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machine gun
A machine gun is a fully automatic mounted or portable firearm, designed to fire bullets in quick succession from an ammunition belt or magazine, typically at a rate of 300 to 1800 rounds per minute. Fully automatic firearms are generally categorized as submachine guns, assault rifles, battle rifles, automatic shotguns, machine guns, or autocannons. Machine guns with multiple rotating barrels are referred to as "rotary machine guns".
As a class of military firearms, true machine guns are fully automatic weapons designed to be used as support weapons and generally used when attached to a mount or fired from the ground on a bipod or tripod. Light machine guns are small enough to be fired hand-held, but are more effective when fired from a prone position. The difference between machine guns and other categories of weapons is based on caliber, with autocannons using calibers of 20 mm or larger, and whether the gun fires conventional bullets, shells, shotgun cartridges, or explosive rounds. Fully automatic guns firing shotgun cartridges are usually called automatic shotguns, and those firing large-caliber explosive rounds are generally considered either autocannons or automatic grenade launchers ("grenade machine guns"). Submachine guns are hand-held automatic weapons for personal defense or short-range combat firing pistol-caliber rounds. In contrast to submachine guns and autocannons, machine guns (like rifles) tend to have a very high ratio of barrel length to caliber (a long barrel for a small caliber); indeed, a true machine gun is essentially a fully automatic rifle, and often the primary criterion for a machine gun as opposed to a battle rifle is the presence of a quick-change barrel, heavyweight barrel, or other cooling system. Battle rifles and assault rifles may be capable of fully automatic fire, but are not designed for sustained fire. Many (though by no means all) machine guns also use belt feeding and open bolt operation, features not normally found on rifles.
In United States gun law, machine gun is a legal term for any weapon able to fire more than one shot per trigger pull regardless of caliber, the receiver of any such weapon, any weapon convertible to such a state using normal tools, or any component or part that will modify an existing firearm such that it functions as a "machine gun" such as a drop-in auto sear. Civilian possession of such weapons is not prohibited by any Federal law and not illegal in many states, but they must be registered as Title II weapons under the National Firearms Act and have a tax stamp paid. The Hughes Amendment to the Firearm Owners Protection Act of 1986 banned new production of firearms classified as machine guns for most civilian applications, however, so only "grandfathered" weapons produced before this date are legally transferable.
Looks like these guys royally screwed up their lives: Former East Coast Gun Dealer to Prison for Illegal Machine Gun and Laser Sights Acquisition
The machine-gun part of the conviction is obvious, but the laser sight part of it seems curious.
I have for sale a transferable Ruger Mini-14 machine gun. This appears to be a Pearl Manufacturing conversion. It is still lawful for an Oregon resident to purchase transferable Class 3 rifles. For how long, who knows?
This rifle is the original 180 series and was also made in 1976 and bears...
I was at a swap meet and this guy was selling some cool looking machine gun ammo (Used just shells but attached) . I purchased it and all these people liked them and started to offer me money for them. Are they good?
Someone got a heck of a theft present.
Holy F
But it's citizens that can't be trusted with weapons.
How many people will be killed with that weapon?!
FBI sub-machine gun stolen from California agent's car FBI sub-machine gun stolen from California agent's car
In recent years I've got increasingly into NFA firearms and have a decent stamp collection going. I've toyed with the idea of getting into a machine-gun, but haven't taken the plunge. The pragmatic side of me (or cost-conscious, er, cheap, if you wish) has a hard time justifying said at...