Brief history and stages of development of firearms. History of the emergence and development of firearms History of the development and creation of firearms

Firearms of any era are similar in principle of operation. It consists of a tube or barrel along which a projectile or bullet moves under the influence of explosion energy, an ignition device and means of controlling the fuse. The development of firearms is characterized by improvements in the barrel and the firing mechanism, or “lock,” so called because it was originally made by metalworkers.

Development of ignition systems
The first firearm was a hand-held self-propelled gun - a simple pipe with a stand at the end on which it rested when firing. The powder charge was ignited using an igniter, the flame of which was directed into the ignition hole in the breech (the closed end of the barrel).
The first mechanical spring ignition system was a matchlock (late 15th century). The very first musket with a matchlock was called an arquebus (arquebus). Such locks have been used for over 200 years. The first matchlock weapon that could be fired from the shoulder was also the arquebus (16th century). Ancient weapons were massive and often required a stand to fire them. The gunpowder and bullet were driven into the barrel through the muzzle along with a wad that held them at the rear of the barrel. Ignition (fine black) gunpowder was poured onto the ignition shelf while the wick slowly smoldered in the castle. Such weapons were not suitable for horsemen. Almost all matchlock weapons were smoothbore (with unrifled barrels); weapons loaded from the breech were very rare.
The wheel lock was a step forward compared to the matchlock: once cocked, it could be in combat readiness for a long time, and was also instantly activated. It was invented at the beginning of the 16th century. (many of the surviving copies are German), but it was complicated, fragile and expensive. Rich people usually rode horses, so carbines and wheel-lock pistols became the weapons of horsemen. It was widely used by German mercenaries (XVI century) and English cavalry (early XVII century).
The matchlock appeared at the end of the 15th century. A slowly burning wick, fixed in a serpentine trigger, dropped onto the gunpowder in the tray when the trigger was pressed.
In a flintlock, flint was used for the fuse. There were two types of flintlock. They differed in that the flint (a piece of metal that is struck by a flint) and the shelf with the ignition chute were combined in one of them, and separated in the other.
The flintlock gun soon replaced all other types of guns. Muskets such as the British "Dark Betsy", the French from Charleville, and later the breech-loading Ferguson rifle, Jaeger rifles and Kentucky rifles contributed greatly to the development of firearms.
Many inventors tried to increase the firepower of weapons by creating multi-barreled guns, compound charges and other means. This is how double-barreled guns and mitrailleuses appeared. Modern navies and air forces of all countries use multi-barrel guns.

Percussion and repeat firearms
In 1805, the Reverend Alexander John Forsyth (1769 -1843) created a lock that used highly sensitive explosive detonating gunpowder for the fuse. As in later designs, this bolt used the property of fulminate salts to explode when struck, for example by a trigger, to ignite the charge. Of the other impact ignition systems, the most successful was the capsule one.
The fundamental design of the weapon did not change at first, and many flintlock rifles were converted into percussion rifles. In 1835-1836 Samuel Colt (1814-1862) patented a cylinder revolver; This is how multiple firearms arose. actions. In 1847, American Dragoon Captain Walker gave Colt an order to produce 0.44-inch weapons. This large six-shot saddle revolver was called the Walker Colt.
It was followed by other cavalry revolvers, the .31" pocket model, the .36" naval revolver, the police revolver model, the .44" army revolver, and cylinder-equipped shotguns, muskets, and rifles. All impact-action Colts were designed to fire single shots - for each shot you had to cock the hammer with your thumb. For the most part, these were flip-grip revolvers that did not have the rigidity of a rigid frame revolver.

Ammo and modern firearms
Cartridges have been used for many centuries, but they did not combine a bullet, charge and primer. The first unitary cartridge was made in 1812, and in 1837 it was improved by the German gunsmith Johann Dreyse (1787-1867) for use in his needle rifle. American Daniel Wesson (1825-1906) developed an improved side-firing cartridge in 1856; the same cartridge was used in the Henry rifle. In a side firing cartridge, the striking compound was located at the bottom of the cartridge case along its circumference. Centerfire cartridges were then created with the primer in the center of the bottom of the case; they were used in 1873 in the Colt revolver and Winchester carbine. Center fire cartridges are used for most types of modern small arms, including machine guns and cannons.

Burmistrov Ilya

People have always needed and still need means of protection. In addition to using sharpened sticks and spears, people threw stones and threw darts. But about several tens of thousands of years ago, Homo sapiens made a real revolution...

It is not known exactly when a person first pulled a bowstring onto a slightly curved branch and sent an arrow at the target, but it certainly happened at least 30 thousand years ago. In fact, the history of small arms is equal in length to the history of mankind. Technical progress has always been characterized by improved weapons.

Small arms are bladed weapons/firearms, the principle of which is to send a charge over a certain distance. Used to destroy enemy personnel, fortifications and equipment.

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MUNICIPAL BUDGETARY EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION

BEREZOVSKAYA SECONDARY SCHOOL

History of the development of small arms

Leaders: Chechugo L.G., history teacher,

Teacher-organizer of life safety Kovalev A.A.

Berezovo village 2013

Plan

  1. Introduction………………………………………………………………………………………pp. 2

1.Purpose………………………………………………………………………………………p. 2

2.Task…………………………………………………………………………………….p. 2

  1. The main part is the history of the development of small arms:

1. Onion…………………………………………………………….……………p. 3

2. Crossbow……………………………………………………….……………p. 4

3. Firearms………………………………………...………………p. 4

4. Matchlock………………………………………………..…………p. 5

5. Wheel lock………………………………………..…………………p. 5

6. Percussion flint lock………………………………….………………p. 6

7. Percussion rifle………………………………………………………pp. 6

8. Revolver and pistol……………………………………………………….p. 7

9. Breech-loading repeating rifle………………….…………………p. 8

10. Rifles with optical devices…………………………..p. 8

11. Machine guns……………………………………………………………………p. 9

12. Automatic and self-loading rifles…………..…….…………p. 10

13. Submachine guns……………………………………………………… p. eleven

14. Automatic machines………………………………………………………………p. 12

15. Shotguns……………………………………………………..…………p. 13

16. Modern innovations………………..…………………………..……… p. 14

  1. Conclusion……………………………………………………………..……page 15
  2. Literature………………………………………..……………………….…p. 16

Introduction

People have always needed and still need means of protection. In addition to using sharpened sticks and spears, people threw stones and threw darts. But about several tens of thousands of years ago, Homo sapiens made a real revolution...

It is not known exactly when a person first pulled a bowstring onto a slightly curved branch and sent an arrow at the target, but it certainly happened at least 30 thousand years ago. In fact, the history of small arms is equal in length to the history of mankind. Technical progress has always been characterized by improved weapons.

Small arms are bladed weapons/firearms, the principle of which is to send a charge over a certain distance. Used to destroy enemy personnel, fortifications and equipment.

Target

Trace the process of formation, design and development of small arms.

Tasks

Study, compare, correlate the processes of development of small arms and draw conclusions.

Onion

Known since ancient times, it was simply a stick made of wood, tied with a bowstring made of sinew, but the first creators of bows quickly realized that this was not the maximum that could be extracted from a stick with a rope, and quickly ground the stick down to the ends so that it would break less in in the middle, then they ground it in the area of ​​the handle, and ground it in a plane perpendicular to the transverse axis of the bow (if you look at the bow frontally, as if from the front) so that the arrow was closer to the center of the bow, but then they tied a small block (bone) to the handle in the plane in which both bow axes lie.

Along with making fire and turning blades and knives for humans, the invention of the bow became a sensation. The ability to send a projectile, ease of manufacture and excellent characteristics for hunting made it possible to produce a bow in artisanal conditions.

Later, around 30 millennium BC. e. the arrow acquired feathers and a tip. Such an ideal ratio of destructive power and ease of use allowed the bow to displace the sling and boomerang.

By 6000 BC. e. people began to make bows of more complex shapes, for example, from several blocks of wood.

But one should not consider the bow a cheap weapon: not only does it require a special wood (yew, elm, beech, ash or at least acacia), but it also had to be sharpened evenly, carefully, so that the weapon was balanced.

For an ideal result, the shooter should have been trained from the age of 4-5. In addition, shooters often used “their own” arrows, adjusted to their weapons. This is not very convenient for the army. The bow is extremely demanding on the quality of training of fighters.

By the New Kingdom (circa 2800 BC) in Ancient Egypt, its soldiers began to wear armor, reinforcing their linen jackets with metal plates. Even lamellar shells gradually appear. Many of Egypt's opponents do the same. This is a reason to improve the penetrating ability of the bow, and by the reign of Thutmose III, double-bows - compound bows - became popular. Such weapons penetrate contemporary armor at a distance of 50-80 meters.

Since wood was brought to Egypt from the southern lands (Nubia), the Egyptians used animal horns and tendons, creating the world's first composite bow.

In the 3rd century. BC e. The Scythians created a composite bow with four bends. Their successors - the Huns - lengthened it from 70 cm to 1.5 m, strengthened the bends with bone plates and created a formidable weapon that pierced iron shields through and through. The Romans, Visigoths, and Franks together, at the cost of enormous blood, stopped this horde.

In Medieval Europe, the best archers were the British - thanks in part to Wales and King Edward I. Their classic long yew bow performed well in the Hundred Years' War, when the British shot almost 30,000 French knights at Crecy and the entire 25,000-strong French corps at Agincourt.

The latest improvement - the reverse bow - was created by the Ottoman Turks, thanks to which the latter captured the Balkans.

Lacking a choice, the bow was the main firearm for centuries and continued to compete with its successor, the crossbow, until the advent of firearms.

Crossbow

The idea of ​​placing the bow on the stock and hooking the string to save the archer's strength originated in the 3rd century. BC e. in ancient Greece and China. Archimedes later created a number of throwing machines. His developments went to the Roman Empire. Along with darts, Roman infantry used crossbows. But Rome, a zealous admirer of the “glorious traditions of the past,” kept only hired archers and crossbowmen. In China, the crossbow was used only in the northern provinces for protection against nomads.

In the Middle Ages, the Italian city-republics were the first to begin general “crossbowing”: Genoa, Venice, Padua, Milan... There were enough reasons: developed technologies, a high level of weapons, the military population was not particularly demanding of itself.

When the Italian crossbow became a composite bow, and later a metal bow, an arrow from such a weapon pierced the knight's armor, and the noble knightly war came to naught. The Pope introduced a ban on the use of a crossbow, since it was unworthy for a nobleman to die from an arrow. The ban, of course, did not apply to Italian mercenaries, because mercenaries are scoundrels without faith, conscience and honor.

We switched from manual reloading to lever reloading. “Anglo-French” (with a tension collar) and “German” (with a serrated collar) crossbows appeared. Although it was inconvenient, the crossbow did not require years of training, allowing European armies to have more marksmen in their army. The goat's leg type lever has greatly increased the rate of fire.

The confrontation between the crossbow and the bow lasted throughout the Middle Ages. The first was suitable for militias and huge armies, the second was ideal for the nobility and professionals. The appearance of firearms immediately replaced the bow, and decades later, the crossbow.

Firearms

The first examples of guns and rocket launchers were created in China at the beginning of the 13th century. They found application in the Mongol army. After the import of gunpowder to Europe in the 15th century, guns began to be created en masse, and later bombards - the first mortars. Smaller versions of cannons and bombards could be picked up and fired. In Rus' they were called “hand-made arquebus”. They were not widely used due to their bulkiness, heavy weight and enormous recoil.

Matchlock

Hand bombards were loaded by bringing a hot rod to the wick. This obscured the sight, and the shooter's right hand could not adjust the weapon to the target.

The invention of the matchlock deprived the shooter of these inconveniences. Now the shooter needed to pull the trigger, a red-hot rod on a stand was brought to the wick, and all that was left was to wait for the shot. The new gun was nicknamed the arquebus. But it was much heavier than a crossbow, and its shooting qualities left much to be desired.

An improved and lighter version of the arquebus, the musket, first appeared in Spain and later spread throughout Europe.

The matchlock had a lot of disadvantages: high recoil, low accuracy, low rate of fire, dependence on the weather, and constant access to fire was needed.

Even the church cursed the “instrument of the devil.” But there was also a benefit: now the heavy knightly cavalry did not inspire fear in the soldiers, because the bullets pierced the armor. For this reason, musketeers made up half of the army in Western Europe. The other half are pikemen. You can't fight in close combat with a musket.

Wheel lock

Often a thought is ahead of its time. In an attempt to find a replacement for the wick, Leonardo da Vinci (1482) and later Ettor of Nuremberg (1504) created the wheel lock. It works with the help of a spring wound by a ring, which drives a wheel and drops a piece of flint onto it, as in modern lighters. Friction occurred and sparks were created to charge.

It was with this type of lock that the first pistols were created. They were developed by the Italian Camillus Vetelli from Pistoia. Also, cavalry - cuirassiers and reiters - could use firearms with such a lock.

But such a mechanism was too expensive - the technical level of many countries was not yet capable of mass production of such weapons. Only the best shooters and mercenaries received it.

And again there was a confrontation between two small arms technologies: a simple, cheap, but inconvenient matchlock, and a weather-independent, high-quality, but very expensive wheel lock.

The matchlock and wheel locks were replaced at the beginning of the 18th century by the percussion flintlock.

Percussion flintlock

A real revolution in military tactics was made by guns with percussion flintlocks. Created in Turkey, and later in Russia and Spain, simple, cheap and quite reliable, they used the same principle of striking a spark from a flint, but not due to the rotation of the wheel, but due to the movement of the flint itself, fixed in the jaws of the trigger, and its impact about a motionless flint.

Also, a bayonet was created for a musket with such a lock, which, together with the new formation of linear infantry, was considered the pinnacle of military-scientific thought; also with this lock, fittings or rifles - shotguns with a rifled barrel - were tested. Reloading them was incredibly difficult; only by the middle of the 19th century was a special rifle bullet created. But the lock had a drawback - since the gap into which the sparks should pass was small, a misfire could occur and the shot would not take place. For this reason, the flintlock was superseded in the 1920s. XIX century capsule.

Capsule rifle

The cap lock appeared at the beginning of the 19th century, initially in hunting weapons. He used a chemical explosive based on mercuric fulminate (mercuric fulminate), enclosed in a metal cap - a primer, or "piston". The trigger hit the primer, which was placed on a hollow seed rod - a brand tube, the cavity of which was connected to the barrel bore. This lock was simple, cheap, and very reliable. Its design was familiar and from the inside it completely repeated the impact flint one, which had long been mastered in production. By the 1840s, it had replaced the flintlock in the armies of almost all developed countries.

Later the primer from the side was moved into the gun itself. Using exactly the same method, a revolver pistol was created. Capsule locks were placed on fittings, and Claude Minier’s invention of a special bullet for rifles simplified the loading process - the bullet slid in a spiral to the end of the barrel. The capsule system reliably served the army throughout the 1st half of the 19th century.It was with the use of percussion rifles that the term “rifle” became established as the soldier’s individual weapon.

In 1827, the German engineer Dreyse presented his rifle project for Central European countries. It was accepted by the Prussian army, despite difficulties in production, but especially drew attention to its single, full cartridge and bolt-action trigger mechanism.

For this system, the first unitary cartridges and a bolt-action trigger mechanism were created, developed by the engineer Dreyse. His modified version of the lock used cartridges where the primer was part of the cartridge. This idea was reproduced after Boxer created metal cartridges.

In 1836, the French gunsmith Lefauchet created a cardboard pin cartridge.

The capsule was in the cartridge, and there was no need to worry about its loss. At first, a small pin was used for ignition, then, as in a revolver, the percussion composition was in the ring at the end of the cartridge, and only then in 1861 the primer was again included in the cartridge.

And in 1853 they developed an all-metal cartridge for pistols and rifles. A little later, they created a more reliable rimfire cartridge without a primer, only with a percussion compound. But it turned out that the cartridge with a primer was much more effective, and new central ignition cartridges replaced all outdated models.

Revolver and pistol.

The advantage of the pistol was supposed to be its rate of fire. But due to the fact that it was loaded, like a gun, from the muzzle, the pistol became a disposable weapon. After the creation of the cap lock, pistols began to be widely distributed in the army. At first they were made multi-barrel for greater effect. Only this option made the weapon much heavier.

The idea to leave the “barrel drum” alone and make a rotating container for changing cartridges came to John Pearson, who worked for the industrialist Samuel Colt. The latter received huge profits from the project and worldwide fame. The new weapon was called "revolver" ( English rotation). It was so perfect that it was classified as a separate type of weapon. The revolver forced the pistol out of the market due to its many advantages. The era of the revolver ended in the 1880s with the invention of smokeless powder, giving way to handguns.

At first, as before, pistols were made with multiple barrels, and then the American John Browning came up with the idea of ​​placing a magazine with cartridges in the pistol handle, and “covering” the trigger with a steel casing. This technology was borrowed all over the world, making pistols indispensable for security and special units, as well as for command personnel. The German gunsmith Georg Luger used a different design in the pistol: instead of a steel casing, he left a revolving striker, installed a fuse above it, and replaced the drum with a magazine.

Breech-loading repeating rifle.

At the front, soldiers suffered heavy losses not only because of problems with the rifle lock. Often they did not have time to recharge it. Loading from the barrel is a very long process, and soldiers had to stand up to their full height to reload. When the capsule lock moved into the rifle itself, several countries immediately developed breech-loading systems - introducing a special groove next to the lock. Now it was easier to reload the rifle without having to stand up to full height, and there was no loss of reliability and accuracy.

Opened in the 70s. smokeless powder made it possible to reduce the caliber from 15-18 to 8 mm. Lightweight cartridges had more ideal ballistic data.

But the single-shot rifle did not meet the requirements of the time.

Dreyse's bolt mechanism was perfect and ideal for reloading. Later, a loading accelerator, under-barrel and butt magazines were made. The accelerator only gave a gain in time. And both types of stores, although they had many options, when firing, the center of gravity changed, and the rifle itself became fragile. In addition, it had to be loaded one cartridge at a time, and the magazine could contain from 4 to 48 cartridges.

The under-barrel mechanism took root in the United States when, in 1860, the American B. T. Henry created a new trigger, which was nicknamed the “Henry bracket.” He sold the patent and rights to the weapon to the industrialist Winchester, who assigned his last name to the weapon.

The Winchester was quick-firing, but the soldiers did not like the fact that this inconvenient weapon discharged very quickly. Henry was unable to further develop his already complex mechanism, and the rifle became unpromising.

Having realized these mistakes, the designers made their choice on the middle store, which had many options, but was often stocked. Typically it held 5 rounds in a clip (a clip is a device for speeding up loading). The longitudinally sliding bolt provided a good rate of fire, and now the rifle was fully in keeping with its time.

Rifles with optical devices

After the invention of the telescope, gunsmiths in European and then American countries tried to start producing weapons with so-called telescopic sights. It was possible to do this only at the beginning of the 19th century. Along with them, a cheaper diopter sight began to be produced. The telescopic sight provided an enlarged image of the target, and the diopter sight helped the shooter calculate the distance to the object.

Sharp shooters were nicknamed snipers, which in English means “snipe hunter.” The fact is that it was not easy to defeat this bird: it was small and maneuverable.

The invention worked well in the United States, where, due to constant local conflicts, the majority of the population were experienced shooters.

The American Civil War gave a new impetus to the development of snipers: Northern Colonel Hiram Berdan created an elite brigade of accurate snipers. The selection was tough, but it was worth it: Berdan's snipers repeatedly thwarted Confederate advances. For example, at the Battle of Gettysburg, a Federal sniper shot and killed Confederate General John Reynolds from 600 m, as a result of which the Confederates retreated from the city in panic. Another example is Sergeant Grace, a Confederate sniper who shot Northern General John Sedgwick in the head from 731 meters while he was riding a horse. His shot stopped the Federal attack and led to the South's victory in the Battle of Pennsylvania.

The Great Patriotic War brought a new round of development of the sniper craft. Soviet soldiers fought to the death for their Motherland. Destroyed Stalingrad and the Belarusian forests became an ideal place for constant sniper fire. Ruins, soot, dust or dense tree crowns, swamps dangerous for traps, and excellent use of camouflage - you can’t imagine a better place for a sniper.

Machine guns

The 20th century was approaching, and the army needed automatic weapons for successful wars.

The concept of a machine gun as a weapon with a much higher rate of fire than a rifle, as well as its first project, were put forward in 1718.

Although the first real machine gun appeared in 1883 (it was made by the American Hiram Maxim), at first this weapon was underestimated, and it became widespread only during the First World War, when the armies of the warring countries were bogged down in trenches and trench warfare.

The basis of the operation of machine guns is either semi-free movement of the bolt back and forth, or repulsion by a gas piston, which is acted upon by the pressure of the powder gases, which flow back to the machine gun mechanism through the gas tube. The first samples of automatic rifles were created back in 1863 by Regulus Pilon. In Russia, such a weapon was made by D.A. Rudnitsky in 1886. But technical capabilities allowed European and American designers to make such weapons by 1908-10. Machine guns, approved and manufactured by 1900, were used in the Boer War and the First World War and were considered weapons of mass destruction.

The effectiveness of automatic weapons was confirmed by the experience of the First World War. Machine guns of the Maxim and Lewis system were effective and widespread weapons. Although the rate of fire made it possible to consider its design powerful, the machine gun weighed from 20 to 65 kg. Calculation – from 2 to 6 people.

Due to such shortcomings, a version of a light machine gun arose that could be handled by one person. The first samples of light machine guns were made in 1918. In fact, these are lightweight versions of heavy machine guns. Only in the late 20s were systems other than heavy machine guns created. In the USSR, the Degtyarev machine gun, made in 1927, was used.

Also in the Soviet Union, the first prototype of a high-speed machine gun was created - the aviation ShKAS Shpitalny and Komarov with a rate of fire of up to 3000 rounds per minute. Created at the beginning of the Great Patriotic War, it made a huge impression on the German command. It is known that a sample of the ShKAS was kept in the Reich Chancellery under glass: Hitler ordered that this weapon be kept until German engineers made the same one for the Luftwaffe. But this never happened.

During World War II, another type of machine gun was developed - a single one - both easel and manual. It is considered one of the most acceptable options.

Automatic and self-loading rifles.

Despite the obvious superiority over conventional repeating rifles, their automatic counterparts were not widely used due to their unreliability, fear of overheating of the barrel, and the fear of the ruling circles, who were afraid that there would not be enough ammunition for the assault rifles. Therefore, they were changed, making it possible only to fire single shots without jerking the shutter. Such rifles were called self-loading (purely conditionally). But nowhere did they rearm the army with them. Only in the USA, after 20 years of testing, in 1936 they approved the Garand rifle project and made a complete replacement for it. In the USSR, tests were also carried out in the 30s, but not a single project met the requirements. And only in 1936 the Simonov ABC-36 rifle successfully passed the tests and was put into service. Its working system was above the barrel. In 1938, it was replaced by the Simonov SVT-38 rifle. The new rifle has a locking device (bolt skew) and a hammer trigger mechanism (instead of a striker). In 1940, a new SVT-40 with even better tactical data. But such rifles had a drawback - they required careful maintenance (this does not apply to the SVT-40). Therefore, repeating rifles were also used in World War II.

After the war, preference began to be given to machine guns, and self-loading and non-automatic rifles began to be used only as sniper weapons.

Pistols - machine guns

A submachine gun (PP) is an individual hand-held automatic small arms weapon of continuous fire that uses a pistol cartridge for firing and is effective at close ranges.

They did not become widespread during the First World War; they were mass-produced only from the late 1930s.

Based on the idea of ​​facilitating and increasing the tactical mobility of a machine gun, in 1915 in Italy, Major Abel Revelli created a light double-barreled light machine gun Villar-Perosa M1915 chambered for the Glisenti pistol cartridge (9x20 mm). It was used relatively widely in the Italian army, and especially actively by mountain and assault units. There were options for firing both from the machine and from a bipod or from the hands - which to some extent makes this weapon also a harbinger of the concept of a single machine gun.

But it was General Thompson (one of the creators of the PP) who invented the term submachine gun, which literally means “submachine gun”, in the sense of a lighter type of machine gun, which to this day designates this type of weapon in the USA and, partly, in other English-speaking countries countries.

It is curious that Thompson and his team of engineers began development with the idea of ​​​​an automatic rifle, and only later switched to the development of a light machine gun, carried by one person, suitable for offensive operations in trench warfare and chambered for the .45 ACP pistol cartridge, due to its unsuitability soon became clear which he bought from the inventor of the Blish system semi-free bolt for more powerful rifle ammunition.

In the interwar period, in most countries these weapons were considered unnecessary and secondary. But the conflict in Chaco and the “Banana War” in South America completely refuted this judgment, and after that the infantry was massively enriched with these weapons.

The Second World War was the apogee of the development of submachine guns. Some were cheap but unreliable, others were convenient but expensive. The PPS-43 of the Soviet engineer Sudaev was recognized by the whole world as the best project - it was reliable, simple, and accurate.

After 1945, they were actively improved in Western Europe; in the USSR, these weapons were replaced by automatic pistols. They are mostly fired in bursts with low accuracy. Currently, PPs are most often used by law enforcement agencies, special services, rapid response groups, attack aircraft, as well as armored vehicle crews, artillery crews, missilemen, signalmen, rear officers and other military personnel for whom direct fire contact with the enemy is not a normal situation (so called the “second line”) as a weapon of self-defense - due to the small size of the weapon with relatively large firepower. Unofficially, PPs are called “anti-terror weapons.”

Slot machines

At the beginning of World War II, the infantry of most countries was armed primarily with repeating non-automatic rifles or shortened carbines using rifle cartridges, and submachine guns using pistol ammunition. In addition, many countries had a number of self-loading and automatic rifles in service. None of these types of weapons individually could provide the necessary firepower for the infantry, since:

Repeated non-automatic rifles and carbines had a large, even excessive range of aimed fire for most real combat missions, but at the same time a very low rate of fire, which made non-automatic rifles useless in close combat with infantry;

Submachine guns had a very high rate of fire, and in close-range combat they created a fairly high density of fire. But due to the use of relatively low-power ammunition designed for short-barreled weapons, the effective firing range of most models did not exceed 200 meters, which was often not enough to solve many combat missions, including heavy fire at medium distances.

Self-loading and automatic rifles, created on the basis of existing rifle-machine-gun cartridges, had a number of fatal shortcomings, such as:

strong recoil when shooting,

a very significant mass of weapons and ammunition,

complexity and low technological efficiency of production,

high cost of both weapons and ammunition.

However, the widespread use of PP during the war had a significant impact on the formation of infantry combat tactics and the weapons system of the Soviet army in the post-war period, when great importance began to be attached to the conduct of dense automatic fire along the entire front, to the detriment of shooting accuracy, and the Kalashnikov assault rifle replaced more an accurate, but slower-firing Simonov carbine, while in the West, especially in the USA, for some time the ideology of accurate self-loading weapons with powerful cartridges continued to develop, sometimes with the ability to fire in bursts at a critical moment of the battle, similar to Soviet pre-war developments - ABC and SVT.

Automatic rifles (assault rifles) are weapons that replaced repeating and self-loading rifles. The first prototype is the German MP-43 (StG 44). The rifle was the “middle ground” between the MP-40 and our SVT-40. In September, on the Eastern Front, the 5th SS Wiking Panzer Division conducted the first full-scale military tests of the MP-43, the results of which determined that the new carbine was an effective replacement for submachine guns and repeating rifles, increasing the firepower of infantry units and reducing the need for use of light machine guns.

Despite the splendor of the Sturmgewehr, time was lost and Germany lost the war. Most of the rifles were used on the Eastern Front, and this greatly affected the military doctrine of the Soviet Army.

The most successful weapons power, the Soviet Union, achieved particular success in automation.

After the war, a clear model of a weapon for a Soviet soldier was determined: a reliable, cheap and simple machine gun. It was precisely for these parameters that the Kalashnikov assault rifle project was ideally suited. The weapon was named AK-47 with a caliber of 7.62x54 mm.

The appearance of the AK and its use in the Korean War forced the United States to also begin developing assault rifles. The US Army M14 rifle was inferior to the AK in all respects.

After the outbreak of the Vietnam War, the US Army received the first batch of AR-15 rifles, which were given the name M-16. The rifle was accurate and lightweight, but was very unreliable and inconvenient for fighting on rough terrain. According to the results of the jungle battles, the AK-47 won.

But such a powerful AK cartridge reduced the accuracy of the hit due to the powerful recoil. An “intermediate” cartridge was required - stronger than a pistol cartridge, but weaker than a rifle cartridge.

The most successful option was the 5.45x39 cartridge. The AK-47 was “recalibrated” and given the name AKM-74.

Now, these days, an assault rifle is a combination of a non-automatic, self-loading and automatic (sometimes also a sniper) rifle. The mechanism is an improved bolt-trigger rifle system. The weapon was regularly improved during the Cold War from 1947-1991. As a result of the “war”, two types of machine guns and rifles were formed with their differences:

NATO rifles are accurate, convenient, but unreliable, complex in design, expensive and effective for fast operations and urban combat.

OVD rifles are simple, reliable, cheap, but have low accuracy and are effective in field and forest battles.

There are, of course, “ideal” machines, but their prices are very high.

Shotguns

A shotgun is a smooth-bore firearm that uses the energy of a fixed projectile to fire a number of small round balls (shot) or bullets. A shotgun is a weapon designed to be fired from the shoulder. Shotguns can be of a wide variety of calibers: from 5.5 mm to 5 cm. There are various shotgun mechanisms, including single-barreled, with two or more barrels; pump-action, lever, semi-automatic, there are even fully automatic options. Their mechanism is a Colt sliding forend.

Created at the end of the 19th century in the USA by many American gunsmiths as a replacement for a light machine gun and an offshoot of a repeating rifle. It has not become widely used and is still used mainly in the American army and special forces of the NATO bloc.

Modern innovations

The constant modification of small arms has led to new subtypes:

  • Weapons for fighting underwater (colloquially “needlecushion”)
  • Combination automatic rifles (loved by the NATO block)
  • Weapons with caseless cartridges and rubber powder (weak armor-piercing, but saves metal)
  • Bullpup design: the magazine is located behind the handle.

Who knows to what level a seemingly simple rifle can evolve?

Conclusion

So, at the cost of millions of lives in modern armies, powerful small arms. But was it worth it? We will never know because there has been no alternative in history. In the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, diplomacy was not at its best. But since the 20th century, one of the reasons for wars has been the desire to “train” the army and its weapons. Maybe it’s better to have “three-line soldiers” in the armies than for the destructive power of war to sweep away and distort entire cities and even states? Or should we agree that the trial and error method, using the example of wars, is the most effective? Nowadays, only local conflicts remain in different parts of the world. Most of the army “acts” in parades and exercises, and blood and explosions are on TV screens and computer monitors. But wars are going on - with the help of special troops - and the arms industry is not asleep.

But you shouldn’t look at military conflicts so monotonously. Wars force states to improve, and the altar of victory must be watered from time to time with the blood of patriots and usurpers. Many military defensive installations, considered obsolete, were reflected in civilian infrastructure and helped people live more comfortably. Well, we must not forget about the national pride of any state. Almost all countries in the world have their own military history.

Small arms - a bow, crossbow, pistol, revolver - were almost always a reliable chance for the survival of a person, and later of the state (such as the “Colt Law” and the emblems of partisan groups in the form of crossed AK-47 and M-16). This is a faithful friend who will not betray you if you look after him properly.

Still, states should not invest so much in the arms industry. Almost all of Europe's coal and iron reserves went into the production of armor and crossbows.

Simply put, you need to know the extent of weapons production. Remember Spain and the Aztecs of America. Countries that did not pay due attention to small arms were quickly occupied by other states. Think about the Soviet Union and Napoleon's empire. Countries with too much money turned into empires, but fell apart because the ruling circles forgot about ordinary citizens.

Introduction

Small arms are firearms that hit targets with bullets. Small arms include: pistols, revolvers, submachine guns, machine guns, automatic rifles, machine guns, various types of sporting and hunting firearms. Modern small arms are mostly automatic. It is used to destroy enemy personnel and fire weapons, and some large-caliber machine guns are also used to destroy lightly armored and air targets. Small arms have fairly high firing efficiency, reliability, and maneuverability. It is convenient and easy to use and the device is relatively uncomplicated, allowing the production of weapons in mass quantities.

small arms cartridge gunpowder

History of small arms

There is evidence that already in ancient times there were powerful weapons that spewed fire and smoke and operated at a considerable distance. Naturally, its device was kept in the strictest confidence, and everything connected with it was shrouded in the fog of legend. Was it a firearm, did it use the energy released during the combustion of some propellant, its properties similar to gunpowder? In some cases, judging by the manuscripts, this was indeed the case. At least it has been established: gunpowder was invented in ancient China, where it was used in warfare and for festive fireworks. Then he migrated to India. There is evidence that incendiary and, probably, explosive substances were also known in the Byzantine Empire. But the true history of firearms began in Europe, at the turn of the 8th-14th centuries.

Weapons are usually divided into artillery and small arms. The first strikes the enemy with large projectiles fired along mounted or flat trajectories. To maintain artillery systems, a crew of several gunners is required. The second, mainly individual, is used for direct fire at open, relatively close targets.

The variety of systems, calibers and other parameters against the background of modern handguns will make its first samples seem primitive. However, we must not forget that the transition to them from the bow and crossbow (throwing weapons) was much more difficult than the subsequent development of firearms. So what were the predecessors of today's rifles, pistols, machine guns and revolvers?

Experts recreate their general appearance and structure based on ancient drawings and descriptions, but only a few examples have survived. In our country they are exhibited in the State Historical Museum, the State Hermitage, the Military Historical Museum of Artillery, Engineering and Signal Corps, museums of the Moscow Kremlin, and the Central Museum of the Armed Forces.

It should be noted right away that hand-held weapons were not much different in principle from the guns of that time. Even the names were similar: in Western Europe - bombardellas (small bombards) (Fig. 1), and in Rus' - pikali (handbrake).

Rice. 1. Bombardella, early 15th century

Fig 2. Russian arquebus, 1375-1450.

At the end of the 14th - beginning of the 15th century, their barrels were a short iron or bronze tube, about 30 cm long and 25-33 mm in caliber with a blind end, near which a small ignition hole was drilled on top. It was placed in a trench hollowed out in a log - a bed 1.5 m long, and secured with metal rings. They loaded it through the muzzle with pulverized gunpowder (they began to make it granular later) and a spherical bullet made of copper, iron or lead. By the way, the shape of the bullet has remained virtually unchanged throughout the long era of smooth-bore, muzzle-loading weapons. This was explained by the fact that it is easy to manufacture and does not require stabilization in flight.

Having loaded the bombardella or handgun, the shooter either rested the butt against the ground or chest, or placed it on his shoulder and pinched it under the arm (this depended on the length of the butt and its configuration), took aim, and then ignited the powder charge by bringing a hot metal rod to the ignition hole (Fig. .3).

The Military Historical Museum of Artillery, Engineers and Signal Corps houses a short iron barrel from the 14th - 15th centuries, fastened with three rings. At the rear there is a narrow groove leading to the ignition hole - this is what the ancestor of today's pistols looks like.

When creating hand weapons, medieval craftsmen solved the same problems as modern designers - they increased the firing range and accuracy, tried to reduce recoil, and increase the rate of fire. The range and accuracy of fire was improved by lengthening the barrels, and they combated recoil by equipping handguns and other self-propelled guns with support hooks and additional stops. It turned out to be much more difficult to increase the rate of fire. In the 14th and 15th centuries, the production of multi-barreled bombardelles, handguns, and guns was launched. Of course, their charging required more time, but in battle, when every second counts, the shooter fired several shots in turn without reloading.

New military equipment immediately affected battle tactics. Already in the 15th century, in many countries, detachments of shooters armed with “mini-guns” appeared. True, at first such weapons were inferior to bows and crossbows brought to perfection in rate of fire, accuracy and range, and often in penetrating power. In addition, forged or the barrels cast by eye did not last long, or even simply burst at the moment of the shot.

Experience has shown that it is very inconvenient to aim and at the same time bring the rod to the weapon. Therefore, at the end of the 15th century, the pilot hole was moved to the right side of the barrel. A small shelf with a recess was placed nearby, into which a measure of so-called seed powder was poured. Now it was enough to ignite it so that the fire would spread through the ignition hole into the breech of the barrel and ignite the main charge. This seemingly small improvement made a small revolution in the history of handguns.

After some time, the shelf was covered from wind, rain and snow with a hinged lid. At the same time, they found a replacement for the red-hot rod - a long wick, which in Western European countries was soaked in saltpeter or wine alcohol, and in Rus' it was boiled in ash. After such treatment, the wick no longer burned, but slowly smoldered, and the shooter could activate the weapon at any time. But it was still inconvenient to bring the wick to the shelf every time. Well, they managed to simplify and speed up this operation by connecting the fuse to the weapon. A hole was made in the stock through which a thin metal strip in the shape of the Latin letter S with a clamp at the end, called serpentine (in our country - zhagra), was passed. When the shooter lifted the lower end of the serpentine, the upper end, from which the smoldering wick protruded, fell to the shelf and touched the ignition gunpowder. In a word, from now on there was no longer any need to stay close to the field brazier to heat the rod.

At the end of the 15th century, the weapon was equipped with a rather complex matchlock for those times, in which a sear was added to the serpentine - a leaf spring with a protrusion, mounted on an axis on the inside of the locking board. It was connected to the serpentine in such a way that as soon as the shooter pressed the trigger, the rear end of the sear rose and the wick lay on the shelf, igniting the ignition powder. And soon the shelf itself was moved to the key board.

In the 16th and 17th centuries, the British attached a small shield to the shelf, which protected the eyes from the flash when fired. Then they switched to a more effective type of gunpowder. The previous one, crushed into dust, quickly absorbed moisture in damp weather, stuck together, and generally burned unevenly, which is why unburned particles constantly clogged the barrel and seed hole. Experience has shown that small hard cakes should be fashioned from the powder mixture, and then split into relatively large grains. They burned more slowly than “dust”, but without leaving a residue and released more energy. The new gunpowder soon replaced all previous varieties and existed safely until the mid-19th century, when more effective pyroxylin gunpowder replaced it.

The bullets also changed. At first they were made from steel and other alloys in the form of arrows, balls, cubes and rhombuses. But then they settled on a round bullet made of lead, which is easy to process, and its heaviness gave the bullet good ballistic properties.

Curiously, for some time it was believed that the metal of the bullet must certainly correspond to the intended target. Indeed, only a steel bullet could effectively hit an enemy dressed in metal armor. And a certain French conspirator, before the assassination attempt on the Spanish King Charles 5, cast bullets for him... from gold!

No matter how hard the craftsmen tried to improve the matchlock, they were unable to achieve significant changes. The wick itself turned out to be a hindrance, which the shooter had to constantly keep smoldering. But what then is used to ignite the propellant charge in the barrel? And then a brilliant idea arose - to replace the wick with flint and a metal rectangle. The invention of the flintlock wheel lock marked the beginning of a new era in the history of handguns.

On February 25, 1836, Samuel Colt patented his revolver design. This pistol became one of the most famous repeating revolvers and revolutionized gun combat during the Civil War. Colt's design turned out to be just the beginning of firearm innovation.

Here is the story of how such weapons evolved from primitive tools to ultra-precise instruments that bring death.

Chinese squeaks

The simplest type of firearm appeared in twelfth-century China and was a arquebus loaded with gunpowder and a pike that warriors carried with them.

Primitive gun

Gunpowder came to Europe along the Silk Road, and since then people began experimenting with simple guns. They were in use in the 13th and 14th centuries.

Matchlock shotgun

During the 15th and 16th centuries in Europe and Asia, firearms technology advanced greatly. Guns appeared in which gunpowder was ignited using a complex system called a matchlock.

Flintlock gun

The wick lock was soon replaced by a flintlock. Pistols and rifles, known to everyone today, appeared, which will soon become the most common weapons in the army.

Musket

The muzzle-loaded smoothbore weapon, called a musket, was the most common flintlock rifle, often carrying a bayonet.

Whitworth rifle

During the American Civil War, both sides widely used the first sniper rifle, the Whitworth rifle, which could hit very distant targets with its rifled barrel.

Breech-loading shotgun

Rear-loading weapons became very common in the 19th century. Almost all shotguns and rifles were like this.

Springfield rifle

The Springfield rifle was one of the first to be breech-loading. It was developed in the 1850s and became known for its accuracy because it used standardized cartridges.

Gatling gun

In 1861, Dr. Richard Gatling invented rapid-fire weapons. The machine gun fired bullets from several barrels rotating under the force of gravity.

Revolver-pepper shaker

The problem of loading a weapon with more than one bullet at a time was practically solved by a multi-barreled pepper pistol with rotating barrels. The shooter had to twist the barrels manually after each shot.

Colt revolver

In 1836, Samuel Colt invented the revolver, which soon became the first mass-produced revolver and was widely used during the Civil War.

Lever-action rifles and hard drives

Reloading a rifle of this type is done manually by moving the trigger guard in a semicircle around the trigger. The most popular model that brought popularity to this weapon is the Winchester, model 1873.

Bolt action rifles

The bolt action soon became the most commonly used method of reloading rifles. The rate of fire of such weapons had a great effect in the wars of the 19th and 20th centuries.

Machine guns

The size and weight of the earliest machine guns, Gatling guns, greatly limited their use in warfare. Smaller and more convenient machine guns were invented on the eve of the First World War and brought considerable destruction.

Cartridge strips

The cartridge belt very quickly became popular because it made it possible to simply store a large number of cartridges and quickly load them into weapons (mainly into machine guns).

The shops

A magazine is a device for storing ammunition in close proximity to or directly on the repeating weapon itself. Magazines received enormous development during the First World War as a means of quickly reloading mainly weapons such as pistols.

Browning HP and semi-automatic shotguns

The Browning HP 9mm pistol, developed by American firearms inventor John Browning in 1929, became one of the most famous models of semi-automatic pistols due to its widespread use during World War II. Semi-automatic shotguns are also known as semi-automatic shotguns. These weapons reload cartridges automatically after each shot, but semi-automatic weapons do not require continuous fire, unlike automatic weapons.

Sniper rifle Garand M1

The M1 Garand rifle was invented by John Garand, and General George Patton called it "the greatest weapon of the day." This semi-automatic rifle replaced the Springfield rifle in the US Army in 1939 and performed quite well during World War II.

Thompson submachine gun

The Thompson or Tommy gun gained a bad reputation during the American Prohibition era due to the fact that it was these weapons that were used by gangsters. However, Tommy guns also saw action in World War II.

Browning M2

The 50-caliber Browning M2 was a heavy machine gun developed at the end of World War I by John Browning and used extensively in World War II. Known for its reliability and firepower, this machine gun is still used by the American and NATO armies to this day.

AK-47

The AK-47 was not the very first assault rifle, but nevertheless it is more famous than others. The assault rifle was invented by Soviet small arms designer Mikhail Kalashnikov in 1948. Due to the reliability of these weapons, the AK-47 and its various variants remain the most widely used assault rifles today.

M-16 rifle

The M-16 rifle and its various variants were developed in 1963 for jungle warfare during the Vietnam War. The M-16 soon became the standard combat rifle of American troops. Its variants remain in service to this day and have also spread to the armed forces of other countries.

Modern firearms

Modern firearms technology strives to reduce weight and ease of use in order to increase the mobility and capabilities of soldiers in combat.

3D weapon production

The personal firearms market is becoming increasingly technologically advanced. Today it is even possible to 3D print plastic weapons that fire live ammunition.


Maintaining.

Small arms are firearms that hit targets with bullets. Small arms include: pistols, revolvers, submachine guns, machine guns, automatic rifles, machine guns, various types of sporting and hunting firearms. Modern small arms are mostly automatic. It is used to destroy enemy personnel and fire weapons, and some large-caliber machine guns are also used to destroy lightly armored and air targets. Small arms have fairly high firing efficiency, reliability, and maneuverability. It is convenient and easy to use and the device is relatively uncomplicated, allowing the production of weapons in mass quantities.

This essay aims to show the history of the development of small arms, to find out the principle of operation of some of its types: revolvers, pistols, repeating rifles, and to compare them.

1. The appearance of pistols and revolvers.

Revolvers and pistols have many common features arising from their purpose, and differ fundamentally only in the design of the mechanisms. A pistol in the broadest sense of the word is a firearm that is held with one hand while firing. This definition does not provide for the design features of the weapon, therefore a revolver, in essence, is also a pistol, but a pistol with a unique design. The revolver's charges are located in a rotating drum, and this design feature turned out to be so significant during the birth of this weapon that it gave it the right to an independent name (revolver - from the English word revolve - to rotate). A number of innovations, the main one being the rotating cylinder, made revolvers qualitatively different from their predecessors - pistols. Modern pistols are technically superior to revolvers and, of course, incomparably superior to those pistols that were replaced by revolvers in their time, because the operation of their mechanisms is automated. Since now the mechanisms of all pistols work automatically, with the exception of signal, target and some others, the need to use defining words has disappeared, that is, the word “automatic” or “self-loading” is usually omitted. Previous single-shot, muzzle-loading pistols now require characteristics such as “flintlock” or “capsule” to distinguish them from modern ones.

Revolvers and pistols begin their history relatively recently. If the first examples of firearms, that is, weapons that use the energy of burning gunpowder to throw projectiles, originated at the beginning of the 14th century, then “small guns” that could be fired with one hand appeared much later - only in the middle of the 16th century. Formally, the Italian master Camillus Vetelli is considered their inventor, and, perhaps, because he lived and worked in the city of Pistoia, this new cavalry weapon was called a pistol, and perhaps this word came from the Czech pistala - pipe. The appearance of pistols was facilitated by the invention of spark locks, first wheel locks (Fig. 1), and then flintlocks (Fig. 2). Before this, there were only isolated, relatively small samples of firearms, which could not be developed due to the imperfection of the wick method of igniting the charge. However, spark locks, representing a higher technical level than matchlocks, were only able to give birth to pistols, but they could not contribute to their development, since they had a number of disadvantages. For a good two and a half centuries, pistols have not changed at all in terms of design. During this time, only the following moments of their development could be noted. Already emerging by the end of the 16th century. an increase in barrel length with a simultaneous slight decrease in caliber; gradual displacement during the 17th century. wheel locks flint locks the appearance in external forms - especially in the forms of handles - of greater rationalism and grace; the emergence of a new variety of these weapons - dueling pistols, distinguished by particularly high qualities. This is not to say that during this time no attempts were made to improve pistols. These attempts took place throughout the entire period of spark ignition, but all that was undertaken were only individual attempts, as a rule, ineffective, along with minor improvements that gave the weapon a number of disadvantages - especially the bulkiness and complexity of the device, which turned out to be unbearable for the primitive production of those times. Therefore, the entire period of spark ignition cannot yet be considered the history of pistols - rather, it is their prehistory.


Rice. 1. Spark wheel lock.


Rice. 2. Spark impact flintlock a - with the hammer cocked; b - at the moment the trigger hits the flint.


2. The beginning of the rapid development of pistols and revolvers. 19th century.

And only at the beginning of the 19th century, when capsule (more precisely, percussion cap) locks appeared and quickly gained recognition (Fig. 3), a time of rapid development began for pistols and for all firearms. The use of a shock composition to ignite a charge was patented in 1807 by the Englishman Forsyth. In addition to primers with percussion-igniting compounds, important prerequisites for the successful development of pistols were also a rifled barrel, a rotating drum and a charging chamber inserted from the treasury. These inventions were made before the advent of percussion caps, but then they, as separate innovations, could not give the effect that turned out to be possible when they were combined with a new idea - the idea of ​​primer ignition.

The primary goal pursued by designers in improving pistols was to increase the rate of fire, because in comparison with it, no other qualities of melee weapons, such as pistols, were as important. The accuracy and range of the shot, the destructive power of the bullet and the comparative compactness of the pistols that existed at that time, although they left much to be desired, were still ensured to some extent. As for the rate of fire, it practically did not exist. The duration of the muzzle loading process and the conditions in which the pistols were used alone, that is, the close proximity of the enemy, were so incompatible that they, in fact, turned the pistols into disposable weapons. Therefore, as soon as the industry rose to a level where it was able to provide more or less mass production of fairly accurate mechanical devices and when percussion capsules appeared, an intensive search began for ways to increase the rate of fire of pistols.

In 1836, the first and very successful revolver of the American Samuel Colt appeared, which he called « Paterson" after the name of the city where it was released. Colt himself was not a designer, but only a typical industrialist. The true creator of the revolver is John Pearson, who received a meager reward for his invention, which brought Colt huge profits and world fame. Following the Paterson, other, more advanced examples of Colt revolvers began to be produced, which became increasingly widespread not only in the USA, but also in other countries. Colt revolvers were a new rapid-fire weapon, the advantages of which over single-shot pistols were undeniable. The main feature of this new weapon is a rotating drum with several charges (five or six) located in its chambers. In order to fire a series of shots from a revolver, the shooter only had to consistently cock the trigger and pull the trigger.

With the advent of percussion capsules, many so-called bundelrevolvers, or pepperboxes (“pepperboxes”), were created - weapons in which an increase in the rate of fire was achieved by using a rotating bunch of barrels (Fig. 4). However, although pepperboxes were produced and improved for some time, they could not withstand the competition with revolvers, since, along with a high rate of fire, they had all the disadvantages of weapons loaded from the muzzle. Revolvers, in comparison, also had greater compactness, better accuracy, range and penetration, because they were rifled, fired elongated bullets and were loaded without driving bullets through the barrel. When fired, the bullet cut tightly into the rifling, as in any other breech-loading weapon.

The popularity of Colt's capsule revolvers (Fig. 5) was so great that even today there remains a certain interest in them. The interest in ancient weapons in the West, which has become something of a fashion, has led to the resumption of production of capsule revolvers in a number of countries. These modern copies of older models are called "replicas".

The appearance of Colt revolvers caused a number of imitations from other designers, both American and European. Very soon, after the Colt revolvers, many new, more advanced systems appeared. Thus, the trigger mechanisms become self-cocking, the bodies become more durable, monolithic, the handles become more comfortable (Fig. 6 shows a Russian-made revolver). The development of capsule revolvers led to an increase in the power of portable weapons and at the same time to a decrease in their size and weight. The firepower of revolvers, their high rate of fire, combined with sufficient accuracy, made this new weapon truly formidable, decisively reducing the importance of such a previous argument of strength as numerical superiority.



Rice. 3. Russian capsule pistols. The trigger of the lower pistol is cocked, and the igniter primer is visible on the priming rod (piston or fire tube).



Fig.4. Capsule bundelrevolver Marietta. 6 trunks. On the right is a front view of the muzzle and spherical lead bullets.


Rice. 5. Colt 1851 capsule revolver, bullets for it and a bullet gun.


Rice. 6. Goltyakov's self-cocking capsule revolver, 1866. Nearby are igniter capsules and a powder flask.


3. The appearance of unitary cartridges.

One of the most important inventions that found application in revolvers was the invention of unitary cartridges - cartridges in which the charge, bullet and igniter capsule were combined by a cartridge case into a single whole. Their appearance not only contributed to the improvement of revolvers, but also subsequently served as the basis for the emergence and development of fundamentally new designs of portable weapons - automatic pistols. Unitary cartridges together with needle percussion mechanisms were proposed by the German gunsmith Dreyse back in 1827, but due to the bulkiness of needle mechanisms, they were not widespread among revolvers at that time, although individual samples of needle revolvers were produced. The widespread introduction of unitary cartridges with a metal sleeve for revolvers began in the 50s of the 19th century after the invention of the Frenchman Casimir Lefauchet, who proposed the so-called pin cartridge. The invention of hairpin cartridges dates back to 1836, but then they had cardboard sleeves. In 1853, cartridges with metal sleeves appeared. The Lefoshe cartridge was called a hairpin cartridge because it had a pin, one end of which was located in front of the percussion composition of the primer placed inside the cartridge case, and the other protruded out through a hole in the side wall of the cartridge case near the bottom (Fig. 7, c). The cartridges were inserted into the drum in such a way that the protruding ends of the pins protruded in different directions in the direction from the center of the drum. During the operation of the impact mechanism and the rotation of the drum, successive blows were struck from above by the trigger. These shocks were transmitted to the capsules through the pins.

Revolvers chambered for a unitary cartridge had enormous advantages over capsule revolvers, as well as great opportunities for further improvement. However, the hairpin system had a number of significant disadvantages. Loading was complicated by the fact that the cartridges were inserted into the chambers of the drum in a strictly defined position - in such a way that the pins fit into the corresponding cutouts on the drum. The pins sticking out to the sides posed some danger in that, being sensitive to shock, they could lead to either an accidental shot or an explosion of a charge in a chamber located not opposite the bore. The side protruding above the surface of the drum did not completely protect the studs from accidental impacts, and the protective ring surrounding the studs, although it sufficiently protected them, increased the dimensions of the weapon and its weight. Therefore, soon after the appearance of pin-type unitary cartridges, unitary cartridges with solid-drawn metal sleeves and different arrangements of impact compounds in them began to appear (Fig. 7, a, b, d). The best of them turned out to be circular ignition cartridges (Fig. 7, d), which at first became widespread among American revolvers. The impact-igniting composition was located in an annular protrusion located along the edge of the bottom of the cartridge case, and was ignited by the flattening of the protrusion when the striker struck it. Such cartridges appeared in 1856 after the American Beringer improved an extremely low-power, toy cartridge for entertaining indoor shooting, proposed by the Frenchman Flaubert in 1842. Since 1861, even more advanced cartridges began to quickly spread - central ignition cartridges (Fig. 7, d) . It was a remarkable invention that led to the improvement of all firearms, including revolvers and pistols. The capsule in such a cartridge was located in the center of the bottom of the cartridge case, which greatly facilitated and accelerated loading. The advantage of the new cartridges was that their primers in a loaded weapon were absolutely inaccessible to accidental impacts and other external influences. The central ignition cartridge proposed by the Frenchman Potte and improved by the Englishman Boxer quickly gained universal recognition, despite the fact that the obvious advantages of unitary cartridges in general gave such an impetus to the spread of pinned cartridges that they continued to exist and be manufactured until the beginning of the 20th century.


Rice. 7. Options for the arrangement of impact-ignition compositions in unitary cartridges (arrows indicate the direction of strikes of the strikers):

a and b - obsolete American cartridges inserted into the drum from the front; a - Lefoshe pin chuck; g - circular ignition cartridge; d - central ignition cartridge.


4. Further development of revolvers.

So, having originated in America, revolvers began to spread in Europe. In the second half of the 19th century. There have been two directions in their development - American and European. American revolvers were characterized by the use of mainly circular ignition cartridges and single-action trigger mechanisms, while European revolvers were characterized by the use of predominantly pin and central ignition cartridges, as well as the predominance of self-cocking. Over time, the improvements that appeared on both revolvers were borrowed from each other, and thus the line between them quickly blurred. Well-known systems that gained recognition and popularity were readily copied by many arms companies, so many revolvers appeared on the world arms market, which were variations of a relatively small number of systems. The use of centerfire cartridges allowed revolvers to achieve such significant perfection that it would seem to exclude the possibility of competition from pistols. However, the appearance in 1884-1888. smokeless powders, advances in metallurgy and the general development of technology decisively changed the situation. The championship passed to pistols, since almost all the design possibilities of revolvers had already been exhausted, and new opportunities were just opening up for improving pistols.

Attempts to further develop revolvers by automating them, based on the use of gunpowder energy, did not lead to the desired results - automatic revolvers always turned out to be worse than non-automatic ones. While acquiring only minor advantages in the form of a slightly higher rate of fire, they inevitably lost the remarkable qualities characteristic of conventional revolvers - simplicity of design and reliability in operation.

Attempts to create non-automatic multi-shot (multi-barrel and magazine) pistols also failed. As a rule, they all turned out to be so complex that they could not compete with revolvers (Fig. 8).



Fig.8. Pistols chambered for unitary cartridges, non-automatic, single-shot and multi-shot (multi-barreled):

Single-barreled single-shot pistols: 1 - Delvik. Shoots Lefoshe hairpin cartridges; 2 - Flaubert, “Montecristo”, 6 or 9 mm rimfire cartridge. The most common 6-mm cartridge appeared for the first time in 1856. There is no powder charge, a spherical bullet (pellet) is pushed out of the barrel by the force of the explosion of the impact-igniting composition. Barrels of different lengths are rifled or smooth. The shutter is in the form of a shield; when opened, it turns upward to the left. Late 19th - early 20th century; 3 - “Montecristo” with a barrel that folds down; 4 - Colt, I model. Fires rimfire cartridges. Caliber 41. To reload, the barrel is rotated around the longitudinal axis of the hinge located in front of the trigger;

5-Stevens. For reloading, the barrel tilts down; 6-Martin, "Victor". To reload, the barrel is rotated, rotating around a vertical axis; 7 - "Liberator", caliber 45 automatic transmission (11.43 mm). A million of these pistols were manufactured in the USA during the 2nd World War; they were dropped from planes to support the Resistance movement in Europe.

Double-barreled pistols: 8-Remington, "Derringer", .41 caliber, first released in the USA in 1863 and is still a success. Its West German copies of various calibers from .38 to .22 are called RG-15S and RG-16; 9-High standard with a self-cocking trigger mechanism.

Multi-barreled pistols: 10 - Sharps. With each cocking of the hammer, the cylinder with the firing pin rotates 90", ensuring consistent breaking of cartridge primers in all four barrels; 11 - Thomas Bland and Sons, imitation of the Lancaster system. The self-cocking trigger mechanism allows you to shoot sequentially from four barrels.


5. The emergence and development of automatic pistols.

Pistols, the operation of whose mechanisms are automated by using the energy of powder gases, begin their history even before the advent of smokeless powders. The first patents for them were taken in 1872 by the European Plesner and in 1874 by the Americans Wheeler and Luce. At the end of the 19th century. Many examples of such pistols appear, but if the first revolvers immediately received recognition and distribution, then with pistols the situation was different. At first, automatic pistols were only prototypes, and some time passed before they were widely used, especially as military weapons. An obstacle to the development of automatic systems was some of the properties of black powder, so only the emergence of smokeless gunpowder, which had new remarkable properties, served as an impetus for the very rapid development of pistols, the number of systems of which by the end of the 19th century. reached several dozen. An obstacle to the development of pistol mechanisms was the traditional forms of previous personal weapon systems. Thus, the first samples of pistols were clearly influenced by the shapes of revolvers, which did not allow achieving the optimal layout of fundamentally new mechanisms. For example, at first stores were located near the place where the revolvers had a drum, leaving the handle almost empty of any devices. But Browning pistols, which appeared in 1897 with a fundamentally new arrangement of mechanisms, where the magazine was located in the handle, eliminated, as it were, the last obstacles to the development of pistols and served as a model for the creation of many systems..

During the first decades of the 20th century, a lot of different automatic pistol systems were produced. The general layout of the pistol mechanisms was improved, which further increased their compactness and increased their combat qualities. For example, the return spring, located above the barrel on most early models, began to be placed under the barrel or around it - this made it possible, while maintaining the given dimensions of the pistol, to increase the magazine capacity or, without reducing the number of charges, to reduce the height of the pistol. Various mechanisms of pistols have also been improved - trigger systems have become increasingly widespread, and recently self-cocking trigger mechanisms have begun to be introduced. There were slide stops that signal when the magazine is empty and speed up reloading, as well as cartridge indicators in the chambers, more convenient safety devices and other improvements.

Revolvers and pistols have long reached a high degree of perfection, and the involvement of one or another of their models as modern is determined not by the date of their release, but by the possibility of using modern cartridges in them, especially since the vast majority of modern cartridges were designed in the late 19th - early 20th centuries. Thus, if a given model of a revolver or pistol fires currently used standard cartridges and does not have obviously curious devices and shapes, then it can be considered modern. Of course, among modern ones there are models of different ages, both new and outdated, but there are no fundamental differences in this division. Of course, new models, as a rule, are more convenient, more technologically advanced, and therefore cheaper to produce, but these qualities, although important, have almost, and sometimes absolutely, no effect on the tactical and technical data.

Pistols continue to be improved even now, but some stagnation can be noted in their development. Now here, too, a situation has arisen in which most of the constructive possibilities have been exhausted. Quite often it can be noted that the so-called new pistols are fundamentally no different from the old ones, released decades ago, and are only more or less successful compositions made up of structural units borrowed from different systems.

A certain stagnation in this area also occurred because qualitatively new types of small arms appeared - submachine guns. In addition, the enormous growth of military equipment in modern conditions assigns a very modest role to personal portable weapons. Nevertheless, this type of weapon, despite its relatively ancient origin, has not outlived its usefulness, since it has exceptional qualities - high portability and unsurpassed flexibility of fire.

Is it possible to further improve portable weapons? It is certainly possible, but its improvement along the lines of mechanics is perhaps unpromising. The development of small arms in general and pistols in particular has much greater potential in the use of new materials and in the use of new explosive fuels and other chemicals. A significant improvement in even one quality will inevitably cause a number of other qualitative changes. For example, if it were possible to change the quality of gunpowder, then it would be possible to change the design of the cartridge, which, in turn, would make it possible to change the caliber, increase the magazine capacity, change the configuration of the weapon, etc. As is believed abroad, the use of caseless cartridges, as well as jet bullets, which requires fundamental changes in the design of weapons, is promising.

6. Modern samples of revolvers and pistols.

As mentioned above, a characteristic part of a revolver is a drum with chambers for cartridges. The drum can rotate around its axis, and at the same time all its chambers will alternately be combined with a fixed barrel, acting as chambers. Thus, the cylinder of a revolver is essentially a rotating bank of chambers. The rotation of the drum is carried out mechanically - the source of energy is the muscular strength of the shooter. This force is transmitted to the drum not directly, but through the trigger mechanism. Basically, the shooter's efforts are spent on compressing the mainspring when cocking the hammer, carried out by pressing a finger either on the trigger spoke or on the trigger. This pressure causes the trigger mechanism to work, and its operation causes the operation of the device that turns the drum. Once all the cartridges are used up, the spent cartridges remain in the drum. To reload, you need to free the drum from the cartridges, and then equip it with cartridges.

An automatic pistol is fundamentally different in design from a revolver. It has one chamber, into which cartridges are fed alternately from a box magazine as the bolt moves. These movements are carried out automatically - backward due to the energy of the powder gases generated during the shot, forward under the influence of the return spring compressed when moving back. The energy of powder gases is used for the functioning of other mechanisms - trigger and locking. Thus, the shooter’s role when firing a pistol is reduced only to aiming and consistently pressing the trigger. The automatic operation of the mechanisms provides a much higher rate of fire, since the reloading cycle is so short that the very next moment after the shot, you can press the trigger again and fire a new shot. After each shot, a spent cartridge case is ejected from the pistol, so that when all the cartridges are used up, the magazine and chamber are empty. Reloading a pistol is much faster than reloading a revolver.

Despite the fundamental differences in the designs of revolvers and pistols, they have a number of common features due to the very purpose of personal weapons. These common features are ballistic qualities that ensure effectiveness at short distances (sufficient accuracy and lethality of the bullet), portability and safety necessary for constantly carrying a loaded weapon with you, constant readiness for action, as well as a high rate of fire. However, there are specific, individual features inherent only in one of these species. The characteristic qualities inherent in each of these types of weapons separately arise from completely different operating principles of their mechanisms. These include different efforts made by the shooter when shooting from a revolver and a pistol, the difference in reloading speed, the unequal influence on the operation of the mechanisms of the degree of clogging and the quality of the cartridges, and the reliability of the weapon as a whole, which depends on this.

Of the listed general features, only ballistic qualities are independent of design features, so they should be specially mentioned before other qualities of revolvers and pistols that characterize them separately are considered. The ballistic qualities of both revolvers and pistols are approximately the same. Although the initial velocities of bullets are low compared to other types of firearms, they, as a rule, provide such a flat trajectory that allows the use of a constant sight for shooting at those distances that are generally accessible for this type of weapon.

The question of the lethality of a bullet is posed here specifically, not in the same way as it is posed in relation to other types of small arms. For a rifle bullet, for example, flight range and penetration ability are very important. They are achieved by combining a high initial velocity with a significant lateral load of the bullet (the lateral load of the bullet is expressed by the ratio of its mass to the cross-sectional area). As for the destructive power of such a bullet, it is maintained throughout almost the entire trajectory, although the nature of the damage at the beginning and end of the bullet’s path is very different. At close ranges, a rifle bullet has a very high velocity, allowing it, with its pointed shape, to spread the impact to the sides. Thus, a shot from a short distance at a vessel with liquid causes a rupture in parts of this vessel due to the fact that the kinetic energy of the bullet through the liquid affects all the walls of the vessel. When shooting at long distances with a drop in flight speed, the ability of a rifle bullet to transmit a blow to the sides is sharply reduced and even completely lost, but the destructive ability is still preserved mainly due to its relatively significant mass under a large lateral load. How soon the enemy will be incapacitated after a bullet hits him is not of significant importance when shooting from a rifle, since this shooting is usually carried out at a considerable distance, and here it is only important to hit the target - one way or another it will already be incapacitated, and it will happen whether it is immediately or in a few seconds - it doesn’t matter. The situation is completely different when shooting from revolvers and pistols. The conditions in which they are used require immediate incapacitation of the affected target. Indeed, being in close proximity to the enemy, it is very important to have a weapon that could instantly completely paralyze the enemy, even if a bullet hits parts of the body whose damage does not pose an immediate danger to life. Otherwise, the enemy, struck but not immediately incapacitated, continues to threaten the shooter’s life, because in the next moment he can respond with a much more successful shot. Since revolvers and pistols have low initial bullet velocities compared to other types of small arms, the simplest and most effective way to achieve the required lethality was to use bullets of significant caliber. Such bullets have a large, so-called stopping effect, the ability to transfer the maximum of their kinetic energy to the obstacle they hit.

Thus, the best examples of pistols are superior to the best examples of revolvers in most characteristics, but the latter, thanks to some positive qualities inherent only to them, are still not completely forced out of use. Thus, in a number of countries, revolvers continue to be produced, improved and remain in service, not only in the police, but also in the army. Their newest models, both civilian police and military, are produced in the USA, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Japan and other countries.


7. Magazine rifles. general characteristics

In the evolution of non-automatic shotguns, the main type of individual small arms in which the energy of gunpowder is used only to throw a bullet, repeating rifles turned out to be the pinnacle of technical perfection that gunsmiths in many countries have been striving for for a very long time. All the best inventions of the previous time were embodied in the design of repeating rifles. All their qualities were brought to a very high degree of perfection.

The kinetic energy of the bullet, and it determined the killing ability and penetrating effect of the bullet, was quite large and often significantly exceeded that required to hit the target. We are talking mainly about an open target, but it is known that part of the energy of the bullet is intended to penetrate the cover behind which the target is located.

The range and accuracy of fire were excellent, even exceeding the capabilities of human vision. The rate of fire was also quite high - reloading rifles was easy and quick, and the intervals between shots were mainly determined by the time spent aiming, and not on operating the bolt. And only in relation to the weight and size of some rifles could one wish for better, but nevertheless, the longest of them then corresponded to their purpose, since the infantryman’s weapon should to a large extent be suitable for bayonet combat, that is, the Suvorov “bayonet - well done” installation "still played a significant role in the design of early models of repeating rifles.

Eloquent evidence of the perfection of repeating rifles can be seen in the almost uniform schematic diagram of many rifles designed and adopted in different countries, and their very long service life. Common qualities inherent in all repeating rifles are such qualities as exceptional simplicity of the device and the resulting unpretentiousness to external conditions, reliability of the mechanisms and their survivability, satisfactory rate of fire, high accuracy and firing range with a high lethality of the bullet.

In general, each repeating rifle is designed as follows.

Its main part is a barrel with a rifled channel. Adjacent to the rear of the barrel is the receiver and the bolt housed in it. Under the receiver there is a magazine that usually holds 5 rounds and a trigger mechanism. Sighting devices are mounted on top of the barrel. All of the mentioned metal parts of the rifle are attached to a wooden stock, ending at the rear with a butt. Rifles are equipped with bayonets, usually removable and most often knife-shaped.

The main mechanisms of the rifle are the bolt, magazine, and sights.

The bolts of magazine rifles, as a rule, are longitudinally sliding, driven by the muscular force of the shooter. With the help of the bolt, a cartridge is sent into the chamber, the barrel is locked, a shot is fired, and the spent cartridge is ejected. All these actions occur when the shutter moves and when the trigger is pressed. The force of the shooter, necessary for the operation of the bolt, is transmitted to the latter using its handle. The shooter imparts to the bolt not only translational movement, but also rotational movement - rotations of the bolt around its longitudinal axis by approximately 90 ° are necessary to lock and unlock the barrel. (Fig. 9) In the receiver, the bolts are usually held either by a special delay or by a part connected to the trigger. The bolts of all rifles are equipped with safeties, most often designed in the form of small levers, more or less reminiscent of flags, or in the form of a special trigger device, if the position of which changes, the shot becomes impossible.

How to handle a rifle largely depends on the location of the handle on the bolt and its shape.

The handles of some shutters are located in their middle part, while for others - behind them. The difference in the distance of both from the butt seems to be small and amounts to only a few centimeters, but it has a significant impact on the convenience of reloading. Bolts with handles that are more distant from the butt require a change in the position of the rifle for each reload - lowering it somewhat while moving the butt from the shoulder to the armpit. Only after this the handle is within reach of the shooter, and he can, by turning it with his hand, palm facing up, open and close the bolt. Bolts with handles located at the rear allow you to reload the rifle without removing the butt from the shoulder, especially if their handles are not horizontal, but inclined, as if bent downwards. With the help of such handles, it is more convenient to reload by placing your hand on top of them, palm down. Of no small importance is the fact that such handles, being as close as possible to the trigger, during reloading somewhat reduce the time spent by the shooter moving his hand from the trigger to the handle and back. The conditions for the tactical use of shotguns, when their first magazine samples were designed, were fully consistent with handles moved forward and located horizontally, but on later samples, created taking into account the experience of the First World War, which showed that rifle shooting was carried out mainly from a prone (or standing) position in a trench), the tendency for the handles to be located at the rear of the bolt becomes clear. It turns out that when shooting from rifles with this arrangement of handles, reloading is more convenient and faster, which means that the practical rate of fire increases, the uniformity of aiming is maintained, which has a positive effect on accuracy, and, finally, the shooter gets less tired.

The design of the bolts, the handles of which do not need to be turned for reloading, has a particularly positive effect on the rate of fire - to open and close such a bolt, you just need to pull the handle back and immediately send it forward. Unlocking and locking the barrel of rifles with such bolts is achieved by the fact that the bolt stem, having a slightly longer stroke length than the combat cylinder, uses its excess movement to turn the locking devices on or off. Despite the obvious advantages, such valves also had a number of disadvantages (difficulty extracting the cartridge case, greater sensitivity to contamination, etc.), so their distribution was relatively small.

Of the military repeating rifles that fire cartridges using smokeless powder, the Winchester rifle of 1895 stands out in terms of its bolt design. Its bolt is also longitudinally sliding, but it is not controlled in the usual way - its movements are carried out not with the help of a handle on the bolt itself, but with the help of a system of levers . In order to open and close the bolt, a special bracket located under the neck of the butt and fused with the safety bracket should be pushed down and forward until it stops, and then returned to its place. Both the locking device and the impact mechanism are unusual in this bolt - the locking here is carried out by a special wedge that moves vertically and enters the support recesses in the bolt stems, and the breaking of the primer by the firing pin occurs when the trigger is released from the cocking mechanism, a part that has not a rectilinear, but a rotational movement.

Stores (Fig. 10). Only on early single samples of repeating rifles firing smokeless powder cartridges could the magazines be loaded with one cartridge at a time. These were either under-barrel or mid-barrel stores, and the latter could be permanent or removable. Most rifles have middle magazines that are filled with several rounds at once. According to the loading method, such rifles are divided into rifles with burst loading and with loading from a clip. Burst loading was invented in Austria-Hungary by Mannlicher in 1886. Its essence is as follows. The cartridges were inserted into the magazine along with a metal pack that united them in 5 pieces. At the same time, they lay on the feeder and lowered it down, compressing the spring. A pack of cartridges inserted into the magazine was not pushed back by the feeder, because a special protrusion located on it engaged with the latch tooth mounted on the magazine. By freeing the pack from adhesion to this tooth, it could be removed from the magazine and thus unload the rifle. Thanks to the specially curved edges of the pack, the cartridges could be moved forward by the bolt from the magazine only, that is, in the direction of the chamber. As the cartridges were consumed, the feeder rose higher and higher, without touching the pack, since it was narrower than the distance between the walls of the pack, and did not act on it, but only on the cartridges. Once all the cartridges were used up, the pack fell freely down.

In 1889, another method of quickly filling the middle magazines appeared - loading using a clip (Mauser system). The clip, which combined cartridges of 5 pieces, was not inserted into the magazine, but served only for the convenience of filling it.

When the bolt was open, the cartridge clip was installed in special grooves in the receiver. After this, the shooter pressed the upper cartridge with his finger and thus pushed all the cartridges out of the clip into the magazine at once. At the same time, the feeder spring was compressed, trying to push the cartridges back, but they were held in the magazine thanks to special spring grips. The empty clip was ejected, the bolt was closed (at the same time the upper cartridge was sent into the chamber), and the rifle was ready to fire.

Loading from a clip initially required slightly more time than burst loading, but the use of clips provided advantages that turned out to be more significant than the very slight time gain with burst loading. These advantages primarily include a much smaller mass of clips. Therefore, the portable supply of ammunition contained less “dead” load in the clips. For example, the mass of a German pack was 17.5 g, and the clips were only 6.5 g. This means that for every hundred cartridges when loaded in batches, there was an excess mass of 220 g. The middle magazines, filled with cartridges using clips, had different devices . In addition to the aforementioned magazine with the cartridges arranged in one vertical row, magazines soon appeared - also Mauser systems - with a double-row arrangement of cartridges. Unlike single-row magazines, which had spring devices arranged in one way or another to hold cartridges in them when the bolt was open, double-row magazines did not have these devices. As if jamming each other, the cartridges were securely held in the magazine when the bolt was open, but when the bolt moved forward, they easily moved into the chamber. Due to the simplicity of the device, reliability and compactness, such stores were considered the best.

The drum magazine of the Mannlicher-Schönauer rifle had a unique device (Fig. 10, D).

The sights of magazine rifles are designed for a fairly long firing range - up to 2000 m or more. Almost at such a range in combat conditions, individual living targets are not visible to the naked eye, but when firing in volleys, for example at group targets, notches on sights at such long distances turned out to be useful. At first, various frame sights prevailed, usually with several slots (Fig. 11, L, B). The slots on such sights were located on the frames themselves and on movable clamps that moved along the frames. To use the slot located on the clamp, the frame was installed vertically, thereby limiting the field of view. Subsequently, with the improvement of rifles, sector sights began to become widespread, that is, those in which the moving part, rotating around a transverse axis, could move along an imaginary sector and, depending on the set firing range, was fixed with a clamp or (less often) in some other way (Fig. 11, C, D). Such sights had only one slot for shooting at all ranges. They were simpler and stronger than frame sights. Using them turned out to be more convenient, despite the fact that, like all open sights, they had some drawback, namely, the inability, due to the peculiarities of human vision, to clearly see three objects at the same time - the slot, the front sight and the target. The eye can adapt to a clear vision of objects at different distances, but not simultaneous, but sequential.

Frame or sector diopter sights with a hole instead of a slot in the rear sight have also become somewhat widespread. Such sights are located on rifles as close to the shooter's eye as possible. They seem to diaphragm the pupil and allow you to see both the target and the front sight with almost equal clarity. This and the possibility of obtaining a greater length of the aiming line are the advantages of diopter sights over open sights. Their disadvantages are that they limit the field of view and reduce the brightness of the target image perceived by the eye. Therefore, when illumination decreases, the capabilities of diopter sights are exhausted earlier than the capabilities of open sights (in the gathering twilight, the impossibility of aiming when using a diopter occurs earlier than when using a slot).

Some rifles are also equipped with side diopter sights. They are like an addition to the main sights and are used for shooting at very long distances.

The front sights on rifles are usually movable, secured after zeroing by punching. Their bases are special protrusions on the muzzle of the barrel. The bases of the front sights on old models were integral with the barrel; on later ones they are made separately and tightly fixed to the barrel. This reduces the cost of production, since in this case the barrels are a body of rotation without protrusions that require additional processing. Many samples have muzzle guards of various shapes that protect the flies from accidental impacts. Some rifles have front sights located on the upper stock ring.

To arm snipers, rifles are produced that are distinguished by particularly accurate firing. Such rifles, as a rule, are equipped with optical sights, which significantly increase shooting accuracy. These sights are multi-magnification optical spotting scopes mounted on a rifle. In the field of view of the sight there is an image of aiming marks. Using a special mechanism, you can change the direction of the aiming line in relation to the axis of the barrel and thereby set the sight for shooting at different ranges. The magnifying ability of optical sights makes it possible to distinguish targets on the battlefield that are inaccessible to the naked eye, and their aperture allows for targeted shooting even at dusk and in moonlight.

The stocks on all rifles are made of wood, and only as an experiment in some countries plastic was used to make stocks. The neck of the stock in most cases has one or another pistol-shaped shape, which is considered more convenient. Barrel linings can be more or less long.

Cleaning rods on rifles can be one-piece or composite. Composite cleaning rods for use are screwed together from separate relatively short rods, which are parts of several rifles. Thus, the mass of the cleaning rod, the length of which will be sufficient to clean the bore, is distributed over several rifles, which helps to lighten them. To make ramrods of the length required for cleaning, soldiers borrow individual parts from each other. Some rifles do not have a cleaning rod.

The experience of the First World War showed that the length of infantry rifles of some countries was excessive. With the development of machine guns, to which a number of fire tasks were transferred, the need for rifle shooting over long distances practically disappeared. A long rifle firing a powerful cartridge has ceased to be the optimal weapon for infantrymen. It was necessary to shorten and lighten the rifle and modernize it, which was carried out after the First World War in a number of countries. In some countries during this period, new models of repeating rifles were designed that met new tactical requirements. However, only reducing the size and weight of the latest models of repeating rifles was a half-measure towards creating weapons for infantry that fully meet the new requirements. If the new requirements for infantry weapons provided for a slight reduction in the firing range of rifles, then the most logical and correct way to achieve this would be by reducing the power of the cartridge. Depending on the power of the new cartridge, new weapons would be created.

The use of a new, less powerful and lighter cartridge promised many benefits. For example, it made it possible to increase the supply of ammunition carried by the shooter, to reduce, lighten, simplify and reduce the cost of weapons. However, almost nowhere in the period between the first and second world wars were new cartridges adopted, and the reduction in the firing range of infantry weapons was carried out exclusively by shortening and lightening the rifles of older systems. This approach was motivated by economic considerations, since shortening existing rifles was much cheaper than radically replacing all small arms and ammunition in service, associated with the re-equipment of weapons and ammunition factories.

Only in France was it possible to note the transition to weapons chambered for a new, smaller cartridge, but here this cartridge was created mainly for a light machine gun, and not for a rifle.

After the Second World War, repeating rifles as military weapons ceased their development, giving way to various types of automatic small arms. Therefore, the creation and improvement of new cartridges was carried out mainly in relation to automatic weapons. However, in the 1940s. prototypes of rifles appeared, designed for new cartridges of reduced power. Structurally, these were typical repeating rifles, but when classifying them from the point of view of the ammunition used, they should be classified as new weapons chambered for an intermediate cartridge. However, the lack of automatic weapon reloading turned out to be a more significant feature than the cartridges used.

Compared to magazine rifles firing conventional rifle cartridges, the new rifles were more advanced; they were devoid of those shortcomings of individual small arms that were caused by the use of old, too powerful cartridges. These rifles were smaller and lighter than conventional magazine rifles. They were distinguished by their simplicity, reliability, manufacturability, low cost, and larger magazine capacity, but despite all this, they did not receive further distribution, since their appearance was clearly belated. This weapon seemed to have died before it was born, and left its mark on history only in the form of a few prototypes.





Rice. 9. The main types of non-automatic rifle bolts:

A - with a rotating handle located in the middle part of the bolt stem (Mosin rifle 1891, Russia, USSR); B, C - with rotating handles located in the rear part of the bolt stem (Mauser rifle 1898, Germany, and MAC-36, France, respectively); G - with a handle that has only linear movement (Mannlicher, 1895, Austria-Hungary). Screw grooves with a gentle pitch, located on the combat cylinder (inside the bolt stem, shown in dotted lines), when interacting with the protrusions inside the bolt stem, ensure rotation of the combat cylinder when opening and closing the bolt: 1 - stem; 2 - handle; 3 - combat larva; 4 - combat ledges; 5 - drummer; 6 - mainspring; 7 - trigger; 8 - ejector; 9 - connecting strip; 10 - coupling; 11 - fuse.



Rice. 10. Middle permanent magazines for non-automatic rifles:

A - with batch loading (on the right - the moment of chambering the cartridge); B - with horizontal arrangement of cartridges, filling one cartridge at a time; B - with a vertical single-row arrangement of cartridges, filling from a clip; G - with a double-row (checkerboard) arrangement of cartridges, filling from a clip; D - drum, filled from a clip.



Fig.11. The main types of rifle sights (the arrows show the direction of movement of the moving parts of the sights when installing them for shooting at increasing ranges):

L-frame with several slots (Manlicher rifle, 1895); B-frame stepped (Konovalov system, Mosin rifle, 1891, Russia); B-sector without a clamp, sometimes called quadrant (Schmidt-Rubin 1889/96, Switzerland); G-sector with a clamp moving along the sighting bar (Mosin rifle 1891/1930, USSR); D - diopter sector with a slider moving along the sighting ridge (MAC-36 rifle, France).


Bibliography.

Bolotin D.N. Soviet small arms over 50 years. L., 1967

Bolotin D.N. Soviet small arms. M., Military Publishing House 1986

Great Soviet Encyclopedia T.21

Gnatovsky N.I. history of the development of domestic small arms. M., Military Publishing House 1959

Zhuk A.B. Handbook of small arms M., 1993.

Mavrodin V.V. Russian rifle L., 1984.

Pastukhov I.P. Stories about small arms. M., DOSAAF, 1983.

Razin E.A. History of military art M., Voenizdat 1961.

Soviet military encyclopedia M., Military Publishing House 1976-1980.

Fedorov V.G. The evolution of small arms, part 1-3 Publishing house of the Artillery Academy named after. F.E. Dzerzhinsky, 1939



Rice. 5. Single shot flintlock pistols with spark percussion flintlocks:

15, 16 - Scottish all-metal (brass loch) of the mid-18th century; 17 - American military model of 1836. The so-called non-losing ramrod (does not separate from the pistol when the charge is loaded); 18,19-Caucasian, 18-19 centuries; 20-Arabic from North Africa, 17th-19th centuries.