Semi-Auto vs. Full Auto Firearm: What’s the Difference?
The majority of Mag Life fans can compare automatic and semi-automatic guns. However, the recent years have turned many into first-time gun owners. Additionally, the current gun control discussions have confused the understanding, either through lack of knowledge or intentional vagueness. So, keeping this in view, let’s quickly check how automatic guns differ from semi-automatic ones.
Let’s Get to The Basics First
An automatic firearm, also known as a machine gun, works in a specific way. You press the trigger once. After that, it keeps firing until it runs out of bullets, or you let go of the trigger. In contrast, a semi-automatic gun demands a single trigger press for each shot fired. Pressing and holding the trigger, like you would on a machine gun, doesn’t work. You have to let go of the trigger and push it again to shoot another bullet. One squeeze of the trigger means one bullet shot.
The half-automatic grouping doesn’t cover revolvers. These need a trigger squeeze to turn the cylinder. Also, it doesn’t cover rifles or shotguns. With these, the shooter must use their hands to move the action. This is true for a lever action or bolt action rifle, and a pump shotgun. These firearms are “repeaters”. However, they aren’t semi-automatic.
From the point of view of the one firing the gun, that’s the main difference. Of course, there’s more underlying details. I’m not a weapons designer or a gun mechanic, but a simple explanation seems necessary.
And Now Some Advance Mechanical Understanding
Fully automatic and semi-automatic firearms have a key difference: fully automatic guns contain an auto sear, while semi-automatic guns lack one. This auto sear lets the trigger break away from the gun’s action, allowing uninterrupted cycling till the trigger is let go to halt it. An adapted fully automatic firearm can burst, much like the M4 carbine used by the US military. The M4 has an in-built cam clutch spring for stopping the action after a quick three-round burst.
Semi-auto guns lack the auto sear. Indeed, the National Firearms Act of 1934 strictly controls auto sears and treats them as real machine guns. Stay tuned for more details.
An automatic M-16 possesses an extra element on the bolt carrier group. This component interacts with the auto sear. The semi-automatic AR-15’s bolt carrier lacks this part, however, it is compatible with the semi-automatic rifle, but not the fully automatic one. Despite this extra part, the semi-automatic AR-15 doesn’t become fully automatic, only the auto sear can cause that. The hammers’ shape varies, too. There’s an added choice on the M-16 for fully automatic shooting.
Why are Machine Guns Heavily Regulated?
In 1884, Hiram Maxim, an American inventor, created the first machine gun. During the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–1905, the new weapon was used in protracted combat for the first time. By the time the First World War broke out in 1914, machine guns were standard equipment for modern armies. Because of the enormity of the First World War, a great number of machine guns were produced and made accessible to the general public as war surplus.
Submachine guns like the MP-18 and Thompson were invented, bringing portable automatic power to the military, police, and citizens. Americans could purchase automatic “Tommy Guns” via mail-order catalogs. Those were the simple times. American Prohibition, however, forced a surge in organized crime as criminal groups smuggled in and distributed illicit alcohol to a public dealing with alcohol scarcity.
The Great Depression struck, worsening everything. As poverty spread, people found themselves desperate, resorting to armed robbery. Famous law-breakers, such as Clyde Barrow, Baby Face Nelson, and John Dillinger, leaned on automatic weapons for their crimes. This led to the 1934 National Firearms Act, whose constitutionality remains in question.
Still, it manages all automatic weaponry, as well as suppressors, explosive devices, and select rifles and shotguns. In 1986 another law, the National Firearms Owners Protection Act, restricted the transfer and ownership of machine guns, a form of automatic gun, unless they were already owned legally before the law. There are exceptions, naturally, for the military and law enforcement. Hence, the available amount of such automatic weapons open for public transfer has a hard limit.
Clearing the Confusion Once and For All
Lots of folks count on news outlets for gun terms such as “semi-auto” and “auto.” If you’re a firearm enthusiast, you likely understand that the press sometimes lacks solid knowledge about guns. This leaves readers or viewers puzzled by their coverage.
Tragically, a lot of media personnel follow the guidelines from the lead gun authority Michael Bloomberg and his groups such as Everytown for Gun Safety. They also receive pointers from the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions. This center is a wing of the Bloomberg School of Public Health. They provide training for journalists. This training teaches them how to cover gun-related issues.
Do you reckon it might lean towards favoritism, considering who foots the bill? A straightforward “yes” answers that question-truth is, it’s more than just a bit.
Journalists often label semi-automatic firearms as “automatic weapons.” When this is pointed out, they use the phrase “fully semi-automatic” to keep up the intimidating storyline. Essentially, much of the media acts as a big machine against firearms. They began with a lack of understanding. That still exists, but now many purposefully mislead the public on guns and their workings.
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