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Repeating rifle

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open until this forward momentum is overcome. Other methods involve delaying the opening until two rollers have been forced back into recesses in the receiver in which the bolt is carried. Simple blowback action is simple and inexpensive to manufacture, but is limited in the power it can handle, so it is seen on small caliber weapons such as
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Fafting rifle: In 1774 a rifle was invented by a Norwegian colonel by the name of Fafting capable of firing 18 to 20 shots a minute and being used as an ordinary rifle by taking off a spring-loaded container attached to the gun's lock. It was also stated that the inventor was working on a gun capable
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In a gas-operated mechanism, a portion of the gases propelling the bullet from the barrel are extracted and used to operate a piston. The motion of this piston in turn unlocks and operates the bolt, which performs extraction of the spent cartridge and via spring action readies the next round. Almost
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1789 French rifle: In 1791 it was mentioned in a book published in France that there existed since at least 1789 a rifle that held 5 or 6 shots and was capable of being reloaded three times in a minute for a total of 15 or 18 shots a minute. A rifle similar in type to this was also stated to be kept
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Devisme guns: In 1844 a French gunsmith known as Devisme presented a variety of repeating firearms for the French Industrial Exposition of 1844 including an 18 shot pistol with no visible hammer or lock, a 6 shot pistol, a rifle with 6 shots and a 'revolving thunder' and a four shot 'double acting'
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Porter self-loading gun: In February 1851 a loose-powder-and-ball percussion magazine gun invented by a Parry W. Porter, better known for the turret rifle he invented and to which the magazine for his loose-powder-and-ball gun was to be attached, was reported on in American newspapers and later in
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In blowback operation, the bolt is not actually locked at the moment of firing. To prevent violent recoil, in most firearms using this mechanism the opening of the bolt is delayed in some way. In many small arms, the round is fired while the bolt is still travelling forward, and the bolt does not
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In a classic lever-action firearm of the Henry-Winchester type, rounds are individually loaded into a tubular magazine parallel to and below the barrel. A short bolt is held in place with an over center toggle action. Once closed, the over center action prevents opening solely by the force on the
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patented in Britain a repeating rifle he called "the Volitional Repeater". He would patent it again in the United States in 1849. This rifle featured a tubular magazine beneath the barrel and a lever mechanism to raise cartridges into the chamber. Unable to finance the building of the rifle, Hunt
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Lepage guns: In 1819 a French gunsmith called Lepage invented and presented at the French industrial exposition of that year percussion 2-shot and 4-shot turn-over rifles. In 1823 he exhibited a volley rifle that fired seven rifled barrels simultaneously as well as a turning carbine. In 1827, the
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mechanism popular in handguns, these did not have longevity. Even though the revolver mechanism was fine for pistols, it posed a problem with long guns: without special sealing details, the cylinder produces a gas discharge close to the face when the weapon is fired from the shoulder, as was the
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The Belton flintlock was a repeating flintlock design using superposed loads, conceived by Joseph Belton of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania some time prior to 1777. The musket design was offered by Belton to the newly formed Continental Congress in 1777. Belton wrote that the musket could fire eight
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With a pump-action firearm, the action is operated by a movable fore-end that the shooter moves backwards and forwards to eject a spent round, and extract and chamber a fresh round of ammunition. Pump-actions are usually associated with shotguns, but one example of a pump-action rifle is the
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1854 Lindner revolving rifle: In 1854 the German Edward Lindner patented in the United States and Britain a repeating rifle which used a revolving cylinder to elevate the cartridges, which were paper and could be either self-contained needlefire cartridges or use external percussion caps for
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Church and Bartemy/Bartholomew gun: A repeating rifle designed by the Americans William Church and Chrostus Bartemy or Bartholomew in 1813 with three separate magazines for containing up to 42 charges of ammunition and capable of firing 25 shots a minute. It could be reloaded in one
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same inventor exhibited at another French industrial exposition eleven percussion and one flintlock firearms which included a 4-shot revolving rifle, a 'double rifle' with a cylinder with five charges and a 'single rifle' and a pair of pistols also with a cylinder with five charges.
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Perry 'faucet-breech' gun: A hinged or tilting breech repeating rifle patented in the US in December 1849 by Alonzo Perry using paper cartridges contained in several gravity-operated tubular magazines in the stock and a separate magazine for fulminate pills which were used for
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The bolt is a mechanism that is operated by hand to extract a fired cartridge, move a fresh round into the chamber and reset the firing pin, readying the weapon to fire again. The bolt closes the breech end of the barrel and contains the
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Bailey, Ripley and Smith magazine rifle: In 1838 the Americans Lebbeus Bailey, John B. Ripley and William B. Smith patented a percussion repeating rifle with a gravity-operated tubular magazine which could hold up to 15 re-useable steel
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Henry rifle: A French 14 shot flintlock rifle in the style of the Kalthoff and Lorenzoni rifles patented in 1831 (granted in 1835) by François-Antoine Henry, though possibly based on an earlier design published in 1809 by the same
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series. Rifles with pump action are also called slide-action. This style of rifle is still popular with some local law enforcement branches as a rifle that is easy to train officers who are already familiar with the pump shotgun.
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Eaton rifle: In 1838 a percussion rifle invented in America by James Eaton was described as being capable of holding 24 rounds in a rotating magazine and discharging them all in four minutes for a rate of fire of 6 rounds per
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Leroy rifle: In 1815 (sometimes incorrectly dated as 1825) a French inventor called Julien Leroy patented a flintlock and percussion revolving rifle with a mechanically indexed cylinder and a priming magazine.
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improved the design and sold it as the "Smith-Jennings Repeating Rifle". At first they used a slightly modified Flobert cartridge, patented in 1853, but later they would switch to a modified
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shotgun, the barrel and breechblock remain locked for the full recoil travel, and separate on the return; in short-recoil actions, typical of most semiautomatic handguns (e.g. the
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Dixon self-loading and self-priming gun: A repeating gun demonstrated by a C. S. Dixon which won a silver award at the Annual Fair of the American Institute in October 1851.
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Cass repeating belt gun: A percussion repeating rifle patented in 1848 in the US using a chain or belt in the stock which carried paper cartridges to the breech of the gun.
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rifle of the late 19th and early 20th centuries is the most famous of the bolt-action types, with most similar weapons derived from this pioneering design, such as the
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in France a French gunsmith called Leroux demonstrated a repeating carbine with a magazine for 36 Flobert cartridges and which featured a novel cartridge extractor.
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Pirmet-Baucheron revolving rifle: In 1822 a French gunsmith called Pirmet-Baucheron presented a revolving rifle with 7 shots and a single lock.
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In a recoil-operated firearm, the breech is locked, and the barrel recoils as part of the firing cycle. In long-recoil actions, such as the
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Hewson magazine gun: In 1824 an English gunsmith called W. P. Hewson advertised, amongst other firearms and one air gun, a magazine gun.
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Silas Day magazine gun: A percussion revolving rifle to which was attached a loose-powder-and-ball magazine patented in the US in 1837.
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for the following shot. In common usage, the term "repeating rifle" most often refers specifically to manual repeating rifles (e.g.
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Buchel cartridge magazine gun: The first tubular cartridge magazine gun to be patented in the United States in February 1849.
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The first slide action patent: Issued in Britain in 1854, to Alexander Bain who modified the mechanism of a harmonica gun.
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Needham self-loading carbine: A self-loading carbine demonstrated in June 1851 at the Great Exhibition by Joseph Needham.
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is exemplary of this type. Later lever-action designs, such as Marlin leverguns and those designed for Winchester by
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Although most falling-blocks were single-shot actions, some early repeaters used this design, notably the Norwegian
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Jobard rifle: a turret rifle with 14 shots patented in Belgium in 1826 and presented to the government in 1835.
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assault rifle, can also handle more powerful cartridges but is more complicated and expensive to manufacture.
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Thomson rifle: A flintlock repeating rifle patented in 1814, using multiple breeches to obtain repeating fire.
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pushes up the reserve rounds, positioning the topmost between the bolt and the chamber at the base of the
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removes the spent cartridge, which is then ejected through the lever slot. A spring at the bottom of the
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Abridgments of the Specifications Relating to Fire-arms and Other Weapons, Ammunition, and Accoutrements
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bolt when the weapon is fired. This toggle action is operated by a hand grip that forms part of the
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had invented a rifle capable of firing 30 times in a minute and being reloaded in one minute.
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type of ammunition altered so as to function as a self-contained centerfire cartridge.
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of the previous shot to cycle the action and load the next round, even though all
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placed the first order for the "Jennings Magazine rifle" for his hardware store:
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mechanism, while the act of chambering the round typically also recocks the
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Kratsch rifle: In 1839 it was reported that a mechanic called Kratsch from
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A one-off example of Lever action reloading on automatic firearms is the
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ignition, to the breech from a tubular magazine located under the barrel.
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of firing up to 30 times in a minute on more or less the same principles.
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mechanism. The complete cycle action also resets the firing pin. The
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rifles when used for military combat, as they allowed a much greater
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The Exeter Flying Post or, Trewman's Plymouth and Cornish Advertiser
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Kurz rifle (abbreviated often as Kar98k or simply K98). The Russian
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Complete Book of the .22: A Guide to the World's Most Popular Guns
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Lagatz Rifle: a modification of the Lorenzoni System, designed by
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Repeating rifles were a significant advance over the preceding
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prevents firing unless the toggle is fully closed. The famous
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all modern military rifles use mechanisms of this type.
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reload. This is typically achieved by having multiple
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the same year a patent was procured by the inventor.
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Firearm that can fire multiple times between reloads
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Unsourced material may be challenged and 1255:The History of Smith & Wesson Firearms 1515: 1277: 1243: 433:Learn how and when to remove this message 1502: 1496: 981: 828: 749: 717: 606: 574: 513: 465:Circuit Judge revolver mechanism carbine 460: 1423: 1252: 1226: 822: 481: 1556: 1544:"Rapports du jury mixte international" 1106: 1012:"TraitĂ© complet de la chasse au fusil" 1457:Great Britain, Patent Office (1859). 952: 668:are examples of bolt-action designs. 43:) and then fed individually into the 897: 700:, as seen in for example the French 411:adding citations to reliable sources 378: 337:Colette gravity pistol: A repeating 1493:americansocietyofarmscollectors.org 1424:Simpson, Layne (15 December 2003). 1348:"Improvement in faucet-breech guns" 1257:. The Lyons Press. pp. 16–17. 51:, via either a manual or automatic 13: 1503:McCollum, Ian (1 September 2015). 707: 450: 141: 14: 1575: 274:Jennings magazine rifle: in 1847 223:Collier flintlock revolver (1814) 95:are technically a subcategory of 1278:Van Zwoll, Wayne (August 2006). 383: 134:to see military service was the 1536: 1483: 1469: 1450: 1403: 1389: 1368: 1354: 1340: 1319: 1298: 1271: 1220: 1199: 1185: 1164: 1143: 1100: 1034: 1018: 1004: 990: 982:Migneron, Pierre-Henri (1824). 975: 961: 946: 739: 555:M1895 Colt–Browning machine gun 503: 287:, improve the lever mechanism. 1489:David H. Hanes (October 2021) 953:Cotty, Gaspard Herman (1822). 932: 918: 891: 877: 863: 849: 804: 671: 596: 564: 1: 1505:"RIA: Colette Gravity Pistol" 1216:– via www.retronews.fr. 797: 478:common approach with rifles. 374: 356:Exposition Universelle (1855) 283:who in turn had an employee, 1284:. Rowman & Littlefield. 1111:. Paris: Exposition de 1839. 1107:Jobard, J. B. A. M. (1841). 1046:. 1 January 1824. p. 4 835:. US: ABC-CLIO. p. 71. 816:Victoria & Albert Museum 354:Leroux magazine gun: At the 7: 1094:www.histoire-genealogie.com 1057:– via Newspapers.com. 915:bibliotecavirtualdefensa.es 765: 676: 39:(within or attached to the 10: 1580: 1428:Shotguns & Shotgunning 1172:"Improvement in fire-arms" 743: 711: 680: 600: 568: 521:C lever-action carbine in 507: 485: 454: 130:, and the first repeating 1227:Halphen, Gustave (1845). 1193:"Army and Navy Chronicle" 812:"Flint-Lock Magazine Gun" 445: 829:Westwood, David (2005). 195:rounds with one loading. 898:Hoyt, Epaphras (1813). 368:Roper repeating shotgun 362:Spencer repeating rifle 75:, etc.), as opposed to 1253:Boorman, Dean (2002). 758: 746:Gas-operated reloading 725: 698:Lever-delayed blowback 620: 584: 526: 466: 293:Robbins & Lawrence 250:Colt ring lever rifles 207: 1491:The Incredible Linder 1362:"Scientific American" 885:"The Weekly Register" 753: 721: 610: 583:.22 pump action rifle 578: 540:Model 1873 Winchester 517: 464: 93:self-loading firearms 664:, and the Norwegian 590:Remington Model 7600 488:Falling-block action 482:Falling block action 473:were made using the 407:improve this section 349:Colt revolving rifle 128:American Indian Wars 723:M1941 Johnson rifle 660:rifle, the British 613:Winchester Model 70 279:sold the rights to 256:cartridge-chambers. 199:Girardoni air rifle 126:and the subsequent 77:self-loading rifles 47:by a reciprocating 873:(in French). 1791. 759: 726: 621: 615:. 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Index

barreled
ammunition
cartridges
magazine
rifle
chamber
bolt
action
hammer
striker
lever-action
pump-action
bolt-action
self-loading rifles
recoil
gas
blowback
self-loading firearms
repeating firearms
single-shot
breechloading
rate of fire
Spencer rifle
cavalry
American Civil War
American Indian Wars
air rifle
WindbĂĽchse rifle
Kalthoff repeater
Cookson repeater

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