A fire involving rifles a rifle fires a projectile at very high velocity
any high powered rifle shotgun assault rifle light machine gun and alot of bullets should do the trick
about 120
No high point weapon has full auto capability as it comes from the factory.
Blue bullets are bullets are high quality Polymer Coated Lead Bullets.
There are several rifles and carbines that are chambered for the 9mm Parabellum cartridge. Among others, the AR-15 style rifles have been made in that caliber, as well as the Marlin Camp 9 carbine, and High Point carbine.
maybe a minigun? they have a super high rate of fire and they fire small bullets. it might also be a cannon. They're the very long ones.
Recoil (kick) is an example of one of Newton's Laws- remember hearing about action and opposite reactions? The bullet or shot being pushed down the barrel in ONE direction, pushes the gun in the OTHER direction. Rifle bullets are usually smaller (lighter) than shotgun pellets. It is sort of bullet speed times bullet weight, divided by weight of the gun (not exactly, but close). SOME rifles may have more recoil than SOME shotguns. They shoot VERY heavy bullets at high speed. Generally speaking, if you feel a shotgun kicks harder than a rifle, you must be talking about a .22 rifle. Fire a standard load in a 12 gauge shotgun. Then fire a standard load in a rifle chambered for 30.06, or .308 Winchester, or 8mm Mauser, or .303 British, all standard rifle calibers. Then see what you think about a shotgun kicking harder than a rifle.
It's not the rifle, it's the operator. <><><> Either the aiming point is too high, or the rear sight is set too high. Many rifles are "zeroed" for a given distance. Fired at a lesser distance, strike of the bullet may be higher than the aiming point.
There was no turning point because the Germans inflicted high casualties on the Russians who most of the time had 1 rifle between 4 people so then they ran into machine fire. They did this until they pulled out of the war in 1917
It fires .22 Long Rifle bullets, and leaves behind shell casings when you eject them from the cylinder after firing.
Best left to a gunsmith