Locking Block Rail Insert
The present invention provides a pistol with a frame having a rear grip, a trigger facility forward of the grip and an upper surface. An elongated slide connects to the frame and is operable to reciprocate along the upper surface. The frame defines a trigger recess open above the trigger facility at the upper surface. An insert has a major portion removably received in the trigger recess and has a rail extending from the major portion above the upper surface. The frame rail is adapted to connect with the slide to constrain reciprocation of the slide.
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This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/535,594 filed on Jul. 21, 2017, entitled Pistol Locking Block, Slide Rail and Stopping Block, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety for all that is taught and disclosed therein.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention generally relates to firearms. More specifically, the present invention relates to firearm parts.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThe assembly of firearms from parts instead of purchasing a complete firearm has become popular with the purchasers of firearms. It has become a hobby that allows the firearm to be customized with the desired features by the purchaser. When a purchaser buys a completed firearm from the dealer, that purchaser usually ends up spending more money on customizing the firearm, while discarding parts that originally were part of the firearm. Popular changes to completed firearms are trigger replacement, barrel replacement, sight replacement and weight reduction modifications.
One of the parts of the firearm is always engraved or marked with a serial number and recorded for tracking purposes. The marked part is generally considered as the firearm by the ATF and is usually the receiver or frame of the firearm. The purchaser can purchase only the marked part and build a firearm by purchasing the other required parts to complete the firearm. Under the law in most jurisdictions, a purchaser can machine a firearm without marking of that part that is normally registered. The unmarked machined part usually has restrictions from sale to others and must remain with the person who machined the unmarked part. If a transfer of the unmarked part takes place, the part must be marked with a serial number prior to the transfer; and the normal federal firearms regulations which include DROS, and background checks are required to be performed on the recipient of the firearm. An issue with machining the firearm from scratch is that most purchasers do not have a machine shop or the skills to machine such parts.
Machine shops and polymer manufacturers can manufacture firearms receivers or frames up to a point of incompletion, that allows them to sell the unfinished frame to customers, who then proceed to finish the frame for their personal use. Under the federal law, if the part is only completed eighty percent or less of the effort to provide a completed part that requires marking, the part is considered not being a firearm. It should be noted that the “80%” description is not recognized by the ATF as an official technical term, but is understood as a classification or description of the type of component that is being produced within the firearms industry. The part being classified as a non-firearm allows the part to be sold by manufacturers without violating the law.
The trend is to have firearm receivers and frames of a polymer material available for sale that a purchaser can buy. Then, the purchaser buys the other required firearm parts separately to assemble the firearm. The receivers and frames are traditionally made from metal, but now are also being made from a polymer material. Receivers and frames made of the polymer material sometimes require additional parts to be used with the parts to be installed. Incorporation of durable metal parts that are removable and replaceable instead of molding them in place is preferable to keep the polymer frame at 80% and reduce manufacturing costs. Typically, these durable metal parts can include such components as slide rails, slide stops and receiver stiffeners.
It is an object of the present invention to provide one component that adds both slide rails, slide stops, and a pin location for a trigger as one part to be assembled in a frame or receiver.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention provides a pistol with a frame having a rear grip, a trigger facility forward of the grip and an upper surface. An elongated slide connects to the frame and is operable to reciprocate along the upper surface. The frame defines a trigger recess open above the trigger facility at the upper surface. An insert has a major portion removably received in the trigger recess and has a rail extending from the major portion above the upper surface. The frame rail is adapted to connect with the slide to constrain reciprocation of the slide.
The front of the rear leg slot 48 includes a contact radius support surface 68 to engage the contact radius edge 66 to provide additional support of the locking block rail insert 10 in the pistol frame 36. When the locking block rail insert 10 is installed into the pistol frame 36, the fit between the front legs 20, rear legs 22 and the pistol frame 36 precisely positions the locking block rail insert 10 in the pistol frame 36 and prevents forward and rearward motion of the locking block rail insert 10 in the pistol frame 36.
The second embodiment is a different version of the locking block rail insert.
While different embodiments of the invention have been described in detail herein, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that various modifications and alternatives to the embodiments could be developed in light of the overall teachings of the disclosure. Accordingly, the particular arrangements are illustrative only and are not limiting as to the scope of the invention that is to be given the full breadth of any and all equivalents thereof.
Claims
1. A pistol, comprising:
- a frame having a rear grip, a trigger facility forward of the grip and an upper surface;
- an elongated slide connected to the frame and operable to reciprocate along the upper surface;
- the frame defining a trigger recess open above the trigger facility at the upper surface;
- an insert having a major portion removably received in the trigger recess and having a rail extending from the major portion above the upper surface, the frame rail adapted to connect with the slide to constrain reciprocation of the slide.
2. The pistol of claim 1, wherein the trigger recess of the frame has opposed parallel sidewalls, and the insert is closely received between the sidewalls.
3. The pistol of claim 1, wherein the insert has opposed parallel vertical elongated portion connected to each other at their upper ends by a span, and each having a frame rail at its upper end.
4. The pistol of claim 3, further including at least three pin contact surfaces define in each elongated portion to engage three pins, and corresponding holes in the frame registered with the apertures to receive the pins.
5. The pistol of claim 3, wherein the elongated portions each have front edges and rear edges, and wherein the trigger recess has respective front contact surfaces and rear contact surfaces closely abutting the insert front edges.
6. The pistol of claim 1, further including a slide stop block on each side of the pistol frame to stop the slide as the slide moves rearward along the rails; and wherein the elongated portions each have a stop support surface to engage and support the slide stop block.
7. The pistol of claim 3, wherein the span has a stop surface to constrain reciprocation of a barrel moving rearward during recoil.
8. A locking block rail insert adapted to be mounted in a trigger recess of a pistol frame, comprising:
- a right side with a rail that is adapted to accept a slide;
- a left side with a rail that is adapted to accept the slide;
- a cross member mounted between the right side and the left side, wherein the right side and left side are connected together by the cross member; and
- contact edges along edges of the right side and the left side adapted to engage contact surfaces within the trigger recess of the pistol frame.
9. The locking block rail insert of claim 8, wherein the cross member includes a stop surface adapted to constrain rearward motion of a barrel during recoil.
10. The locking block rail insert of claim 8, wherein the right side and the left side each include at least three pin contact surfaces adapted to receive and engage a pin to secure the locking block rail insert in the pistol frame.
11. The rear rail insert of claim 8, wherein the right side and the left side each include a front leg and a rear leg, the front leg and the rear leg each having a contact edge adapted to engage contact surfaces within the trigger recess of the pistol frame.
12. The rear rail insert of claim 11, wherein the contact edge of each rear leg includes a radius adapted to match a curved contact surface of the pistol frame.
13. The rear rail insert of claim 11, wherein each of the front legs and rear legs include a pin hole adapted to engage a pin in the pistol frame and wherein each of the rear legs include a semi-circle cut out adapted to engage a pin in the pistol frame.
14. The locking block rail insert of claim 8, wherein the right side and the left side each have a stop support surface adapted to engage and support a slide stop block on each side of the pistol frame to stop the slide as the slide moves rearward along the rails.
15. The locking block rail insert of claim 8, wherein the right side and the left side each have a slide stop block adapted to stop the slide as the slide moves rearward along the rails.
16. A kit of parts for assembling a pistol comprising:
- a pistol frame having a trigger recess, the trigger recess having contact surfaces inside of the trigger recess;
- a slide; and
- a locking block rail insert to be mounted in the trigger recess of the pistol frame;
- the locking block rail insert comprising:
- a right side with a rail that is adapted to accept a slide;
- a left side with a rail that is adapted to accept the slide;
- a cross member mounted between the right side and the left side, wherein the right side and left side are connected together by the cross member; and
- contact edges along edges of the right side and the left side adapted to engage contact surfaces within the trigger recess of the pistol frame.
17. The rear rail insert of claim 16, wherein the right side and the left side each include a front leg and a rear leg, the front leg and the rear leg each having a contact edge adapted to engage contact surfaces within the trigger recess of the pistol frame.
18. The locking block rail insert of claim 16, wherein the right side and the left side each have a stop support surface adapted to engage and support a slide stop block on each side of the pistol frame to stop the slide as the slide moves rearward along the rails.
19. The locking block rail insert of claim 16, wherein the right side and the left side each have a slide stop block adapted to stop the slide as the slide moves rearward along the rails.
20. The locking block rail insert of claim 16, wherein the right side and the left side each include at least three pin contact surfaces to each receive and engage a pin to secure the locking block rail insert in the pistol frame.
Type: Application
Filed: Dec 18, 2017
Publication Date: Jan 24, 2019
Applicant: Polymer 80, Inc. (Dayton, NV)
Inventors: David Borges (Fairfield, CA), Loran Kelley (Carson City, NV), Michael Guttridge (Dixon, CA)
Application Number: 15/845,118