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A magazine (also called a mag or, commonly but incorrectly, a clip) is an ammunition storage and feeding device within or attached to a firearm. Magazines may be integral to the firearm (fixed) or removable (detachable).

The cartridges in the magazine are loaded into the firearm either automatically or manually depending on the type of gun, but almost always by a spring. Some magazines can in turn be loaded by a clip; contrary to the common misconception, clip and magazine are not synonymous terms. An example of this misuse is the use of the term banana clips to refer to curved box magazines. Although this particular phrase is more commonly used, the proper term would be banana magazine. The belt of linked ammunition used by most machine guns is also not a magazine.

The most common type of magazine is the detachable "box" type (pictured at right). However, other types are available, such as the drum magazine, sometimes used with the Thompson submachine gun, the "pan" magazine of the Russian DP-28 machine gun, and the fixed "tube" magazine found on many lever-action rifles and pump-action shotguns.

Magazines for a particular firearm may come in different shapes and sizes. Certain magazines can be readily identified by their appearance, such as those of the AK-type assault rifles, while with others it can be more difficult to tell what gun they belong to, such as when comparing the Ruger Mini-14's magazines with AR-15/M16 magazines.

Magazine Types


Tubular

Many of the first repeating rifles, particularly lever-action types, use a tubular magazine which stores cartridges end-to-end inside of a spring-loaded tube running parallel to the barrel. This type of magazine is usually fixed to the firearm, meaning that it cannot be removed easily. The tubular magazine was made obsolete for military purposes with the introduction of pointed "Spitzer" bullets, which risk igniting cartridges stored in the magazine as the pointed bullet impacts the primer of the cartridge ahead of it during recoil. Tubular magazines can still be found today, commonly in shotguns or firearms designed to use round nose, flat nose, or otherwise soft-pointed bullets. The tubular magazine also tends to negatively effect the harmonics of the barrel, which limits the potential accuracy of the rifle (see accurize).

Box

The most popular type of magazine in modern rifles and handguns, the box magazine stores cartridges in a parallel column, or stack, one above the other. This allows the bullets of the cartridges stored in the magazine to retain a pointed shape, which contributes to the consistent accuracy of the firearm. Cartridges are fed into the loading position via pressure provided by a spring beneath the cartridge stack. Box magazines may be built into the firearm (internal, integral, or fixed) or may be removable (detachable).

  • An internal box magazine (also known as an integral or fixed box magazine) is built into the firearm and is not easily removable. This type of magazine is found most often on most pre-WWII military bolt-action rifles, as well as most modern bolt-action hunting rifles. An internal box magazine is usually loaded through the action, usually one round at a time. Military rifles utilized stripper clips or chargers, allowing multiple rounds to be loaded at once. Some internal box magazines utilize en-bloc clips, which are loaded into the magazine along with the ammunition and are ejected from the firearm along with the last spent case.

  • A detachable box magazine is a self-contained magazine, capable of being loaded or unloaded while detached from the host firearm. They are attached via a slot in the receiver of the firearm, usually below the action. When the magazine is empty, it can simply be detached from the firearm and replaced by another full magazine. This significantly speeds up the process of reloading the firearm, allowing the operator quick access to a relatively large amount of ammunition in a relatively short span of time. This type of magazine is common in most modern firearms and may be straight or curved, the curve necessary if the rifle uses rimmed ammunition or bottlenecked ammunition with a tapered case. In some situations, two or more detachable box magazines may be taped or otherwise attached together, allowing for faster access to a full reload. Magazines for the SIG 550 rifle have integrated attachment points for this purpose.

Rotary

The rotary or spool magazine consists of a star-shaped rotor, or sprocket, actuated by a torsion spring. The magazine may be fixed or detachable. Cartridges fit between the teeth of the sprocket, which is mounted on a spindle parallel to the bore axis, with the torsion spring providing the pressure necessary to rotate the rounds into the feeding position. Rotary magazines are usually of low capacity, from five to ten rounds, depending on the cartridge used.

The rotary magazine was first used in the Mannlicher-Schönauer rifles and is still used in a few modern firearm designs, most notably the Ruger 10/22 and the Steyr SSG 69.

Drum

Used in several light machine guns, submachine guns, and shotguns, a moving partition within a cylindrical chamber forces loose rounds into an exit slot, with the cartridges being stored parallel to the axis of rotation. After loading of the magazine, a wound spring or other mechanical force moves the partition against the rounds. The cylindrical design allows for larger capacity than boxes, without growing to excessive length, though the more complicated mechanism can lead to reliability problems. Many drum-fed firearms can also load from conventional boxes, such as the Russian RPK light machine gun and the Thompson submachine gun. Other weapons, such as the Pancor Jackhammer and DAO-12 shotguns are specifically designed for a drum feed and cannot use boxes.

Dual Drum magazines such as the Beta C-Mag are also available. They consist of two independent single column drums which feed into a double column arrangement between the two drums. These magazines are designed to increase the capacity of firearms originally designed to use detachable box magazines.

Pan

Often referred to as a drum magazine, the pan magazine differs from other drum magazines in that the cartridges are stored perpendicular to the axis of rotation, rather than parallel, and are usually mounted on top of the firearm. This type is used on the American 180 submachinegun, the Lewis Gun, and the Degtyarev light machine gun.

Helical

Helical magazines extend the drum magazine design so that rounds follow a spiral path, allowing for a very large ammunition capacity in a compact package. They have been used on the Calico 960 and Bizon submachine guns, but require a complex mechanism.

Belt

Generally used with machine guns, a belt links together individual rounds of ammunition. The belt is fed through the firearm, and the links either disintegrate or are pushed out the opposite side of the chamber. It is not itself a magazine, but serves the same purpose of delivering rounds of ammunition to the firing chamber.

See also


Firearm components

Magasin (våben) | Magazin (Waffentechnik) | מחסנית | 弾倉 | Magazīna | Våpenmagasin | Magazynek | Lipas

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Magazine (firearm)".

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