What is the difference between a machine gun, a sub machine gun and an assault rifle? All are capable of being fully auto so technically all are machine guns?
Am I missing the bleedin obvious here?

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Gazza wrote:I was in the garden today with a cuppa and had a thought.......
What is the difference between a machine gun, a sub machine gun and an assault rifle? All are capable of being fully auto so technically all are machine guns?
Am I missing the bleedin obvious here?
Well, I think that clears that upmeles meles wrote:How definitively definitive do you want to be?
A machine gun was originally exactly that, a gun that was a machine, i.e. the loading and firing were mechanised but powered by a ooman turning a handle or similar: think Gatling, Nordenfelt, Gardner or Puckle
Following on from that, the use of the power in the cartridge or action to cycle the action took over, think Maxim et al, the machine gun came to be an automated system where the ooman only had to cycle the action once to cock it and then keep the trigger pressed. What we would now consider automatic fire. The machine gun then split into Heavy and Light categories, the former tripod mounted (Vickers, Maxim,) and the latter man portable for rapid re-siting - (Lewis, Bren, MG 34). All fired rifle calibre ammunition.
The sub-machine gun was a light, portable gun that could be carried into the offence - think Sten, MP40 et al, all generally using a pistol calibre round.
The semi-auto / full auto 'assault' rifle combined the function of the Light Machine Gun and the sub machine gun, making both obsolete. They generally fire an intermediate cartridge.
I wouldn't say the select-fire "assault" rifle has made the light machine gun and the submachine gun obsolete by any stretch of the imagination!.meles meles wrote:
The semi-auto / full auto 'assault' rifle combined the function of the Light Machine Gun and the sub machine gun, making both obsolete. They generally fire an intermediate cartridge.
The 'intermediate' cartridge is key to the definition of 'assault rifle'. It's incorrect to tag the first generation of NATO rifles (or the German WW2 FG42 for that matter) as 'assault' rifles as they fire full-power cartridges with all their downsides in terms of recoil, gun handling and coping with chamber and barrel heat. In NATO's case, this was a result of the US Army forcing its choice of the T65E3 7.62X51mm cartridge onto all member countries. So the M14, FAL, HK91 etc were just upgraded semi-auto rifles even if some were initially manufactured with a full-auto facility. The prototype FN FAL (Fusil Automatique Legere) chambered in 7.92X33mm Kurz then adapted to the British 280/30 was several inches shorter and pounds lighter than in its final NATO form. As some have quipped the FAL was no longer 'automatique' or legere, but as it was still a rifle should have been renamed the FN F.meles meles wrote:The semi-auto / full auto 'assault' rifle combined the function of the Light Machine Gun and the sub machine gun, making both obsolete. They generally fire an intermediate cartridge.
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