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  2. Thompson submachine gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thompson_submachine_gun

    The M1A1 Thompson submachine gun on display at the Virginia War Museum. The M1A1, standardized in October 1942 as the United States Submachine Gun, Cal. .45, M1A1, could be produced in half the time of the M1928A1, and at a much lower cost. The main difference between the M1 and M1A1 was the bolt.

  3. .45 Remington–Thompson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.45_Remington–Thompson

    Headstamp for the .45 Remington-Thompson cartridge. The .45 Remington–Thompson (11.4x25mm) was an experimental firearms cartridge designed by Remington Arms and Auto Ordnance for the Model 1923 Thompson submachine gun, a variant of the Model 1921 with a longer barrel, with the intent of increasing the power and range of the weapon.

  4. Muzzle brake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muzzle_brake

    In the later 1920s, there was some limited progress: around 1926, Cutts compensator became an option in the Thompson SMG (R. M. Cutts' earliest patent is from 1925 [7]), in 1927 Škoda patented [8] a family of muzzle brake designs, one of which was used on 8 cm kanon vz. 28, and in 1928, Schneider et Cie (which was allied with Škoda at the ...

  5. Receiver (firearms) - Wikipedia

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

    A disassembled Mauser action showing a partially disassembled receiver and bolt. In firearms terminology and law, the firearm frame or receiver is the part of a firearm which integrates other components by providing housing for internal action components such as the hammer, bolt or breechblock, firing pin and extractor, and has threaded interfaces for externally attaching ("receiving ...

  6. Blowback (firearms) - Wikipedia

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

    In firearms, a blowback system is generally defined as an operating system in which energy to operate the firearm's various mechanisms, and automate the loading of another cartridge, is derived from the inertia of the spent cartridge case being pushed out the rear of the chamber by rapidly expanding gases produced by a burning propellant, typically gunpowder. [3]

  7. 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).

  8. Auto-Ordnance Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auto-Ordnance_Corporation

    Auto-Ordnance Corporation was created by John T. Thompson in August 1916 with the backing of investor Thomas Ryan. In 1915 Thompson had found the Blish Lock patent of Commander John Blish, which was the operating principle of the first prototypes of the Thompson submachine gun and the Thompson Autorifle. In exchange for shares of the newly ...

  9. List of equipment of the Myanmar Army - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_equipment_of_the...

    M3 submachine gun: Submachine gun.45 ACP United States: Military aid from the United States in 1950s Thompson submachine gun: Submachine gun: M1A1.45 ACP United States: Inherited from British Burma Army and also Military aid from the United States in 1950s BA-52 (Ne Win Sten) Submachine gun: 9×19mm Parabellum Socialist Republic of the Union of ...