| Dictionary: machine gun |
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| Military History Companion: machine guns |
The concept of a gun able to fire multiple shots rapidly and without constant reloading is as old as the history of firearms in warfare and was experimented with throughout firearms' early history. Volley guns, with multiple barrels arranged in parallel, in a fan shape, or in a tubular cluster were the best that the flintlock and muzzle-loading age could produce, and it rapidly became clear that the best multiple-shot gun would have to be a form of breech-loader. As with the history of breech-loading weapons, the invention of the self-contained cartridge proved to be a conclusive milestone in the development of machine guns since, while the percussion system lent itself better than did the flintlock system to multiple shots, it was still severely limited.
A combination of the percussion cap and self-contained cartridge was utilized in a variety of American-designed hand-cranked early machine guns invented in the 1850s and 1860s, perhaps the most successful being Wilson Agar's ‘coffee-mill’, 50 of which were bought and used by the Union army during the American civil war for the defence of Washington; its nickname was derived from the hopper atop the weapon from which were fed steel tubes filled with powder and ball and primed with percussion caps—essentially reloadable cartridges. Agar's ‘coffee-mill’ gun was superseded by the far more effective Gatling gun, invented in 1861 and used in limited quantities, and in defensive positions during the war. Like the Agar gun, and like all machine guns for the next 30 years, the Gatling was operated by a hand-crank. Unlike the single-barrelled Agar, the Gatling had six barrels arranged around a central core; these revolved as the crank was operated and cartridges were chambered, fired, and extracted one barrel at a time.
Prior to the invention of the automatic firing machine gun by Maxim in the 1890s, most inventors experimented with multi-barrelled hand-cranked weapons. Aside from the well-known Gatling, other hand-cranked machine guns included the Gardner gun, invented by William Gardner of Toledo, Ohio; the Lowell gun, invented by De Witt Farrington of Lowell, Massachusetts; and the Nordenfelt gun, invented by a Swedish engineer, Heldge Palmcranz, but financed by a Swedish banker, Thorsten Nordenfelt. The Gardner gun initially featured two side-by-side barrels contained in a tube and was fed vertically from a tall clip atop the chamber, the rounds being inserted, fired, and extracted by a hand-turned crankshaft; it was adopted with some success by the Royal Navy in the 1880s. The Lowell gun was four-barrelled with a feed similar to that of the Gardner but, despite small sales to Russia and the US navy, was never successful. The Nordenfelt generally featured ten side-by-side barrels, although combinations of two to twelve barrels existed too; it was gravity-fed from a hopper, operated by a crank and lever, and capable of firing 100 rounds per minute per barrel—1, 000 rounds per minute from the ten-barrelled version. The Nordenfelt was manufactured in a large variety of calibres and adopted by the Royal Navy in two versions: five-barrelled .45 inch for anti-personnel use and four-barrelled 1 inch calibre for defence against torpedo boats. Britain's Royal Navy thus made use of three types of hand-cranked machine gun in the 1870-90 period: the Gatling, the Gardner, and the Nordenfelt. Significantly, they were used aggressively and defensively.
Across the English Channel, similar developments in multi-barrelled weapons in Belgium and France resulted in the invention of the mitrailleuse, perfected by the Belgian Joseph Montigny and sold to the French government. Originally a 37-barrelled weapon, it was later refined to 25 barrels and was capable either of firing all its barrels almost simultaneously or firing them slowly: it all depended upon the speed at which its crank was operated. But it was sited and used as field artillery during the Franco-Prussian war and was not a success in this role, many being destroyed by German counter-battery fire. But when a single mitrailleuse was used as an infantry support weapon at the battle of Rezonville/Gravelotte, it caused over 2, 600 Prussian casualties, or more than 50 per cent of the troops opposing it: the Prussians may have learned more lessons than the French from this experience. France also adopted the Hotchkiss 37 mm revolving cannon in the 1880s, as did the navies of Denmark, Germany, Greece, the Netherlands, and Russia. This weapon operated similarly to the Gatling and had also been an American invention successful in the European arms race of the late 19th century.
The 1880s were the decade of transformation for the machine gun and, as with the Gatling and—to a lesser extent—the Hotchkiss, it was a transformation wrought by an American but adopted successfully in Europe. Hiram Maxim (1840-1915) was born in Maine of Huguenot stock and was a successful and versatile inventor in the USA before settling in England in the early 1880s. The machine gun which came to bear his name was developed by him between 1883 and 1885 and demonstrated by him, using the .45 inch drawn brass Martini-Henry rifle cartridge, to British staff officers in 1885. His machine gun was fully automatic in that it utilized the recoil power of the barrel and its attached sliding breech-block, generated by the blast from the fired cartridge, to eject the empty cartridge case, chamber a new cartridge, and cock and fire the weapon. Once initially cocked and fired, the gun would then continue to fire, except when interrupted by the very rare jam, until the gunner's finger was released from the trigger. Capable of firing 600 rounds per minute, the Maxim's single barrel was encased in an oil-filled cooling jacket and the rate of fire harnessed to the rate of oil flow so that the barrel could not overheat and distort. Chambered for the .303 rifle cartridge, Maxim's machine guns were adopted by the British in 1889 and first issued to infantry battalions in 1891. By 1899 Germany had adopted them, as had Russia: both nations manufactured them under licence and Russia first employed its Maxims with devastating effect in the Russo-Japanese war. Britain's combat use of the Maxim was necessarily confined to colonial wars against less well-equipped opponents and accounts of the slaughter they inflicted exist from the Gambian campaign of 1887, through the Matabele war of 1893-4, to the Chitral campaign on the North-West frontier in 1895 and at Omdurman. Both the British and their enemies used Maxims in the Second Boer War of 1899-1902, a conflict less easily won by the British.
Maxim's machine guns did not suffer from lack of competition. Other automatic systems were developed almost contemporaneously, notably by John Moses Browning (1855-1926), whose gas-operated machine gun—which used barrel combustion gases to effect what in the case of the Maxim was effected by recoil—was perfected by Colt in 1895. In the same year Hotchkiss developed a gas-operated machine gun invented by an Austrian; it was adopted by the French army in 1897. In Austria Skoda developed a machine gun in 1888 on the ‘blowback’ principle; its breech was blown back by propellent gases, ejected the spent cartridge, and rammed a fresh one into the breech. By the end of the 19th century, therefore, the three principal automatic firing systems had been developed into operating machine guns available to or adopted by those nations who would be the main combatants fourteen years later during WW I: recoil, gas-operated, and blowback.
Problems which remained with machine guns were centred upon weight and thus manoeuvrability, versatility, and battlefield role. In 1914 both Britain and Germany went to war with versions of the Maxim: the British Vickers Mk. I and the German MaschineGewehr (MG) Modell 1908. The Vickers weighed 34 lb (15.4 kg) and the MG 08 44 lb (19.9 kg), without their tripod mountings and other equipment, including such essential features as the ammunition belts. While both guns proved devastatingly effective, and the British learned several hard lessons in the role of machine guns in the relatively static warfare of the trenches, both were limited in their tactical value by their weight and, to an extent, by their need to be operated by a team. Light machine guns were quickly developed, the British adopting the Lewis and the Germans modifying the MG 08 in 1915 by fitting a shoulder stock and bipod and redesignating it the MG 08/15. Both weapons, although lighter than the Vickers or MG 08, were still heavy and both were operated more effectively if the gunner was accompanied by a loader.
The French army adopted both the Chauchat and the Hotchkiss and both, particularly the former, were issued to the US army in Europe after 1917. In the USA Browning continued the development of machine guns, eventually producing the Model 1917 water-cooled heavy machine gun which came into land service in France in 1918; it was derived from a gas-operated machine gun developed for aircraft use. Aircraft during WW I generally mounted lightened and air-cooled versions of machine guns developed for land use, with—as appropriate—their cyclic rate modified to be interrupted in order for them to be fired through the arc of the propeller. The lightened Lewis machine gun was particularly popular as an observer's weapon, fitted on co-axial mounts, in the rudimentary turrets of light and heavy RAF bombers.
Lessons learnt by the Prussian army in its war with France 1870-1 underlie the debate which occupied European military thought in the 1880-1918 period over the tactical use of the machine gun. It was clearly ineffective when used as artillery, and only the German army of 1914 seems to have understood the enormous defensive capabilities of the machine gun when used to provide cones of intersecting fire which were all but impassable by advancing troops. As the supreme defensive weapon, the machine gun effectively created the stalemate of trench warfare, before being itself countered by the tank.
Developments in machine guns since 1918 have focused upon questions of weight and power. Both became increasingly relevant as wars of swift movement involving ground-air co-operation replaced the brief experience of relatively static conflict of 1914-18. High-powered machine guns were developed for aircraft use, most importantly the American .50 inch Browning—which was used in fighters' wings, in the turrets and fuselages of bombers, and mounted on the turrets of tanks. Armour-piercing ammunition was also introduced for machine guns. Germany led the way with the development of both light and sub-machine guns, adopting the MaschineGewehr 1934 (MG 34) a year after Hitler's assumption of power. The arms race of the late 1930s produced that great friend of the British soldier, the Bren gun: a light machine gun developed from a Czech design, chambered for the .303 British rifle cartridge and weighing only 22 lb (9.9 kg). The German MG 34 was replaced after 1942 by Mauser's MG 42, a gas piston-operated light machine gun firing 1, 200 rounds per minute and notable for both its cheapness—being manufactured from mass-produced pressed steel components—and its adaptability. A paratroop version was designated the FallschirmGewehr, or FG, 42 and the MG 42's descendants are still in use worldwide. Most nations now have a version of light machine guns developed during the 1940s and differences between them are small and matters of detail. There remains a role for the heavy machine gun, often the tried and tested .50 inch Browning and its derivatives. The general purpose machine gun, or GPMG (of which the German MG 34 was the first), has been increasingly developed to bridge the gap between the heavy and light machine gun. Modern tendencies have leant towards light machine guns which are nearer to bipod-mounted assault rifles or personal weapons than machine guns in the traditional sense.
Aside from the infantryman's use of machine guns, automatic weapons have been developed in the past 40 years for tank and helicopter use. Derivations of the multi-barrelled Gatling principle became the American GE Minigun. ‘Chain guns’ have been experimented with in both tanks and helicopters, utilizing electrically driven roller chains to drive the weapons' bolts and achieving high rates of fire.
Bibliography
— Stephen Wood
| US Military History Companion: Machine Guns |
are repeating firearms that when triggered will load and fire automatically until their ammunition is exhausted. In 1861, the U.S. Army was offered its first machine gun: Wilson Ager's single‐barrel, hand‐cranked weapon, often called the “coffee mill” gun due to its resemblance to a coffee grinder. At the order of President Lincoln, a few Ager guns were purchased; however, mechanical problems and the opposition of chief of ordnance, Brig. Gen. James W. Ripley, blocked adoption of the gun.
Patented in November 1862 by Dr. Richard J. Gatling, early versions of the Gatling gun were rejected by the conservative Union Ordnance Department. Purchased in 1866, improved .50‐caliber and 1‐inch versions of Gatling's hand‐cranked, multibarred machine gun were intended for use in the close‐in defenses of coastal fortifications, frontier forts, and aboard ship. The .50‐caliber version of the gun weighed 224 pounds and the 1‐inch version 1,008 pounds; later rifle‐caliber Gatlings weighed from 135 to 200 pounds.
Because he feared the weapons might hamper his column's movement through the rugged valley of the Little Bighorn River, Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer declined an offer of Gatling guns. Complex, heavy, and difficult to transport and supply, early machine guns saw little use during the Civil War and in the Indian wars. For almost four decades the Ordnance Department procured a small number of Gatlings. Interest in the weapon lagged, however, and doctrine for its use and a unit to use it were neglected.
The perfection of smokeless powder in 1886 and the final development of small‐caliber, high‐velocity rifle ammunition made the development of fully automatic machine guns practical. In 1898, American expeditionary forces in Cuba included an improvised machine‐gun unit with Gatling guns manned by infantrymen. Commanded by Lt. John Henry Parker, the Gatlings provided decisive support for the attack during the Battle of San Juan Hill. In 1900, the army tested replacements for the Gatling gun. Among the competitors were two American designs: a recoil‐operated gun patented by Hiram Maxim in 1885, and the gas‐operated Colt machine gun patented by John M. Browning in 1895. Adopted in 1904, the heavy and complex Maxim gun (gun, tripod, and full water jacket weighed 153.5 pounds) was replaced in 1909 by the French‐designed Benét‐Mercié, an air‐cooled weapon weighing 27 pounds. However, the fragile Benét‐Mercié also failed to meet army needs, and in 1916 it was replaced by a new weapon, the water‐cooled, British Vickers machine gun (gun, tripod, and full water jacket weighed 75.5 pounds).
Despite domination of World War I battlefields by machine guns and artillery, each U.S. infantry regiment in 1917 had only six machine guns, and the army possessed a total of fewer than 1,500. The first twelve American divisions sent to France were equipped with French Hotchkiss machine guns. By July 1918, embarking American units were issued the new water‐cooled, .30‐caliber Browning machine gun (gun, tripod, and full water jacket weighed 74 pounds) and the Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR; 19.4 pounds), developed to provide an air‐cooled, light machine gun carried and operated by a single infantryman. From 50 machine guns in early 1917, U.S. infantry divisions ended the war with 260 machine guns and 768 BARs per division.
In the 1930s, the army adopted the air‐cooled .30‐caliber Browning M‐1919A4 (gun and tripod weighed 45.5 pounds) and the more powerful, air‐cooled, .50‐caliber Browning M‐2, heavy machine gun (gun and tripod weighed 128 pounds). During World War II, the number of machine guns multiplied in the increasingly mechanized American forces. In 1943, each American infantry division was issued 157.30‐caliber and 236.50‐caliber Browning machine guns. In addition, Browning .50‐caliber guns were standard on most American aircraft; they also saw widespread use as antiaircraft weapons.
In 1957, the .30‐caliber Browning was replaced by the 7.62‐millimeter, air‐cooled M‐60 machine gun, weighing 23 pounds; the BAR was replaced by a version of the M‐14 service rifle. The .50‐caliber M‐2, however, remained the standard American heavy machine gun. During the 1990s, American forces were equipped with a variety of air‐cooled machine guns—the 5.56‐millimeter, M‐249 squad automatic weapon, which performed a function similar to the BAR (gun and 200 rounds of ammunition weigh 22 pounds); the M‐60, and the 7.62‐millimeter, air‐cooled, M‐240C coaxial machine gun mounted in tanks and armored fighting vehicles; as well as the .50‐caliber Browning M‐2.
Adoption and use of machine guns has been affected primarily by mechanical problems such as overheating, by their size and weight, and by problems of transport and ammunition supply. Development of metallic cartridges and smokeless powder and design improvement—recoil and gas‐operated guns and reliable, air‐cooled weapons—gradually produced lightweight machine guns suitable for widespread combat use. Mechanization of American forces overcame logistical constraints and by mid‐twentieth century the machine gun was fully integrated into the armory of the American military.
[See also Caribbean and Latin America, U.S. Military Involvement in the; Cuba, U.S. Military Involvement in; Weaponry, Army; Weaponry, Marine Corps.]
Bibliography
| US Military Dictionary: machine gun |
An automatic gun that fires bullets in rapid succession for as long as the trigger is pressed.
v. machine-gunshoot with a machine gun.
machine-gunner n.
See the Introduction, Abbreviations and Pronunciation for further details.
| US History Encyclopedia: Machine Guns |
The first machine gun, the mitrailleuse, was designed in 1851 in Belgium, but the weapon is largely a product of American inventors. In 1862 Dr. Richard J. Gatling patented a gun with six barrels that rotated around a central axis by a hand crank. Conservative officers rejected Gatling's invention during the Civil War, but the army purchased 100 improved Gatling guns in 1866. The Gatling gun nevertheless occupied only a minor position as an auxiliary artillery weapon. Hiram S. Maxim, an American engineer, patented the first automatic machine gun in 1884. Maxim's gun—smaller, lighter, and easier to operate than the Gatling—proved to be an excellent infantry weapon. In 1890 John M. Browning introduced the principle of gas operation, the last basic development in machine-gun design.
The Spanish-American War rekindled the army's interest in machine guns, but only in 1916 did the army authorize a regimental machine-gun company. By November 1918 each infantry regiment had a twelve-gun company, and each division included three machine-gun battalions—a total of 168 weapons. Entering World War I equipped with obsolescent machine guns, the army finished the war partially equipped with superb Brownings, which remained standard equipment during World War II and the Korean War. During World War II Browning guns also served as the principal armament for fighter aircraft and as antiaircraft weapons for tanks and other vehicles. During the mid-1950s American ordnance officers replaced the Browning .30 caliber guns with the new M60, which they distributed at the infantry platoon level. Through continued physical and doctrinal development, the machine gun gradually shifted from classification as an artillery weapon to the backbone of infantry firepower.
Bibliography
Armstrong, David. Bullets and Bureaucrats: The Machine Gun and the United States Army, 1861–1916. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1982.
Ellis, John. The Social History of the Machine Gun. New York: Pantheon Books, 1975; Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1986.
| Wikipedia: Machine gun |
A machine gun is a fully automatic mounted or portable firearm, usually designed to fire rifle bullets in quick succession from an ammunition belt or large-capacity magazine, typically at a rate of several hundred rounds per minute. The first design/invention of the machine gun was by Leonardo Da Vinci, presenting a design of an eight barreled machine gun that was operated manually by a handcrank, and was mounted onto the ground, and barely portable.
In United States law, machine gun is a term of art for any fully-automatic firearm, and also for any component or part that will modify an existing firearm into a fully-automatic firearm.[1]
Machine guns are generally categorized as sub-machine guns, machine guns, or autocannons. Submachine guns are designed to be portable automatic weapons for personal defense or short range combat, and are intended to be fired while being hand held. Submachine guns use small pistol caliber rounds. A proper machine gun is often portable to a certain degree, but is generally used when mounted on a stand or fired from the ground on a bipod. Light machine guns can be fired hand held like a rifle, but the gun is more effective when fired from a prone position. Proper machine guns use larger caliber rifle rounds. The difference between machine guns and autocannons is based on caliber, with autocannons using calibers larger than 16 mm.[2]
Another factor is whether the gun fires conventional rounds or explosive rounds. Guns firing large-caliber explosive rounds are generally considered either autocannons or automatic grenade launchers ("grenade machine guns"). By contrast to the other two categories (submachine guns and autocannons), machine guns (like rifles) tend to share a very high ratio of barrel length to caliber (a long barrel for a small caliber); indeed, a true machine gun is essentially a fully-automatic rifle, and the boundaries between the two are often blurred. Often, the criterion for a machine gun as opposed to an automatic rifle is considered to be the presence of a quick change barrel or other cooling system (see below).
Contents |
Unlike semi-automatic firearms, which require one trigger pull per bullet fired, a machine gun is designed to fire bullets as long as the trigger is held down and ammunition is fed into the weapon. Although the term "machine gun" is often used by civilians to describe all fully automatic weapons, in military usage the term is restricted to relatively heavy weapons fired from some sort of support rather than hand-held, able to provide continuous or frequent bursts of automatic fire for as long as ammunition lasts. Machine guns are normally used against unprotected or lightly-protected personnel, or to provide suppressive fire.
Some machine guns have in practice maintained suppressive fire almost continuously for hours; other automatic weapons overheat after less than a minute of use. Because they become very hot, practically all machine guns fire from an open bolt, to permit air cooling from the breech between bursts. They also have either a barrel cooling system, or removable barrels which allow a hot barrel to be replaced.
Although subdivided into "light", "medium", "heavy" or "general purpose", even the lightest machine guns tend to be substantially larger and heavier than other automatic weapons. Squad automatic weapons (SAWs) are a variation of light machine gun and only require one operator (sometimes with an assistant to carry ammunition). Medium and heavy machine guns are either mounted on a tripod or on a vehicle; when carried on foot, the machine gun and associated equipment (tripod, ammunition, spare barrels) require additional crew members.
The majority of machine guns are belt-fed, although some light machine guns are fed from drum or box magazines, and some vehicle-mounted machine guns are hopper-fed.
Other automatic weapons are subdivided into several categories based on the size of the bullet used, and whether the cartridge is fired from a positively locked closed bolt, or a non-positively locked open bolt. Fully automatic firearms using pistol-caliber ammunition are called machine pistols or submachine guns largely on the basis of size. Selective fire rifles firing a full-power rifle cartridge from a closed bolt are called automatic rifles or battle rifles, while rifles that fire an intermediate cartridge (see below)are called assault rifles. The difference in construction was driven by the difference in intended deployment. Automatic rifles (such as the Browning Automatic Rifle were designed to be a high duty cycle arm for support of other troops, and were often made and deployed with quick change barrel assemblies to allow quick replacement of over heated barrels to allow for continued fire, and may have been operated by both the person actually firing the weapon as well as an additional crewman to assist in providing and caring for ammunition and the barrels, similar to a reduced version of a squad weapon (above). The assault rifle generally was made for a more intermittent duty cycle, and was designed to be easily carried and used by a single person.
Assault rifles are a compromise between the size and weight of pistol-caliber submachine gun and a full size traditional automatic rifle by firing full-sized cartridges (or sometimes intermediate cartridges) and allowing semi-automatic, burst or full-automatic fire options (selective fire), often with two or more of these available on the rifle at once. The modern legal definition of "assault rifle" is of significance in states like California, where according to state law, certain weapons that resemble true assault rifles, but are only capable of semi-automatic (or autoloading), are categorized as "assault weapons" and are illegal to purchase or own by civilian residents of the state, even after a less restrictive ban by the federal government was allowed to lapse after having no impact on these weapons' use in crime.[citation needed] Therefore, supporters of gun rights generally consider the use of the phrase "assault weapon" to be pejorative when used to describe these civilian firearms, and this term is seldom used outside of the United States in this context.
The machine gun's primary role in modern ground combat is to provide suppressive fire on an opposing force's position, forcing the enemy to take cover and reducing the effectiveness of his fire . This either halts an enemy attack or allows friendly forces to attack enemy positions with less risk.
Light machine guns usually have simple iron sights. A common aiming system is to alternate solid ("ball") rounds and tracer ammunition rounds (usually one tracer round for every four ball rounds), so shooters can see the trajectory and "walk" the fire into the target, and direct the fire of other soldiers.
Many heavy machine guns, such as the Browning M2 .50 caliber machine gun, are accurate enough to engage targets at great distances. During the Vietnam War, Carlos Hathcock set the record for a long-distance shot at 7382 ft (2250 m) with a .50 caliber heavy machine gun he had equipped with a telescopic sight.[3] This led to the introduction of .50 caliber anti-materiel sniper rifles, such as the Barrett M82.
All machine guns follow a cycle:
Cycle is repeated as long as the trigger is activated by operator. Releasing the trigger resets the trigger mechanism by engaging a sear so the weapon stops firing with bolt carrier fully at the rear.
The operation is basically the same for all semi automatic or automatic weapons, regardless of the means of activating these mechanisms. Some examples:
Heavy machine guns were often water cooled but air cooled MG have interchangeable barrels, which must be changed periodically to avoid overheating. The higher the rate of fire, the more often barrels must be changed and allowed to cool. To minimize this, most air-cooled guns are fired only in short bursts or at a reduced rate of fire.
In weapons where the round seats and fires at the same time, mechanical timing is essential for operator safety, to prevent the round from firing before it is seated properly. Machine guns are controlled by one or more mechanical sears. When a sear is in place, it effectively stops the bolt at some point in its range of motion. Some sears stop the bolt when it is locked to the rear. Other sears stop the firing pin from going forward after the round is locked into the chamber.
Almost all weapons have a "safety" sear, which simply keeps the trigger from engaging.
It would not be until the mid-19th century that successful machine-gun designs came into existence. The key characteristic of modern machine guns, their relatively high rate of fire and more importantly machine (automatic) loading, came with the Model 1862 Gatling gun, which was adopted by the United States Navy. These weapons were still powered by hand; however, this changed with Hiram Maxim's idea of harnessing recoil energy to power reloading in his Maxim machine gun. Dr. Gatling also experimented with electric-motor-powered models; this externally powered machine reloading has seen use in modern weapons as well. The Vandenburg and Miltrailleuse volley (organ) gun concepts have been revived partially in the early 21st century in the form of electronically controlled, multibarreled volley guns. It is important to note that what exactly constitutes a machine gun, and whether volley guns are a type of machine gun, and to what extent some earlier types of devices are considered to be like machine guns, is a matter of debate in many cases and can vary depending which language and exact definition is used.
Among first known ancestor of multi-shot weapons was created by James Puckle, a London lawyer, who patented what he called "The Puckle Gun" on May 15, 1718. It was a design for a 1 in. (25.4 mm) caliber, flintlock revolver cannon able to fire 9 rounds before reloading, intended for use on ships.[4] According to Puckle, it was able to fire round bullets at Christians and square bullets at Turks.[4] While ahead of its time, foreshadowing the designs of revolvers, it was not adopted or produced.
In 1777, Philadelphia gunsmith Joseph Belton offered the Continental Congress a "new improved gun", which was capable of firing up to twenty shots in five seconds, automatically, and was capable of being loaded by a cartridge. Congress requested that Belton modify 100 flintlock muskets to fire eight shots in this manner, but rescinded the order when Belton's price proved too high.[5][6]
In the early and mid-19th century, a number of rapid-firing weapons appeared which offered multi-shot fire, and a number of semi-automatic weapons as well as volley guns. Volley guns (such as the Mitrailleuse) and double barreled pistols relied on duplicating all parts of the gun. Pepperbox pistols did away with needing multiple hammers but used multiple barrels. Revolvers further reduced this to only needing a pre-prepared magazine using the same barrel and ignitions. However, like the Puckle gun, they were still only semiautomatic.
The coffee-mill gun of the Civil War featured both automatic loading and single barrel, only separated functionally from the modern machine gun by being hand-powered rather than using cartridges.
The Gatling gun, patented in 1861 by Richard Jordan Gatling, was the first to offer controlled, sequential automatic fire with automatic loading. The design's key features were machine loading of prepared cartridges and a hand-operated crank for sequential high-speed firing. It first saw very limited action in the American Civil War and was subsequently improved. Many were sold to other armies in the late 1800s and continued to be used into the early 1900s, until they were gradually supplanted by Maxim guns. Early multi-barrel guns were approximately the size and weight of contemporary artillery pieces, and were often perceived as a replacement for cannon firing grapeshot or cannister shot.[7] The large wheels required to move these guns around required a high firing position which increased the vulnerability of their crews.[7] Sustained firing of gunpowder cartridges generated a cloud of smoke making concealment impossible until smokeless powder became available in the late 19th century.[8] Gatling guns were targeted by artillery they could not reach and their crews were targeted by snipers they could not see.[7] The Gatling gun was used most successfully to expand European colonial empires by killing warriors of non-industrialized societies.[7]
The Gatlings were the first widely used rapid-fire guns and, due to their multiple barrels, could offer more sustained fire than the first generation of air-cooled, recoil-operated machine guns. The weight, complexity, and resulting cost of the multibarrel design meant recoil-operated weapons, which could be made lighter and cheaper, would supplant them. Recoil operated machine guns were light enough to be moved by one man, were easier to move through rough terrain, and could be fired from a lower, protected position. It would be another 50 years before the concept was again used to allow extremely high rates of fire, such as in miniguns, and automatic aircraft cannons.
The first self-powered machine gun was invented in 1884 by Sir Hiram Maxim. The "Maxim gun" used the recoil power of the previously fired bullet to reload rather than being hand-powered, enabling a much higher rate of fire than was possible using earlier designs such as the Nordenfelt and Gatling weapons. Maxim's other great innovation was the use of water cooling (via a water jacket around the barrel) to reduce overheating. Maxim's gun was widely adopted and derivative designs were used on all sides during the First World War, most famously - during stalemate at The Battle of the Somme. The design required fewer crew, was lighter, and more usable than earlier Nordenfelt guns and Gatling guns.
Heavy guns based on the Maxim such as the Vickers machine gun were joined by many other machine weapons, which mostly had their start in the early 20th century such as the Hotchkiss machine gun. Submachine guns (e.g., the German MP18) as well as lighter machine guns (the Chauchat, for example) saw their first major use in World War I, along with heavy use of large-caliber machine guns. The biggest single cause of casualties in World War I was actually artillery, but combined with wire entanglements, machine guns earned a fearsome reputation. The automatic mechanisms of machine guns were applied to handguns, giving rise to automatic pistols (and eventually machine pistols) such as the Borchardt (1890s) and later submachine guns (such as the Beretta 1918). Machine guns were mounted in aircraft for the first time in World War I. Firing through a moving propeller was solved in a variety of ways, including the interrupter gear, metal reinforcement of the propeller, or simply avoiding the problem with wing-mounted guns or having a pusher propeller.
During the interwar years, many new designs were developed, such as the Browning M2 .50 caliber (12.7 mm), which, along with others, were used in World War II. The trend toward automatic rifles, light machine guns, and more powerful submachine guns resulted in a wide variety of firearms that combined characteristics of ordinary rifles and machine guns. The Cei-Rigotti (1900s), Fedorov Avtomat (1910s), AVS-36 Simonov (1930s), MP44, M2 Carbine, AK-47, and AR-15 have come to be known as assault rifles (after the German term sturmgewehr). Many aircraft were equipped with machine cannons, and similar cannon (nicknamed "Pom-pom guns") were used as antiaircraft weapons. The designs of Bofors of Sweden and Oerlikon of Switzerland were widely used by both sides and have greatly influenced similar weapons developed since then.
Germany developed during the interwar years the first widely-used and successful general-purpose machine gun, the Maschinengewehr 34. The Maschinengewehr 42 was developed from it and was much cheaper to produce. The current GPMG of the German Army, the MG3, is a direct evolution of the MG42. Many other modern machine guns, including the US M60 and the FN MAG borrow elements of the design of the MG42.
Conventional machine-gun development has been slowed by the fact that existing machine-gun designs are adequate for most purposes, although significant developments are taking place with regard to antiarmor and antimissile weapons.
Electronically controlled machine guns with ultrahigh rates of fire, like Metal Storm's weapons may see use in some applications, although current small-caliber weapons of this type have found little use: they are too light for anti-vehicle use, but too heavy (especially with the need to carry a tactically useful amount of ammunition) for individual soldiers. The trend towards higher reliability and lower mass for a given power will probably continue. Another example is the six barreled, 4000 round per minute, XM214 "six pack" developed by General Electric. It has a complex power train and weighs 85 pounds, factors which may, in some circumstances, mitigate against its deployment.
The most common interface on machine guns is a pistol grip and trigger. On earlier manual machine guns, the most common type was a hand crank. On externally powered machine guns, such as miniguns, an electronic button or trigger on a joystick is commonly used. Light machine guns often have a butt stock attached, while vehicle and tripod mounted machine guns usually have spade grips. In the late 20th century, scopes and other complex optics became more common as opposed to the more basic iron sights.
Loading systems in early manual machine guns were often from a hopper of loose (un-linked) cartridges. Manual-operated volley guns usually had to be reloaded manually all at once (each barrel reloaded by hand). With hoppers, the rounds could often be added while the weapon was firing. This gradually changed to belt-fed types. Belts were either held in the open by the person, or in a bag or box. Some modern vehicle machine guns used linkless feed systems however.
Modern machine guns are usually mounted in one of four ways. The first is a bipod - often these are integrated with the weapon. This is common on light machine guns and also medium machine guns. Another major way is with tripod, where the person holding it does not form a 'leg' of support. Medium and heavy machine guns usually use tripods. On ships and aircraft machine guns are usually mounted on a pintle mount - basically a steel post that is connected to the frame. Tripod and pintle mounts are usually used with spade grips. The last major mounting type is one that is disconnected from humans, as part of an armament system, such as a tank coaxial or part of aircraft's armament. These are usually electrically-fired and have complex sighting systems. (For examples see US Helicopter Armament Subsystems).
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