NO SHEAR GAS KEY AND CARRIER SYSTEM
20210010767 ยท 2021-01-14
Inventors
Cpc classification
F41A5/18
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41A3/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41A5/24
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F41A3/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41A5/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A shear resistant bolt carrier and gas key are provided having a mating recoil lug and recoil lug slot that transfer shear forces between the gas key and bolt carrier to reduce and eliminate shear forces on the screw attachment points and eliminate a point of failure in the bolt carrier group (BGC).
Claims
1. A bolt carrier group for a firearm comprising: a gas key including a first and second screw holes, a gas passage and at least a first shear absorption component on the gas key; and a bolt carrier having a gas hole, a first and second screw holes arranged to align with the first and second screw holes of the gas key and adapted for receiving a screw in each screw hole for securing the gas key to the bolt carrier, and at least a second shear absorption component on the bolt carrier arranged to engage the first shear absorption component of the gas key.
2. The bolt carrier as recited in claim 1 wherein the first shear absorption component and the second shear absorption component comprise a recoil lug and a recoil lug slot.
3. The bolt carrier group as recited in claim 2 wherein the recoil lug is a protrusion having a cross-section shape in the form of a rounded rectangle, and the recoil lug slot is one of a detent or hole having side walls in the form of a rounded rectangle sized to receive the recoil lug.
4. The bolt carrier group as recited in claim 1 wherein the first shear absorption component is a recoil lug slot and the second shear absorption component is a recoil lug.
5. The bolt carrier group as recited in claim 3 wherein the recoil lug is a protrusion having a cross-section shape in the form of one of a square, rectangle, circle, or T and the recoil lug slot is one of a detent or hole having side walls in the form of one of a square, rectangle, circle or T selected and sized to receive the recoil lug.
6. The bolt carrier group as recited in claim 1 wherein the bolt carrier includes a plurality of shear absorption components adapted to engagement a plurality of shear absorption components on the gas key.
7. The bolt carrier group as recited in claim 1 wherein the bolt carrier extends from a first end to a second end to define a first longitudinal axis, and wherein the gas key extends from a first end to a second end to form a second longitudinal axis, wherein when the gas key is fixed to the bolt carrier second so that the second longitudinal axis is parallel to and in space relation with the first longitudinal axis.
8. The bolt carrier group as recited in claim 7 wherein the first shear absorption component and second shear absorption component are arranged to engage and transfer force in a direction parallel to the first longitudinal axis and second longitudinal axis during operation of the bolt carrier group.
9. The bolt carrier group as recited in claim 7 wherein the first shear absorption component and second shear absorption component do not prevent the gas key from moving in a direction perpendicular to the first longitudinal axis or second longitudinal axis.
10. The bolt carrier group as recited in claim 1 wherein the first and second shear absorption components do not fixedly secure the gas key to the bolt carrier.
11. The bolt carrier group as recited in claim 2 wherein the recoil lug is integrally molded in one of the gas key or the bolt carrier.
12. The bolt carrier group as recited in claim 2 wherein the recoil lug is a removable pin protruding from one of the gas key or the bolt carrier.
13. A bolt carrier group for a firearm comprising: a gas key having a first and second screw holes and a recoil lug arranged along a bottom surface, and a gas passage extending from a forward facing inlet portion at a front portion of the gas key to a downward facing outlet portion on the bottom surface adjacent one of the first or second screw holes, wherein the recoil lug is integrally formed with the gas key, disposed between the first and second screw holes, extends downwardly from the bottom of the gas key and has a cross-sectional shape in the form of a rounded rectangle; and a bolt carrier having a first and second screw holes, a recoil lug slot and a gas hole arranged along an upper surface of the bolt carrier, wherein the first and second screw holes are arranged to align with the first and second screw holes of the gas key and are adapted for receiving a screw in each screw hole for securing the gas key to the bolt carrier, and wherein the recoil lug slot is integrally formed in the bolt carrier upper surface, shaped in the form of a rounded rectangle and sized and arranged to receive and engage the recoil lug of the gas key, and wherein the gas hole of the bolt carrier is arranged to align with the outlet of the gas passage on the bottom surface of the gas key.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0010] The accompanying drawings illustrate various non-limiting examples and innovative aspects of the shear resistant bolt carrier and gas key in accordance with the present description:
[0011]
[0012]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0013] simplified overview, an improved bolt carrier and gas key are described herein for minimizing and eliminating BCG failure due to shear forces during the firing cycle. For example, the present disclosure is directed to a BCG having a bolt carrier fitted with gas key wherein the gas key has an integral recoil lug incorporated into the bottom side of the key to receive and transfer the shear force produced by the high pressure gas. The recoil lug shall fit into a female recoil lug slot or hole cut into the bolt carrier of sufficient size and dimensions to allow the lug to fit into the slot. The gas key may be held in position by the two screws just as in the current system, however, the screws will no longer take the shear force. The shear force will instead be transferred in whole or in part between the gas key and bolt carrier by the recoil lug and recoil lug slot interface, thus eliminating the possibility of broken screws.
[0014] An embodiment of the BCG bolt carrier and gas key components is shown in
[0015] The gas key recoil lug 34 is preferably sized, shaped and arranged, to be received in the bolt carrier recoil lug slot 14 when the gas key 30 is fitted to the bolt carrier 10, and the screw holes 32 of the gas key 30 and screw holes 12 of the bolt carrier 10 are arrange so that they are aligned to receive securing screws (not shown) to secure the gas key 30 to the bolt carrier 10. In this arrangement the bolt carrier gas hole 16 is also adapted and arranged to align with the outlet of the gas channel or passage 36 on the bottom of the gas key 30 when the gas key 30 is secured to the bolt carrier 10 using the screw holes 12. The gas hole 16 is in communication with a gas chamber (not shown), formed by a tail end of the bolt (not shown), a set of bolt gas rings (not shown), and an internal space 24 in the bolt carrier 10. Also present on the bolt carrier 10 is a hammer clearance slot 22, which permits the hammer (not shown) to extend into the bolt carrier 20 and strike a firing pin (not shown).
[0016] In this arrangement the gasses produced by the burning powder from the fired cartridge travels down the barrel, through the gas port in the barrel, into the gas tube which extends into the gas passage 36 of the gas key 30, which forms a pathway to move the gas traveling through the gas tube (not shown) into the bolt carrier 10. The high pressure gas which may exceed 60,000 PSI is used to force the BCG backward, putting high shear forces on the interface between the gas key 30 and bolt carrier 10. In the disclosed embodiments these shear forces are received and transferred between the gas key 30 and bolt carrier 10 through shear absorption components the recoil lug 34 and recoil lug slot 14, thus eliminating or reducing any shear force on the securing screws (not shown) in screw holes 12 and 32, and eliminating or minimizing any risk of failure of the securing screws (not shown).
[0017] While as depicted in the illustrative embodiment, the recoil lug 34 and recoil lug slot 14 are formed in mating rectangular shapes with rounded or chamfered corners, in alternate embodiments the recoil lug 34 and recoil lug slot 14 may be in a circular, triangular, square, hexagon, pentagon, T or X shaped or other shapes with either sharp, rounded or chamfered corners. While the illustrative embodiment also depicts the recoil lug 34 and recoil lug slot 14 as being disposed between the screw holes 12 and 32, in other embodiments the placement of the recoil lug 34 and recoil lug slot 14 may be in other arrangement where the screw hole pairs 12 and 32 are adjacent one another and the recoil lug 34 and recoil lug slot 14 are adjacent to the out let of the gas passage 36 and gas hole 16, respectively. In yet other embodiments this may be reversed so that the recoil lug 34 is most distant from the outlet of the gas passage 36 and the recoil lug slot 14 is most distant from the gas hole 16. In further alternate embodiments, the arrangement of the recoil lug 34 and recoil lug slot 14 may be reversed so that the recoil lug 34 may be on the bolt carrier 10, and the recoil lug slot 14 may be on the gas key 30. In yet further alternate embodiments the bolt carrier 10 may include more than one recoil lug 34 or recoil lug slots 14 or a combination of a recoil lugs 34 and recoil lug slots 14, and have mating reciprocal recoil lugs 34 and/or recoil lug slots 14 on the gas key 30.
[0018] It should be understood that this description (including the figures) is only representative of some illustrative embodiments. For the convenience of the reader, the above description has focused on representative samples of all possible embodiments, and samples that teach the principles of the disclosure. The description has not attempted to exhaustively enumerate all possible variations. That alternate embodiments may not have been presented for a specific portion of the disclosure, or that further undescribed alternate embodiments may be available for a portion, is not to be considered a disclaimer of those alternate embodiments. One of ordinary skill will appreciate that many of those undescribed embodiments incorporate the same principles of the disclosure as claimed and others are equivalent.