Shotgun (single, double, pump, lever, bolt)
Shotgun Auto (non MSSA)
Rifle (single, double, pump, lever, bolt)
Rifle Auto (non MSSA)
MSSA
Pistol
Black powder (rifle, pistol, shotgun)
Air/Gas (pistol, rifle)
un-armed
You're quite right on the fixed firing pin and rounds failing to fully chamber are a common enough occurrence... If you have a round that has been dented or malformed in some way it won't fully chamber, leaving part of the case wall exposed which will then rupture when ignited. I think the more complicated weapons that fire from an open bolt release the firing pin when they go fully into battery (round completely chambered).
Edit: The 'open-bolt blowback' is just a plain blowback system that fires from an open bolt meaning that the bolt starts off locked back then when the trigger is pulled it gets pushed forward on a spring, stripping a cartridge from the mag, firing it then the bolt is blown backwards by the recoil to its starting position. Generally not as accurate as a weapon that fires from a closed bolt due to the moment of inertia created by the bolt moving forward causing the aim of the weapon to change, but much cheaper and simpler to make up for it.
So with an exposed firing pin how to you make sure that it pushes the round into the chamber rather than hitting the primer?
Are you sure anything as small as a firing pin has enough weight to fly forward under its own weight and hit the primer hard enough? I just have a hard time imagining anything that small having enough "inertial" force. Were there many cases of exposed firing pin rifles or smgs like the sten (i think?) detonating the round before it fully chambers?
You can always add weight to the firing pin or put a weight behind it to act as a hammer.
The bolt with a fixed firing pin could pick up and chamber the round without a problem, you have to put a fair amount of force on the primer to set it off, then once the round fully chambers and stops, the weight of the bolt would force the pin forward to dent the primer.
As for detonations I really don't know I'm afraid, probably time to start googling!
I have never built a firearm from scratch so here I will have to agree with Jono, start googling. Google is you friend.
WOlf was right, you can build any firearm you hold a licence for. It needs to have a serial number stamped on it somewhere.,
One lad in the CAS game built a working copy of a Colt SAA with a Buntline barrel. He also added the fittings that allowed a shoulder stock to be attached.
Very impressive. Shot well.
"When you think of it,
Lifes a bowl of ....MERDE"
"When you think of it,
Lifes a bowl of ....MERDE"
well looks like ive found my reloading setup.
$225 usd including the reloading gear,308me dies and shipping - which Im getting reamed on over half the price hahaha.
but they have it in stock!
Then I could get a Kb Tshirt, move to Timaru and become a full time crossdressing faggot
As Jono said, you have a weighted firing pin.
As you're making it yourself rather than using a stock firing pin, that is a minor matter - you machine the thing with a fair bit of mass at one end and a pointed skinny bit at the other. When you make your bolt block, you make a cavity inside to fit the weight and allow it sufficient forward/rearward travel. The bolt stops, the weighted pin keeps on going, boom!
Cheers, Chris, I'd forgotten the serial number requirement.
Motorbike Camping for the win!
I've been toying with the idea of getting some castings from
the States with which to build another single shot rifle.
Could be fun.
"When you think of it,
Lifes a bowl of ....MERDE"
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