Low collateral damage kinetic energy projectile

US9329008B1 · US · B1

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-9329008-B1
Application numberUS-201414444301-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB1
Filing dateJul 28, 2014
Priority dateAug 8, 2013
Publication dateMay 3, 2016
Grant dateMay 3, 2016

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  3. Assignees and inventors

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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  6. CPC / IPC classifications

    Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.

  7. Citations and related patents

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

A low collateral damage, kinetic energy penetrator has multiple segments that are mechanically locked together by centrifugal force generated by penetrator spin. When the penetrator spin decreases below a minimum value, the segments separate and fall to the ground with non-lethal kinetic energy.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. A kinetic energy penetrator having a central longitudinal axis, the penetrator comprising: a nose segment having an aft portion; a generally annular middle segment disposed aft of the nose segment; a base segment disposed aft of the middle segment and having a forward portion; a compression spring disposed in the middle segment, the compression spring biasing the nose segment and the base segment away from the middle segment; a pair of torque transfer projections formed on each of the aft portion of the nose segment and the forward portion of the base segment, the projections in each pair being spaced 180 degrees apart; slots formed in an inner surface of the middle segment for receiving the pairs of torque transfer projections whereby the pairs of torque transfer projections transfer torque from the base segment to the middle segment and the nose segment; a pair of ball openings formed in each of the aft portion of the nose segment and the forward portion of the base segment, the ball openings in each pair being offset 90 degrees from respective torque transfer projections; a pair of balls disposed in each of the two pairs of ball openings, each ball being translatable in its ball opening; and forward and aft ball detents formed in the inner surface of the middle segment for receiving the pairs of balls; wherein a first angular velocity of the penetrator causes the two pairs of balls to engage the forward and aft ball detents and mechanically lock the nose segment and the base segment to the middle segment. 2. The penetrator of claim 1 , wherein a second angular velocity less than the first angular velocity causes the two pairs of balls to disengage the forward and aft ball detents thereby enabling the compression spring to separate the nose segment and the base segment from the middle segment. 3. The penetrator of claim 2 , wherein each pair of torque transfer projections are opposing ends of a pin that is disposed in a through bore formed in each of the aft portion of the nose segment and the forward portion of the base segment. 4. The penetrator of claim 3 , wherein each ball is constrained from translating completely out of its respective ball opening. 5. The penetrator of claim 4 , wherein each ball opening is staked to constrain translation of its respective ball. 6. The penetrator of claim 4 , wherein the forward and the aft ball detents are grooves formed in the inner surface of the middle segment. 7. The penetrator of claim 6 , wherein the nose segment, middle segment and base segment comprise tungsten. 8. The penetrator of claim 4 , further comprising a discarding sabot disposed around the penetrator. 9. A kinetic energy penetrator having a central longitudinal axis, the penetrator comprising: a nose segment having an aft portion; a generally annular middle segment disposed aft of the nose segment; a base segment disposed aft of the middle segment and having a forward portion; a compression spring disposed in the middle segment, the compression spring biasing the nose segment and the base segment away from the middle segment; a pair of torque transfer projections formed on each of the aft portion of the nose segment and the forward portion of the base segment wherein each pair of torque transfer projections are opposing ends of a pin that is disposed in a through bore formed in each of the aft portion of the nose segment and the forward portion of the base segment; slots formed in an inner surface of the middle segment for receiving the pairs of torque transfer projections whereby the pairs of torque transfer projections transfer torque from the base segment to the middle segment and the nose segment; a pair of ball openings formed on each of the aft portion of the nose segment and the forward portion of the base segment; a pair of balls disposed in each of the two pairs of ball openings, each ball being translatable in its respective ball opening and constrained from translating completely out of its respective ball opening; and forward and aft ball detents formed in the inner surface of the middle segment for receiving the pairs of balls, the ball detents comprising grooves. 10. The penetrator of claim 9 , wherein a first angular velocity of the penetrator causes the two pairs of balls to engage the forward and aft ball detents and mechanically lock the nose segment and the base segment to the middle segment. 11. The penetrator of claim 10 , wherein a second angular velocity less than the first angular velocity causes the two pairs of balls to disengage the forward and aft ball detents thereby enabling the compression spring to separate the nose segment and the base segment from the middle segment. 12. The penetrator of claim 9 , wherein each ball opening is staked to constrain translation of its respective ball. 13. The penetrator of claim 9 , further comprising a discarding sabot disposed around the penetrator. 14. A method, comprising: providing the penetrator of claim 1 ; spinning the penetrator up to at least the first angular velocity; and translating the two pairs of balls into engagement with the forward and aft ball detents to thereby mechanically lock the nose segment and the base segment to the middle segment. 15. The method of claim 14 , further comprising decelerating the angular velocity of the penetrator to less than the first angular velocity and then, translating the two pairs of balls out of engagement with the forward and aft ball detents to thereby unlock the nose segment and the base segment from the middle segment. 16. The method of claim 15 , further comprising forcing the nose segment and the base segment away from the middle segment using the compression spring. 17. The method of claim 16 , further comprising decreasing the kinetic energy of each of the nose segment, middle segment and base segment to less than about 75 joules.

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • of the core or solid body · CPC title

  • F42B12/02Primary

    characterised by the warhead or the intended effect · CPC title

  • Sub-calibre projectiles having sabots; Sabots therefor · CPC title

  • F42B10/48Primary

    Range-reducing, destabilising or braking arrangements, {e.g. impact-braking arrangements}; Fall-retarding means, {e.g. balloons, rockets for braking or fall-retarding}(F42B10/34 takes precedence) · CPC title

  • with hard or heavy core; Kinetic energy penetrators (F42B12/16, F42B12/74 take precedence) · CPC title

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What does patent US9329008B1 cover?
A low collateral damage, kinetic energy penetrator has multiple segments that are mechanically locked together by centrifugal force generated by penetrator spin. When the penetrator spin decreases below a minimum value, the segments separate and fall to the ground with non-lethal kinetic energy.
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Gilbert Steven, Hassan Ahmed, Chen Yin, and 2 more
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification F42B12/02. Mapped technology areas include Mechanical Engineering.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue May 03 2016 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B1). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 8 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).