yes on older guns chambered for 45 ACP There are many guns old and new chambered in 45acp the cartridge has been around for over 100 years, however because of less refined Metallurgy it is not always recommended to shoot newer ammo in older guns specifically due to the higher pressures that new ammo attains and the age and overall wear on the weapon.
Your machine guns in use in 2010 were still developed between the 1950s and 1980s, generally. A gas operated machine gun might fire anywhere from 500 - 1200 rounds per minute, depending on type. Weapons such as the M-134 Minigun can fire between 3000 - 6000 rounds per minute.
The MG42 utilized 7.92mm Mauser rounds in drum belts of 50 or 250 rounds.
They Use Guns
muskets, and guns, (pennsilcainians used rifles)
to guns
No. The militiary trains at the highest level with live rounds, them simunition then blanks, then empty guns, then paintball occasionally. Some police units may use airsoft.
Any firearm maked for the .45 ACP cartridge. This has been around since 1911, and includes a HUGE number of pistols, derringers, revolvers, carbines and submachine guns.
Yes, with the very few exceptions of certain older automatic mechanical guns.
Most paintball guns use an above hopper instead of magazines or clips like firearms. The standard hopper holds 200 rounds. Most magazines for paintball sim-markers are 30 rounds. No paintball guns use clips.
It was chambered in both 32 ACP and 380 ACP.
If it's chambered for the .45 ACP cartridge, yes.
In the US, for non-government use, about 3.8 million NEW guns last year. That does not include resale of older guns. Figures are not available for all other countries
0.380 ACP.
32 acp.
Yes, you can use .38 rounds in a .357.
Not usually. Machine guns are legal in most states, but not legal for hunting in all of those states. Plus, many states have a limit of the number of rounds allowed in a gun for hunting, usually 3 or 5.
.45 ACP means Automatic Colt Pistol. It IS .45 Auto.