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  2. Smart guns fire only when their owner pulls the trigger - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2015-11-07-smart-guns-fire-only...

    If anyone else takes the gun, like, for example, a child or a thief, the bullet won't fire. The technology behind it uses a fingerprint scan or it recognizes the owner's handgrip in order to ...

  3. ‘Dangerously defective’ pistol fires even if you don’t touch ...

    www.aol.com/dangerously-defective-pistol-fires...

    The lives of experienced gun users, who are suing Sig Sauer, Inc., were “upended” by the company’s “dangerously defective pistol,” a complaint filed Nov. 30 in federal court in New ...

  4. Firearm malfunction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firearm_malfunction

    Most modern firearms are designed to not be capable of firing when significantly out-of-battery. As such, a firearm that is out-of-battery typically cannot be fired, which is why this is a type of firearm malfunction. A dangerous situation can occur when a chambered round fires when the firearm is out-of-battery (called an out-of-battery ...

  5. Safety (firearms) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safety_(firearms)

    Firearms with the ability to allow the user to select various fire modes may have separate switches for safety and for mode selection (e.g. Thompson submachine gun) or may have the safety integrated with the mode selector as a fire selector with positions from safe to semi-automatic to full-automatic fire (e.g. M16 rifle). Some firearms ...

  6. Bump stock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bump_stock

    Bump stocks or bump fire stocks are gun stocks that can be used to assist in bump firing, the act of using the recoil of a semi-automatic firearm to fire cartridges in rapid succession. The legality of bump stocks in the United States came under question [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] following the 2017 Las Vegas shooting , in which 60 people were killed ...

  7. Gunshot residue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunshot_residue

    Gunshot residue (GSR), also known as cartridge discharge residue (CDR), gunfire residue (GFR), or firearm discharge residue (FDR), consists of all of the particles that are expelled from the muzzle of a gun following the discharge of a bullet.

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  9. Glock switch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glock_switch

    A Glock switch functions by applying force to a semi-automatic pistol's trigger bar to prevent it from limiting fire to one round of ammunition per trigger pull. [5] [6] Normally, in a semiautomatic pistol, after firing, the trigger bar catches the firing pin until the trigger is released, but when depressed by the switch it does not catch.