Pressure Discriminating Cartridge Chamber
20220057159 ยท 2022-02-24
Assignee
Inventors
- Brian R. Hoffman (Bloomington, IN, US)
- Caleb W. McGee (Bloomington, IN, US)
- John David Lawrence (Bloomington, IN, US)
- Calvin Tyler Lawson (Springville, IN, US)
Cpc classification
F41A17/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41A17/34
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
Abstract
Provided is a firearm cartridge chamber with a relief feature that traps a portion of a cartridge case within the cartridge chamber when fired. The relief feature causes the cartridge case to deform within the chamber, wherein it optionally separates into a forward section and a rearward section. The deformed case remains trapped after firing, preventing extraction of the fired case and the chambering or firing of any subsequent cartridges, thereby causing a firearm malfunction. The cartridge chamber can distinguish between higher and lower pressure cartridges by allowing for normal firing and function with blank training ammunition while also facilitating localized deformation of the cartridge case when firing standard ammunition that includes one or more projectiles. The inventive chamber prevents more than one higher pressure round from firing while allowing lower pressure or training rounds to fire without limitation, which aids in enhanced safety during training exercises.
Claims
1.-15. (canceled)
16. A firearm cartridge chamber for supporting a cartridge, comprising: a relief feature incorporated into said cartridge chamber that forms a cavity devoid of structural support between said chamber and said cartridge.
17. The apparatus of claim 16, wherein a portion of said cartridge case deforms and partially expands into said cavity when said cartridge is fired by said firearm.
18. The apparatus of claim 17, wherein said cartridge case deforms and optionally separates into two sections, leaving a forward section of said case separated entirely from a rearward section of said case and trapped within said cavity.
19. The apparatus of claim 17, wherein said deformed cartridge case creates a firearm malfunction by preventing chambering or firing of any subsequent cartridges.
20. The apparatus of claim 19, wherein said firearm malfunction is not correctable by the operator.
21. The apparatus of claim 17, wherein in said relief feature is selected from the group consisting of a circumferential groove, a partial circumferential groove, dimple, hole, slot, knurling, and a helical groove of continuous or interrupted geometry.
22. A firearm cartridge chamber for supporting a cartridge, comprising: a relief feature incorporated into said cartridge chamber that forms a cavity devoid of structural support between said chamber and said cartridge, wherein said cavity prevents continued operation of a firearm by trapping a first cartridge case within said cartridge chamber when a first cartridge type is fired, and wherein said cavity permits continued operation of said firearm when a second cartridge type is fired.
23. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein said first cartridge type is a higher pressure cartridge.
24. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein said second cartridge type is a lower pressure cartridge.
25. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein said first cartridge type is a standard style cartridge including one or more projectiles.
26. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein said second cartridge type is a training style or blank cartridge.
27. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein a portion of said cartridge case from said first cartridge type deforms and partially expands into said cavity when said cartridge is fired by said firearm.
28. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein said cartridge case from said first cartridge type deforms and optionally separates into two sections, leaving a forward section of said case separated entirely from a rearward section of said case and trapped within said cavity.
29. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein said deformed cartridge case from said first cartridge type creates a firearm malfunction by preventing chambering or firing of any subsequent cartridges.
30. The apparatus of claim 29, wherein said firearm malfunction is not correctable by the operator.
31. The apparatus of claim 22, wherein in said relief feature is selected from the group consisting of a circumferential groove, a partial circumferential groove, dimple, hole, slot, knurling, and a helical groove of continuous or interrupted geometry.
32. A firearm cartridge chamber for supporting a cartridge, comprising: one or more relief features incorporated into said cartridge chamber that forms a cavity devoid of structural support between said chamber and said cartridge; wherein said cartridge case deforms and partially expands into said cavity when said cartridge is fired by said firearm; wherein said cartridge case optionally deforms by separating into two sections, leaving a forward section of said case separated entirely from a rearward section of said case and trapped within said cavity; wherein said deformed cartridge case creates a firearm malfunction by preventing chambering or firing of any subsequent cartridges; wherein said firearm malfunction is not correctable by the operator.
33. The apparatus of claim 32, wherein in said relief feature is selected from the group consisting of a circumferential groove, a partial circumferential groove, dimple, hole, slot, knurling, and a helical groove of continuous or interrupted geometry.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] The detailed description of the drawings particularly refers to the accompanying figures in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0026] The embodiments of the invention described herein are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to precise forms disclosed. Rather, the embodiments selected for description have been chosen to enable one skilled in the art to practice the invention.
[0027] Generally, the invention relates to a firearm cartridge chamber with a circumferentially relief feature incorporated integrally or non-integrally into the cartridge chamber that forms a cavity where there is no contact between the chamber and the cartridge. A portion of the cartridge case deforms and fills the cavity when the cartridge is fired. The relief feature permits the cartridge case to deform within the cartridge chamber, wherein it separates into a forward section and a rearward section. The forward section remains trapped after case extraction, preventing the chambering or firing of any subsequent cartridges, thereby causing a firearm malfunction. The cartridge chamber can distinguish between high and low pressure cartridges by allowing for normal firing and function with blank training ammunition while also facilitating localized deformation of said cartridge case when firing standard combat ammunition. The inventive chamber prevents more than one high pressure round from firing while allowing low pressure or training rounds to fire without limitation, which aids in enhanced safety during training exercises.
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[0037] The utility benefit being offered by the inventive cartridge chamber could potentially apply to numerous weapon systems of various calibers. Due to the safety benefits, the inventive cartridge chamber could potentially find use in other less obvious applications as well such as the entertainment/movie industry that regularly relies on the use of blank ammunition when firing weapons during filming.
[0038] Additionally, the inventive cartridge chamber could be used to differentiate between any two cartridge types that operate at significantly different peak pressures and to the benefit of operator safety even if one of the two types of ammunition is not a blank training round. Non-limiting examples include a single chamber configuration that can accept different cartridge types (.38 Special vs .357 Magnum, high vs low brass vs magnum shotgun shells, and the like.). In some cases, the firearm is not capable of repeated firings of the higher-pressure cartridge even if the chamber geometry allows for such rounds to be loaded and fired. The inventive cartridge chamber thereby limits the number of unwanted firings to only one, aiding to the safety benefit of the operator and those in close proximity.
[0039] The cartridge chamber can also differentiate between different cartridge types even if they operated at similar or identical peak pressures if the cartridge case structural characteristics (such as sectional geometry, material, and/or strength) associated with each unique cartridge type are sufficiently different. Continued investment in the development of polymer and other non-standard cartridge case material alternatives may allow this scenario to unfold for applications of the inventive cartridge chamber in future use. Also, while the concept was initially conceived and subsequently designed and demonstrated in a small caliber training weapon, its general applicability is not limited to small caliber weapons.
[0040] While not an object of the invention nor a requirement for implementing the inventive cartridge chamber, it is readily achievable in practice to utilize the inventive chamber with an additional safety device, such as one designed to capture the bullet from a fired combat cartridge and not allow it to travel downrange. That can easily be accomplished by way of a robust blank firing attachment (BFA), which is typically a muzzle-mounted device on end of a gun barrel used when firing blank ammunition to generate sufficient backpressure (in the absence of a bullet) to automatically cycle the operating group of the training weapon. A BFA often serves a secondary duty as a bullet trap, capturing one or more bullets from fired combat cartridges and preventing them from exiting the barrel before the BFA succumbs to structural failure.
[0041] There are a number of possible permutations to the preferred embodiment that would still fall under the utility umbrella of the inventive cartridge chamber. The general utility of the inventive cartridge chamber includes its ability to passively leverage peak operating pressure differences between different types of cartridges for the purpose of selectively facilitating material deformation of the cartridge case after firing for the purpose of inducing a severe malfunction that renders the weapon unusable for further firing. The ability to differentiate between cartridge types is not limited to standard combat and blank training cartridges only. Any varying type(s) of ammunition that operate with a sufficient peak pressure delta could be selectively discriminated by way of the inventive cartridge chamber. It is conceivable that certain medium caliber weapon systems may also benefit. Some examples of alternative embodiments, which deviate from the illustrated preferred embodiment, are included below. [0042] Circumferential relief geometry of a different groove profile (such as a square groove, full radius groove). [0043] Utilizing additional circumferential relief features in combination in the same or different areas of the cartridge chamber. [0044] Utilizing discrete relief features that are not fully circumferential (such as holes, dimples, counterbores, countersinks, segmented radial grooves, longitudinal grooves). [0045] Utilizing helical relief/groove features (not unlike a screw thread form, could be single or multi-start).
[0046] Utilizing opposing helical relief/groove features (not unlike knurling) [0047] Incorporating any of the above by way of an additional component insert or inserts in the cartridge chamber (e.g., not incorporated integrally in the existing cartridge chamber). [0048] Utilizing a cartridge chamber material, or material insert, of inferior mechanical properties (itself designed to fail at a certain pressure) either with or without any additional relief features.
[0049] It is also important to note that despite the illustrations showing the preferred embodiment being implemented on a centerfire rifle sized bottleneck cartridge, the inventive cartridge chamber is not limited to use in bottleneck applications or rifles. The concept is fundamentally applicable to use in handguns, rifles, machine guns, or shotguns chambered for any general cartridge configuration type (e.g., bottleneck, straight-walled, tapered, and the like) of centerfire and/or rimfire types.