A typical box of linked rounds will contain a single 100 round belt. As many of these can be linked together as required.
It was a very strong machine gun even if it needed 4-6 crew members to operate it. It could fire 400-600 small calibe rounds per minute.
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.
Some as falows: Rifles M1903 Springfield M1892-99 Springfield M1917 Enfield Lee-Enfield (AEF soldiers in Commonwealth units) M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle Winchester Model Lee 1895 (Used by the Navy) Winchester Model 1895 Winchester Model 1907 Remington Model 8 Berthier rifle (AEF soldiers in French units) Machine Guns M1917 Browning Machine Gun Chauchat Lewis Gun Hotchkiss M1909 Benet-Mercie machine gun Hotchkiss M1914 machine gun M1895 Colt-Browning machine gun Vickers machine gun Shotguns Winchester M1897 Winchester M1912 Browning Auto-5 Remington Model 10 Grenades F1 Grenade Mk 1 grenade Mk 2 grenadebr Mills bomb
As fast as they could in World War II or Korea, though some could fire faster than others. The Browning was medium fast, the Lewis and the Vickers a bit faster, though the Germans had the fastest firing machine guns of all. I don't remember the specific RPM for each gun.
A Browning M2 Heavy Machine gun with a 66418 serial would have been manufactured around 1958. Over 3 million M2 .50 cal machine guns have been manufactured.
A machine gun is a firearm that with one pull of the trigger will feed and fire 2 or more rounds in succession. Most machine guns are belt fed and fire high powered rifle ammunition. Similar weapons include Assault Rifles and Sub-machine Guns which fire intermediate and pistol caliber rounds. An example of a machine gun would be a Browning M1919 or Browning M2.
On the top of the turret it had one browning m2 50. cal machine gun in the turret it had one 75mm tank gun and one browning 30. cal machine gun and in the body it had another browning 30. cal machine gun
anywhere between 3.2 and 12 on a newer machine gun. WW2 weapons such as Browning M3 "grease gun" and Thompson submachine gun could fire at a rate of 5 to 12.5 rounds per Second. The German medium machine gun, MG42, had a rate of 25 rounds per second. The modern US M-60 evloved from this gun. Later guns such as AK-47 and M-16 could fire from 12 to 15 rounds per second.
A sub-machine gun fires pistol cartridges. A machine gun fires rifle rounds.
No. The .50 AE is 33mm in length. The .50 Browning Machine Gun rounds, as used in the Barrett, are 99mm in length. Very substantial difference.
Yes. A sub machine gun is a machine gun that fires pistol rounds and Uzis are 9mm.
It was a very strong machine gun even if it needed 4-6 crew members to operate it. It could fire 400-600 small calibe rounds per minute.
Browning M 1917 machine gun
450 - 650
About 600 rounds per minute on full auto.
The BAR machine gun is recommended for its accuracy and portability whereas with the browning you sacrifice these qualities for greater fire rate, ammo capacity and bullet penetration. Actually, the Browning Automatic Rifle (aka Browning Machine gun) IS the BAR; they are one and the same. BAR is an acronym for Browning Automatic Rifle.
A "Round" is usually how many shots are in the loading chamber. it can be one or many. A BB gun can carry 100 ROUNDS but only fires one ROUND at a time. A Machine gun fires many rounds in a "burst".