DUAL FOCAL PLANE RETICLES FOR OPTICAL SIGHTING DEVICES
20210239425 · 2021-08-05
Inventors
Cpc classification
F41G1/38
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41G1/473
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G02B27/32
PHYSICS
International classification
F41G1/34
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41G1/38
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41G1/473
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A dual focal plane optical sighting device, such as a riflescope, having two focal planes, with a first reticle at the first focal plane, and a second reticle at the second focal plane. The reticle at the first focal plane is a glass etched reticle; the reticle at the second focal plane is a wire reticle. The two reticles have different patterns or markings providing the appearance of a single reticle or complementary markings when viewed through the optical sighting device.
Claims
1. An optical sighting device comprising: a body with a first end and a second end and having a center axis; an objective lens system disposed within the body; an eyepiece lens disposed within the body; an erector lens system disposed within the body; the objective lens system, eyepiece lens, and erector lens system forming an optical system having a first focal plane and a second focal plane, the first focal plane proximate the objective lens system and the second focal plane proximate the eyepiece lens; a first reticle at the first focal plane; a second reticle at the second focal plane; and the first reticle including at least one first marking; the second reticle including at least one second marking; and wherein the at least one first marking and the at least one second marking provide complementary markings creating the appearance of a single reticle when viewed along the center axis.
2. The optical sighting device of claim 1, wherein the first reticle is a glass etched reticle.
3. The optical sighting device of claim 1, wherein the second reticle is a wire reticle.
4. The optical sighting device of claim 2 wherein the first reticle includes at least one subtension marking
5. The optical sighting device of claim 2 wherein the first reticle includes mil dot markings.
6. The optical sighting device of claim 3, wherein the second reticle includes at least one stadia line.
7. The optical sighting device of claim 1, wherein the first reticle has a pattern of markings.
8. The optical sighting device of claim 1, wherein the second reticle includes at least one target dot.
9. The optical sighting device of claim 8, wherein the at least one target dot is illuminated by an LED.
10. The optical sighting device of claim 9, wherein the at least one target dot comprises an optic fiber having a first end and a second end, wherein light enters the first end and illuminates the second end.
11. The optical sighting device of claim 10, wherein the optic fiber includes a light collector at the first end.
12. The optical sighting device of claim 10, wherein the second end includes an angled cut wherein the light reflects off of the angled cut.
13. The optical sighting device of claim 10, wherein the optic fiber is aligned with and tracks along a stadia line.
14. The optical sighting device of claim 1, wherein either the first reticle or the second reticle is a wire reticle.
15. The optical sighting device of claim 14, wherein the second reticle is a wire reticle having at least one target dot illuminated by an LED, the target dot comprising an optic fiber having a first end and a second end, the first end including a light collector and the second end including an angled cut wherein the light from the LED passes through the optic fiber and reflects off of the angled cut.
16. An optical sighting device comprising: a body with a first end and a second end and having a center axis; an objective lens system disposed within the body; an eyepiece lens disposed within the body; an erector lens system disposed within the body; the objective lens system, eyepiece lens, and erector lens system forming an optical system having a first focal plane and a second focal plane, the first focal plane proximate the objective lens system and the second focal plane proximate the eyepiece lens; a first reticle at the first focal plane; a second reticle at the second focal plane; the first reticle including at least one first marking; the second reticle including at least one second marking; wherein the at least one first marking and second marking do not overlap each other when viewed along the center axis; and wherein the second reticle is a wire reticle.
17. The optical sighting device of claim 16, wherein the second reticle has at least one target dot illuminated by an LED, the target dot comprising an optic fiber having a first end and a second end, the first end including a light collector and the second end including an angled cut wherein the light from the LED passes through the optic fiber and reflects off of the angled cut.
18. The optical sighting device of claim 17, wherein the optic fiber is aligned with and tracks along a stadia line.
19. An optical system for use in an optical sighting device, the optical system comprising: an objective lens system; an erector system; an eyepiece; a glass etched reticle located at a first focal plane between the objective lens system and the erector system, the glass etched reticle having a marking pattern; a wire reticle at a second focal plane between the erector system and the eyepiece, the wire reticle including stadia lines; wherein the marking pattern of the glass etched reticle appears to be superimposed on the stadia lines of the wire reticle when the reticles are viewed through the eyepiece.
20. The optical system of claim 19, wherein the wire reticle at the second focal plane further comprises an illuminated feature.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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SUMMARY
[0040] An optical sighting device includes an objective lens system having a center axis, an eyepiece lens, and an erector lens system forming an optical system having a first focal plane and a second focal plane, the first focal plane proximate the objective lens system, and the second focal plane proximate the eyepiece lens. The optical system has a first reticle at the first focal plane and a second reticle at the second focal plane. The reticle at the first focal plane is a glass etched reticle, and the reticle at the second focal plane is a wire reticle. The first reticle and the second reticle include at least one first marking and at least one secondary marking that complement each other to create the appearance of a single reticle when viewed along the center axis.
[0041] An alternative embodiment of the present invention is an objective lens system having a body with a center axis and with an objective lens system disposed within the body. An eyepiece lens is also disposed within the body. The objective lens system and the eyepiece lens are parts of an erector lens system that has a first focal plane and a second focal plane. A first reticle is disposed at the first focal plane and a second reticle, which is a wire reticle, is disposed at the second focal plane. The first reticle includes at least one first marking and the second reticle includes at least one second marking. The first and second markings do not overlap each other when viewed along the center axis.
[0042] Yet another embodiment of the present invention is an optical system for use in an optical sighting device that includes an objective lens system, an erector system, and an eyepiece. A glass etched reticle having a marking pattern is located at a first focal plane between the objective lens system and the erector system. A wire reticle including stadia lines is located at a second focal plane between the erector system and the eyepiece. The glass etched reticle and wire reticle are aligned to that the marking pattern of the glass etched reticle appears to be superimposed on the stadia lines of the wire reticle when the reticles are viewed through the eyepiece.
[0043] It will be understood by those skilled in the art that one or more aspects of this invention can meet certain objectives, while one or more other aspects can lead to certain other objectives. Other objects, features, benefits and advantages of the present invention will be apparent in this summary and descriptions of the disclosed embodiment, and will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art. Such objects, features, benefits and advantages will be apparent from the above as taken in conjunction with the accompanying figures and all reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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[0047] In one embodiment of a dual focal plane optical sighting device 10, a glass reticle 60 (such as a glass etched reticle) is positioned at the first focal plane 20 and an electronic reticle 70 (such as an OLED reticle) is positioned in the second focal plane 30. The pattern on the glass reticle 60 could be a cross hair with hash marks, for example, and the pattern of the electronic reticle 70 could be a dot as seen in
[0048] In an alternate embodiment, the electronic reticle 70 is placed on the same focal plane as the glass reticle 60. In yet another alternate embodiment, the electronic reticle 70 could be positioned at the first focal plane 20 and the glass reticle 60 positioned at the second focal plane 30. In additional embodiments, wire reticles could be used in either focal plane position.
[0049] With any dual focal plane optical sighting device, the two reticles have to be properly aligned so that when they are viewed by a user from the eye piece, the reticles appear aligned as seen in
[0050] In a dual focal plane optical sighting device 10 the first focal plane 20 and second focal plane 30 may be rather far apart and the reticles themselves are physically rather small (although through the eyepiece they may appear large). For example, glass etched reticles are generally about 10 microns, and some reticles have lines that are 0.005 mm thick. As another example, the first focal plane and second focal plane could be separated by a distance of 50-100 mm within the body of a sighting device. As such, it is difficult to get a precise alignment over that distance. Alignment of such small reticles requires very small movements. If the dual focal plane optical sighting device features two glass etched reticles, alignment must be done mechanically to a high degree of precision, which is difficult and costly to accomplish. Alternatively, if the dual focal plane optical sighting device features two electronic reticles, a power failure results in having no reticle at all. Thus, one advantage of having one glass reticle 60 and one electronic reticle 70 in a dual focal plane optical sighting device 10 is to simplify the complexity and cost of mechanically aligning the two reticles. Dual reticle alignment can be simplified by requiring less or even no mechanical alignment, depending on the manufacturing process used. For example, electronic reticle 70 could be digitally aligned with glass etched reticle 60 using computerized or automated processes. Some OLED screen reticles have pixels that are under 5 microns. Since this is about half the line width of the glass reticle, it easier to align the digital reticle. Further, if a power failure occurs with the optical sighting device, the glass reticle will remain visible and operative as a backup aiming solution.
[0051] The dual focal plane optical sighting device 10 could also have a memory chip or internal processor, for example within controller 82, which contains various electronic reticle options, such as the dot from
[0052] In some embodiments, the optical sighting device 10 can also be particularly useful with firearms that can accommodate both a supersonic bullet and a subsonic bullet. For example, the 300 blackout bullet is a bullet that can be used either way, although in other rifles, different bullets can be used for each function. Supersonic is faster and carries more energy. Subsonic is much quieter, especially when used with a sound suppressor or silencer on a rifle. Certain shooters, such as special operations shooters, like to have both options, and like to interchange which bullet type they use based on the mission.
[0053] The optical sighting device 10 of this disclosure can accommodate this interchangeability. In one embodiment, the optical sighting device 10 is adapted to be used with a supersonic bullet and a subsonic bullet. The optical sighting device 10 can include a controller 82 including a memory chip or internal processor for causing at least two marking patterns to be displayed on the electronic reticle, the first pattern 75 illustrating hold over or angular markings for use with the supersonic bullet, and the second pattern 80 illustrating hold over or angular markings for use with the subsonic bullet, the second pattern having greater spacing between the markings than in the first pattern.
[0054] Further, when the glass reticle 60 is in the second focal plane with a few hash marks, and the electronic reticle 70 is in the first focal plane, a switch 84 on the riflescope changes a series of drop dots or other “hold over” aiming points or angular markings based on the bullet used (subsonic vs. supersonic). Different colors, shapes, or any combination thereof can be used to differentiate between the hold-over features, depending on whether supersonic or subsonic was selected. In the embodiment illustrated in
[0055] In any of the embodiments disclosed herein, a glass etched or non-electronic reticle can also have basic angular markings (MOA or MRAD) hashed to be used if battery power fails, with the dots corresponding to a crosswind speed.
[0056] The alignment issue identified above may be addressed by separating elements of the reticles in the first and second focal planes and superimposing those elements, such that reticle markings in the first focal plane and reticle markings in the second focal plane are complimentary. One example of this alignment problem is shown in
[0057] When the reticles 100, 200 are in perfect alignment, the first focal plane stadia lines 102, 104 are indistinguishable from second focal plane stadia lines 202, 204. If the reticles 100, 200 are out of alignment for any reason, however, including when the user simply moves his line of sight out of perfect alignment with center axis 150 (see
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[0061] Aligning glass etched reticle 300 and wire reticle 400 creates the illusion of viewing a single reticle when viewed through the optical sighting device 10. Unlike existing dual focal plane optical sighting devices that include reticles having markings that overlay each other as described above, using glass etched reticle 300 in combination with wire reticle 400 eliminates any double vision issues as shown in
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[0065] Additionally, the previously described electronic reticle 70 may be used in the first focal plane 20, wherein the electronic reticle 70 would not include the vertical and horizontal stadia lines present in wire reticle 400. The flexibility of the electronic reticle 70 display is ideal for providing a shooter with a variety of reticle pattern options, which could be superimposed over the features of wire reticle 400.
[0066] Although the invention has been herein described in what is perceived to be the most practical and preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not intended to be limited to the specific embodiments set forth above. Rather, it is recognized that modifications may be made by one of skill in the art of the invention without departing from the spirit or intent of the invention and, therefore, the invention is to be taken as including all reasonable equivalents to the subject matter of the appended claims and the description of the invention herein.