Today’s installment of “Ask Foghorn” isn’t intended so much for you, the readers of this site. Our readers (as the recent survey, which is still going on BTW, shows us) generally own firearms already, so we would assume that you’ve figured out the basics of how a gun works. No, today we provide you with something better. This post was intended to be a resource, something that you all can link to the next time someone asks you that fateful question. So, how exactly does a gun work?…
The basic concept behind how a gun works, ANY gun, is pretty simple. A projectile is placed in a tube or “barrel“, and then some force is applied to accelerate it out the other end. The projectile then flies through the air until it hits a target. Just like the spitball-blowing gentleman in the lead image demonstrates, this concept works very well in the small scale for things like tiny pieces of wet paper and even small darts in blowguns. But when the projectiles are larger and the targets further away, more force is required.
Luckily, a compound was discovered ages ago in China that would provide that force. Gunpowder is a granular substance that burns (not explodes) very quickly, creating a lot of expanding gases. These gases push the projectile out of the tube faster than any man can blow, even heavy projectiles made of lead. A mechanism was devised for making the best use of this substance, where it was inserted into a long metal tube and a projectile crammed in after it. The gunpowder was ignited using either a burning piece of rope or a spark, and then the projectile was expelled from the tube. This mechanism was called a “musket” and was used for centuries.
Muskets are known as “muzzle loaders” because that’s how you load them, from the front opening or “muzzle” of the gun. The musket is a long metal tube into which you pour some gunpowder and then shove a projectile. It’s simple and it works, but because the powder and projectile are loaded separately it takes a while to load and is sensitive to changes in the weather. Starting in the 1800’s a new way of loading a firearm was devised, one which used a self contained package that sped up the process of loading and firing the gun.
This video, a slow motion depiction of a pistol firing made by our own Daniel Zimmerman, shows exactly what I’ve been describing. The hammer (at the back, moving veeeeeeeery slowly) hits the primer, the primer detonates the powder (causing that large initial flash), and then the expanding gases force the bullet out of the barrel. You can even see the expanding gasses following the bullet out of the gun in a large black cloud. The flash you see from the muzzle is the remaining un-burnt gunpowder being ignited.
Once modern cartridge based ammunition became the norm in firearms design a plethora of different mechanisms were designed to make loading a firearm faster and more efficient. I just wanted to take a second and detail some of the more popular mechanisms for pistols and rifles (shotguns tend to follow rifles in their design and use many of the same mechanisms).
A pistol is a firearm that was designed to be compact in size and usually is not intended to be fired when braced against the shooter’s shoulder.
- Revolvers (bottom right of picture) are a type of pistol which use a rotating cylinder to hold the cartridges. When the hammer is pulled back the cylinder rotates, lining up a new and unfired cartridge with the barrel.
- Semi-Automatic pistols (top left) use the force of the expanding gases and moving projectile to automatically remove the spent case and load a new cartridge from a spring loaded magazine located in the handle. The slide (lighter colored part on the top) moves back and forth as the gun fires to eject and insert the cartridges.
- Bolt Action Rifles (first and third from right along the back) as well as Pump Action guns (third from left along the back), like revolvers, require the shooter to perform an action in order to remove the spent case and insert a new cartridge into the gun.
- Semi-Automatic rifles (first, second, and fifth along the back, as well as both long guns on the bottom), like their pistol counterparts, use the force of the expanding gases and moving projectile to automatically remove the spent case and load a new cartridge from a magazine.
And that, in a nutshell, is how a firearm works.
TL;DR: Expanding gases produced from burning gunpowder force a projectile (bullet) through a metal tube (barrel), giving it enough momentum to hit a target.
If you have a topic you want to see covered in a future “Ask Foghorn” segment, email guntruth@me.com.