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Claims  |
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The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or
privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
1. A pistol comprising upper and lower receiver assemblies, a gas-actuation
system, and a barrel;
said lower receiver assembly having a squared-off rear surface;
said upper receiver assembly having a buffer spring assembly mounted on top
thereof and a bolt carrier assembly slidably mounted therein;
said buffer spring assembly engaging said bolt carrier assembly to
resiliently bias said bolt carrier assembly into engagement with a
cartridge chamber formed on the end of said barrel;
said buffer spring assembly comprising a buffer rod, a buffer spring
mounted concentrically on said buffer rod, and a buffer housing enclosing
said buffer rod and buffer spring; said rod, spring, and housing arranged
to resiliently bias said rod continuously into said housing;
said buffer spring assembly further comprising a connector sleeve fixedly
attached to the rear end of said buffer rod and slidably mounted in an
elongated slide housing on said upper receiver assembly, said connector
sleeve being removably attached to said bolt carrier assembly;
said bolt carrier assembly containing a firing pin; a bolt carrier gas key
attached to said bolt carrier by threaded screw means; and, threaded means
connecting said connector sleeve to said bolt carrier;
a gas key attachment threaded hole in said bolt carrier;
said threaded screw means comprises a cylindrical buffer connector having a
threaded lower end threadedly engaged in said gas key attachment.
2. A pistol comprising upper and lower receiver assemblies, a gas-actuation
system, and a barrel:
said lower receiver assembly having a squared-off rear surface;
said upper receiver assembly having a buffer spring assembly mounted on top
thereof and a bolt carrier assembly slidably mounted therein;
said buffer spring assembly engaging said bolt carrier assembly to
resiliently bias said bolt carrier assembly into engagement with a
cartridge chamber formed on the end of said barrel;
said buffer spring assembly comprising a buffer rod, a buffer spring
mounted concentrically on said buffer rod, and a buffer housing enclosing
said buffer rod and buffer spring; said rod, spring, and housing arranged
to resiliently bias said rod continuously into said housing;
said buffer housing being affixed to the top of said pistol, extending from
a point above said bolt carrier assembly to a point above said barrel; and
said buffer housing being fixedly attached at its forward end to a gas
manifold which is snugly attached to said barrel, said manifold having a
gas passage formed therein communicating with a gas port passing through
said barrel and into the bore of said barrel;
a gas key in said bolt carrier assembly;
a gas tube in said manifold communicating with said gas passage, said tube
extending rearwardly into said upper receiver and into slidable engagement
with said gas key.
3. A pistol comprising:
a lower receiver assembly;
an upper receiver assembly having a bolt carrier assembly slidably located
therein, said upper receiver assembly being pivotally attached to said
lower receiver assembly;
a buffer spring assembly mounted on top of said upper receiver assembly and
arranged to resiliently bias said bolt carrier assembly forward;
a pistol barrel having a cartridge chamber, said barrel being fixedly
engaged in said upper receiver assembly and arranged to receive said bolt
carrier assembly in temporary locking engagement therein; and
a gas actuation system for communicating heated gas from the bore of said
barrel to said bolt carrier assembly.
4. The pistol of claim 3 further comprising a rear bulkhead blocking off
the rear end of said lower receiver assembly.
5. The pistol of claim 3, wherein said upper receiver assembly comprises an
elongated slide housing attached to the top of said upper receiver
assembly.
6. The pistol of claim 5 further comprising a scope mounting base located
on top of said slide housing.
7. The pistol of claim 3, wherein said bolt carrier assembly comprises an
M16 bolt carrier modified by having about one-half of the rear portion
thereof removed.
8. The pistol of claim 5, wherein said upper receiver assembly further
comprises an elongated slot formed in the top thereof between the upper
receiver body and said elongated slide housing.
9. The pistol of claim 7, wherein said bolt carrier assembly further
comprises a connector pin threadedly engaging a gas key screw hole in said
bolt carrier. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is directed to the field of firearms and more
particularly involves an automatic/semi-automatic hand-held pistol based
on the design of the military M16 rifle.
The M16 automatic rifle and the AR15 semi-automatic rifle have been the
standard issue weapons of the U.S. military and civilian police
departments for decades. The rifle design was originated by E. M. Stoner
and developed by Fairchild Engine and Airplane Company in the 1950's.
Modified versions of the M16 designated as the M16A1 and M16A2 are
currently in use by armed forces in the U.S. and throughout the world. A
civilian semi-automatic version of the M16 designated as the AR15 is sold
to civilians by Olympic Arms of Olympia, Wash. When used herein, the
phrase "M16" is intended to include all versions of the M16 and AR15
previously and currently being produced.
One of the basic patents on gas-operated firearms was U.S. Pat. No.
2,951,424 issued to E. S. Stoner on Sep. 6, 1960, disclosing the M16 bolt
and bolt carrier system and the gas operation thereof. This patent
discloses a rifle utilizing a gas tube that extends from gas ports in the
barrel, back into the receiver of the rifle and into a gas tube pocket or
"key" attached to the bolt carrier.
Other patents which disclose conventional AR15 and M16 designs include U.S.
Pat. No. 3,236,155 to Sturtevant issued Feb. 22, 1966, and U.S. Pat. No.
3,742,636 to Dealy et al. issued Jul. 3, 1973.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,675,534, issued to P. C. Beretta on Jul. 11, 1972,
discloses a gas-operated automatic rifle having a piston and stem inside a
gas tube with the stem fixedly attached to the bolt carrier.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,358,986, issued to C. Giorgio on Nov. 16, 1982, discloses a
gas-operated automatic rifle having a stationary piston and a segmented
movable gas cylinder/operating rod assembly including a biasing spring.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,618,457, issued to A. Miller on Nov. 9, 1971, and U.S. Pat.
No. 3,318,912, issued to Miller on May 9, 1967, both disclose a
gas-operated rifle utilizing a gas-operated piston and rod assembly with
the piston rod telescopically mounted over a stationary guide rod and
being spring-biased.
While the aforementioned patents all disclose various constructions for M16
rifles having gas-operated bolt assemblies, none discloses structure for
utilization as a pistol having the M16 type of upper and lower receivers,
sliding and rotating bolt assembly, and gas operation.
Also, whereas numerous automatic and semi-automatic pistol designs are
known in the art, they utilize a "blowback" design wherein the bolt is not
locked up in the chamber when the cartridge is fired. Furthermore, the
automatic and semi-automatic pistol designs that are utilized are designed
for the relatively mild, low pressure cartridges generally associated with
pistols and revolvers, such as the 45 ACP, 9 mm, 38 special, and 357 and
44 magnum calibers. To the best of this inventor's knowledge, no automatic
or semi-automatic pistol design has ever been commercialized that is
capable of handling the long "bottle-necked" rifle cartridges or of
handling the high pressures generated in such rifle cartridges. The
pressures normally associated with conventional pistol cartridges
generally range from around 30,000 up to about 40,000 CUP (copper units of
pressure). This allows for the use of the limited "blow-back" bolt design.
Rifle cartridges, on the other hand, are generally much larger in powder
capacity and generate internal pressures in the range of about 50,000 to
60,000 CUP, requiring a locking bolt design. Semi-automatic and automatic
pistol designs are incapable of handling rifle cartridges.
In addition, the conventional M16 rifle design does not lend itself to a
pistol design for several reasons. One reason is the length of the M16
bolt assembly (bolt and bolt carrier) which requires a long chamber area
to the rear of the upper receiver to allow cycling of the bolt assembly
backward during the firing cycle. Another reason is the requirement for a
buffer tube extending from the rear of the receiver area for containing a
buffer and buffer spring which are necessary in the M16 for absorbing the
recoil of the bolt and then cycling the bolt forward after a cartridge has
been fired.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention overcomes the disadvantages of the above-described
firearms by providing a modified M16 pistol design that utilizes standard
rifle cartridges such as the 5.56 mm NATO (.223 Rem.) caliber without need
for an extended buffer chamber at the rear of the pistol. The present
invention achieves its advantages by providing a modified M16 pistol which
utilizes a shortened M16 bolt assembly and a spring-biased buffer system
mounted in the upper portion of the receiver, above the bolt assembly.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional side view of the pistol of the present
invention seen from the right hand side.
FIG. 2 is a rear view of the pistol of FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a top view of the pistol of FIG. 1.
FIG. 4 is a view of the bolt assembly used in the pistol.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring now to FIG. 1, which is a cross-sectional side view of the M16
pistol of the present invention, the pistol 10 consists of an upper
receiver 11 pivotally attached to a lower receiver 12 and having a barrel
13 threadedly engaged in the upper receiver 11. A cylindrical handguard 14
threadedly engages the forward end of the upper receiver 11 and secures
barrel 13 to the upper receiver by engaging an external shoulder formed on
barrel 13. A gas manifold block 15 encircles barrel 13 and has attached to
the top thereof a cylindrical buffer housing 16. A snug-fitting slidable
buffer rod 17 is located in buffer housing 16 and has located thereon, in
annular relationship with housing 16, a helical coiled buffer spring 18
arranged to be engaged by the right hand end of the buffer rod 17 and the
left end of buffer housing 16 such that movement of the buffer rod out of
the housing to the left serves to compress buffer spring 18. Buffer spring
18 thereby resiliently biases buffer rod 17 to the right inside housing 16
and maintains it in a retracted telescopic position therein.
A gas tube 19 snugly engaged in gas manifold 15 communicates with a bore
passage 15A passing through the lower portion of manifold 15 and
communicating with gas port 13A formed in barrel 13. Barrel 13 has a
central rifled bore portion 13B passing from a cartridge chamber area 13C
to the muzzle end of barrel 13. Gas passage 13A communicates with rifled
bore 13B.
At the left-most end of gas tube 19 is a gas key 23 slidably engaged over
the end of gas tube 19 and fixedly attached to the top of a modified M16
bolt carrier 21. Bolt carrier 21 has located therein, in a partially
rotatable and slidable relationship, a conventional M16 bolt 20 having a
conventional M16 firing pin 22 slidably located therein.
Lower receiver 12 and all of the components located therein including
magazine 25, cartridges 26, trigger 27, hammer 28, disconnector 29, and
pistol grip 34 are of a conventional M16 design except for one
modification. That modification consists of the rearward or left-most end
36 of lower receiver 12 which is a solid bulkhead or plate as opposed to
the open bore threaded end of a conventional M16 lower receiver. The solid
end face 36 of lower receiver 12 can be more clearly seen in FIG. 2.
Otherwise, all the remaining components located in the lower receiver 12,
commonly referred to as the lower receiver assembly, are of the
conventional M16 construction. Likewise, the bolt 20 and firing pin 22
comprise a conventional bolt assembly of an M16 rifle. The bolt carrier 21
of the present invention is modified significantly from that of the
conventional M16 as can be more clearly seen in FIGS. 1 and 4.
Upper receiver 11 is also modified considerably from the conventional M16
structure. The upper receiver 11 differs from an M16 upper receiver in the
construction of an upper spring buffer assembly comprising the buffer
housing 16, buffer rod 17, buffer spring 18, buffer connector 32 and
buffer connector sleeve 33. Also, not shown in FIG. 1, but illustrated
clearly in FIGS. 2 and 3 is a charging handle 37 threadedly engaged in the
left hand side of connector sleeve 33 and projecting outward through a
slot formed in slide housing 30. Slide housing 30 comprises a relatively
rectangular shaped box portion attached permanently to the top of the
upper receiver 11, fixedly connected to the left end of housing 16, and
containing therein a slide area for connector sleeve 33. Connector sleeve
33 is threadably attached at the rearward end of buffer rod 17 and is also
connected to bolt carrier 21 by means of buffer connector 32 which
comprises a cylindrical metal pin extending downward and having a threaded
end portion at the bottom thereof to threadably engage in the conventional
gas key bolt hole formed in the bolt carrier 21. In this embodiment,
buffer connector pin 32 threadably engages in the front gas key bolt hole
in bolt carrier 21 and a conventional gas key screw is located in the rear
gas key screw hole providing additional attachment means for connecting
gas key 23 to bolt carrier 21 as is known in the conventional M16 design.
FIG. 2 represents the rear view of the M16 pistol of the present invention.
In FIG. 2 can be clearly seen the charging handle 37 extending leftward
out of the slot formed in slide housing 30 and also being threadedly
engaged at the innermost end in connector sleeve 33. Also obvious in FIG.
2 is the blanked off rearmost end 36 of the lower receiver. As in
conventional M16 construction, the upper receiver 11 is pivotally
connected to the lower receiver 12 by front pivot pin 38 and rear pivot
pin 39 visible in FIG. 1.
Referring now to FIG. 3, which is a top view of the invention, the top rear
sight base 31 can be seen comprising a series of ridges and grooves
adapted to receive conventional "Weaver" type scope mount rings available
commercially from the Weaver Scope Company, El Paso, Tex. Also visible in
top view 3 is the charging handle 37 extending leftwardly from the slide
housing 30 and the front and rear thumb screws 40 and 41 which serve to
attach the slide housing 30 to upper receiver 11.
FIG. 4 is a side view of the modified bolt carrier/bolt assembly 20, 21 of
the M16 pistol. As previously mentioned, bolt 20 is a conventional M16
type bolt having a side-mounted extractor and a face-mounted ejector pin.
Also, firing pin 22 passing through the center of bolt 20 is of a
conventional M16 design. The bolt carrier 21 is of a modified M16 design
having a conventional front portion but the rear portion which extends
from the end of the firing pin backward has been removed. Sitting atop
bolt carrier 21 and threadedly attached thereto by a conventional gas key
screw as well as buffer pin 32, is gas key 23 which is modified from a
conventional M16 gas key. The major modification thereof is the provision
of a buffer engagement block 42 which is permanently attached to the gas
key by means such as welding. Block 42 is a rectangular-shaped block
having a pair of cylindrical openings bored therethrough to allow
threading of the rearward gas key retention screw and threading of the
buffer connector pin 32 into the normal gas key attachment threads in the
bolt carrier. Block 42 provides lateral support for the engagement of
buffer connector pin 32 with the entire bolt/bolt carrier assembly. This
provides a spreading of the lateral forces from charging handle 37 into
the bolt carrier 21 while the operator of the firearm is pulling the bolt
carrier assembly rearwardly to load a live round of ammunition into the
chamber and also during cycling of the bolt assembly during the firing
cycle.
In typical operation, the M16 pistol 10 will have the bolt/bolt carrier
assembly 20, 21 resting in the forward position. A loaded magazine 25
containing live rounds of ammunition 26 is loaded upward into magazine
housing 24 until the magazine engages a magazine catch as usual in a
conventional M16 rifle. The charging handle 37 is then pulled rearwardly
to its rearmost travel point near the end of slide housing 30 which pulls
with it the bolt/bolt carrier assembly 20, 21 to its rearmost position
while simultaneously pulling buffer rod 17 rearwardly and compressing coil
spring 18 between the forward end of rod 17 and the rearward end of buffer
housing 16. When the bolt/bolt carrier assembly has reached its rearmost
position and the connector sleeve engages the rearward end of slide
housing 30, the operator of the weapon then releases the charging handle
and the force of compressed spring 18 slides the buffer rod 17 and the
connector pin 32 forward which simultaneously pulls bolt/bolt carrier
assembly 20, 21 forward. As the bolt/bolt carrier assembly moves forward,
it strips a live round from magazine 25 and moves it into the chamber of
barrel 13.
Utilizing conventional M16 camming procedures, bolt 20 moves into locking
engagement in the chamber by passing through the chamber locking lugs and
then rotating behind, thereby providing full lock-up of the bolt in the
chamber prior to firing of the cartridge. When the trigger 27 is pulled,
hammer 28 is released and strikes firing pin 22 driving it into the primer
of the cartridge 35 thereby firing the cartridge. The bullet from the
cartridge passes down the rifle bore 13B and exits the muzzle end of
barrel 13. After the bullet passes by gas port 13A, heated gases from
firing of the cartridge pass up through gas port 13A into gas passage 15A
formed in manifold 15. The gas then passes down gas tube 19 and impacts
gas key 23 camming the bolt out of engagement with the locking lugs and
driving bolt/bolt carrier assembly 20, 21 rearward in the housing until
the compression of spring 18 slows and then stops rearward movement of the
bolt/bolt carrier assembly. The compressive force stored in spring 18 then
drives the buffer rod 17 and the bolt/bolt carrier assembly forward again,
stripping another live round from the magazine and reloading the gun for
firing. Just as in a conventional M16, the movement of bolt/bolt carrier
20, 21 rearward also serves to recock hammer 28 and trigger 27 by
conventional means utilized in M16 rifles. This is accomplished by
rearward movement of the bolt carrier against the hammer which pushes the
hammer back into a cocked position as the bolt carrier slides over the
hammer in its rearward movement. Thus, the cycle of firing one round is
completed and the weapon is now reloaded and recocked and ready for firing
again. The action of buffer rod 17, buffer spring 18, and buffer housing
16 serves to recycle the bolt/bolt carrier assembly 20, 21 after firing of
each individual round.
Thus, the present invention discloses an M16 pistol capable of firing the
high pressure, high capacity rifle cartridges such as the 5.56 NATO round
(.223 REM.). Although the present invention is disclosed in semi-automatic
format, it is obvious that the present invention could also be utilized in
a full automatic, submachine gun configuration by altering the
conventional AR15 semi-automatic lower receiver assembly into the
conventional M16 full automatic receiver assembly by the use of the
full-auto sear and the proper safety, disconnector, trigger and hammer
assembly. Since, as previously mentioned, the lower receiver and the lower
receiver assembly are conventional M16 construction (except for the
blanked off rear face 36 of the receiver), one skilled in the art can
easily modify the present invention to fire either semi-automatic (AR15)
or fully automatic (M16) with conventionally obtainable parts.
Although a specific preferred embodiment of the present invention has been
described in the detailed description above, the description is not
intended to limit the invention to the particular forms of embodiments
disclosed therein since they are to be recognized as illustrative rather
than restrictive and it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that
the invention is not so limited. For example, whereas the present
invention is described with reference to the 5.56 NATO caliber, it is
clear that the invention could be used in other calibers including rifle
and handgun calibers such as 6 mm, .222 Rem, .222 Rem Magnum, .17 Rem, .22
Hornet, .223 Rem, .218 Bee, 219 Wasp, 22 PPC, .225 Win, 220 Swift, .243
Win, .308 Win, .22-250, and many others, by modifications known to those
skilled in the art, given the teachings of this disclosure. Thus, the
invention is declared to cover all changes and modifications of the
specific example of the invention herein disclosed for purposes of
illustration which do not constitute departure from the spirit and scope
of the invention.
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Description  |
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