Takedown pin and bolt catch for a firearm
10704851 ยท 2020-07-07
Inventors
Cpc classification
F41A11/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41A3/72
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41A17/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F41A17/42
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41A17/36
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The present invention is for a rear takedown pin and a bolt catch for use in a firearm such as an AR-15. The rear takedown pin has an elongated recess, a track, a slot, and a spring along an elongated cylindrical body that allows an upper and lower receiver of a firearm, such as an AR-15, to disengage, while the pin remains in the upper and lower receiver holes, thereby allowing a user to quickly replace a magazine without the barrel of the firearm rotating away from the preset aimed position. The invention also includes a bolt catch that allows a user to toggle a release to keep a bolt in its open opinion as well as provides a retractable pin that complies with magazine release lock regulations so a user can quickly replace a spent magazine.
Claims
1. A bolt catch device for a firearm, the firearm having a bolt that slides between a latched and an unlatched position, the device comprising: a) a main body that is substantially L-shaped, the main body having a first leg and a second leg substantially perpendicular to the first leg; b) a bolt catch tab for catching a bolt; c) a spring member disposed within a hole in the first leg of the main body; d) a magazine release blocking pin at least partially disposed and partially retractable within a hole on a bottom side of the second leg; e) a pad for toggling the bolt catch into a latching and unlatching position for a bolt; and, f) an elongated main body aperture sized i) to fit a rotation pin that allows the bolt catch to rotate around the rotation pin and ii) to allow the bolt catch to rise and lower in response to force exerted by the spring member; whereby the bolt of the firearm is held in a latched position by interaction of the bolt with the bolt catch, and the bolt catch is configured to allow latching and unlatching of the bolt by a user.
2. The bolt catch device of claim 1 wherein the pad is an oval-shaped disc.
3. The bolt catch device of claim 1, wherein the magazine release blocking pin is positioned at a non-perpendicular angle from the bottom side of the second leg.
4. The bolt catch device of claim 3, wherein the magazine release blocking pin is between five degrees and twenty degrees offset from the bottom side of the second leg.
5. The bolt catch device of claim 4, wherein the magazine release blocking pin is approximately ten degrees offset from the bottom side of the second leg.
6. The bolt catch device of claim 3, wherein the elongated main body aperture is between 4 mm and 5 mm in length, and between 2 mm and 3 mm in width, whereby dimensions of the elongated main body aperture i) allows for sufficient rotation around an axis of the rotation pin within the elongated main body aperture and ii) allows the bolt catch to rise and lower in response to force exerted by the spring member.
7. The bolt catch device of claim 1 further comprising a second spring member, the second spring member disposed with the second leg of the main body adjacent the magazine release blocking pin, whereby force exerted by the second spring member forces the magazine release blocking pin to project downward unless manually retracted upward by a user, thereby having a default position of the magazine release blocking pin down in a blocking position.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(16) The invention now will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention may however be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art.
(17) It will be understood that when an element is referred to as being on another element, it can be directly on the other element or intervening elements may be present therebetween. As used herein, the term and/or includes any and all combinations of one or more of the associated listed items.
(18) It will be understood that, although the terms first, second, third etc. may be used herein to describe various elements, components, regions, layers, and/or sections, these elements, components, regions, layers, and/or sections should not be limited by these terms. These terms are only used to distinguish one element, component, region, layer, and/or section from another element, component, region, layer, and/or section.
(19) It will be understood that the elements, components, regions, layers and sections depicted in the figures are not necessarily drawn to scale.
(20) The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only, and is not intended to be limiting of the invention. As used herein, the singular forms a, an, and the are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. It will be further understood that the terms comprises and/or comprising, or includes and/or including when used in this specification, specify the presence of stated features, regions, integers, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, regions, integers, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof.
(21) Furthermore, relative terms, such as lower or bottom, upper or top, left or right, above or below, front or rear, may be used herein to describe one element's relationship to another element as illustrated in the Figures. It will be understood that relative terms are intended to encompass different orientations of the device in addition to the orientation depicted in the Figures.
(22) Unless otherwise defined, all terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs. It will be further understood that terms, such as those defined in commonly used dictionaries, should be interpreted as having a meaning that is consistent with their meaning in the context of the relevant art and the present disclosure, and will not be interpreted in an idealized or overly formal sense unless expressly so defined herein.
(23) Exemplary embodiments of the present invention are described herein with reference to idealized embodiments of the present invention. As such, variations from the shapes of the illustrations as a result, for example, of manufacturing techniques and/or tolerances, are to be expected. Thus, embodiments of the present invention should not be construed as limited to the particular shapes of regions illustrated herein but are to include deviations in shapes that result, for example, from manufacturing. The invention illustratively disclosed herein suitably may be practiced in the absence of any elements that are not specifically disclosed herein.
(24) One present inventive device relates to a rear takedown pin for firearms as shown in isolation in
(25) Turning to the Figures to describe embodiments of rear takedown pin embodiments of the present invention first with reference to the rear takedown pin exemplified as one embodiment in
(26) Referring to
(27) Disposed on proximal end 106 is a positioning member 110, which is in the form of a knob 110. The knob 110 is designed to facilitate the rear takedown pin 100, 200 so that when the knob 110 is pressed by a user, the elongated cylindrical body 102 is pushed toward the distal end 104, and the elongated recess 108 shifts away from the knob 110 to align with components in the firearm 5 to disengage the upper receiver 10 from the lower receiver 30.
(28) The knob 110 is sized such that its diameter is larger than the lower receiver takedown pin holes 34, 36, so that the entirety of the pin 100, 200 cannot pass through the holes 34, 36. This configured design keeps the pin 100, 200 positioned within the firearm 5. The knob 110 is adjacent to the spring member 112 at a first end 114, and the second end 116 of the spring member 112 is adjacent to a ring member 118. The ring member 118 has an outer circumference 120 and a ring member rib 122 that substantially bisects the ring member 118. The ring member rib 122 is designed, sized, shaped, and adapted to fit within a slot 124 disposed on the proximal end of the elongated cylindrical body 106. The slot 124 has a slot distal end 126 and slot proximal end 128 (shown in
(29) In an alternative embodiment of a pin 200, as shown in
(30) Turning to the spring member 112, the spring member 112 may be of a variety of sizes, and in one embodiment the wire diameter is approximately 0.032 inches (0.81 mm), the diameter from the inner coils is approximately 0.25 inches (6.35 mm), and the length of the spring member is approximately 0.6 inches (15.24 mm). The ring member 118 is sized to form a base that the spring member 112 contacts. The diameter of the ring member 118 from the outer circumference of the ring 120 is approximately 0.32 inches (8.13 mm) and the rib 122 is approximately 0.25 inches (6.35 mm) in length, and width is approximately 0.03 inches (0.76 mm). The knob 110 is sized to fit the proximal end of the spring 114 and in one embodiment, is approximately 1.25 inches (31.75 mm) in length, and has a diameter of approximately 0.45 inches (11.43 mm), and includes a recess 154 where the spring member 112 is positioned, the recess approximately 0.247 inches.
(31) Turning to the elongated recess 108, the elongated recess 108 has an elongated recess proximal end 134 and an elongated recess distal end 136, and in one embodiment, has a length of approximately 0.5 inches (12.7 mm). On the distal end of the elongated cylindrical body 104 is a track 138 having a track proximal end 140 and an open track distal end 142. The track 138 is adapted, sized, and shaped to fit a detent 19 (shown in
(32) The detent 19 may be retractable so that the user can manually (such as by finger), retract the detent 19 to fit within the track 138 and prevent the pin 100, 200 from rotating within the firearm 5. The track 138 may be a variety of shapes and sizes, and in one embodiment is approximately 0.045 inches (1.1 mm) in depth and has a width of approximately 0.095 inches (2.4 mm) and length of approximately 0.291 inches (7.4 mm). The track 138 may also have a widened portion on its distal end 142 to first engage, and then guide the detent 19 into the track 138 toward the proximal end 140 of the track 138. As previously discussed, all dimensions are approximations that can work with the present invention, but can be in a range of plus or minus 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50% or more to accommodate various firearm components and dimensions.
(33) Disposed at the distal end of the elongated cylindrical body 104 is a tapered region 144 that assists in guiding the detent 19 into the track 138. The tapered region 144 can be a variety of shapes and angles, and in one embodiment is approximately 40 degrees relative to the longitudinal axis of the pin 100, 200. Other values of the degrees of the tapered region 144 may be between 10 and 80 degrees or have no tapering at all. Embodiments where the elongated cylindrical body 102 has no tapered region may also work without detracting from the spirit of the invention.
(34) Also disposed on the distal end of the elongated cylindrical body 104, and along the same longitudinal axis, is a projection 146 having a smaller diameter than the elongated cylindrical body 102. The projection 146 is sized to fit an end cap 148 having a diameter larger than the diameter of the elongated cylindrical body 102, such that when the end cap 148 is attached to the projection 146, the pin 100, 200 cannot be withdrawn from the rear takedown pin holes 34, 36, thus securing the upper receiver 10 to the lower receiver 30, and preventing the upper receiver 10 from overly separating (by more than approximately 0.5 cm to 3 cm) from the lower receiver 30.
(35) The embodiments shown in
(36) In the embodiment shown in
(37) Turning now to the relative positioning of the rear takedown pin 100, 200 within a firearm 5,
(38) Referring now to
(39) In the configuration shown in
(40) The inner views showing how the rear takedown pin 100, 200 is able to accomplish this the partial separation, yet maintain coupling is illustrated by showing the rear takedown pin 100, 200 in the upper receiver 10 and lower receiver 30, separately, as shown in
(41) Additional components of the firearm 5 include a barrel 27 (see
(42) It is another object of the present invention to provide a bolt catch 300, shown in isolation in
(43) The purpose of a bolt catch 300 is to stop the bolt carrier group (BCG) from traveling forward and contacting a round. The bolt carrier group is the heart of an AR-15 and houses the bolt, firing pin, and other components to fire a bullet. The bolt catch 300 enables a bolt 25 (shown in
(44) In normal operation, using a traditional bolt catch, rounds in a magazine keep the bolt catch 300 in a position that allows the bolt carrier group (BCG) to slide forward. When the last round is fired, the bolt catch 300 pops up and engages the bolt carrier group such that it remains in a retracted (i.e. rearward) position. The bolt catch 300 in the present invention is novel and inventive because it is capable of not only keeping the bolt 25 in its retracted position, but also functions as being the means to keep the magazine of the firearm in a magazine-locked, or magazine-releasable configuration via the use of manually pressable magazine release blocking pin 332 on the bottom side 326 of the bolt catch 300. Thus, this type of bolt catch 300 has multiple function, not seen in the prior art. Common bolt catches are not California compliant because the pin 332 does not block the rear side of the magazine release button 31, but only functions to catch a retracted bolt 25. In the present embodiment of a bolt catch 300, the bolt catch 300 is California compliant because, by default, a pin 332 blocks the magazine release button 333 from being able to be pressed by blocking the rear side of the magazine release button 31 being able to be moved, thereby keeping the magazine in a locked position. However, the user can manually retract the magazine release blocking pin 332 upwards into the bolt catch 300 so it no longer blocks the magazine release button 333 from being pressed.
(45) In traditional bolt catches, the only purpose of the bolt catch is to catch the BCG, but because of the combination of the spring, the elongated hole and the pin, not only can the present bolt catch 300 catch the BCG in its retracted position, but the bolt catch 300 can either keep the magazine release in an operable or inoperable configuration to be California compliant.
(46) Turning specifically to
(47) The first leg 312 includes an angled first top side facet 342 angled downward through a top side recess 364, leading to second top side facet 344 that angles up toward to pad 302 to form a top angled region 345. The bolt catch 300 can be in a stable position and not able not able to rise up and down when the upper and lower receivers 10, 30 are in the locked and engaged configuration. The angles and positioning of the facets 342, 344, and angled regions 345 enable the bolt catch 300 to slide in and out of a locked and unlocked position when inserted into the firearm such that bolt catch 300 can be positioned to lock the BCG in a retracted position, and allow the pin 332 to be in a position that blocks the rear side of the magazine release button 31.
(48) The first leg bottom side 352 includes a bottom side hole 318 (illustrated in
(49) When the magazine of the firearm 5 is empty, the bolt catch tab 338 rises up, due to spring force caused by a bolt catch spring member 320 pressing against the lower receiver 30, which blocks the BCG having the bolt 25 from going forward, and keeps the BCG in the retracted position. When the user then exchanges the empty magazine with a loaded magazine, the bolt catch 300 remains in the lower position such that the bolt catch tab 338 does not rise to a position where it catches and locks the BCG having the bolt 25.
(50) In firearm parts that are California compliant, the bolt catch 300 cannot automatically catch the BCG having the bolt 25 when the last round is fired, and to be California complaint, in the present invention, the user has the option, though not the default, to manually push in the manual magazine release blocking pin 332 such that the user can press the magazine release button 333 to release the magazine. In current bolt catches, this feature does not exist and there is no California compliant option for making the magazine releasable when the last round has been spent. However, in the present invention, the bolt catch 300 by default California compliant, but the user has the option to manually push the pin 332 so the magazine can be released. Other bolt catches without these features do not act both as a bolt catch and a magazine lock.
(51) With respect to other features of the bolt catch 300, the pad 302 has a top 304, a front 306, and rear region 308, and is typically an oval-shaped disc, though the pad 302 can take a variety of shapes without detracting from the spirit of the invention. The pad 302 is integral to the second leg 314 and extends substantially along the same axis of the second leg 314.
(52) The bolt catch 300 has a front side 346 of that extends downward from the pad 302, and the front side 346 has a plurality of facets, including a first front side facet 348 angled forward from the pad 302. A second front side facet 350 is angled rearward from the first front side facet 348 and forms to a toggle portion 328 near the bottom of the second leg 314. The second leg has a bottom side 326 that has a second leg hole 330. The second leg hole 330 is sized, shaped and adapted to fit a magazine releasing blocking pin 332 having a proximal end 334 and a distal end 336, such that when the pin 332 is in its projected-out orientation, the pin 332 covers the rear side of the magazine release button 31 (as shown in
(53) To prevent the blocking pin 332 from falling out the top side of the bolt catch 300, a second leg hole cap 360 may be put on the on the top side of the second leg hole 330. To uncover the rear side of the magazine release button 31, a user can manually push up the blocking pin 332 so that it retracts into the second leg 314, thus allowing the rear side of the magazine release button 31 to be exposed, which allows a user to release a magazine by pressing the magazine release button 333 (shown in
(54) In preferred embodiments, the magazine release blocking pin 332 projects at an angle toward the longitudinal axis of the bolt catch 300 so that the pin braces against the rear side of the magazine release button 31. The pin 332 may be held in its projected state via the use of a second spring 366 within the hole 330 of the second leg 314. Force exerted by the second spring member, adjacent the magazine release blocking pin 332, forces the magazine release blocking pin 332 to project downward unless manually retracted upward by a user, thereby having the default position of the magazine release blocking pin down in a blocking position.
(55) Within the bolt catch main body 310, below the pad 302, and within the second leg 314 is an elongated main body aperture 316, where a pin is generally inserted that allows the bolt catch 300 to rotate and rise or lift when the user presses the pad 302. Having the aperture 316 elongated or oblong, such as oval shaped, as shown, instead of circular, allows the bolt catch 300 to not just swivel around a specific axis, but also rise and lower with respect to the pin (not shown) that secures the bolt catch to the firearm 5. This elongated main body aperture 316 allows the magazine release blocking pin 332 to rise up with the entirety of the bolt catch 300, such that the magazine release blocking pin 332 no longer blocks the rear side of the magazine release button 31 because the spring member 320 is able to push the bolt catch 300 up. In contrast, if the hole were not elongated, the bolt catch 300 could not both pushed up vertically and swivel, but rather, could only swivel.
(56) Alternatively, when the bolt catch 300 is not raised by the user pressing the pad 302, the user can still manually raise the magazine release blocking pin 332 to expose the rear side of the magazine release blocking button 31 so that the user can release the magazine when the user presses the magazine release button 333. In other words, there are two ways for the magazine release blocking pin 332 to go up, either by pressing the pad 302 which, raises the pin 332, or by raising the pin 332 manually.
(57) Specifications of the bolt catch 300 can have a variety of dimensions. The dimensions may be plus or minus 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%, 35%, 40% or more or less depending on the size of the firearm without detracting from the spirit of the invention. In a preferred embodiment, the height of the rear side of the first leg 354 is 131.1 mm, the height of the bolt catch tab 338 is 7.6 mm, the length of the first leg bottom side 352 to the middle of the first leg hole is approximately 15 mm, the width of the pad 302 is 3.0 mm, the length of the elongated main body aperture 316 is approximately 4.4 mm, the width of the elongated main body aperture 316 is approximately 2.8 mm, the length of the bottom side of the second leg 314 of the main body is approximately 7.5 mm, the length of the toggle portion is approximately 3.5 mm, the length of the front side of the bolt catch 346 is approximately 15 mm, the length of the top side recess 364 from the beginning of the recess to the pad 302 is approximately 6.6 mm. In other embodiments, the elongated main body aperture is between 4 mm and 5 mm in length and between 2 mm and 3 mm in width. The dimensions of the elongated main body aperture 316 allows for sufficient rotation around the axis of rotation pin within the elongated main body aperture and also allows for the bolt catch to rise and lower in response to force exerted by the spring member. The length of the entirety of the bolt catch 300 is approximately 30 mm from the rear side of the first leg 354 to the most forward portion of the second front side facet 346. The angle of the pin 332 with respect to the bottom side of the second leg 326 is at a non-perpendicular angle, and preferably is approximately ten degrees offset from the vertical axis of the bolt catch 300 (or 80 degrees from the horizontal second leg bottom side 326). The angle of the pin may be between five degrees and twenty degrees offset from the vertical axis of the bolt catch. This angle may but also may vary with 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%, 35%, or more.
(58) The following reference numbers are used throughout the Figures: 5 Firearm (AR-15) 10 Upper receiver 12 Rear takedown lug 13 Rear takedown lug hole 15 Firearm grip 17 Trigger 18 Ejection port cover 19 Detent 21 Magazine attachment receiver 23 Spacing (between upper and lower receivers) 26 Bottom surface of upper receiver 30 Lower receiver 34 Lower receiver takedown pin hole (first) 36 Lower receiver takedown pin hole (second) 37 Rotation point (Pivot connection between upper and lower receiver) 100 Rear takedown pin (outside spring embodiment) 102 Elongated cylindrical body (ECB) 104 Distal end of ECB 106 Proximal end of ECB 108 Elongated recess 110 Knob 112 Spring member 114 First end of spring member 116 Second end of spring member 118 Ring member 120 Outer circumference of ring member 122 Rib of ring member 124 Slot on the end of the cylindrical body 126 Distal end of slot 128 Proximal end of slot 130 Outer circumference of ECB 132 Hollow proximal end of ECB 134 Proximal end of elongated recess 136 Distal end of elongated recess 138 Track 140 Proximal end of track 142 Distal end of track 144 Tapered region 146 Projection (for end cap) 148 End cap 150 Receiving hole of end cap 152 Threads (on projection) 154 Recess in knob 200 Rear takedown pin (inside spring embodiment) 300 Bolt catch release lever 302 Pad 304 Top of pad 306 Front of pad 308 Rear of pad 310 Main body of bolt catch release lever (substantially L-shaped) 312 First leg of main body 314 Second leg of main body 316 Elongated main body aperture 318 First leg hole (bottom side) 320 Spring member 322 Spring member proximal end 324 Spring member distal end 326 Bottom side of bolt catch second leg 328 Toggle portion 330 Second leg hole 332 Magazine release blocking pin 334 Proximal end of release blocking pin 336 Distal end of release blocking pin 338 Bolt catch tab 340 Top side of first leg 342 First top side facet 344 Second top side facet 345 Top angled region 346 Front side of bolt catch 348 First front side facet 350 Second front side facet 352 First leg bottom side 354 Rear side of first leg 360 Second leg hole cap 362 Blocking pin retaining lip 364 Top side recess 366 Second spring (in second leg hole)
(59) While the invention has been described in terms of exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the words that have been used are words of description and not of limitation. As is understood by persons of ordinary skill in the art, a variety of modifications can be made without departing from the scope of the invention defined by the following claims, which should be given their fullest, fair scope.