ATV and AFV

Infojunky said:
wbnc said:
te only thing I ever scratched my head about was that its selfdefense weapons, the twin mini-guns up front...have a very limited arc of fire.

My big issue is the twin rotary guns, 4 times the chance of failure for less than 10% increase in firepower.

you really do get more out of a rotary weapons with four barrels than you would by putting four standard machine guns of the same caliber together.

Gatling-style guns are notoriously finicky in early designs But the modern Minigun is very reliable.one advantage is they do not have reciprocating parts, the action is very smooth and as no jar or rattle involved as you do with a heavy bolt slamming back and forth. That also reduces stress on the weapon and improves reliability. a dud round doesn't stop the gun from functioning it simply cycles through the weapon and is ejected. and you can adjust rate of fire with the turn of a knob to change the motors RPM.

And if you look at the increase in sustained fire capability things are far more impressive giving it barrel a chance to cool down a bit between shots and the air flow created by the rotation does seriously increase the sustained fire ability of a rotary gun. a50 caliber minigun will put more rounds down range than as many M2 Machineguns as the minigun has barrels since te M@s have be managed a bit to keep from overheating.

of course this is all theoretical I haven had the pleasure of holding a shoot off between the types...
 
Rate of fire determines how much lead is going downstream within a tight window of time and space.

Multiple separate barrels and lower RoF will spread the love around; probably good against zombie hordes.
 
Condottiere said:
Rate of fire determines how much lead is going downstream within a tight window of time and space.

Multiple separate barrels and lower RoF will spread the love around; probably good against zombie hordes.

Ah yes, yes they will, Quad 50s will shred an infantry position nicely...and the occasional zombie horde if encountered. Several vehicles were fitted with mutl-gun systems for just that reason. The Duster is the biggest one I can think of off hand with twin 40mm. The Russian ZSU has to be the poster child for the concept. The quad 50 mount was also pretty fearsome in both AA and infantry support roles.
 
Mileage varies amongst any number of machine guns, light, general, heavy and or rotisserie.

The German MG42 varied between nine and fifteen hundred rounds per minute, apparently depending on the bolt, though at twelve hundred, that seems enough that when anyone heard it, they all dropped to the floor.

Four to six hundred seems to be enough for sustained suppression.
 
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