female bolt scraper arrangement includes an axial well having at least one scraping blade, and preferably two, formed in a wall thereof, the blade being shaped to conform to the outer surfaces of the bolt face of a bolt assembly of a weapon such as an M4, M16 or AR15 style rifle. The male bolt carrier scraper arrangement includes at least one longitudinal scraping blade, and preferably three arranged symmetrically, formed in the outer surface and end of the cylindrical body, the blade being shaped to conform to an inner surface of a bolt-receiving chamber of the bolt carrier. Preferably, a unified cleaning tool in accordance with the present invention further comprises a transverse threaded bore in the cylindrical tool body for receiving any of various auxiliary tool elements such as a wire brush attachment for assisting in cleaning the bolt-receiving and/or firing chamber of a weapon. In such application, the tool body simply functions as a T-handle for the auxiliary tool element. Preferably, such a tool further comprises a second transverse bore and associated circular recess having at least one scraper blade for cleaning the surface of a firing pin extracted from the bolt.
The features described herein can be better understood with reference to the drawings described below. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead generally being placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention. In the drawings, like numerals are used to indicate like parts throughout the various views:
Referring to
Bolt assembly 14 comprises an outer surface including a gas ring surface 20 that serves as a gas sealing ring holding section of bolt assembly 14. A gas sealing ring 22 is typically disposed in annular depression in gas ring surface 20. The outer surface further comprises a bolt cylindrical section 24 and a curved bolt face 26.
Firing pin 16, depicted in
Chamber 12, including seating wall 18, and also cylindrical section 24, and curved bolt face 26 are prone to collecting byproducts of ammunition being fired, which can interfere with further operation of the weapon and periodically require cleaning as by scraping and brushing.
It is an important object of the present invention to provide a unified bolt and bolt carrier cleaning tool comprising at least a carrier chamber scraper arrangement and a bolt scraper arrangement in a single tool. It is another object of the invention to provide an additional scraping tool to clean a portion of a firing pin of an associated firearm.
Referring now to
A first embodiment 34 of a bolt scraper arrangement includes an axial bore including a cylindrical wall section 38, a curved wall section 39, and having at least one scraping blade 40, and preferably two, formed in a wall thereof, the blade being shaped to conform to the outer surfaces of the cylindrical and curved bolt faces 24, 26 and the gas ring 22 of bolt assembly 14. Blades 40 are the result of forming first axial recesses 42 offset from the longitudinal axis 37 of the bore and intersecting cylindrical wall section 38 tangentially at first recess edges 44 and normally at second recess edges 46; and second axial recesses 48 also beside and intersecting cylindrical wall section 38 along the same longitudinal lines as second recess edges 46, creating sharp first and second scraping blades 40. In end portion 50 of body 32, blades 40 are progressively flared through the curved wall section 39 from cylindrical wall section 38 to the end of body 32, conforming to the cylindrical and curved sections of the bolt face 26. Preferably, body 32 has an increased diameter and is knurled 52 (as shown) or axially or radially grooved (not shown) on a portion of the outer surface of bolt scraper arrangement 34 to provide a firm grip for manual rotation of tool 30 by a user.
An alternative embodiment 34′ of a bolt scraper arrangement includes a cylindrical axial well 38′ having at least one scraping blade 40′, and preferably two, formed in a wall thereof, the blade being shaped to conform to the outer surfaces of the cylindrical and curved bolt faces 24, 26 and the gas ring 22 of bolt assembly 14. Blades 40′ are the result of forming first axial recesses 42′ beside and intersecting cylindrical well 38′ tangentially at first recess edges 44′ and normally at second recess edges 46′. In this embodiment, first axial recesses 42′ are simply slots that extend through outer surface of the body adjacent to the knurled or grooved surface 52. As in first embodiment 34, second axial recesses 48′ also interrupt cylindrical well 38′ along the same longitudinal lines as second recess edges 46′, creating sharp first and second scraping blades 40′. In this alternative embodiment, the internal axial bore of the first end is not continuous as it is interrupted by the slots. Blades 40′ are progressively flared from well 38′ to the end of body 32, conformal with bolt surface 26.
Bolt carrier scraper arrangement 36 includes at least one longitudinal scraping blade 54, and preferably three arranged symmetrically, formed by longitudinal incising 56 of outer surface 58 and end 60 of cylindrical body 32, blade 54 being shaped to conform to the inner surface of the bolt carrier chamber 12 and end wall 18. Preferably, the transition region 62 between cylinder surface 58 and end surface 60 is beveled or curved to mate with a similar transition at the end of bolt carrier chamber 12.
Preferably, a unified cleaning tool 30 in accordance with the present invention further comprises a first transverse threaded bore 70 in cylindrical tool body 32 for receiving any of various auxiliary tool elements such as a wire brush attachment 72 (
Preferably, a unified cleaning tool in accordance with the present invention further comprises a second transverse bore 80 and associated circular recess 82. Bore 80 includes at least one scraper blade 84 for cleaning the shaft 86 of a firing pin 16, 88 extracted from bolt 14. Circular recess 82 is provided with at least one scraper blade 83, and preferably four, for cleaning the surface of flange 90 on firing pin 16, 88 when the firing pin is rotated in second bore 80 by a user.
Use of the exemplary embodiments of the invention is described in
The bolt receiving cavity 12 may be further cleaned by inserting the end 36 of the tool having the male scraper arrangement into the bolt receiving cavity 12 as shown in
With respect to
With respect to
While the present invention has been described with reference to a number of specific embodiments, it will be understood that the true spirit and scope of the invention should be determined only with respect to claims that can be supported by the present specification. Further, while in numerous cases herein wherein systems and apparatuses and methods are described as having a certain number of elements it will be understood that such systems, apparatuses and methods can be practiced with fewer than the mentioned certain number of elements. Also, while a number of particular embodiments have been described, it will be understood that features and aspects that have been described with reference to each particular embodiment can be used with each remaining particularly described embodiment.
The present application draws priority from a provisional U.S. Provisional patent application, Ser. No. 61/734,759, filed Dec. 7, 2012. The present application also incorporates by reference in its entirety US Patent Application Publication No. US 2012/0186127, which is owned by the common assignee of this application.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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61734759 | Dec 2012 | US |