No they carry spud guns
Yes they did.
A Zeppelin could carry up to 2000lb of bombs and had five machine guns.
Their defensive armament consisted of 12 .50 caliber machine guns. Some early versions had a 20mm cannon in the tail, as well, but later variants did away with this.
Yes because machine guns are much better than gatling guns. With Gatling guns, you have to crank and put bullets in at the same time so they can open fire but with machine guns, you don't have to crank them. Just put in bullets, place them on the ground and let them activate. If you have Gatling guns, you have to carry them and hold them but they are very heavy and also not fully automatic. With machine guns, you do not have to carry them and hold to let them open fire. Some machine guns are heavy and light but they open fire automatically without having someone to crank but even though, machine guns are faster and much stronger than Gatling guns. They can fire up to thousand to 1 million rounds per minute while Gatling guns can fire up to 60 rounds per minute. Winner: Machine guns have beaten Gatling guns.
Some did.
No. Machine guns are fully automatic. With Gatling guns, you have put in bullets and crank at the same time but with machine guns, you have to put in bullets, place them on the ground and let them activate and they will open fire. Gatling guns cannot fire automatically, you have carry them and hold them so they can fire. Machine guns are much better than Gatling guns because they can fire thousand of rounds per minute, faster, powerful and can automatically open fire.
The only guns used at Midway were anti-aircraft guns and guns from torpedo bombers, dive bombers, and fighter planes. Midway, like the Battle of Coral Sea before it, were strictly "naval AIR battles."
No. Machine guns will beat Gatling guns.
Machine guns.
A barrel, but that is about it.
The Japanese used their aircraft, including B5N bombers, A6M Zeroes and D3A dive bombers. They also used many toxic gasses and bombs, such as armor piercing or incendiary. The U.S. used anything they could, including machine guns, AA guns and as many un-destroyed aircraft as they could.
Going from a pistol to a rifle, then from a rifle to a machine gun, then from a machine gun to a tank, is an example of "escalation." Which is just about what happened in Vietnam; it went from a guerrilla war using small arms (rifles, pistols, machine guns, mortars, hand grenades, etc.) then starting in 1964 it escalated to jet bombers, then in 1965 B52 bombers and Patton tanks! By 1965 the US had a real war on their hands!