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ForgottenWeapons
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Ask Ian: Are Man-Portable Chain Guns Coming? (Audio Only)

From Nikolas on Patreon:

"Have there been any attempts to make miniaturized man-portable chain guns? Do you think there's a future for such a machine gun given modern advances in energy storage?"

Chain guns are a specific type of externally-powered machine gun. They have a single barrel, and used a loop of chain to control the movement of the breech and feed system of a machine gun so that it cycles under external power independent of energy taken from the firing cartridge. They are most commonly used in:

- 20mm-30mm cannons

- Armored vehicle turrets

- Helicopters

- Naval AA mounts

The benefit of a chain gun is its ability to cycle a dud cartridge right through the system without causing a stoppage. They are also unaffected by variations in powder charge, within reason. This makes them idea for aerial mounts. The ability to lock the action closed longer than typical machine gun designs allows them to leak minimal propellent gasses out the breech, an advantage for use in tanks and APCs.

For infantry-type use, these benefits are not particularly useful. They are offset by the increased weight required of a chain gun, both from the additional components to actually the bolt and also the electric motor and battery to power it. I can see development of this system for autonomous or drone-based applications, but not for human infantry.

Comments

if I understand correctly, in EM-2 "bullet" doesn't touch the barrel at all, so rotating it won't change anything.

Serhii

I'm thinking that the guy who originally asked this *MIGHT* have meant things like handheld Miniguns, as a referring to Gatling guns as Chainguns is a common misnomer (probably dating back to at least Doom, 1993).

Lance Thundercock

Great analysis Ian.

zspikez

Based on this, I want to ask is it viable to rotate whole barrel to stabilize a bullet? In firearms overall I think it is impossible, but for example for EM-2 or same sort of weapon I think it could be useful. Since the barrel there is just a light stud-like tube and you already have a power source available. If barrel rotation mechanism will malfunction - the gun can still fire. Granted it would reduce trigger time, but when you do not want extra stabilization you can simply turn barrel rotation off. And you can also increase or decrease rotation or change the direction to get more or less or different spin based on weather (or even automate it via crosswind sensor + computer for compensation or sort of).

Old Newbie


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