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Terminology of Rifle Gun

Names of parts of the M1 Garand rifle, World War II era, from US Army field manual

Historically, rifles fired only a single projectile with each pull of the trigger. Today, modern rifles are typically classified as single-shot, bolt-action, semi-automatic, or automatic. Single-shot, bolt-action, and semi-automatic rifles are designed to fire one shot per trigger pull. In contrast, automatic rifles can fire multiple rounds with a single squeeze of the trigger. However, some automatic rifles are limited to firing a fixed burst of two, three, or more rounds per squeeze

Rifle Guns

Modern automatic rifles overlap to some extent in design and function with machine guns. Many light machine guns (such as the Russian RPK) are adaptations of existing automatic rifle designs. A military’s light machine guns are typically chambered for the same caliber ammunition as its service rifles. Generally, the difference between an automatic rifle and a machine gun comes down to weight, cooling system, and ammunition feed system. Rifles, with their relatively lighter components (which overheat quickly) and smaller capacity magazines, are incapable of sustained automatic fire in the way that machine guns are; they trade this capability in favor of increased mobility.

Modern military rifles are fed by magazines, while machine guns are generally belt-fed. Many machine guns allow the operator to quickly exchange barrels to prevent overheating, whereas rifles generally do not. Most machine guns fire from an open bolt to reduce the danger of a “cook-off”, while almost all rifles fire from a closed bolt for accuracy. Machine guns are often crewed by more than one soldier; the rifle is an individual weapon.