Posted on 11/03/2001 12:54:05 AM PST by TERMINATTOR
ULTIMATE FIREPOWER | ||
With no moving parts, Metal Storm weapons can lay down a million-plus rounds per minute. |
BY SCOTT GOURLEY |
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Illustrations by Paul DiMare | ||
An all-electronic firing control mechanism is easily adapted to include a fingerprint-based user-ID system, and an on-the-fly selection of different rounds for different situations. |
To the human ear, the sound of 180 bullets being fired in less than one-hundredth of a second is perceived as one enormous noise. And the fact that some people have heard that noise is testimony to the perseverance of one inventor with a unique vision of the future of weapons technology. "They say that half the engineers in the first company that I worked with wanted me to finish my coffee and leave as soon as possible," says Mike O'Dwyer, recalling the way some of his far-reaching ideas were received. O'Dwyer's revolutionary weapons concept is based on an electronically fired gun-and-launcher design with multiple rounds stacked in a single barrel. The only moving parts are the bullets themselves. Beyond creating an astounding fast-firing weapon, the concept makes way for the creation of entirely new types of firearms. Among other things, it will allow the shooter to select from different types of rounds and even between firing lethal and nonlethal ammunition. O'Dwyer's ideas were initially met with skepticism, but now they are being taken seriously by the military and police. "Nothing succeeds like actually building something and pulling the trigger or, in our case, pressing the button to show what happens," he tells POPULAR MECHANICS. "One of the first things I did was to build a prototype with one short piece of barrel loaded with two projectiles and propellant behind each," O'Dwyer says. "I then fired the leading projectile just to determine whether the system would operate. If it did, the second projectile should stay in the barrel, without being pushed back with the propellant behind it." Based on the results of that testing, O'Dwyer quickly moved to an expanded firing prototype--a single-barrel design loaded with 15 9mm rounds. "There was nothing particularly optimum about having 15 rounds," he says. "It was just a good number. There was also nothing particularly optimum about 9mm. It was just a convenient size. "The wedging-system design O'Dwyer used to lock and seal multiple projectiles stacked in a single barrel required each of the 9mm projectiles to be slightly modified from their sporting configurations. "The 15 shots was a big step for us from two, and electronically firing those 15 shots from a single barrel allowed us to experiment immediately with rates of fire," O'Dwyer says. The smoothbore prototype allowed electronically variable rates of fire ranging from semiauto to the equivalent of 45,000 rounds per minute. |
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An Australian site, currently very slow downloading.
At .25 per round that is $25,000 per minute. Then there's loading time. At one round per second it would take 11.6 24-hour days to load that million rounds. Some of those guns have 64 barrels, each one holding 15 rounds. That's 960 rounds in a fraction of a second. A .45 with a hollow point will stop a guy just as surely as 960 rounds with the main difference being that the cops will still be able to identify the body.
Somebody designed a gun especially for women? </kidding>
I don't think they load the bullets one at a time, I think they have them already packaged in cylinders, they just drop them in the barrel. And they don't fire for a full minute straight! You couldn't fit that many bullets in the barrel! (remember, with this type of gun, all of the bullets are in the barrel until they are fired)
On a different note, what if the battery goes flat? I'll stick to mechanical guns, thank you.
Now all they have to come up with is a new material for a barrel that would withstand that kind of heat.
They are also giving up accuracy with a smooth bore weapon.
The effect of this weapon is much more like a shotgun, it would seem, then a rifle. I suppose using the same method you could claim that a 10 guage shotgun shell loaded with small shot fires "millions" of proectiles per minute, but only for 1/100 of a second at a time!
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