a
machine gun (an
automatic gun, usually with a cooling apparatus,
firing a rapid stream of bullets fed into it by a belt) which was
developed by the famous
American gun designer,
John Moses Browning (1855 - 1926). Under tests in 1917, one of these guns
fired over 600 rounds of ammunition per minute.
a
reference to the
automatic weapons designed and manufactured by
American arms designer
John Moses Browning (1855-1926). The
Browning automatic rifle, pistol and
machine guns were
developed at the start of the twentieth century and were widely used by the United
States and many other countries in both
World War I (1914-1918) and
World War II (1939-1945). The two most typical
machine guns made by
Browning were a .30
caliber,
having a bore (inside diameter of barrel) of three tenths of an inch, and the larger .50
caliber, with a bore of one-half inch. Specialized versions of these were used on both tanks and aircraft.
a
machine gun (an
automatic gun, usually with a cooling apparatus,
firing a rapid stream of bullets fed into it by a belt) which was
developed by
American gun designer
John Moses Browning (1855?1926).