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April 1, 2021, 09:13 AM | #1 |
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Rate of fire/rounds per minute
Every gun has a rate of fire, battle ships 2 shots a minute; M-60, 900 rounds a minute. What controls the rate of fire on an automatic weapon, bullet weight, recoil spring tension???
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April 1, 2021, 12:39 PM | #2 |
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Physics. You are converting chemical energy to mechanical motion which involves inertial energy of mass, (bolt, gas piston if applicable, recipricating parts), stored energy, springs, friction, etc. These are all tuned to the application needed for the weapon and desired cyclic rate. Ammunition is generally a parameter constant in design stages to keep reliability and functionality.
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April 1, 2021, 12:43 PM | #3 |
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That goes very far into the overall mechanical design, not as simple as just ammo or springs. Frex the .50 Browning ground gun is listed at 800 rpm, but there is an aircraft model for putting more lead on a fast moving airplane at 1200 rpm.
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April 1, 2021, 01:34 PM | #4 | |
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Understand that there are two numbers involved and they are not identical for hand held or crew served weapons, and usually not identical for weapons in fixed mountings (such as aircraft). Look up a given machinegun in the books and you will find a rate listed, this is the cyclic rate of the gun. It is the mechanical rate at which the action cycles, expressed in rounds per minute (rpm). This is primarily determined by design factors, and is usually expressed as a range (550-600rpm for example), and additional factors can play a part, such as the condition of the springs, the specific ammo being fired, etc. The cyclic rate is the number that engineers say they gun will run at. It is also the number most often used by people who don't know what they are talking about, and who think the gun actually shoots that fast. They do not shoot that fast. The other number is the important one for most uses and its usually called "rate of fire" (not cyclic rate), and it is the rate that the gun can be fired in the real world. IT is always lower than the cyclic rate because it includes the time needed to actually feed ammo into the gun. Changing magzines, feeding fresh belts, etc. It is also expressed in RPM. Its not usually found in the gun specifications. And then there is a third number found in military user manuals, which is "sustained rate of fire" and this number is lower yet. IT is a rate number in RPM which takes into account the stress, wear, and heat of rapid fire, and intended to be a rate at which the gun may be fired "continously" without breaking down or burning out the barrel. Most often used with artillery but it has small arms applications as well. For example say you have a 105mm howitzer and the book says max rate of fire is 17 rpm. A really good gun crew might be able to do 20rpm for brief periods, most will probably do less. And. doing so will wear out the gun tube in short order (significant shortening of its service life). We do that in emergencies. Regular firing rate would be 5-6rpm, which preserves the life of the gun tube. Say the book says the cyclic rate of the M16 is 700-900rpm. That is the rate the mechanism cycles, not the rate at which you can shoot it. Lets just take the low end for example, 700rpm. Now, take your M16, and have 23 loaded 30 rnd mags (690 rnds) stacked up ready and begin shooting. Brother, if you can fire them all out in 60 seconds, I'll buy your lunch! (you buy the new barrel for your M16 ) The same sort of thing applies even to belt fed weapons. Belts only hold a certain number of rounds. Usually 100 rnds for infantry guns, so while the gun might run at 600rpm, at the end of every belt, you have to stop, open the feed cover and insert a new belt, then close the cover, and possibly cycle the action to get the round into feeding position This takes a little bit of time, time when the gun is not firing. So, actually reaching the cyclic rate in real rounds fired in one minute is problematic and very rarely done. Fixed guns, like in fighter aircraft, with high rates of fire (9-1200rpm) don't make the actual 1200 rnds fired in one minute, usually because they don't have 1200 rounds of ammo storage capacity, a matter of space and weight, Our famous fighter planes in WWII with 4,6, or even 8 .50 cal guns in the wings carried at most 450-500rnds per gun and some only between 200 and 300. So, don't confuse cyclic rate with how many rounds the gun can actually fire in one minute. Semi autos also have a cyclic rate. Lower than most machine guns, usually, but not a lot lower than infantry MGs. Its the rate the action cycles at, and of course is much, much higher than the rate at which a semi auto can be fired. To summarize, cyclic rate is the rate the mechanism functions at, rate of fire is the rate (rpm) that the user can operate the gun at. NOT the same thing.
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April 1, 2021, 05:02 PM | #5 | |
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I think the cyclic rate of the original 1917 Browning was only around 450 rpm. But Mr Browning sat down behind his second demonstration model and held the trigger down for 46 minutes. Certainly somebody linking belts for him for over 20,000 rounds. He said he wanted to shoot for an hour but that was all the ammo they had left after shooting a 20000 round burst the day before on the first sample gun. |
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April 1, 2021, 05:23 PM | #6 | |
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Very early Maxim machine guns weren't even close to fixed rate
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IIRC part of the adjustable rate of fire in the early guns for trials was because the militaries of the time had no idea what an "ideal" rate might be. Remember this is the same time that more than a few magazine fed bolt action rifles had magazine cutoffs with the intent that soldiers "wouldn't waste ammo" firing it too quickly and were supposed to continue to single load rounds.
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April 1, 2021, 11:22 PM | #7 | |
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With the notable exception of the MG42, up through WWII the majority of infantry machine guns had cyclic rates in the 4-600 rpm range. After WW I aircraft guns were made with higher rates of fire. Browning infantry guns ran about 450-550 rpm and ran, and ran, and ran. The standard joke in armorer's circles was "What is the number 1 reason a Browning MG stops firing?" "It runs out of ammo!" One thing underappreciated by people who have not shot machine guns is that recoil is cumulative, and the faster the cyclic rate, the greater the effect. Not too bad when the gun is mounted on something, and even a tripod goes a long way to keeping the gun on target, but when firing from a bipod or from the shoulder with an automatic rifle of .30 caliber, you get moved around a bit... IF you get a chance, find a video of an M2HB firing from a tripod and watch the front leg. It often...hops a bit. The receiver weighs 84lbs the barrel 28 or so, the tripod 65, and each round of ammo weighs about a quarter pound, and then the links weigh a bit, too. Gives you some idea of the power of the gun's recoil, nearly bouncing all that weight off the ground...
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April 2, 2021, 07:57 AM | #8 |
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When Pawn Stars was looking at the half track with .50 quad mount and Corey got to shoot the guns, I noticed that one of them was not firing. The British supposedly used them on MGBs and said the reason for a quad mount of .5 Brownings was so you would normally have one gun to shoot.
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April 2, 2021, 01:50 PM | #9 |
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The British say a lot of things, some true, others, not so much.
I've read British reviewers works on lots of things, and the one thing they all seem to have in common is that if its not British, its flawed in some way. WWII US fighter planes were described as having cockpits like "executive offices" (large) and complain about all the "wasted space". And, our flight instruments are all in the "wrong" places.... they examined a captured Tiger tank, and concluded how difficult it would be to operate, due to the cramped crew spaces. German crewman felt otherwise, one driver said how he loved the amount of space in the Tiger, there was actually enough room for him to sleep in the tank, something none of the earlier tanks had... Its all point of view, I guess.... If a quad .50 isn't firing all 4 guns (and is set to fire all 4 guns) then something is broken and needs fixing.
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April 5, 2021, 11:25 AM | #10 |
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44 amp, close. The M-16 has a sustained rate of fire of 12-15 rounds a minute. That is how many you can fire thru it in a long term to prevent over heating etc.
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April 10, 2021, 09:59 AM | #11 | |
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April 10, 2021, 12:37 PM | #12 |
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12 rounds per minute is 5 seconds per shot. 15 rounds is 4 seconds per shot. This is a rate of fire that can be managed with manually operated repeaters, and I expect some skilled folks could manage it with a single shot breechloader.
Sustained rate of fire is just that, an arbitrarily chosen low rate of fire that can be sustained for minute after minute, until the mission requirement ends without overheating and wearing out the weapon. It is something normally used for artillery barrages and such things, where a steady slow rate of fire gets the job done. And the military, being the military and having a military passion for having stndards has Sustained Fire rates for small arms, as well as the big guns. Very, very rarely used in small arms during combat. And, during combat, sometimes the sustained rate of fire for the big guns gets tossed aside, as well.
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April 16, 2021, 01:14 PM | #13 |
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dyl, as 44 amp states is basically means the rifle can fire at that rate forever.
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April 17, 2021, 09:34 AM | #14 |
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You're forgetting the reload. As does most when discussing RPM.
600 rpm is only factual if you have 600 rounds available without the need to reload |
April 17, 2021, 10:23 AM | #15 |
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ss1 in Post #2 nailed it, it’s pure physics.
I believe Metal Storm had a max rate of 1 million rounds per minute but that never hit production (probably a good thing at current .30 cal prices.) But some anti gunners have said on TV (so it must be true) that ARs can fire 30 rounds per second / 1800 rounds per minute. I’d like to see the barrel after 1 minute on that one.
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April 18, 2021, 12:00 AM | #16 | |
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April 20, 2021, 07:49 PM | #17 |
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Weren't M60 gunners taught to say to themselves 'fire a burst of six' each time they pulled the trigger, for both ammo conservation and cooling?
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April 23, 2021, 01:34 PM | #18 |
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All air cooled machine gun users are taught to fire short bursts, for control ability and cooling issues. Ammo conservation is also on the list, but usually its further down the list, and is seldom a concern, UNTIL the ammo starts running short...
In Arctic training we were taught to fire single shots, or as small a burst as possible (2-3rnds) until the guns warmed up. Then, one could fire "normally". this was because in extreme cold, parts get brittle, and are much more prone to breakage than they are when at "normal" temps. Laying on a long burst when the gun is at ambient well below zero temp is very likely to break something, and likely something needed for the gun to operate. Unless facing human wave attack short bursts are almost always the best idea.
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May 3, 2021, 06:25 PM | #19 |
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If the gun fires 10 rounds in 1 second, it’s firing at a rate of 600 rpm. RPM is just used as a common reference.
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May 3, 2021, 10:13 PM | #20 | |
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A number of rounds came pre loaded in a barrel, and you could have as many or as few barrels in parallel as you wanted. Push the button and it sounded like a very loud arc welder.
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May 4, 2021, 01:31 AM | #21 |
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There are 3 terms mentioned so far that relate to the number of rounds being fired. For two of them, RPM is used as an abbreviation, and you need to know the context.
Cyclic rate This is the rate the mechanism cycles at. It is expressed in RPM. It is the rate the mechanism will run at if fed a continuous supply of ammunition, but it may not be (and usually isn't) the number of rounds fired if the gun were run continuously for a full minute, since most guns cannot run continuously for a full minute. A belt fed gun could run continuously for a full minute, with enough belts linked together, something fed from a magazine cannot do that. The actual number of rounds that can be fired in one minute is "rate of fire", and is also expressed as RPM, but that rate is less them the cyclic rate of the action due to practical considerations. SO you have to understand the context when someone uses the term RPM. They can be talking about two different things. Adding to the confusion is people being "conversationally sloppy" using rate of fire when they mean cyclic rate, the way people use engine and motor as interchangable terms in casual conversation when in technical terms they are quite different things. Also mentioned was "sustained rate of fire" which is a much lower rate, it is the number of rounds per minute that the gun can fire, for long periods of time without overheating and excessive wear. It is something more important to artillery than small arms, generally.
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May 4, 2021, 05:30 PM | #22 |
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My comment was targeted at the AR and extreme rate of fire not the Metal Storm.
If you want to see an interesting (very hypothetical) discussion of the Metal Storm read John Ringo's "Hell's Faire" where a Metal Storm 105mm pack is used in the "anti-spaceship lander" role mounted on a modified M1 Abrams chassis. The Shiva gun is also entertaining.
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May 4, 2021, 10:48 PM | #23 | |
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Bun Bun rocks!
However, in those books the crews of the Metalstorm tanks got rather abused. In one scene a nuclear class detonation happens close just as they are firing and one crewmember asks 'what was that last bang??" Ringo is my current favorite military SF writer. Metalstorm is the ultimate muzzleloader. But the muzzle loading is done at the factory, not in the field. There is, literally, no action to cycle. Projectiles and powder charges (no cases or primers) are loaded one ahead of the other and can fill the entire barrel length (or nearly so), rounds in the barrel are fired sequentially using an electronic ignition system, and barrels are bundled together into "packs" becoming the ultimate "volley gun". Not something very applicable to individual small arms, currently. Possible use as a crew served weapon, but not yet (if ever) superior to a belt fed machine gun. Once you get above that, you're into artillery and there, the concept has potential, (and some drawbacks). To get back to the OP Quote:
The M60 machine gun is rated at 550-650 rpm, not 900. What controls the number of rounds that can actually be fired in one minute is the available ammo supply ready to feed into the chamber. Belt fed guns can run as long as the belt, magazine fed run until the magazine is empty, then they stop until another loaded magazine is inserted and then firing can resume. This takes time, and that time not firing means that the number of rounds actually fired in one minute is less than the cyclic rate of the action.
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May 6, 2021, 10:17 AM | #24 | |
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There's a certain charm in that. The question is should "anti-matter" detonation be described as "nuclear". And remember, "Don't let rednecks play with anti-matter!" (Same book for those confused.)
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May 6, 2021, 10:56 PM | #25 |
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while in the class of nuclear detonations energy, antimatter would not be a nuclear detonation, because its neither fission nor fusion.
*not a physicist don't play one on TV* do have 30+ years as a certified fissile material handler, though...
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