Want this question answered?
Any gun can shoot blanks. However, generally speaking, a "blank gun" such as a starters pistol, has a blocked barrel so it cannot fire a bullet...real or rubber.
No real difference. The term "Rubber Bullet" is frequently used for riot control weapons that fire VERY large flexible plastic bullets (about 40mm) at fairly slow speeds. These are NOT intended to kill people, but may if the person is struck in the wrong place. There are also training cartridges that fire small diameter plastic bullets at high speed. Used for short range marksmanship training, they should never be fired at a person- they will cause fatal injuries at close range.
If police use the real bullets people die, police not want people die Police use rubber bullets to injure people deter them from riot
No, they fire blanks. Real bullets would be dangerous.
9mm PTB gas bullets. It is not a real gun, and does not fire live ammunition. Do not attempt to run live rounds through it. <<<<<<<<<< Agree with above. It does NOT use any bullets. This is a blank firing gun. It uses the 9mm PAK blank cartridge- which has no bullet. Do not attempt to fire any standard ammunition in this gun- it would be extremely dangerous
Airsoft weapons do not fire real ammunition.
No, it does not. It has an arc, the same as a bullet fired from a gun does.
They do fire projectiles, but are not capable of firing live ammunition of the sort used in an actual firearm.
In general, no. Actors fire blank cartridges. When you see a bullet strike a surface or the ground in a movie, that is a special effect created by a small, firecracker sized charge. That can be electrically detonated in EXACTLY the right place- because it was already placed there. Live ammunition is too dangerous, AND does not have the splashy visual effects that a movie maker wants. (Real bullets do not make sparks when they hit)
No, the barrel us obstructed. A real bullet would shatter it, but a real gun will also fire blanks.
No you can not sell REAL bullets in a gift shop. But, bullets are sold at gun shops
In movies and TV shows? The bullets are not real (most of the time) in movies and television. However, they do often use real guns just not real ammunition. Recently, Alec Baldwin shot a crew member with a real bullet during the filming of a new movie or TV show. Apparently, there was live ammo in the gun he used but there was supposed to be "blanks" or fake ammo in it.