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US3195407A - Liquid propellant projectile unit - Google Patents

Liquid propellant projectile unit Download PDF

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Publication number
US3195407A
US3195407A US411663A US41166364A US3195407A US 3195407 A US3195407 A US 3195407A US 411663 A US411663 A US 411663A US 41166364 A US41166364 A US 41166364A US 3195407 A US3195407 A US 3195407A
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Prior art keywords
bolt
barrel
unit
propellant
piston means
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Expired - Lifetime
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US411663A
Inventor
Charles F Turner
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Olin Corp
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Olin Corp
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Priority claimed from US278676A external-priority patent/US3175494A/en
Priority to FR973473A priority Critical patent/FR1393016A/en
Application filed by Olin Corp filed Critical Olin Corp
Priority to US411663A priority patent/US3195407A/en
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Publication of US3195407A publication Critical patent/US3195407A/en
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F42AMMUNITION; BLASTING
    • F42BEXPLOSIVE CHARGES, e.g. FOR BLASTING, FIREWORKS, AMMUNITION
    • F42B5/00Cartridge ammunition, e.g. separately-loaded propellant charges
    • F42B5/02Cartridges, i.e. cases with charge and missile
    • F42B5/16Cartridges, i.e. cases with charge and missile characterised by composition or physical dimensions or form of propellant charge, with or without projectile, or powder
    • 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
    • F41A1/00Missile propulsion characterised by the use of explosive or combustible propellant charges
    • F41A1/04Missile propulsion using the combustion of a liquid, loose powder or gaseous fuel, e.g. hypergolic fuel

Definitions

  • This invention relates .to an explosive driven unit and in particular to bullets and projectileatype fasteners each of which includes and uses a liquid propellant charge.
  • One object of this invention is to provide a relatively simple primerless type of bullet or projectile fastener which depends on adiabatic compression of gas in the compression chamber of a gun or tool barrel for ignition and explosive expansion of the propellant and thereby avoids need for carrying a propellant charge together with a priming mix separately from the bullet or other projectile unit.
  • Another object is to provide a simple projectile structure including a charge of mixed liquid alkyl nitrates, a pump piston, and a ruptu-rable seal, all as an integral part of a projectile unit.
  • Another object is to provide a projectile structure having initially a cavity substantially filled with propellant, thereby avoiding need for additional cavity space for an adiabatically compressible gaseous phase for ignition of the propellant, but having finally a maximum projecta-ble solid body of the desired caliber for projection through a barrel.
  • Still another object is the provision of a bullet or fastener providing an accurate propellant charge together with a means for injecting that charge into the compression and firing chamber of a firearm or tool.
  • Still another object is the provision of a simple but rugged firing apparatus.
  • the apparatus is capable of injecting the charge of liquid propellant in a compression chamber and of applying compression for ignition without the need for a propellant reservoir, for various fluid metering and valving parts, and for an apparatus pumper acting directly on the propellant with attendant deterioration.
  • FIG, 1 is a longitudinal view in cross section of a bullet according to this invention shown before firing;
  • FIG. 2 is a longitudinal View also in cross section of the same bullet shown after firing
  • FIG. 3 is a longitudinal partly cross sectional view of a projectile type of fastener according to another embodiment of this invention shown before explosive driving in suitable driving apparatus only part of which is shown;
  • FIG. 4 is a view of the same fastener shown after it has been driven
  • FIG. 5 is a fragmentary View of a suitable firing or driving apparatus according to this invention showing the parts and a bullet of the type shown in FIGURE 1 in the ready to-fire position;
  • FIG. 6 shows the apparatus and bullet in chambering and pumping position
  • FIG. 7 shows the apparatus and bullet during ignition
  • FIG. 8 shows the apparatus with certain of its parts being blown back by the burning propellant gases following ignition to put these parts into the ready-to-fire position again.
  • an embryonic bullet 11 consisting of the usual jacket 1 of a suitable copper base alloy, a solid front core section 2 usually of lead or an alloy of lead, and a rear core section 3 fitted snugly in the jacket and displaced rearwardly from the front section to provide a cavity 4 containing a charge 5 of a liquid monopropellant.
  • a cavity volume and charge of about 0.5 of a cubic centimeter are contemplated; which is to say that the cavity is to be almost completely filled with an alkyl nitrate propellant, except for a few percent of volumetric capacity left to take up for thermal expansion and contraction of the iquid.
  • a suitable liquid propellant is a mixture of ethyl nitrate and normal propyl nitrate. Specifically, 60 mole percent of ethyl nitrate admixed in normal propyl nitrate, and known as 60:40 EP-N, was found to have the desired sensitivity and reliability from the standpoint of adiabatic compressive ignition and stability.
  • the rear core section 3 Projecting from the jacket and sealed in by the ring 6 of sealant such as solder or epoxy resin, the rear core section 3 has a central aperture 7 forming an ejection passage hermetically closed by a plug 8 of suitable consumable material such as polyethylene force-fitted into this tiny aperture to prevent loss of propellant before use.
  • the closure 8, which may be further sealed and retained by the application of an epoxy adhesive 9 is adapted to rupture whenever the rear core section 3 is rammed forward by a thrust applied to the trailing end of the section at bevel It! provided for the purpose.
  • the projectile After firing the projectile assumes the final form of the bullet 15 shown in FIGURE 2 where the sections 2 and 3 are put into abutment inside the jacket .to provide a substantially solid bullet characterized by desirable external ballistic parameters.
  • the core sections may be of any suitable material such as steel, or a combination of materials to provide desired weight and/or hardness, balance, armour piercing properties, or mushrooming properties.
  • the embryonic unit 16 is of a form suitable for assuming the final finished shape of the fastener 18 shown in FIGURE 4 driven into a supporting plate 19.
  • This unit has a main fastener section 21 of steel of suitable hardness and toughness having an ogivally tapered piercing point 22 and a threaded or otherwise formed and enlarged rear end 23, usually as shown to adapt section 21 for attachment of objects to the support.
  • One end of the main section is recessed at the rear to form the propellant cavity 24 containing the EPN mixture 25 and partially containing the compression plug section 23 closing the cavity and retained in hollow section 21 frictionally and/ or adhesively with the aid of a sealing ring of epoxy resin adhesive 2?.
  • the plug section is provided with longitudinal serrations forming passages around its cylindrical surface for ejection of the propellant when the seal 29 is ruptured as the plug section 28 is pushed in by ram 31 to fill the cavity 24 and drive the propellant out into the compression chamber 32 formed in tool barrel 33 around the ram between the fastener unit 16 and a compression plunger 34 coaxially mounted to slide forwardly with respect to ram 31 after the latter has completed its forward thrust against the fastener plug section.
  • Ram 31 and section 28 have convex faces 35 and 36, respectively, in juxtaposition to allow for application of the pressure of the ignited propellant against both sections of the fastener and avoid separation of them.
  • the serrations 33 take the form of preferably two or three slots equally spaced about the circumference of section 23.
  • the projectile fastener unit 16 in the barrel 33 with a desired seal and a desired initial resistance and thereby provide confinement at the front end of the compression chamber there is a tapered shot-start collar 4% forwardly converging to fit between the tapered tool shoulder 41 leading from the chamber to the barrel and the tapered fastener shoulder 42.
  • the collar is made of a suitable plastically deformable metallic or plastic material such as soft aluminum, 50:50 lead-tin alloy or a readily consumable polyolefin such as polyethylene.
  • the collar may be formed integrally as a thin readily deformable fin circumferentially extending out between the threads and the tapered shoulder. This, like the malleable metal and the combustible polyethylene, has the advantage of leaving no residual ring in the gun or tool barrel after firing.
  • shot start and scaling in barrel 5% is provided by ramming the projectile unit home to the beginning of the rifiing 51 by means of the compound rifle bolt 52 part of which has a short stroke for picking the unit out of a magazine 53 and positioning it in gun chamber 54.
  • the bolt as in the driving device shown in FEGURE 3, has two coaxial parts, namely a bolt ram 56 sleeved about an inner propellant compression piston 57. These correspond, respectively, to ram 31 and plunger 34, PEGURE 3.
  • the ram 56 is biased forwardly by the bolt coil spring 58 and is driven forwardly when the bolt sea-r 59, which is iased by sear follower 6d and its spring 61 into engagement with sear notch 62, is disengaged from the notch in response to the operation of the trigger (not shown).
  • the driven ram then engages at bevel Iii) with the piston section 3 of the bullet unit and rams the bullet jacket home while sealing'off the gun chamber 54 from the magazine 53 by a sleeve valve action as shown in FIGURE 6.
  • This system allowing a closed breech is admirably suited to automatic recocking by blow-back action of the propelling gases acting on both the ram and the piston of the bolt after firing.
  • FIG. 1 the bullet of FIGURES l and 2 need not be jacketed and that the front core section may be integral with the jacket shown.
  • the bullet rear section may take either the centrally apertured form or the form of the uniformly serrated plug section of FIG- URES 3 and 4. Likewise, these serrations providing passages at the outer surface of the plug may be replaced by a central passage for ejection of the propellant.
  • the means for sealing the ejection aperture is adherent to one of the unit sections and is rupturable at a predetermined ram force to release the propellant for adiabatic ignition.
  • the recess in the body section and also the plug section both are of complementary cylindrical configuration to adapt these for frictional retention yieldable under a forward thrust to allow telescoping action between the sections for decrease of the cavity volume and ejection of the propeliant charge forcefully through the ejection passage for relatively instantaneous fueling of the compression and combustion chamber.
  • the cavities 4 and 24 are nearly completely filled with liquid, leaving insufi'icient volume unfilled for premature adiabatic ignition, in contrast with the compression chamber in the firing device where liquid propellant loading is from about 15 percent to about 45 percent of the initial volume.
  • the liquid ejection ram of the bolt preferably has a somewhat slower stroke than the adiabatic firing compression piston.
  • a firing device for explosively projecting units of the type described comprising a barrel, an axially extending bolt operative to engage and make a fluid-tight seal with respect to one end of said barrel, said bolt cooperating with a projectile unit disposed in a position in the barrel opposite said bolt to define a barrel chamber, a first piston means including said bolt for feeding and compressing said unit in said barrel to said position and to eject liquid propellant from said unit into an axially extending compression chamber including said bolt, said compression chamber being formed in said barrel chamber, and a second piston means including said bolt coaxially mounted with respect to said first piston means and having relative axial movement with respect to said first piston means for reducing the volume of said compression chamber whereby the liquid introduced therein is pressurized together with a gaseous phase for adiabatic ignition.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Portable Nailing Machines And Staplers (AREA)

Description

y 5 c. F. TURNER 3,195,407
LIQUID PROPELLANT PROJECTILE UNIT Original Filed May 7,- 1963 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 FIG '3 I CHARLES 15E$ER A TTORNE Y July 20', 1965 c. F. TURNER 3,195,407
LIQUID PROPELLANT PROJE C'IILE UNIT Original Filed May '7', 1963 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 f /l 5x $.12 Q
"L I l 5? 0 {WT 53 FIG '5 4 ,3 58 f R 57 55H? Jl 'A\' '\\'\&\\\ \\\\w-.. 1'1 /1 I I 57 CU/" 6o 62 FIG 6 0 EL. W FIG 7 56 W x/ 57 I T I? 0 all [[6 as INVENTOR. CHARLES F TURNER MW United States Patent 3,195,407 LIQUID PROPELLANT PROJECTILE UNIT Charles F. Turner, Mount Carmel, Conn., assignor to Olin Mathieson Chemical Corporation, a corporation of Virginia Original application May 7, 1963, Ser. No. 278,676. Divided and this application Oct. 19, 1964, Ser. No.
3 Claims. c1. 89-7) This application is a division of co-pending application, Serial Number 278,676, filed May 7, 1963.
This invention relates .to an explosive driven unit and in particular to bullets and projectileatype fasteners each of which includes and uses a liquid propellant charge.
One object of this invention is to provide a relatively simple primerless type of bullet or projectile fastener which depends on adiabatic compression of gas in the compression chamber of a gun or tool barrel for ignition and explosive expansion of the propellant and thereby avoids need for carrying a propellant charge together with a priming mix separately from the bullet or other projectile unit.
Another object is to provide a simple projectile structure including a charge of mixed liquid alkyl nitrates, a pump piston, and a ruptu-rable seal, all as an integral part of a projectile unit.
Another object is to provide a projectile structure having initially a cavity substantially filled with propellant, thereby avoiding need for additional cavity space for an adiabatically compressible gaseous phase for ignition of the propellant, but having finally a maximum projecta-ble solid body of the desired caliber for projection through a barrel.
Another is a bullet or fastener with a liquid propellant charge, avoiding need for cartridge cases, their extraction or ejection, and also storage and metering devices.
Still another object is the provision of a bullet or fastener providing an accurate propellant charge together with a means for injecting that charge into the compression and firing chamber of a firearm or tool.
Still another object is the provision of a simple but rugged firing apparatus. The apparatus is capable of injecting the charge of liquid propellant in a compression chamber and of applying compression for ignition without the need for a propellant reservoir, for various fluid metering and valving parts, and for an apparatus pumper acting directly on the propellant with attendant deterioration.
Other objects and advantages will be evident from a description of various embodiments shown in the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG, 1 is a longitudinal view in cross section of a bullet according to this invention shown before firing;
FIG. 2 is a longitudinal View also in cross section of the same bullet shown after firing;
FIG. 3 is a longitudinal partly cross sectional view of a projectile type of fastener according to another embodiment of this invention shown before explosive driving in suitable driving apparatus only part of which is shown;
FIG. 4 is a view of the same fastener shown after it has been driven;
FIG. 5 is a fragmentary View of a suitable firing or driving apparatus according to this invention showing the parts and a bullet of the type shown in FIGURE 1 in the ready to-fire position;
FIG. 6 shows the apparatus and bullet in chambering and pumping position;
FIG. 7 shows the apparatus and bullet during ignition; and
FIG. 8 shows the apparatus with certain of its parts being blown back by the burning propellant gases following ignition to put these parts into the ready-to-fire position again.
As shown in FIGURE 1 there is provided an embryonic bullet 11 consisting of the usual jacket 1 of a suitable copper base alloy, a solid front core section 2 usually of lead or an alloy of lead, and a rear core section 3 fitted snugly in the jacket and displaced rearwardly from the front section to provide a cavity 4 containing a charge 5 of a liquid monopropellant.
For example, in a typical 0.45 caliber bullet, a cavity volume and charge of about 0.5 of a cubic centimeter are contemplated; which is to say that the cavity is to be almost completely filled with an alkyl nitrate propellant, except for a few percent of volumetric capacity left to take up for thermal expansion and contraction of the iquid. A suitable liquid propellant is a mixture of ethyl nitrate and normal propyl nitrate. Specifically, 60 mole percent of ethyl nitrate admixed in normal propyl nitrate, and known as 60:40 EP-N, was found to have the desired sensitivity and reliability from the standpoint of adiabatic compressive ignition and stability.
Projecting from the jacket and sealed in by the ring 6 of sealant such as solder or epoxy resin, the rear core section 3 has a central aperture 7 forming an ejection passage hermetically closed by a plug 8 of suitable consumable material such as polyethylene force-fitted into this tiny aperture to prevent loss of propellant before use. The closure 8, which may be further sealed and retained by the application of an epoxy adhesive 9 is adapted to rupture whenever the rear core section 3 is rammed forward by a thrust applied to the trailing end of the section at bevel It! provided for the purpose.
After firing the projectile assumes the final form of the bullet 15 shown in FIGURE 2 where the sections 2 and 3 are put into abutment inside the jacket .to provide a substantially solid bullet characterized by desirable external ballistic parameters.
Firing abolishes the cavity 3 and except for the presence of the remaining central aperture 7 the projected bullet 15 is quite conventional in appearance and behavior as compared to the embryonic forms 11.
The core sections may be of any suitable material such as steel, or a combination of materials to provide desired weight and/or hardness, balance, armour piercing properties, or mushrooming properties.
In FIGURE 3, the embryonic unit 16 is of a form suitable for assuming the final finished shape of the fastener 18 shown in FIGURE 4 driven into a supporting plate 19.
This unit has a main fastener section 21 of steel of suitable hardness and toughness having an ogivally tapered piercing point 22 and a threaded or otherwise formed and enlarged rear end 23, usually as shown to adapt section 21 for attachment of objects to the support. One end of the main section is recessed at the rear to form the propellant cavity 24 containing the EPN mixture 25 and partially containing the compression plug section 23 closing the cavity and retained in hollow section 21 frictionally and/ or adhesively with the aid of a sealing ring of epoxy resin adhesive 2?. In lieu of central passages, the plug section is provided with longitudinal serrations forming passages around its cylindrical surface for ejection of the propellant when the seal 29 is ruptured as the plug section 28 is pushed in by ram 31 to fill the cavity 24 and drive the propellant out into the compression chamber 32 formed in tool barrel 33 around the ram between the fastener unit 16 and a compression plunger 34 coaxially mounted to slide forwardly with respect to ram 31 after the latter has completed its forward thrust against the fastener plug section.
Ram 31 and section 28 have convex faces 35 and 36, respectively, in juxtaposition to allow for application of the pressure of the ignited propellant against both sections of the fastener and avoid separation of them.
The serrations 33 take the form of preferably two or three slots equally spaced about the circumference of section 23.
To chamber the projectile fastener unit 16 in the barrel 33 with a desired seal and a desired initial resistance and thereby provide confinement at the front end of the compression chamber, there is a tapered shot-start collar 4% forwardly converging to fit between the tapered tool shoulder 41 leading from the chamber to the barrel and the tapered fastener shoulder 42. The collar is made of a suitable plastically deformable metallic or plastic material such as soft aluminum, 50:50 lead-tin alloy or a readily consumable polyolefin such as polyethylene. Alternately, the collar may be formed integrally as a thin readily deformable fin circumferentially extending out between the threads and the tapered shoulder. This, like the malleable metal and the combustible polyethylene, has the advantage of leaving no residual ring in the gun or tool barrel after firing.
In the gun device of FIGURES 5 to 8, shot start and scaling in barrel 5% is provided by ramming the projectile unit home to the beginning of the rifiing 51 by means of the compound rifle bolt 52 part of which has a short stroke for picking the unit out of a magazine 53 and positioning it in gun chamber 54. The bolt, as in the driving device shown in FEGURE 3, has two coaxial parts, namely a bolt ram 56 sleeved about an inner propellant compression piston 57. These correspond, respectively, to ram 31 and plunger 34, PEGURE 3. The ram 56 is biased forwardly by the bolt coil spring 58 and is driven forwardly when the bolt sea-r 59, which is iased by sear follower 6d and its spring 61 into engagement with sear notch 62, is disengaged from the notch in response to the operation of the trigger (not shown). The driven ram then engages at bevel Iii) with the piston section 3 of the bullet unit and rams the bullet jacket home while sealing'off the gun chamber 54 from the magazine 53 by a sleeve valve action as shown in FIGURE 6. At this stage, there is formed a compression chamber 63 in the tubular ram between the bullet and the head d4 of the compression piston. Continued forward motion of the ram drives section 3 of the bullet forward to break seals at 6 and 9, and unseat ping 3 so that the rammed section 3 may act as a piston directly acting on the liquid propellant to get it through aperture 7 into chamber 63 as shown in FIGURE 6.
Further trigger action releases compression piston '77 to act on the mixture of liquid and gas for adiabatic con pression of the latter and ignition of the former as shown in FIGURE 7.
This system allowing a closed breech is admirably suited to automatic recocking by blow-back action of the propelling gases acting on both the ram and the piston of the bolt after firing.
Entry of dirt is avoided since the system is closed and requires no outside ports continuously opening and closing with each shot for ejection such as occurs in systems using a cartridge case.
It will be understood that the bullet of FIGURES l and 2 need not be jacketed and that the front core section may be integral with the jacket shown. The bullet rear section may take either the centrally apertured form or the form of the uniformly serrated plug section of FIG- URES 3 and 4. Likewise, these serrations providing passages at the outer surface of the plug may be replaced by a central passage for ejection of the propellant.
The means for sealing the ejection aperture is adherent to one of the unit sections and is rupturable at a predetermined ram force to release the propellant for adiabatic ignition.
In any event, the recess in the body section and also the plug section both are of complementary cylindrical configuration to adapt these for frictional retention yieldable under a forward thrust to allow telescoping action between the sections for decrease of the cavity volume and ejection of the propeliant charge forcefully through the ejection passage for relatively instantaneous fueling of the compression and combustion chamber.
As a safety feature, the cavities 4 and 24 are nearly completely filled with liquid, leaving insufi'icient volume unfilled for premature adiabatic ignition, in contrast with the compression chamber in the firing device where liquid propellant loading is from about 15 percent to about 45 percent of the initial volume. The liquid ejection ram of the bolt preferably has a somewhat slower stroke than the adiabatic firing compression piston.
What is claimed is:
1. A firing device for explosively projecting units of the type described comprising a barrel, an axially extending bolt operative to engage and make a fluid-tight seal with respect to one end of said barrel, said bolt cooperating with a projectile unit disposed in a position in the barrel opposite said bolt to define a barrel chamber, a first piston means including said bolt for feeding and compressing said unit in said barrel to said position and to eject liquid propellant from said unit into an axially extending compression chamber including said bolt, said compression chamber being formed in said barrel chamber, and a second piston means including said bolt coaxially mounted with respect to said first piston means and having relative axial movement with respect to said first piston means for reducing the volume of said compression chamber whereby the liquid introduced therein is pressurized together with a gaseous phase for adiabatic ignition.
2. The firing device of claim 1 wherein the first piston means is coaxially mounted about said second piston means and is adapted to act on aprotruding moveable rear end part of a projectile unit.
3. The firing device of claim 1 wherein the first piston means is coaxially mounted within said second piston means and is adapted to act on a protruding moveable rear end part of a projectile unit.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,129,875 9/38 Post 897 2,574,147 11/51 Hobbs 897 2,947,221 8/60 Griffin et al 8 9-7 3,097,602 7/ 63 Turner 1G239 BENEAMIN A. B'ORCHELT, Primary Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. A FIRING DEVICE FOR EXPLOSIVE PROJECTING UNITS OF THE TYPE DESCRIBED COMPRISING A BARREL, AN AXIALLY EXTENDING BOLT OPERATIVE TO ENGAGE AND MAKE A FLUID-TIGHT SEAL WITH RESPECT TO ONE END OF SAID BARREL, SAID BOLT COOPERATING WITH A PROJECTILE UNIT DISPOSED IN A POSITION IN THE BARREL OPPOSITE SAID BOLT TO DEFINE A BARREL CHAMBER, A FIRST PISTON MEANS INCLUDING SAID BOLT FOR FEEDING AND COMPRESSING SAID UNIT IN SAID BARREL TO SAID POSITION AND TO EJECT LIQUID PROPELLANT FROM SAID UNIT INTO AN AXIALLY EXTENDING COMPRESSION CHAMBER INCLUDING SAID BOLT, SAID COMPRESSION CHAMBER BEING FORMED IN SAID BARREL CHAMBER, AND A SECOND PISTON MEANS INCLUDING SAID BOLT COAXIALLY MOUNTED WITH RESPECT TO SAID FIRST PISTON MEANS AND HAVING RELATIVE AXIAL MOVEMENT WITH RESPECT TO SAID FIRST PISTON MEANS FOR REDUCING THE VOLUME OF SAID COMPRESSION CHAMBER WHEREBY THE LIQUID INTRODUCED THEREIN IS PRESSURIZED TOGETHER WITH A GASEOUS PHASE FOR ADIABATIC IGNITION.
US411663A 1963-05-07 1964-10-19 Liquid propellant projectile unit Expired - Lifetime US3195407A (en)

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Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
FR973473A FR1393016A (en) 1963-05-07 1964-05-06 Projectile and liquid propellant fixing device
US411663A US3195407A (en) 1963-05-07 1964-10-19 Liquid propellant projectile unit

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US278676A US3175494A (en) 1963-05-07 1963-05-07 Liquid propellant projectile unit
US411663A US3195407A (en) 1963-05-07 1964-10-19 Liquid propellant projectile unit

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3540141A (en) * 1968-10-25 1970-11-17 Olin Mathieson Repeating mechanism for impact ignition pellets
US3690255A (en) * 1970-10-01 1972-09-12 Us Air Force Liquid propellant cartridge
FR2256393A1 (en) * 1973-12-28 1975-07-25 Pulsepower Systems
US5842623A (en) * 1997-06-16 1998-12-01 Olin Corporation Gas primed powder actuated tool

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2129875A (en) * 1935-05-25 1938-09-13 Rost Helge Ammunition and firearm
US2574147A (en) * 1949-06-28 1951-11-06 James M Hobbs Firearm
US2947221A (en) * 1956-12-10 1960-08-02 Olin Mathieson Compression ignition gun
US3097602A (en) * 1960-10-28 1963-07-16 Olin Mathieson Liquid propellant cartridge

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2129875A (en) * 1935-05-25 1938-09-13 Rost Helge Ammunition and firearm
US2574147A (en) * 1949-06-28 1951-11-06 James M Hobbs Firearm
US2947221A (en) * 1956-12-10 1960-08-02 Olin Mathieson Compression ignition gun
US3097602A (en) * 1960-10-28 1963-07-16 Olin Mathieson Liquid propellant cartridge

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3540141A (en) * 1968-10-25 1970-11-17 Olin Mathieson Repeating mechanism for impact ignition pellets
US3690255A (en) * 1970-10-01 1972-09-12 Us Air Force Liquid propellant cartridge
FR2256393A1 (en) * 1973-12-28 1975-07-25 Pulsepower Systems
US5842623A (en) * 1997-06-16 1998-12-01 Olin Corporation Gas primed powder actuated tool

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