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Weapon aiming system    
United States Patent5686690   
Link to this pagehttp://www.wikipatents.com/5686690.html
Inventor(s)Lougheed; James Hugh (Kinburn, CA); Wardell; Mark (Waterloo, CA); Sheney; Daniel Raymond (Kemptville, CA)
AbstractA machine gun unit comprises a machine gun mounted to a support by a mounting permitting pivoting movement of the machine gun relative to the support in azimuth and/or elevation. Angle encoders provide position signals representing angular displacement of the machine gun relative to the support. An aiming system comprises a sensor, for example a CCD sensor, which provides a video signal representing a field of view for the aiming system, a display device for displaying the field of view, a manual input interface, a graphics artifact generator, and a digital signal processor (DSP). The DSP monitors the outputs of the angle encoders and controls the graphics artifact generator to combine the output of the graphics artifact generator with the output of the CCD sensor for display by the display device. Various graphics artifacts can be provided. Masks may be provided for delimiting field of fire. A cursor may be repositioned to reflect superelevation requirements. Target motion and opposing fire can be detected and highlighted. Tracers can be simulated. The weapon can also be used for surveillance, either alone or as part of a weapon system comprising a plurality of the weapons and a central command post.
   














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Patent Text Patent PDF Print Page Summary File History
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Drawing from US Patent 5686690
Weapon aiming system - US Patent 5686690 Drawing
Weapon aiming system
Inventor     Lougheed; James Hugh (Kinburn, CA); Wardell; Mark (Waterloo, CA); Sheney; Daniel Raymond (Kemptville, CA)
Owner/Assignee     Computing Devices Canada Ltd. (Nepean, CA)
Patent assignment
All assignments
Publication Date     November 11, 1997
Application Number     08/433,198
PAIR File History     Application Data   Transaction History
Image File Wrapper   Patent Term   Fees
Litigation
Filing Date     May 2, 1995
US Classification     89/41.17 89/41.05 89/134 348/155
Int'l Classification     F41A 017/08
Examiner     Johnson; Stephen M.
Assistant Examiner    
Attorney/Law Firm     Adams; Thomas
Address
Parent Case     This is a continuation-in-part of patent application Ser. No. 07/984,692 filed Dec. 2, 1992 now U.S. Pat. No. 5,456,145.
Priority Data    
USPTO Field of Search     89/41.05 89/41.17 89/134 364/423 348/143 348/155 348/169
Patent Tags     weapon aiming
   
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Market Size
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$5B - $10B
$2B - $5B
$500M - $2B
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Market Share
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50% - 74.99%
25% - 49.99%
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 Technical Review Submit all comments and votes
 Claims Submit all comments and votes
 


What is claimed is:

1. A weapon comprising:

a gun barrel having a bore axis fixed relative to a datum;

a sighting device having an optical axis fixed relative to the bore axis;

position sensing means for detecting angular movement of the gun barrel relative to the datum and providing a corresponding position signal representing angular displacement of the gun barrel;

sensor means for providing a scene signal comprising a series of frames each representing a field of view of the sighting device, and a frame synchronization signal;

input means for inputting a signal other than the position signal;

display means for displaying an image of the field of view frame by frame;

artifact memory means for storing data corresponding to a said frame;

signal processor means for repeatedly writing into said artifact memory means data words each representing one of a plurality of pixels which, when displayed by hid display means, form a graphics artifact;

video generation means for generating a graphics artifact signal from the data stored in the artifact memory means;

means for combining the scene signal and the graphics artifact signal and supplying the combined signals to the display device to superimpose the graphics artifact on the image of the scene displaced; and

the signal processor means being responsive to the position signal and to the frame synchronization signal to modify the stored data words to effect changes in the graphics artifact relative to the scene in continuous and direct dependence upon the angular displacement of the gun relative to the support, and responsive to said signal other than the position signal to modify such dependency.

2. A weapon as claimed in claim 1, wherein the gun barrel is mounted to a support by a mounting permitting pivoting movement of the gun barrel relative to the support in at least one of azimuth and elevation, and the position sensing means comprises angle encoders for providing said position signals in dependence upon angular displacement of the gun barrel relative to the support.

3. A weapon as claimed in claim 1, wherein the video generation means provides signals representing a graphical artifact comprising at least one mask alelimiting an area of the field of view; and

the signal processing means is responsive to the input of limit signals via the input means to record specific azimuthal and/or elevational orientations of the gun barrel as boundaries of said area and subsequently responsive to the position sensing means initially to control the graphics artifact generation means to display at least a part of said at least one mask when the aiming point of the gun barrel traverses one of said boundaries and thereafter to adjust the extent of said part in dependence upon further pivoting of the gun.

4. A weapon as claimed in claim 1, further comprising means for providing a range signal representing range to a designated target; the video generation means providing said graphics artifact signal representing a cursor, and the signal processing means being responsive to the range signal and stored ballistics data to compute a required degree of superelevation for the gun barrel and apply a corresponding offset to the position signal, thereby offsetting the cursor downwards relative to the image of the field of view, such that restoration of the cursor to the displayed target requires elevation of the gun barrel by an amount corresponding to the required superelevation.

5. A weapon as claimed in claim 1, wherein the signal processor means is further responsive to a signal from the input means to supply parameters to said graphics artifact generation means, and the video generation means generates a graphics artifact in the form of a spot displayed by the display means at a position determined by said parameters.

6. A weapon as claimed in claim 5, wherein the signal processor means computes said parameters for a trajectory of a round fired by the weapon and the graphics artifact generation means displays said spot at a calculated landing position of the round.

7. A weapon as claimed in claim 6, wherein the signal processor is arranged to modify said parameters to compensate for movement of the gun barrel so as to maintain a particular artifact at the same position relative to displayed scene features in successive frames.

8. A weapon as claimed in claim 7, wherein the signal processor and graphics artifact generator combine to display in a particular frame a plurality of said artifacts spaced apart in a path traversed by the aiming point of the gun barrel, with artifacts generated earlier being reduced in size and/or luminance relative to artifacts generated later.

9. A weapon unit as claimed in claim 5, further comprising a laser rangefinder and wherein the parameters are such that said spot is displayed at an aiming point of the laser rangefinder.

10. A weapon as claimed in claim 9, wherein the signal processor is arranged to modify said parameters for successive frames to compensate for movement of the gun barrel so as to maintain the spot at a corresponding position in the display.

11. A weapon as claimed in claim 1, wherein the signal processor means comprises interframe detection means for detecting differences between pixels of a current frame of the video signal and corresponding pixels of a preceding frame of the video signal and means for recording data corresponding to the differing pixels, the graphics artifact generator using the data for generation of corresponding graphics artifacts.

12. A weapon unit comprising:

a scene sensor mounted to a support and providing a scene signal representing a field of view of the scene sensor;

a gun barrel mounted to the support and pivotal, by an operator, in elevation relative to both the support and a line of sight of the scene sensor; the gun barrel having a bore axis;

position sensing means for detecting angular movement of the gun barrel in elevation relative to the support and providing a position signal representing angular displacement of the gun barrel relative to the support;

graphics artifact generation means for providing an artifact signal representing a cursor;

display means responsive to the scene signal and the artifact signal for displaying an image of the field of view and the cursor combined: and

signal processing means responsive initially to the position signal and to the artifact signal to control the display means to display the cursor at a position in the displayed scene corresponding to an aim point of the gun barrel;

the weapon unit further comprising means for providing a range signal representing range to a designated target; and

input means operable by the operator to provide a target designation signal;

the signal processing means being further responsive to the target designation signal, the range signal and stored ballistics data to compute a required degree of superelevation for the gun barrel and apply a corresponding offset to the position signal, thereby offsetting the cursor downwards relative to its position in the displayed field of view at the instant that the target designation signal occurred, such that restoration of the cursor to said position requires angular displacement of the gun barrel relative to the scene sensor line of sight by an amount corresponding to the required superelevation.

13. A weapon as claimed in claim 12, wherein the gun barrel is mounted to a support by a mounting permitting pivoting movement of the gun barrel relative to the support in at least one of azimuth and elevation, and the position sensing means comprises angle encoders providing position signals representing angular displacement of the gun barrel relative to the support.

14. A weapon as claimed in claim 12, wherein said offsetting is controlled such that at least part of the cursor remains within the displayed field of view.

15. A weapon as claimed in claim 12, wherein the offset is non-linear, so that movement of the cursor in regions adjacent an edge of the display will be less, for a given angular displacement of the gun barrel, than movement of the cursor in regions near the middle of the display.
 Description Submit all comments and votes
 


This invention relates to weapons, particularly weapons which are aimed manually, such as machine guns, sub-machine guns, rifles and the like, and is especially concerned with aiming of such weapons, whether they are hand-held or mounted pivotally to a support.

Generally, the invention is applicable to so-called "crew-served" weapons operated by one or two persons, which typically includes "light" machine guns, which fire non-explosive rounds, and "heavy" machine guns, which fire larger rounds or grenades; and to hand-held equivalents of those weapons, such as sub-machine guns and rifles which are carried by individuals, including rifles with "add-on" grenade launchers. Hitherto, such weapons have been aimed at the target by sighting by means of a direct-view sight on the weapon barrel, which limits the effectiveness of such weapons, especially with battlefield conditions becoming increasingly complicated.

OBJECT OF THE INVENTION

An object of the present invention is to provide an improved aiming system suitable for machine guns, sub-machine guns, rifles and like weapons.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

To this end, according to one aspect of the present invention there is provided a weapon unit comprising:

a gun having a barrel with a bore axis fixed relative to a datum and a sighting device having an optical axis fixed relative to the bore axis;

position sensing means for detecting angular movement of the gun barrel in azimuth and elevation relative to the datum and providing a position signal representing angular displacement of the gun barrel relative to the datum;

sensor means for providing a scene signal comprising a series of frames each representing a field of view of the sighting device, and a frame synchronization signal;

input means for inputting a signal other than the position signal;

display means for displaying an image of the field of view frame by frame;

artifact memory means for storing data corresponding to a said frame;

processor means for repeatedly writing into said memory data words each representing one of a plurality of pixels which, when displayed by said display means, form a graphics artifact;

video generation means for generating, from the data stored in the artifact memory, a graphics artifact signal;

means for combining the scene signal and the graphics artifact signal and supplying the combined signals to the display device to superimpose the graphics artifact on the image of the scene displayed;

the processor means being responsive to the position signal and to the frame synchronization signal to modify the stored data words to effect changes in the graphics artifact relative to the scene in continuous and direct dependence upon the angular displacement of the gun relative to the support, and responsive to said signal other than the position signal to modify such dependency.

Where the gun is pivotally mounted to a support, the position sensing means may conveniently comprise angle encoders for measuring angular displacement of the gun barrel relative to the support.

Alternatively, the position sensing means may comprise angular rate sensors, external magnetic field sensors, gravity sensors, or other suitable sensors for determining angular displacement of the gun barrel about the datum without reference to a separate support. Such position sensing means may be used with hand-held weapons or with weapons mounted to a support.

When using a machine gun, it is often desirable to set limits to its field-of-fire so as to avoid fratricide and/or improve effectiveness by avoiding overlap between fields of fire of other machine guns.

According to a second aspect of the present invention a weapon comprises:

a gun barrel with its bore axi