Automatic Firearm PDF

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Automatic firearm

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automatic_firearm

An automatic firearm continuously fires rounds as long as the trigger is pressed or held
and there is ammunition in the magazine/chamber. In contrast, a semi-automatic
firearm fires one round with each individual trigger-pull. [1]

Although all "semi-automatic", "burst fire", and "fully automatic" firearms are "automatic"
in the technical sense that the firearm automatically cycles between rounds with each
trigger pull, the terms "automatic weapon" and "automatic firearm" are conventionally
reserved by firearm enthusiasts to describe fully automatic firearms. Use of the terms
"fully automatic" or "full auto" can avoid confusion.[1] Firearms are further defined by the
type of firearm action used.

Rates of fire

Cyclic rate
Self-loading firearms are designed with varying rates of fire due to having different
purposes. The speed with which a self-loading firearm can cycle through the functions
of:

1. Fire
2. Eject
3. Load
4. Cock

is called the cyclic rate. In fully automatic firearms the cyclic rate is tailored to the
purpose that the gun is made to serve. Anti-aircraft machine guns often have extremely
high rates of fire to maximize the probability of a hit. In infantry support weapons these
rates of fire are often much lower and in some cases variable within the design of the
firearm. The MG 34 is a WWII-era machine gun which today would be referred to as a
general purpose machine gun. It came in several variations with a cyclic rate as high as
1200 rounds per minute, but also made an infantry model which fired at 900 rounds per
minute. [2]

Effective rate of fire


Firing any firearm generates a very high temperature in the firearm's barrel and elevated
temperature throughout much of its structure. If fired too fast, the components of the
firearm will suffer a structural failure. This means that all firearms, regardless of whether
they are semi-automatic, fully automatic, or burst mode in their firing methods, will
overheat and fail if fired too often. This is especially a problem with fully automatic fire.
In actual use (for example the MG34), a gun might be able to fire at 1200 rounds per
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minute, but in one minute it may also overheat and fail. So guns used in a repeated firing
mode must not be fired too often. The MG34 is fired manually in bursts of 5 to 7 rounds
(no automatic disconnector mode in this gun). It can fire at an effective rate of 150
rounds per minute.[3]

Similarly semi-automatic firearms will also overheat if not allowed to cool. A semi-
automatic rifle typically has an effective firing rate of 40 rounds per minute. A large part
of the reason that this is so low, is that the recoil of firing a round pushes the gun's aim
off target. The time it takes to "reacquire" the target slows the effective firing rate.[4] The
Army Study Guide lists the sustained rate of fire for an M4 Rifle at 12 to 15 rounds per
minute.[5]

Full-automatic firearm types


Automatic firearms can be divided into six main categories:

Automatic rifle
The standard type of service rifles in most modern armies, usually capable of selective
fire. Assault rifles are a specific type of select-fire rifle chambered in an intermediate
cartridge and fed via a high-capacity detachable magazine. Battle rifles are similar, but
chambered in a full-powered cartridge.[6]

Automatic shotgun
A type of combat shotgun that is capable of firing shotgun shells automatically, usually
also semi-automatically.[6]

Machine gun
A large group of heavier firearms used for suppressive automatic fire of rifle
ammunition, usually attached to a mount or supported by a bipod. Depending on size,
weight and role, machine guns are divided into heavy, medium or light machine guns.
The ammunition is often belt-fed.[6]
Submachine gun
An automatic, short rifle (carbine) that uses pistol cartridges. Today seldom used
militarily, due to body armour making them ineffective, but they are commonly used by
police forces and close protection units in many parts of the world. [6]

Personal defense weapon


A new breed of automatic firearms that combine the lightness and size of the
submachine gun with the medium power calibre ammunition of rifle, thus in practice
creating a submachine gun with body armor penetration capability.[6]

Machine pistol
A handgun-style firearm, capable of fully automatic or burst fire. They are sometimes
equipped with a foldable shoulder stock, to enable better accuracy during automatic fire,
which then makes them very similar to submachine guns. Some machine pistols are
shaped very similar to semi-automatics (e.g. the Glock 18). As with SMGs, machine pistols
fire pistol caliber cartridges (such as the 9mm, .40, .45 ACP etc.).[6]
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Burst mode
Burst mode is often used in military firearms to limit the number of rounds fired due to
the inaccuracy of fully automatic fire. In the US M16/M4, rifles for example, the burst
mode is three rounds. Pulling and holding the trigger results in three rounds being fired.
The gun will not fire again until the trigger is released and then pulled again. There are
suggestions that fully automatic fire has no genuine benefit and has been restricted or
banned in combat due to being a waste of ammunition. The M4 carbine is now the main
combat rifle of the US armed forces and has been available until recently in semi-
automatic and burst mode of three rounds only.[7]

Regulation
Automatic weapons tend to be restricted to military and police organizations in most
developed countries that permit the use of semi-automatic firearms. Where automatic
weapons are permitted, restrictions and regulations on their possession and use may be
much more severe than for other firearms.[1] In the United States, taxes and strict
regulations affect the manufacture and sale of fully automatic firearms under the
National Firearms Act. A prospective user must go through an application process
administered by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), which
requires a federal tax payment of $200 and a thorough criminal background check. The
tax payment buys a revenue stamp, which is the legal document allowing possession of
an automatic firearm. The use of a gun trust to register with the ATF has become an
increasingly popular method of acquisition and ownership of automatic firearms.

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