Mid lock-up receiver
10495394 ยท 2019-12-03
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
Mid lock-up receivers have an elongated cylindrical body, the body defining a passage, the body having a first rear portion and a second forward portion adjacent to and forward of the rear portion, the first rear portion defining a first passage segment having a first diameter and the second forward portion defining a second passage segment having a second diameter greater than the first diameter, a forward facing step surface defined at a forward face of the first rear portion, an elongated cylindrical sleeve defining a sleeve passage and received in the second passage segment, the sleeve having a rear end spaced apart from the step surface, and the sleeve being compressively received in the body wherein the body is in tension about the sleeve, and the sleeve is compressed by the body. The sleeve may be thermally bonded to the body.
Claims
1. A firearm bolt action receiver comprising: an elongated cylindrical body; the body defining a passage; the body having a first rear portion and a second forward portion adjacent to and forward of the rear portion; the first rear portion defining a first passage segment having a first diameter and the second forward portion defining a second passage segment having a second diameter greater than the first diameter; a forward facing step surface defined at a forward face of the first rear portion; an elongated cylindrical sleeve defining a sleeve passage configured to receive a forward portion of a firearm bolt and received in the second passage segment; the sleeve having a rear end spaced apart from the step surface; and the sleeve being compressively received in the body wherein the body is in tension about the sleeve, and the sleeve is compressed by the body.
2. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 1 wherein the sleeve is thermally bonded to the body.
3. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 1 wherein the rear end of the sleeve and the step surface define a bolt lug space.
4. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 1 including a bolt having a rear portion received in the first passage segment, and a forward portion received in the sleeve passage.
5. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 4 wherein the bolt is an elongated body and includes bolt lugs extending laterally from an intermediate location along its length.
6. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 4 wherein the bolt has a bolt face positioned proximate to a forward end of the sleeve.
7. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 4 wherein the bolt has a forward portion forward of the lugs and rotatable with respect to the lugs.
8. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 7 wherein the forward portion of the bolt is rotationally engaged to the sleeve such that it does not rotate when the lugs rotate.
9. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 1 wherein the body defines a body ejection port and wherein the sleeve defines a sleeve ejection port registered with the body ejection port.
10. A method of manufacturing a bolt action firearm receiver comprising the steps: providing an elongated cylindrical body; generating in the body a first passage portion having a first diameter; generating in the body a second passage portion coaxial with the first passage portion having a second diameter greater than the first diameter; providing a sleeve having an exterior profile sized to be closely received in the second passage portion; generating in the sleeve a sleeve passage; establishing a body temperature greater than a sleeve temperature; while the body is at a greater temperature than the sleeve, inserting the sleeve into the second passage portion; and after inserting the sleeve, machining a magazine aperture and an ejection aperture in the body and sleeve.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein inserting the sleeve includes positioning a rear end of the sleeve at a selected distance from the first passage portion.
12. The method of claim 10 wherein machining a magazine aperture and an ejection aperture in the body and sleeve may include boring axially registered passages of a common shape.
13. The method of claim 10 wherein establishing a body temperature greater than a sleeve temperature includes heating the body and chilling the sleeve.
14. A firearm bolt action receiver comprising: an elongated cylindrical body; the body defining a defining a passage; the body having a first rear portion and a second forward portion adjacent to and forward of the rear portion; the first rear portion defining a first passage segment having a first diameter and the second forward portion defining a second passage segment having a second diameter greater than the first diameter; the second passage segment defining an ejection port; a forward facing step surface defined at a forward face of the first rear portion; an elongated cylindrical sleeve defining a sleeve passage and received in the second passage segment; the sleeve having a rear end spaced apart from the step surface; and the sleeve being compressively received in the body wherein the body is in tension about the sleeve, and the sleeve is compressed by the body.
15. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 14 wherein the sleeve is thermally bonded to the body.
16. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 14 wherein the rear end of the sleeve and the step surface defining a bolt lug space.
17. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 14 including a bolt having a rear portion received in the first passage segment, and a forward portion received in the sleeve passage.
18. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 17 wherein the bolt is an elongated body and includes bolt lugs extending laterally from an intermediate location along its length.
19. The firearm bolt action receiver of claim 17 wherein the bolt has a bolt face positioned proximate to a forward end of the sleeve.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9) The same reference numerals refer to the same parts throughout the various figures.
DESCRIPTION OF THE CURRENT EMBODIMENT
(10) A current embodiment of the mid lock-up receiver of the present invention is shown and generally designated by the reference numeral 10.
(11)
(12) An insert 34 is an elongate cylindrical sleeve received within the hollow interior 24 of the receiver body 12. The insert has a front 36, rear 38, right side 40, left side 58 (shown in
(13)
(14) The mid lock-up receiver 10 is intended to be used in a .22 rimfire bolt action rifle (not shown) in the current embodiment. The mid lock-up receiver is a turn-pull design: the user performs an upward lifting movement of the bolt handle 116 to disengage the bolt handle from the bolt handle notch 54 and to turn and unlock the bolt 100 from the breech and cock the firing pin, followed by pulling the bolt handle rearward to open the breech, extract the spent cartridge casing and eject the spent cartridge casing through the ejection apertures 30, 48. The user reverses the process to chamber the next cartridge by stripping a cartridge (not shown) from a magazine (not shown) protruding through the magazine apertures 28, 46 and relocking the breech via a lowering movement of the bolt handle into the bolt handle notch to turn and lock the bolt. The right and left bolt lugs 112, 114 secure the bolt in place as the rifle is fired. In the unlocked condition, the bolt can reciprocate fore and aft within the interior 24 because the right and left bolt lugs are slidably received within right and left radiused lug ways 50, 52, and the bolt nose is slidably received the interior 44 of the insert 34.
(15) It should be appreciated that conventional bolt lugs have flats and corners, requiring conventional lug ways to be machined using the Electrical Discharge Machining (EDM) process. In contrast, the use of radiused right and left bolt lugs 112, 114 in the current invention eliminates the need for use in the costly EDM process to machine the right and left radiused lug ways 50, 52. Instead, the right and left radiused lug ways can be machined with typical, low-cost mill tools.
(16)
(17) It should be appreciated that the insert 34 of the current invention can be machined with typical, low-cost mill tools. The body and insert passages 24, 44 are accurately formed via highly precise fixturing and machining processes to ensure the passages are concentric after the insert is received within the body. The depth of insertion of the insert within the body is also established via highly precise fixtures. The fit between the insert and receiver is thermally set: the insert is submerged in liquid nitrogen before insertion. The receiver may be optionally heated before the insert is inserted. The insert subsequently warms to room temperature within the body and adheres via interference. Thus, the insert is thermally bonded to and compressively received in the body wherein the body is in tension about the insert, and the insert is compressed by the body. The body and insert are made of the same material, so they share the same thermal coefficient. This enables the body and insert to expand and contract together in response to environmental variations. The magazine apertures/ports 28, 46 and ejection apertures/ports 30, 48 are machined in the body and insert after the insert is installed in the receiver. This ensures the magazine apertures are axially registered with one another and the ejection apertures are axially registered with one another. The insert enables the radiused lug ways 50, 52 to terminate at the midpoint of the receiver body 12, thereby increasing the accuracy of a rifle using the mid lock-up receiver 10 relative to a rifle using a conventional rear lock-up receiver. Furthermore, the interior 44 of the insert closely receives the bolt nose 104, which enables the bolt nose to be supported and increases the rigidity of the mid lock-up receiver, thereby increasing the accuracy of a rifle using the mid lock-up receiver of the current invention relative to prior art mid lock-up receivers. Thus, the mid lock-up receiver of the current invention can be produced at a lower cost, produced more rapidly, and result in a rifle with greater accuracy than prior art rear and mid lock-up receivers.
(18) A method of manufacturing the mid-lock up receiver 10, which is a bolt action firearm receiver in the current embodiment, includes the steps of: providing an elongated cylindrical body, generating in the body a first passage portion having a first diameter, generating in the body a second passage portion coaxial with the first passage portion having a second diameter greater than the first diameter, providing a sleeve having an exterior profile sized to be closely received in the second passage portion, generating in the sleeve a sleeve passage; establishing a body temperature greater than a sleeve temperature, and while the body is at a greater temperature than the sleeve, inserting the sleeve into the second passage portion as denoted by the arrow in
(19) In the context of the specification, the terms rear and rearward, and front and forward have the following definitions: rear or rearward means in the direction away from the muzzle of the firearm while front or forward means it is in the direction towards the muzzle of the firearm.
(20) While a current embodiment of a mid lock-up receiver has been described in detail, it should be apparent that modifications and variations thereto are possible, all of which fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. For example, although use of the current invention with a .22 rimfire bolt action rifle has been described, it should be appreciated that the current invention is also suitable for use with rifles having rimfire single shot and repeater actions. With respect to the above description then, it is to be realized that the optimum dimensional relationships for the parts of the invention, to include variations in size, materials, shape, form, function and manner of operation, assembly and use, are deemed readily apparent and obvious to one skilled in the art, and all equivalent relationships to those illustrated in the drawings and described in the specification are intended to be encompassed by the present invention. Therefore, the foregoing is considered as illustrative only of the principles of the invention. Further, since numerous modifications and changes will readily occur to those skilled in the art, it is not desired to limit the invention to the exact construction and operation shown and described, and accordingly, all suitable modifications and equivalents may be resorted to, falling within the scope of the invention.