mrw311 - AnthologyMain MenuIntroductionThe Gatling Gun and Machine GunsRifles and HandgunsIronclad Battleships and Torpedo TechnologyThe Boer WarsStagnation and Fear of DestructionAnxious, Fictional Accounts of the FutureBibliographyMatthew Werkheiserbaf3c422a98f36dbd4c83c180176ff0854fcbc18
Cross Section of Maxim Gun
12016-11-27T00:07:43-05:00Matthew Werkheiserbaf3c422a98f36dbd4c83c180176ff0854fcbc18664plain2016-12-16T12:59:59-05:00Matthew Werkheiserbaf3c422a98f36dbd4c83c180176ff0854fcbc18A cross section of a Maxim gun from the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary, a Russian multi-volume encyclopedia. Invented by Hiram Stevens Maxim, it is the first recoil operated machine gun in history. When a cartridge is fired, the recoil from spent shell is used to move the breech-block backwards, ejecting the spent casing and loading a fresh shell. During the Second Boer War, the British army utilized the Maxim design to develop the "Pom-Pom," a 1-pounder (37mm) auto-cannon. The weapon platform was not without its drawbacks - the increased heat of a single-barrel set up resulted in the need for a cooling system which was, in the case of the Maxim, generally a tank of water. Additionally, the barrel was prone to stripping as it heated up - the rifling was physically pulled out of the barrel as rounds were fired through it, necessitating the replacement of the barrel after a period of continuous fire. Teams were often equipped with what was, in essence, a large oven mitt that was meant to handle the hot barrel and water sheath when swapping barrels in the weapon.
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12016-11-26T16:36:27-05:00Matthew Werkheiserbaf3c422a98f36dbd4c83c180176ff0854fcbc18The Gatling Gun and Machine GunsMatthew Werkheiser21plain20292016-12-16T12:55:46-05:00Matthew Werkheiserbaf3c422a98f36dbd4c83c180176ff0854fcbc18
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12016-12-11T22:15:52-05:00Matthew Werkheiserbaf3c422a98f36dbd4c83c180176ff0854fcbc18Heavy Arms and ArtilleryMatthew Werkheiser1plain2016-12-11T22:15:52-05:00Matthew Werkheiserbaf3c422a98f36dbd4c83c180176ff0854fcbc18
12016-12-12T00:27:32-05:00Matthew Werkheiserbaf3c422a98f36dbd4c83c180176ff0854fcbc18World War IMatthew Werkheiser1plain2016-12-12T00:27:32-05:00Matthew Werkheiserbaf3c422a98f36dbd4c83c180176ff0854fcbc18