IN-LINE LOCKING SYSTEM FOR PISTOL CONVERSION KITS AND COMPLETE HANDGUNS
The slide of a pistol using a short recoil locking breech system is internally machined to house a barrel designed to stay in-line during the complete firing cycle. As the slide goes in battery, a mobile bolt is forced upward to lock the handgun and downward to unlock it to let slide and barrel separate after a shot is fixed.
The short recoil locking system is used on most modern center-fire pistols. The most favoured one is still the John Moses Browning tilting, barrel design, either as the original with swinging links of the 1911 Government or the later linkless ramp of the Browning High Power and the numerous models of various makers which followed. On those type of handguns, necessary clearances between the interfacing components and motion of the parts when firing contributes to reduce accuracy. Correction of such problems is possible but requires qualified and expensive gunsmithing.
BRIEF SUMMARYBasic operating principle of the present invention was exposed in my now abandoned application Ser. No. 12/802,151 filed on Jun. 1, 2010. The invention relates to a short recoil locking system for pistols in which, unlike on the majority of modern handguns of this type the barrel remains in a straight horizontal line during the complete shooting cycle. This system requires less parts of a simpler design increasing inherent accuracy and allowing closer tolerances while limiting stress on the moving parts. Application of the in-line barrel locking technique would take care of the long-standing reliability issues of ultra-short barrel pistols using the tilting barrel locking method. It will also simplify installation of silencers and as the locking assembly is in front of the chamber instead of under it, the barrel can be located deeper in the frame for a lower bore axis to limit apparent recoil and barrel climb in rapid fire.
The present invention refers to short recoil conversion kits made to replace the tilting barrel locking system on different handguns and to build new ones working on the same principle of a barrel remaining in a straight line during the complete shooting cycle. The first model kit, especially designed for .45 caliber 1911 type pistols, has a round barrel with an elongated front chamber (
To assemble a first model kit on a 1911 frame, a barrel 1 is first set in a slide 2 held upside down and a mobile bolt 6 having an integral lug 6.2 (
A loaded magazine is inserted and locked in the handgun grip, the slide is retracted and released to move forward under recoil spring force. The first cartridge is chambered, the hammer remains cocked and the slide keeps pushing the barrel for the last fractions of an inch. The lower ramped front base 6.7 of the locking bolt 6 bearing on lower opposite front of ramp 8.3 (
After a shot is fired, slide and barrel still joined together recoil for a short distance until the rear end of the barrel bottom lug 1.4 bears on the top rear surface of the frame original swinging link assembly housing. Gas pressure still imparting a rearward force on the slide and barrel assembly, the bottom rear angle of the base 6.7 from the mobile bolt 6 slides downward on the front angle of the ramp 8.2. At the end of this sequence; the locking bolt 3 is again in the down unlocked position of
The second model conversion kit represents an improved version of the first one as it requires less parts of a simpler design. Being more economical to produce, it is also easier and faster to assemble. A barrel 3 is inserted muzzle first in a slide 4 held upside down and a mobile bolt 9 is placed over it with its lateral wings 9.3 and 9.4 inside grooves 3.1 and 3.2 in front part of the barrel chamber. A locking rod/recoil spring guide 8 with a recoil spring 8.1 on its forepart is installed from the bottom of the slide (
Claims
1. Breech locking conversion kits for pistols using the short recoil in straight line of a barrel and a mobile locking bolt which, pushed forward by the pistol slide assembly going in battery, slides in upward position on two (or one depending on the kit model) inclined ramps of a removable rod to lock the pistol breech and slides downward on said ramp to unlock the breech after a shot is fired, comprising:
- (A) a slide designed to be positioned on a pistol frame assembly for reciprocation between a forward battery position under the recoil spring pressure to a rearward loading position when the recoil of the pistol forces the slide assembly to move rearward, having on each side of its internal roof a parallel identical notch designed to house the corresponding tip of the lateral wings of a mobile locking bolt as described on paragraphs (D) and (F) when said mobile bolt moves to its upward position;
- (B) a barrel installed from the muzzle end of the slide and held in position by a removable bushing, having on both lateral sides of its chamber a parallel groove wherein the mobile locking bolt wings can slide up and down and a transversal bottom groove wherein the transversal block of the mobile locking bolt enters when said locking bolt moves to its upward position;
- (C) a removable locking rod which fastens on its rear end to the pistol frame by the shaft of the pistol slide stop or the axle of the slide release depending of the pistol model and which cylindrical elongated front extension doubles as a recoil spring guide, having on the same plane on top of its rear part two inclined ramps with identical angles, shapes and dimensions designed to fit precisely on the inclined front and rear surfaces of the bottom ramp of a mobile locking bolt described on paragraph (D);
- (D) a mobile U shaped locking bolt with two lateral wings, one transversal internal block, one bottom ramp having the front and rear inclined surfaces designed to fit precisely inside the two top ramps of a locking rod as described on paragraph (C);
- (E) a removable locking rod as described on paragraph (C) using a reversed disposition of the locking ramps by having only one inclined top ramp designed to fit precisely inside the twin bottom ramps of a mobile locking block as described on paragraph (F);
- (F) a mobile U shaped locking bolt as described on paragraph (D) using a reversed disposition of the locking ramps by having two inclined bottom ramps designed to fit precisely on the front and rear surfaces of the inclined top ramp of the locking rod described on paragraph (E).
2. Breech locking conversion kits according to claim 1 having a round barrel and a removable bushing, designed to be installed without any modification on the frame assemblies of 1911 pistols the same way as the original slide assemblies;
3. Breech locking conversion kits according to claim 1 having a flat sided chamber barrel installed from the bottom of a bushingless flat sided slide, designed to be installed without any modification on the frame assemblies of 1911 pistols the same way as the original slide assemblies;
4. Breech locking conversion kits according to claim 3 designed to be installed without any modification of their frame assemblies on different pistols regardless of their operating systems and the material used in their fabrication.
5. Breech locking conversion kits according to claim 4 having a top ejecting slide with a squared front opening on which the two tips of the locking bolt wings come to bear and, in conjunction with the transversal block of the mobile locking bolt inside the bottom barrel groove, locks together barrel and slide when said mobile bolt has moved to its upward position.
6. New pistols made of different materials and operating on different systems using breech locking conversion kits according to claims 4 and 5 especially designed for their model, size and caliber.
Type: Application
Filed: Jan 29, 2015
Publication Date: Aug 4, 2016
Inventor: Lucien Yves Serandour (Montreal)
Application Number: 14/608,840