Gun nuts of the fediverse. Do any guns use two magazines at once?
I hope folks read more than just the title. So im watching a show with a gun exchange and the person has to reload and you can see they are nervous to get the new magazine in so they can fire again and it made me think. Do any guns have two magazine where you can either manually switch to the other magazine or maybe automatically do it when the first one is empty. With the idea that if you need to fire while in the middle of changing out the empty magazine you could. I feel like this seem obvious enough that someone must have tried it. I mean considering the crazy gun things I have seen. Since im not aware of anything I figure if it has been done it had an issue or was just not useful enough to make worth it. So for the folks that are really into guns, especially wierd protoype ones. Has there every been anything like this?
Zak
in reply to HubertManne • • •American twin-magazine bullpup pump shotgun.
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)DominusOfMegadeus
in reply to Zak • • •Semester3383
in reply to DominusOfMegadeus • • •Unfortunately they're pretty failure prone; they've got some small plastic parts that tend to break. Being pump guns, they're also at risk of short-stroking, where you don't fully complete a cycle, and jam your shotgun.
It's a great idea, KelTec just needs to iron out the bugs.
Blade9732
in reply to Semester3383 • • •It's a great idea, KelTec just needs to iron out the bugs.
Congratulations! You just described the entire premise of Kel-Tec firearms corp.
knightly the Sneptaur
in reply to Blade9732 • • •AngryishHumanoid
in reply to Semester3383 • • •Xaphanos
in reply to Zak • • •Blade9732
in reply to Zak • • •Standard Shotguns - DP-12 - Page 1 - Standard Manufacturing LLC.
Standard Manufacturing CompanyMirshe
in reply to Blade9732 • • •Auwatch
in reply to Zak • • •Auwatch
in reply to Zak • • •ch00f
in reply to HubertManne • • •(Not a real gun, but thought you'd appreciate)
The Glopper
YouTubeMark
in reply to HubertManne • •Nazi Germany tried it with a version of the MP 40, didn't work due to putting too much weight towards the front and the mechanism constantly jamming.
What what you can find in the modern era are shotguns with multiple tube mags, although that's more for being able to have a mixture of shot and slugs. On a similar line is the STK 50MG which takes two belts, again to allow quick switching between standard and armour-piercing rounds. There's also dual purpose weapons like the Ares Shrike which can be used as either a mag fed rifle or belt fed machine gun.
Asklemmy reshared this.
HubertManne
in reply to Mark • • •OhmsLawn
in reply to HubertManne • • •Not exactly what you're looking for, but still fun.
Arsenal Firearms AF2011A1
Here's Scott shooting it
youtu.be/bJrLE-O42m0
Double Barrel 1911 (The Legendary Dueller!!!)
YouTuberockstarmode
in reply to OhmsLawn • • •PenguinCoder
in reply to HubertManne • • •It's not really worth it. A lot more complexity for the trigger and firing mechanisms, barrel alignment; etc. Weight is also a concern with any carry weapon. There were a couple of weapons in history that tried a dual mag setup
MP40I
The Burton
AF2011 (More double barrel but does fire simultaneously)
There's also the DIY jungle style
In general these days, belt fed weapons are used for more capacity where needed.
Dual-Magazine MP40
Ian McCollum (Forgotten Weapons)Cochise
in reply to PenguinCoder • • •HubertManne
in reply to PenguinCoder • • •PenguinCoder
in reply to HubertManne • • •MP40/Inot1😛 May help your research.HubertManne
in reply to PenguinCoder • • •burntbacon
in reply to HubertManne • • •HubertManne
in reply to burntbacon • • •ArcaneSlime
in reply to HubertManne • • •Depends, if we're in the jungles of vietnam? Sure, suppressive fire, still need to retain ammo yourself though.
In a self defense situation in an American city? Bad idea, you're responsible for every round that leaves your barrel, if you hit a bystander while wildly winging shots at an attacker you're fucked and will be going to prison. Unless you're a cop, it would seem.
HubertManne
in reply to ArcaneSlime • • •Semester3383
in reply to HubertManne • • •...But what happens when your second magazine runs out? What then?
Let's say that I have a gun that normally has a seven round magazine. I add a second magazine. Now I've got 14 rounds! ...But why not just make a 14 round magazine? And now when I run out, I have to change two magazines. (FWIW, normal capacity for a semi-auto 9mm is 13-18 rounds, and 15 is about average. 7 is the OEM capacity of all traditional .45ACP 1911 pistols.)
IMO adding a secondary magazine, rather than increasing the capacity of an existing magazine, adds needless complexity. Added complexity increases the odds of failure. I hate to say that this is a skill issue, but, well, changing a magazine quickly is a skill that you should practice if you want to be proficient in practical shooting. (By "practical shooting", I mean things like IPSC, IDPA, USPSA, PCSL, three gun, steel challenge, self-defense, and war. You shouldn't need to worry about rapid magazine changes for hunting or long range competitions.)
sylver_dragon
in reply to Semester3383 • • •RiverRock
in reply to HubertManne • • •MrWildBunnycat
in reply to RiverRock • • •