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  2. Toy gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toy_gun

    Pop Gun, 2009. Toy guns are toys which imitate real guns, but are designed for recreational sport or casual play by children.From hand-carved wooden replicas to factory-produced pop guns and cap guns, toy guns come in all sizes, prices and materials such as wood, metal, plastic or any combination thereof.

  3. Volcanic Repeating Arms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcanic_Repeating_Arms

    Set in 1875, Have Gun Will Travel Radio Episode "Landfall" aired November 08, 1959. A character offers Paladin use of his Jennings rifle. The Rider, the title character of Edward M. Erdelac's Judeocentric Lovecraftian weird west series Merkabah Rider, carries a Volcanic pistol inlaid with gold and silver and bearing various Solomonic talismans and wards, including a jeweled Tree of Sephiroth ...

  4. Repeating firearm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repeating_firearm

    Unlike single-shot firearms, which can only hold and fire a single round of ammunition, a repeating firearm can store multiple cartridges inside a magazine (as in pistols, rifles, or shotguns), a cylinder (as in revolvers), or a belt (as in machine guns), and uses a moving action to manipulate each cartridge into and out of the battery position ...

  5. Captive bolt pistol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captive_bolt_pistol

    A captive bolt pistol (also known as a captive bolt gun, a cattle gun, a stunbolt gun, a bolt gun, a stun gun and a stunner) is a device used for the stunning of animals prior to slaughter. The goal of captive bolt stunning is to inflict a forceful strike on the forehead with the bolt in order to induce unconsciousness .

  6. Gel blaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gel_blaster

    Water bead ammunition. A gel ball blaster, also known as a water gel blaster, orbeez gun, gel gun, gel shooter, gel marker, hydro gel blaster, water bead blaster or gelsoft gun, is a toy gun similar in design to airsoft guns, but the projectiles they shoot are 7–8mm (depending on the replica) superabsorbent polymer water beads (most commonly sodium polyacrylate, colloquially called gel balls ...

  7. Magazine (firearms) - Wikipedia

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

    Nearly all subsequent semiautomatic pistol designs adopted detachable box magazines. [33] The Swiss Army evaluated the Luger pistol using a detachable box magazine in 7.65×21mm Parabellum and adopted it in 1900 as its standard sidearm. The Luger pistol was accepted by the Imperial German Navy in 1904. This version is known as Pistole 04 (or P.04).

  8. Gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun

    A gun is a device designed to propel a projectile using pressure or explosive force. [1] [2] The projectiles are typically solid, but can also be pressurized liquid (e.g. in water guns/cannons), or gas (e.g. light-gas gun). Solid projectiles may be free-flying (as with bullets and artillery shells) or tethered (as with Tasers, spearguns and ...

  9. Harmonica gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harmonica_gun

    A harmonica gun or slide gun is a firearm design which was breech loaded with a steel slide, containing a number of chambers bored in it that were filled with projectiles. Most harmonica guns are percussion cap guns , although some designs exist for compressed air guns [ 1 ] [ 2 ] and some examples were made in pinfire cartridge form.