US15032A - Improvement in fire-arms - Google Patents

Improvement in fire-arms Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US15032A
US15032A US15032DA US15032A US 15032 A US15032 A US 15032A US 15032D A US15032D A US 15032DA US 15032 A US15032 A US 15032A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
hammer
trigger
arms
barrels
pull
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
Publication date
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US15032A publication Critical patent/US15032A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • 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
    • F41A19/00Firing or trigger mechanisms; Cocking mechanisms
    • F41A19/06Mechanical firing mechanisms, e.g. counterrecoil firing, recoil actuated firing mechanisms
    • F41A19/42Mechanical firing mechanisms, e.g. counterrecoil firing, recoil actuated firing mechanisms having at least one hammer
    • F41A19/52Cocking or firing mechanisms for other types of guns, e.g. fixed breech-block types, revolvers
    • F41A19/53Double-action mechanisms, i.e. the cocking being effected during the first part of the trigger pull movement

Definitions

  • Fig. 2 shows another section of the same parts wherein the mechanical instruments are exhibited in the respective positions they assume when the hammer has been cocked by hand.
  • the other figures shown in the drawings are some of the diti'erent views of the mechanical instruments or parts ofthe lock separately considered.
  • (t c is the trigger', which moves on its fulcrum-pin b, and is coilstantly pressed on by its spring c, arranged as seeniu Figs. l and 2.
  • the trigger has a click or driver, d, jointed to it, which, when the trigger is pulled, acts on the shoulder or notch e and raises or cocks the hammer a, or moves it from the position shown in Fig. l to lthat exhibited in Fig.
  • the lock has also means or mechanism for not only admitting the hammer to be cocked by simply pulling it back by the thumb or finger, but subsequently to be discharged or thrown down by a pull on the trigger of much less effort than would be made to cock the hammer.
  • Figs. l and 2,f is a click or catch,which is arranged and pressed toward the hammer by a spring, p, as therein shown.
  • This click whentheha-mmerismovedback,entersanotch, g, thereof and retains the hammer at cock.
  • h is the driver, which causes the barrels to be revolved in the ordinary way on their arbor.
  • t' t' is a spring, which is fixed to the driver la and passes down below the pin of the joint k, by which the driver his connected to the trigger. This spri'ng is so applied as to constantly press the driver It away from the front edge of the hammer and against the ratchet ot' the magazine.
  • the spring t', or another one, should valso be made to press on the tail of the driver d, so as to force it toward the hammer.
  • l is a hook or projection fixed to the lower part of the hammer. It enters a slot, x, formed -in the driver d, which is thereby raised when the hammer is put back by the thumb, the trigger at such time being raised or moved into position to dislodge. the hammer by a very short pull.
  • the driver cl When the trigger is pulled for the purpose of discharging the hammer the driver cl will be forced upward between the clickfand the hammer, and will operate as a wedge to force the click f out of the notch by which it retains the hammer in its highest position. The hammer, on being relieved, will be thrown downward by the retractive power of the mainspring r.
  • a revolver having its lock constructed in the above peculiar manner not only possesses the advantage of rapid tiring by raising the hammer by the trigger when at close quarters, where nieety of aim is not essential, but it also enables a person to take aim with great precision at a long range and with the hammer set to cock, the hammer being afterward discharged with little pressure on the trigger in comparison to that required to elevate it to full-cock. It also possesses the further advantage of having the magazine or rotary series of barrels revolved not only whenever. the trig ger is pulled back by hand applied ldirectly to it,but whenever the hammer is so pulled backward.

Description

F. B. E. BEAUMONT.
Revolver.
Patented June 3, 1856.
NAFEERS. FHOTU-LITMOGRAPNERA WASHINGTON. D C.
Effi
UNITED STATES PATENT EETCE.
FREDK. B. E. BEAUMONT, OF UPPER VVOODBALL, BARNSLIJY, ENGLAND.
IMPRVEMENT IN FIRE-ARMS.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 15,032, dated June 3, 1856,
To all whom fit may concern:
Be it known that I, FREDERICK BLAoxET EDWARD BEAUMONT, of Upper Woodhall, Barnsley, in the county of York, England, lieutenant royal engineers, and a subject of the Queen of Great Britain, have invented or discovered a new and useful Improvement in Fire-Arms called Revolversf7 and I, the said FREDERlcx BLACKET EDWARD BEAUMONT, do herebydeclare that the nature of the invention and the manner in which the same is performed are fully described and ascertained in and by the following statement thereof, reference being had to the annexed drawings, in which- Figure l shows a section ot' the stock and` barrel of a revolving pistol having the lock constructed and arranged according to my invention, the mechanical parts being shown in their respective positions immediately after the fall ot' the hammer. Fig. 2 shows another section of the same parts wherein the mechanical instruments are exhibited in the respective positions they assume when the hammer has been cocked by hand. The other figures shown in the drawings are some of the diti'erent views of the mechanical instruments or parts ofthe lock separately considered.
The revolvingbarrels are not shown in ei ther of the figures, in order that the other parts may be more clearly represented.
In the said drawings, (t c is the trigger', which moves on its fulcrum-pin b, and is coilstantly pressed on by its spring c, arranged as seeniu Figs. l and 2. The trigger has a click or driver, d, jointed to it, which, when the trigger is pulled, acts on the shoulder or notch e and raises or cocks the hammer a, or moves it from the position shown in Fig. l to lthat exhibited in Fig. 2, wherein the click or driverd is shown not only as having forced back the hammer, but as having passed or been forced out of the notch e by a cam, o, in order that the hammer lnay be free to descend on a nipple. In vthese respects the arrangement of parts is substantially the same as in revolverlocks-wherein the hammer is raised by the trigger when it is pulled upon.
It is to be understood that the peculiarity of the present invention thatis, while in addtion to the power of discharging the contents of the barrels of a revolver in succession by the simple act of pulling the trigger, the lock has also means or mechanism for not only admitting the hammer to be cocked by simply pulling it back by the thumb or finger, but subsequently to be discharged or thrown down by a pull on the trigger of much less effort than would be made to cock the hammer. by
pulling on the trigger. It also has means or mechanism which will not only cause the rotary magazine or series of barrels to be turned during the act of pulling backward either the trigger or the hammer, but when the hammer is pulled back by the hand of a person applied directly to it will cause the trigger to be rotracted or drawn back, so as to bring its discharging mechanism into close proximity with the part or parts against which it operates, in order to effect the discharge or release of the hammer after the latter has been set to cock. For these purposes it is necessary to employ an instrument or means which (when the hammer is being pulled back or cocked independently of the trigger) shall act on the trigger and move it in position, to enable a person, by a further movement or pull ou it, to discharge the click or stop which retains the hammer. This application of means or connection between the hammer and the trigger may be varied in detail; but that which l prefer to employ may be described as follows:
In Figs. l and 2,f is a click or catch,which is arranged and pressed toward the hammer by a spring, p, as therein shown. This click, whentheha-mmerismovedback,entersanotch, g, thereof and retains the hammer at cock.
h is the driver, which causes the barrels to be revolved in the ordinary way on their arbor. f
t' t' is a spring, which is fixed to the driver la and passes down below the pin of the joint k, by which the driver his connected to the trigger. This spri'ng is so applied as to constantly press the driver It away from the front edge of the hammer and against the ratchet ot' the magazine. The spring t', or another one, should valso be made to press on the tail of the driver d, so as to force it toward the hammer.
l is a hook or projection fixed to the lower part of the hammer. It enters a slot, x, formed -in the driver d, which is thereby raised when the hammer is put back by the thumb, the trigger at such time being raised or moved into position to dislodge. the hammer by a very short pull.
From the above it will be seen that when the hammer is being cocked or put back by the thumb directly opposed to it the operation of the hook l in the slot x simultaneously causes such a back movement of the trigger as will ei'eet the rotary movement ofthe magazine or series of barrels. Thus, either by a back pull on the trigger orone on the hammer, the magazine may be put in rotation, so as to bring up into the path of the hammer the nipple of the barrel next to be discharged. When the trigger is pulled for the purpose of discharging the hammer the driver cl will be forced upward between the clickfand the hammer, and will operate as a wedge to force the click f out of the notch by which it retains the hammer in its highest position. The hammer, on being relieved, will be thrown downward by the retractive power of the mainspring r.
A revolver having its lock constructed in the above peculiar manner not only possesses the advantage of rapid tiring by raising the hammer by the trigger when at close quarters, where nieety of aim is not essential, but it also enables a person to take aim with great precision at a long range and with the hammer set to cock, the hammer being afterward discharged with little pressure on the trigger in comparison to that required to elevate it to full-cock. It also possesses the further advantage of having the magazine or rotary series of barrels revolved not only whenever. the trig ger is pulled back by hand applied ldirectly to it,but whenever the hammer is so pulled backward. The superiority of such a weapon over .those which have their locks constructed in such manner that their hammers can only be elevated in one way, whether it be by pull on the trigger or by the hand applied directly to them, will be apparent to any person skilled in the use of tire-arms.
I would remark that I do not claim to raise and discharge the hammer of a revolver by the action of the trigger when separately considered; neither do I claim to arrange the lock of a revolver in such manner that the hammer may be cocked by hand when separately considered 5 nor do I claim to rotate the magazine of barrels of a revolver by a mechanism so connected either with the trigger or the hammer that a pull on either of them shall effect such turning of the said mechanism, but when the hammer has a mechanism by which such hammer may be set to cock by a direct pull upon it, and when the trigger, hammer, and rotary series ot' barrels are so combined that by a backward pull on the trigger the hammer shall be elevated the series of barrels turned, and the h ammer set free or discharged.
I claim- Gombining with the hammer and trigger a mechanism (videlicet the hook and slot x or their mechanical equivalent or equivalents) whereby the trigger shall be drawn backward and the series of barrels turned while the hammer is being drawn back by a direct pull on it, as specified. y
In witness whereof I, the said FREDERICK BLACKET EDWARD BEAUMONT, have here-A unto set my hand and sealv this 9th day of April, in the year of our Lord, 1855.
FREDERICK BLACKET EDWARD BEAUMONT.
Witnesses:
GEO. PITT,
4 Old Square. J oHN R. DARKER,
Consulate U. S. A., London.
US15032D Improvement in fire-arms Expired - Lifetime US15032A (en)

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US15032A true US15032A (en) 1856-06-03

Family

ID=2075539

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US15032D Expired - Lifetime US15032A (en) Improvement in fire-arms

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US15032A (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20040206953A1 (en) * 2003-04-16 2004-10-21 Robert Morena Hermetically sealed glass package and method of fabrication

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20040206953A1 (en) * 2003-04-16 2004-10-21 Robert Morena Hermetically sealed glass package and method of fabrication

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US16228A (en) Spring-bolt
US15032A (en) Improvement in fire-arms
US24312A (en) Adjustable hammer eor revolving firearms
US22511A (en) Improvement in revolving fire-arms
US1898255A (en) Single trigger mechanism for double barrel guns
US16634A (en) Self-setting haik-triggered gun-lock
US18387A (en) Improvement in hair-triggers for fire-arms
US17032A (en) Improvement in revolving fire-arms
US22348A (en) Improvement in breech-loading revolving fire-arms
US19213A (en) Improvement in nipple-guards of fire-arms
US21188A (en) Improvement in revolving fire-arms
US42648A (en) Improvement in many-barreled fire-arms
US21054A (en) Improvement in revolving fire-arms
US12638A (en) Improvement in breech-loading fire-arms
US16761A (en) Improvement in portable fire-arms
US956825A (en) Single-trigger mechanism for firearms.
US12124A (en) Improvement in locks for fire-arms
US746619A (en) Single-trigger mechanism.
US7360A (en) Toothed-segment lock for fire-arms
US10930A (en) Improvement in fire-arms
US14095A (en) Firearm
US15144A (en) Improvement in fire-arms
US12555A (en) Improvement in fire-arms
US16124A (en) Improvement in fire-arms
USRE416E (en) Improved magazine, repeating, and needle gun