US3418741A - Firearm - Google Patents

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Publication number
US3418741A
US3418741A US575325A US57532566A US3418741A US 3418741 A US3418741 A US 3418741A US 575325 A US575325 A US 575325A US 57532566 A US57532566 A US 57532566A US 3418741 A US3418741 A US 3418741A
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Prior art keywords
firearm
barrel
firing
automatic
bullet
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Expired - Lifetime
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US575325A
Inventor
Tschoepe Bruno
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Dynamit Nobel AG
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Dynamit Nobel AG
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Publication date
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Publication of US3418741A publication Critical patent/US3418741A/en
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F41WEAPONS
    • F41AFUNCTIONAL FEATURES OR DETAILS COMMON TO BOTH SMALLARMS AND ORDNANCE, e.g. CANNONS; MOUNTINGS FOR SMALLARMS OR ORDNANCE
    • F41A33/00Adaptations for training; Gun simulators
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F41WEAPONS
    • F41AFUNCTIONAL FEATURES OR DETAILS COMMON TO BOTH SMALLARMS AND ORDNANCE, e.g. CANNONS; MOUNTINGS FOR SMALLARMS OR ORDNANCE
    • F41A11/00Assembly or disassembly features; Modular concepts; Articulated or collapsible guns
    • F41A11/02Modular concepts, e.g. weapon-family concepts
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F41WEAPONS
    • F41AFUNCTIONAL FEATURES OR DETAILS COMMON TO BOTH SMALLARMS AND ORDNANCE, e.g. CANNONS; MOUNTINGS FOR SMALLARMS OR ORDNANCE
    • F41A21/00Barrels; Gun tubes; Muzzle attachments; Barrel mounting means
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F41WEAPONS
    • F41AFUNCTIONAL FEATURES OR DETAILS COMMON TO BOTH SMALLARMS AND ORDNANCE, e.g. CANNONS; MOUNTINGS FOR SMALLARMS OR ORDNANCE
    • F41A21/00Barrels; Gun tubes; Muzzle attachments; Barrel mounting means
    • F41A21/10Insert barrels, i.e. barrels for firing reduced calibre ammunition and being mounted within the normal barrels
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F41WEAPONS
    • F41AFUNCTIONAL FEATURES OR DETAILS COMMON TO BOTH SMALLARMS AND ORDNANCE, e.g. CANNONS; MOUNTINGS FOR SMALLARMS OR ORDNANCE
    • F41A21/00Barrels; Gun tubes; Muzzle attachments; Barrel mounting means
    • F41A21/26Barrels; Gun tubes; Muzzle attachments; Barrel mounting means specially adapted for recoil reinforcement, e.g. for training purposes

Definitions

  • thermoplastic materials may be elastically defromed Within certain limits by the application of pressure, and more particularly maybe deformed the more the higher the applied pressure.
  • a plastic body of predetermined cross section can be pressed or forced through an aperture correspondingly smaller in cross section by the application of a correspondingly high pressure and under elastic deformation.
  • the pressure necessary for the forcing of the plastic body through the aperture can be determined at the desired magnitude.
  • the present invention makes use of this fact in that there is provided for the firearm an interchangeable barrel for the firing of the practice ammunition, interchangeable for the barrel of normal caliber ⁇ for the firing of the live ammunition, whose bore is constructed of undersized caliber for achieving the pressing-through resistance of the bullet necessary for the automatic function of the arm or gun.
  • provision may additionally be made to slightly increase the charge of the cartridge.
  • an inlluence may ybe exercised in a limited manner on the cross-sectional ratio between bullet and bore of the practice barrel necessary for the requisite pressing-through resistance.
  • the cross-sectional ratio which differs from case to case and which inter alia, is influenced by or depends from the bullet caliber, from the type of thermoplastic material utilized for the practice ammunition, from the intended bullet range and in connection therewith from the bullet weight, from the weight and the breech closing spring force of the .breech mechanism, etc. may be determined relatively easily, possibly experimentally, for the existing conditions existing in a given case. For example, it was possible to determine experimentally that with the aforementioned plastic bullet having a weight of 0.42 gram, a completely satisfactory automatic functioning of the firearm could be achieved lif the barrel caliber was reduced from 9 mm. to 7.5 mm. and the charge was slightly increased. The cases were ejected in every instance completely satisfactory and a latching of the breech mechanism was realized during single shot firing.
  • the undersized caliber barrel may also be rigidly installed into a firearm that is provided exclusively for firing practice ammunition,
  • the measures according to the present invention entail, in addition to safeguarding the automatic function of the arm, additionally the advantage that all of the remaining parts of the rearm or gun can be constructed identical with a corresponding firearm or gun for the firing of live ammunition whereby the manufacture of the practice arm is considerably simplified and the cost thereof reduced.
  • Another object of the present invention resides in a fully automatic or semi-automatic firearm which can be utilized for firing practice ammunition without endangering the fully automatic or semi-automatic operation thereof even when utilizing the firearm for single shot firing.
  • a further object of the present invention resides in a firearm that is relatively inexpensive in manufacture and assembly yet permits the use of practice ammunition consisting of thermoplastic material bullets of relatively light weight without jeopardizing the correct automatic or semi-automatic functioning of the firearm.
  • a further object of the present invention resides in a firearm for use with practice ammunition consisting of bullets made of thermoplastic material in which the basic parts of the firearm including the semi-automatic or fully automatic firing and breech mechanisms are identical with those used in the same firearm for firing live ammunition yet can be manufactured in a simple manner and without excessive cost.
  • FIGURE l illustrates schematically a firearm provided with an interchangeable barrel for live ammunition
  • FIGURE 2 illustrates schematically a firearm provided with an interchangeable barrel for practice ammunition.
  • reference numeral 10 generally designates therein a conventional semi-automatic or fully automatic gun or firearm of conventional construction including a conventional feed, ejection and breech mechanisms, etc. and a barrel 11 for the firing of normal live ammunition detachably secured in a co-nventional manner.
  • the barrel 1l has a bore with a diameter d corresponding to the caliber of the live ammunition 12.
  • a substitute barrel 1l for the firing of practice ammunition is shown in FIGURE 2 as having a
  • the barrel l1 thereby has a bore with a diameter d-x, whereby the reduction x is so selected as to produce the necessary resistance to a forcing or pressing through of the thermoplastic bullet as is required for producing the necessary pressure to actuate the semi-automatic or automatic means of the gun. Since all parts of the gun are of conventional construction, known per se in the art, a detailed description thereof is dispensed with herein.
  • a firearm having automatic gas actuated recoil mechanisms and a barrel having a cartridge chamber for receiving and detonating a cartridge having a projectile of the same fixed caliber, in combination with the improvement comprising the barrel having a projectile guiding bore with a cartridge chamber end of substantially less than said fixed caliber.

Description

B. TSCHOEPE Dec. 3l', `1968 FIREARM Filed Aug. 26. 1966 ,//AHJ ZZ//Q////f//fa FEED, aREEcH EJECTION MECHANISMS, ETC.
FEED BREEcH,
EJEcnoN MEcHAmsMs, ETc. i
INVENTOR BRUNO TSCHOEPE QQ/LAE@ ATTORNEYS United States Patent O 3,418,741 FIREARM Bruno Tschoepe, Karlsruhe-Durlach, Germany, assignor to Dynamit Nobel Aktiengesellschaft, Troisdorf,
Germany Filed Aug. 26, 1966, Ser. No. 575,325 Claims priority, application Germany, Sept. 8, 1965,
3 claims. (di. 42-77) ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE Background of the invention The automatic function of semi-automatic and fully automatic firearms depends, as is known, on the weight and on the resistance to the pressing-through or forcingthrough of the bullet to be fired as well as on the weight and on the `force of the breech closing spring of the breech mechanism. Correspondingly, it is obvious that vduring the firing of bullets of the same caliber but with very considerable weight differences from one and the same arm, repercussions will arise with respect to the automatic function thereof.
This was confirmed with the test to fire from a fully automatic arms of a 9 mm. caliber both a live cartridge with a bullet of 8 grams weight as well as a practice -`.cartridge with a short-range bullet of thermoplastic material and of only 0.42 gram weight. Whereas with the normal bullet of the live cartridge a completely satisfactory fully automatic function of the arm or weapon was achieved, such a completely satisfactory fully automatic function could no longer be realized with the lightweight bullet of the practice ammunition.
Attempts to assure by changing the breech mechanism and/ or the breech closing spring, a fully automatic function of the arm also during the firing of the light-weight bullet, showed no satisfactory results as the cartridge cases were ejected from time to time only weakly and in particular as the -breech mechanism during firing of single shots did not 4catch or latch in any case, i.e., in no case was the breech mechanism caught and retained in its rearward position by the latching lever provided therefor. Also the attempt to achieve the automatic function of the arm during the firing of the light weight bullets by increasing the charge and therewith increasing the -gas pressure proved unsuccessful because the spatial prerequisites did not exist for the accommodation of a sufficiently large charge.
Summary f the invention In solution to the underlying problem to enable the firing from a semior fully automatic arm with the assurance of the automatic function thereof, both live arnmunition as well as practice ammunition of identical dimensions with a light-weight bullet of thermoplastic material, a new approach is pursued according to the present invention, which starts with the known lfact that thermoplastic materials may be elastically defromed Within certain limits by the application of pressure, and more particularly maybe deformed the more the higher the applied pressure. By reason of this property of the thermoplastic material, for example, a plastic body of predetermined cross section can be pressed or forced through an aperture correspondingly smaller in cross section by the application of a correspondingly high pressure and under elastic deformation. It follows inversely that by a corresponding dimension of the internal cross section of the aperture in relation to the cross section of the plastic body the pressure necessary for the forcing of the plastic body through the aperture can be determined at the desired magnitude. The present invention makes use of this fact in that there is provided for the firearm an interchangeable barrel for the firing of the practice ammunition, interchangeable for the barrel of normal caliber `for the firing of the live ammunition, whose bore is constructed of undersized caliber for achieving the pressing-through resistance of the bullet necessary for the automatic function of the arm or gun.
Insofar as spatial conditions permit and to the extent that it is of use, provision may additionally be made to slightly increase the charge of the cartridge. Especially by the measure of a possible increase of the charge, an inlluence may ybe exercised in a limited manner on the cross-sectional ratio between bullet and bore of the practice barrel necessary for the requisite pressing-through resistance.
The cross-sectional ratio, which differs from case to case and which inter alia, is influenced by or depends from the bullet caliber, from the type of thermoplastic material utilized for the practice ammunition, from the intended bullet range and in connection therewith from the bullet weight, from the weight and the breech closing spring force of the .breech mechanism, etc. may be determined relatively easily, possibly experimentally, for the existing conditions existing in a given case. For example, it was possible to determine experimentally that with the aforementioned plastic bullet having a weight of 0.42 gram, a completely satisfactory automatic functioning of the firearm could be achieved lif the barrel caliber was reduced from 9 mm. to 7.5 mm. and the charge was slightly increased. The cases were ejected in every instance completely satisfactory and a latching of the breech mechanism was realized during single shot firing.
Of course, the undersized caliber barrel may also be rigidly installed into a firearm that is provided exclusively for firing practice ammunition, In that case the measures according to the present invention entail, in addition to safeguarding the automatic function of the arm, additionally the advantage that all of the remaining parts of the rearm or gun can be constructed identical with a corresponding firearm or gun for the firing of live ammunition whereby the manufacture of the practice arm is considerably simplified and the cost thereof reduced.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a rearm which avoids by extremely simple and operationally satisfactory means the aforementioned shortcomings and drawbacks encountered with the .prior art constructions.
Another object of the present invention resides in a fully automatic or semi-automatic firearm which can be utilized for firing practice ammunition without endangering the fully automatic or semi-automatic operation thereof even when utilizing the firearm for single shot firing.
A further object of the present invention resides in a firearm that is relatively inexpensive in manufacture and assembly yet permits the use of practice ammunition consisting of thermoplastic material bullets of relatively light weight without jeopardizing the correct automatic or semi-automatic functioning of the firearm.
A further object of the present invention resides in a firearm for use with practice ammunition consisting of bullets made of thermoplastic material in which the basic parts of the firearm including the semi-automatic or fully automatic firing and breech mechanisms are identical with those used in the same firearm for firing live ammunition yet can be manufactured in a simple manner and without excessive cost.
Brief description of the drawing These and further objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will become more obvious from the following description when taken in connection with the accompanying drawing which shows, for purposes of illustration only, one embodiment in accordance with the present invention, and wherein:
FIGURE l illustrates schematically a firearm provided with an interchangeable barrel for live ammunition; and
FIGURE 2 ilustrates schematically a firearm provided with an interchangeable barrel for practice ammunition.
Detailed description ofthe drawing Referring 4now to FIGURE l of the drawing, reference numeral 10 generally designates therein a conventional semi-automatic or fully automatic gun or firearm of conventional construction including a conventional feed, ejection and breech mechanisms, etc. and a barrel 11 for the firing of normal live ammunition detachably secured in a co-nventional manner. The barrel 1l has a bore with a diameter d corresponding to the caliber of the live ammunition 12. A substitute barrel 1l for the firing of practice ammunition is shown in FIGURE 2 as having a |bullet 13 of thermoplastic material and may be selectively interchanged for barrel 11. The barrel l1 thereby has a bore with a diameter d-x, whereby the reduction x is so selected as to produce the necessary resistance to a forcing or pressing through of the thermoplastic bullet as is required for producing the necessary pressure to actuate the semi-automatic or automatic means of the gun. Since all parts of the gun are of conventional construction, known per se in the art, a detailed description thereof is dispensed with herein.
While I have shown and described only one embodiment in accordance with the present invention, it is understood that the same is not limited thereto but is susceptible of numerous changes and modifications as known to a person skilled in the art, and I therefore do not wish to be limited to the details shown and described herein but intend to cover all such changes and modifications as are encompassed by the scope of the appended claims.
I claim:
l. A firearm having automatic gas actuated recoil mechanisms and a barrel having a cartridge chamber for receiving and detonating a cartridge having a projectile of the same fixed caliber, in combination with the improvement comprising the barrel having a projectile guiding bore with a cartridge chamber end of substantially less than said fixed caliber.
2. The firearm according to claim 1, wherein said barrel bore is of substantially uniform diameter throughout its entire extent and is provided with inwardly extending rifiing ridges.
3. The method of modifying a gas pressure actuated firearm and selectively firing therefrom either conventional live ammunition or practice ammunition of the same caliber projectile, wherein the projectile of the practice ammunition consists of a readily deformable material having plastic characteristics, the firearm having interchangeable barrel capabilities with at least one barrel being characterized as being conventional for firing the live ammunition and at least one barrel having a conventional caliber cartridge chamber and an undersized bore for firing the practice ammunition, comprising the steps of removing, interchanging and assembling either the conventional barrel for the practice barrel or vice versa in the firearm `and discharging a projectile therefrom corresponding in character to the characteristics of the particular assembled barrel.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 660,496 10/1900 Evans 42--76 2,742,821 4/1956 Sweetman 42-76 3,326,133 6/1967 Stadler et al, l02-92.7
FOREIGN PATENTS 756,432 6/1933 France.
BENJAMIN A. BORCHELT, Primary Examiner.
US575325A 1965-09-08 1966-08-26 Firearm Expired - Lifetime US3418741A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DED0048145 1965-09-08

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US3418741A true US3418741A (en) 1968-12-31

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BE (1) BE686447A (en)
DE (1) DE1553856A1 (en)
GB (1) GB1124729A (en)
LU (1) LU51889A1 (en)
NL (1) NL6610154A (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20040244254A1 (en) * 2003-06-09 2004-12-09 Barfield Christopher A.. Firearm safety device
US20090199455A1 (en) * 2008-02-12 2009-08-13 Hillhouse Darrell R Rod trigger grip/hook holder
US10883786B2 (en) * 2015-10-18 2021-01-05 William D. Reilly Sub-mass projectile for a firearm

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2495305A1 (en) * 1980-11-28 1982-06-04 Poudres & Explosifs Ste Nale Multiple calibre fire arm - has rifle capable of taking several barrels to fire small projectiles or grenades
GB2136935B (en) * 1983-03-26 1986-11-19 Hilton Gun Co Firearms
DE19529483C1 (en) * 1995-08-10 1997-01-02 Heckler & Koch Gmbh Weapon designed for self-loading

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US660496A (en) * 1899-07-15 1900-10-23 William S Evans Gun-barrel.
FR756432A (en) * 1932-06-08 1933-12-08 Automatic firearm and method for making it capable of firing reduced caliber cartridges
US2742821A (en) * 1945-04-17 1956-04-24 Leroy R Sweetman Vent for tapered bore gun
US3326133A (en) * 1963-09-07 1967-06-20 Dynamit Nobel Ag Practice ammunition

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US660496A (en) * 1899-07-15 1900-10-23 William S Evans Gun-barrel.
FR756432A (en) * 1932-06-08 1933-12-08 Automatic firearm and method for making it capable of firing reduced caliber cartridges
US2742821A (en) * 1945-04-17 1956-04-24 Leroy R Sweetman Vent for tapered bore gun
US3326133A (en) * 1963-09-07 1967-06-20 Dynamit Nobel Ag Practice ammunition

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20040244254A1 (en) * 2003-06-09 2004-12-09 Barfield Christopher A.. Firearm safety device
US20050188581A1 (en) * 2003-06-09 2005-09-01 Barfield Christopher A. Firearm safety device
US20050188586A1 (en) * 2003-06-09 2005-09-01 Barfield Christopher A. Firearm safety device
US6968770B2 (en) 2003-06-09 2005-11-29 Barfield Christopher A Firearm safety device
US6994011B2 (en) 2003-06-09 2006-02-07 Barfield Christopher A Firearm safety device
US20090199455A1 (en) * 2008-02-12 2009-08-13 Hillhouse Darrell R Rod trigger grip/hook holder
US8046952B2 (en) * 2008-02-12 2011-11-01 Hillhouse Darrell R Rod trigger grip/hook holder
US10883786B2 (en) * 2015-10-18 2021-01-05 William D. Reilly Sub-mass projectile for a firearm
AU2015412218B2 (en) * 2015-10-18 2022-02-10 William Reilly Sub-mass projectile for auto loading firearm and methods
US11828555B2 (en) 2015-10-18 2023-11-28 William D. Reilly Sub-mass projectile for a firearm

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DE1553856A1 (en) 1970-07-30
GB1124729A (en) 1968-08-21
BE686447A (en) 1967-02-15
LU51889A1 (en) 1966-11-07
NL6610154A (en) 1967-03-09

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