Q&A #3: What-Ifs and How-Comes

Published on January 13, 2016
Duration: 48:12

This Q&A episode delves into historical firearm design choices and their evolution. Topics include the obsolescence of magazine cutoffs, reasons for limited indigenous small arms development in non-industrialized nations, and the impracticality of aircraft machine guns like the MG81 as infantry weapons. It also touches on the US Civil War's impact on firearms innovation, the modern niche for revolvers, dangerous Chinese pistols, the high cost of firearm reproductions, and the superiority of John Browning's tilting breech design.

Quick Summary

Revolvers remain relevant for civilians and outdoorsmen because they can reliably fire extremely powerful cartridges and mixed loads, like snake shot, that would cause malfunctions in semi-automatic pistols, despite being outdated for military and police service due to capacity and reload speed.

Chapters

  1. 00:28Magazine Cutoffs Explained
  2. 05:27Why Indigenous Arms Design is Rare
  3. 12:01MG81 as Infantry LMG?
  4. 18:20Conflicts Driving Firearm Tech
  5. 22:04Modern Role of Revolvers
  6. 25:04Dangerous & Poorly Designed Firearms
  7. 30:33Challenges of Firearm Reproductions
  8. 31:11Browning Tilting Breech vs. Luger

Frequently Asked Questions

Why were magazine cutoffs on rifles like the Krag-Jorgensen eventually abandoned?

Magazine cutoffs were abandoned as military doctrine shifted from controlled volley fire towards individual rapid fire. The ability to keep a full magazine in reserve became less critical than the speed of engagement.

What factors limit indigenous small arms design in non-industrialized regions?

High costs and a lack of established industrial capacity make it difficult for non-industrialized regions to produce their own firearm designs. It's often more economically viable to purchase designs or firearms from established manufacturers.

Was the MG81 machine gun suitable for infantry use?

No, the MG81 was designed as an aircraft machine gun with an extremely high cyclic rate. It was impractical for infantry due to excessive ammunition consumption and a lack of specialized cooling features needed for ground support.

Why do revolvers still have a role for civilians despite being outdated for military use?

Revolvers remain relevant for civilians because they can reliably fire extremely powerful cartridges and mixed loads, such as snake shot, without the malfunction issues that might plague semi-automatic pistols.

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