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Guns Are Back in the News: Here's a Handy Guide
EDITOR & PUBLISHER ^ | May 14, 2007 | Chuck Klein

Posted on 05/15/2007 2:08:22 PM PDT by neverdem

 

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Guns Are Back in the News: Here's a Handy Guide
In the wake of the Virginia Tech massacre, a new wave of gun control debate and legal measures will remain in the news for months. But sloppiness is a warm gun: It would be nice if the press at least got its technical terminology right in covering the developments.

By Chuck Klein

(May 14, 2007) -- In the wake of the Virginia Tech massacre, a new wave of gun control debate and legal measures will remain in the news for months. It would be a good idea for the press to at least get its technical terminology right in covering the developments.

My field of expertise is firearms and I am constantly amazed at the lack of knowledge and/or research (laziness?) that some writers exhibit when writing about guns or the use thereof.

For example, one noted author penned, “&helliphe grabbed the 30.06 rifle&hellip.” The thirty-ought-six is probably the most well know cartridge in the world. However, it is displayed as .30-06. The “.30” is the caliber or bore diameter of the barrel. The “06” refers to the year (1906) when the cartridge was accepted by and for the U.S. Military. This same author, when describing a group men in the early 1970s had one of them shooting a Glock pistol. Glock didn’t make handguns until the 1980s.

Some other the most egregious errors found in news media stories, articles and books include:

“The gun used was a Colt automatic.” (Did the writer mean machinegun or the more common SEMI-automatic pistol? Colt has made both).

“He took out his pistol, opened the cylinder&hellip.” (Pistols don’t have cylinders – only revolvers do.)

“The killer placed a fresh bullet into his gun.” (I think he means, cartridge.)

Below are some Firearm Related Terms that might help when editing a piece that includes reference to firearms:

ACTION: Moveable mechanical parts of a firearm.

BALLISTICS: Science of the characteristics of projectiles in motion.

BARREL: Part of the firearm through which the discharged bullet passes moving from breach to muzzle.

BORE: The inside of the barrel through which the discharged bullet passes. Size is determined by measuring the distance between the lands of a rifled barrel or maximum inside diameter of a smoothbore (shotgun) barrel .

BREECH: Rear portion of the barrel which includes the chamber.

BULLET: (aka PROJECTILE) The missile only. The part of the cartridge that separates, exits from the muzzle and impacts on the target.

CARTRIDGE: A complete unit of ammunition which is comprised of the cartridge case, primer, propellant, and bullet - a loaded round of ammunition.

CALIBER: Refers to a weapon's (land or grove) or bullet's diametrical size - usually expressed in thousands of an inch or metric equivalent. Sometimes includes other information to indicated powder charge (e.g., .38-40) or year of adoption (e.g., .30-06) or special designation (e.g., .38 Special).

CENTERFIRE: Cartridge case which contains its primer in the rear center portion. Usually reloadable. A firearm designed to fire centerfire ammunition.

CHAMBER: Inside portion of the breech formed to accommodate the cartridge.

CLIP: Device to hold cartridges for insertion into a magazine. See "MAGAZINE"

CYLINDER: Revolving mechanical part of a revolver which houses multiple chambers.

DEADLY FORCE: See "LETHAL FORCE"

DOUBLE ACTION: (DA) Function of trigger pull that requires two actions to discharge a weapon. The first action is the compressing of the hammer/firing pin (main) spring by physically moving the trigger rearward. The second action is the continued rearward movement of the trigger to the point of causing the release of the hammer/firing pin.

FIREARM: Any weapon from which a projectile(s) is discharged by means of a rapidly burning or exploding propellant.

FRAME: The non-moveable mechanical portion of a weapon into or upon which all other parts are attached.

GRIP: See "STOCK"

HAMMER: Moveable mechanical part of the action which, when released, drives the firing pin into the primer.

HANDGUN: A firearm (revolver or pistol) designed to be operated with one hand and without the aid of extraneous support.

INSTINCT COMBAT SHOOTING: The act of operating a HANDGUN by focusing on the target and instinctively coordinating the hand and mind to cause the HANDGUN to discharge at a time and point that ensures interception of the target with the projectile. Method developed by and term coined by Police Firearms Instructor CHUCK KLEIN.

INSTINCT SHOOTING: (a.k.a. point shooting) Focusing on the target and instinctively shooting any long gun without the aid or use of mechanical sights.

MAGAZINE: Removable part of a pistol which holds cartridges in such a way as to facilitate the chambering of these cartridges during operational functioning.

MUZZLE: The end of the barrel from which the discharged projectile exits.

PISTOL: aka: Autoloader, auto pistol, semi-auto. Any self-loading handgun that is not a revolver. Usually incorporates the chamber as part of the barrel. Requires the manually pulling and releasing of the trigger for each shot. After each shot the recoil "automatically" pushes the slide rearward, ejecting the spent cartridge, cocking the hammer/firing pin and, on the return forward movement, striping a fresh cartridge from the magazine for insertion into the chamber. This action/reaction does not disengage the sear, which can only be done by releasing the trigger.

Fully automatic weapons such as machine guns or submachine guns will continue to fire until either the trigger is released or the magazine is emptied.

POINT BLANK RANGE: Distance so close that appreciable projectile deviation of line of flight is negligible.

POINT SHOOTING: See "INSTINCT SHOOTING".

PRIMER: Detonating mixture structured to ignite propellant when struck a sharp blow as from a firing pin.

RECOIL: The kinetic energy reaction of the expanding burning propellant as it pushes the projectile through the bore. This is also evidenced by the rearward thrust of the weapon against the shooters hand/body.

REVOLVER: A multi-shot handgun, utilizing a revolving cylinder as a cartridge receptacle.

RIFLING: Parallel spiral groves cut into the bore to impart spin on the projectile. This spin aids in stabilizing the bullet in flight which greatly improves accuracy. This rifling so marks the bullet as it passes through the bore. These engravings (fingerprints) are unique to that particular bore and bullet.

RIMFIRE: Cartridge case which contains its primer in the rear rim portion. A firearm designed to fire rimfire ammunition. Not reloadable. .22 LR (Long Rifle); .22 Short; and .22 Long are all rimfire cartridges and are of the most common and oldest cartridges in current use. Rifles, pistols and revolvers have all been chambered for this round of ammunition.

SAFETY: Any device or mechanism which locks or blocks the trigger, hammer and/or sear to prevent unintentional discharge.

SEAR: Mechanical part of the action of a firearm which functions between the trigger and the hammer; acts as a release when the trigger is fully depressed.

SEMI-AUTOMATIC: See "PISTOL"

SHOTGUN: A shoulder fired long-gun with a smooth (not rifled) barrel. Shotgun size and power are designated by Gauge – not by caliber (see Sidebar). Some shotgun types are: SxS (Side by side – a double barrel shotgun with the barrels arranged side by side); O/U (Over/Under – a double barrel shotgun with the barrels arranged one on top of the other); Pump action (One must operate the pump to expel fired shells, load a fresh shell from the magazine and cock the hammer/firing pin); Auto-loading (The force of firing a shell ejects the spent shell and “automatically” recharges the chamber with a fresh shell from the magazine while cocking the hammer/firing pin) Bolt action (a bolt is used to extract, charge the chamber and cock the hammer/firing pin).

SINGLE ACTION: Only one action is required to fire the weapon such as moving the trigger rearward to release the hammer/firing pin.

SLIDE: On semi-automatic or automatic weapons, the movable mechanical device which functions to extract spent cases and insert loaded cartridges.

SNUB-NOSE: Slang term usually meaning any short barreled revolver.

STOCK: Portion of the weapon which is held in the hand.

TACHYINTERVAL: Time-deception phenomena. A condition that occurs when, under extreme stress, events appear to happen in slow motion. Events, of course, do not slow down but, the mind seems to speed up due to the brains ability to digest information much faster than the body can act/react. Many people who have been in serious auto accidents or gun fights have experienced this condition.

TRAJECTORY: The parabolical path of a projectile in flight from muzzle to impact.

TRIGGER: Moveable mechanical device designed to be operated by the index finger for double action or single action mode depending on type of firearm.

TUNNEL-VISION: Peripheral-optic distortion/dysfunction phenomena. A condition that can occur during high concentration where one see (is aware of) only the center of his/hers attention. This temporary occurrence renders the victim oblivious to surrounding events.

SOME COMMON HANDGUN CALIBERS:

.22 Long Rifle (.22LR) This is a rimfire cartridge and has been very popular for over 100 years.
.25 ACP (ACP means, Automatic Colt Pistol)
.380 Automatic (Popular self-defense pistol round)
9mm (Once popular police cartridge, especially in Europe)
.38 Special (Early police revolver cartridge – still popular in snub-nose revolvers)
.357 Magnum (Popular revolver cartridge for police and self-protection)
.40 Caliber (Popular modern police pistol cartridge)
.44 Magnum (Powerful hunting and self-defense round)
.45 ACP Old (1911) and still popular police and self-defense pistol round)

SOME COMMON RIFLE CALIBERS:

.223 (aka 5.56mm. Cartridge designed for the M-16 – and other – military semi-auto and full-auto rifles)
.270 Winchester (Popular hunting cartridge)
.30-06 (Originally a military cartridge – now a very popular hunting round)
.308 Winchester (aka 7.62 NATO. A military round and one of the most accurate high power hunting and target rounds)
.30-30 (Most popular deer hunting cartridge)
.470 Nitro Express (early “elephant” cartridge usually found in SxS double barreled rifles)
.458 Winchester Magnum. (Very powerful hunting cartridge – used for big game)

COMMON SHOT GUN GAUGES:

12 Gauge (.729 bore diameter)
16 Ga. (.662)
20 Ga (.615)
28 Ga (.550)
.410 (.410) Called the Four-Ten, it is actually about a 67 Gauge, but has always been referred to as the four-ten.





Chuck Klein is the author of many firearm related books, columns and articles, many of which may be found on his web site: www.chuckkleinauthor.com. This column is copyright by Chuck Klein 2007.



TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: banglist; rkba
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1 posted on 05/15/2007 2:08:24 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem

Not a bad guide, although it has some problems. For example, not all magazines are removable.

The AP Styleguide has a section on firearms, but that doesn’t seem to help most reporters. I hope this does.


2 posted on 05/15/2007 2:15:12 PM PDT by Gondring (I'll give up my right to die when hell freezes over my dead body!)
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To: neverdem
I would also recommend folks read The Second Amendment Primer: A Citizen's Guidebook to the History, Sources and Authorities For the Constitutional Guarantee of The Right to Keep and Bear Arms by Les Adams, Palladium Press.
3 posted on 05/15/2007 2:17:06 PM PDT by Cornpone (Islam: The world's greatest, preventable and treatable psychosis. ©2006Cornpone)
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To: toomanygrasshoppers

Ping


4 posted on 05/15/2007 2:17:13 PM PDT by FrogHawk (watchforlowflyingfrogs)
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To: neverdem

Where’s that picture of the cop-killer assault glock pistol with bayonnet when you need it?


5 posted on 05/15/2007 2:20:57 PM PDT by 38special (I mean come on.)
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To: neverdem

DANG! I do not own 8 of those calibers/gauges itemized.


6 posted on 05/15/2007 2:22:40 PM PDT by litehaus (A memory tooooo long)
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To: neverdem

Too bad he didn’t educate the press on what an “assault rifle” is.


7 posted on 05/15/2007 2:23:17 PM PDT by D_Idaho ("For we wrestle not against flesh and blood...")
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To: neverdem

Colt has made “both kinds [semi-auto and auto pistols].”

Colt made a machine pistol??

Ed


8 posted on 05/15/2007 2:27:29 PM PDT by Sir_Ed
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To: neverdem
Is this a "pistol" or a "revolver" or is it the Platupus of handguns?

Webley-Fosbery Automatic Revolver

9 posted on 05/15/2007 2:34:23 PM PDT by Jeff Gordon ("An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile hoping it will eat him last." Churchill)
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To: neverdem; Joe Brower; DaveLoneRanger

BTTT


10 posted on 05/15/2007 2:35:10 PM PDT by Fiddlstix (Warning! This Is A Subliminal Tagline! Read it at your own risk!(Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: Sir_Ed
Colt made a machine pistol??

The SCaMP, at least.

11 posted on 05/15/2007 2:36:07 PM PDT by Gondring (I'll give up my right to die when hell freezes over my dead body!)
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To: neverdem

Probably one of the funniest things I’ve ever read in a novel concerning firearms is a break-action double-barrel shotgun that has a pump-action.


12 posted on 05/15/2007 2:38:07 PM PDT by Stonewall Jackson (Sir, I protest! I am not a merry man! - Lt. Worf)
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To: Stonewall Jackson
Probably one of the funniest things I’ve ever read in a novel concerning firearms is a break-action double-barrel shotgun that has a pump-action.

I recall that Dan Brown couldn't keep straight whether the protagonist had a revolver or pistol in Angels & Demons.

13 posted on 05/15/2007 2:39:20 PM PDT by Gondring (I'll give up my right to die when hell freezes over my dead body!)
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Comment #14 Removed by Moderator

To: neverdem

As far as I know a pistol doesn’t have to be self-loading. Single-shot handguns are pistols. All a pistol is is a handgun that is not a revolver.


15 posted on 05/15/2007 2:50:40 PM PDT by Fido969 ("The hardest thing in the world to understand is income tax." - Albert Einstein)
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To: neverdem

Good effort. Needs fine tuning (corrections in caps, if you will forgive the shouting):

ACTION: Moveable mechanical parts of a firearm. LOTS OF PARTS MIGHT MOVE, BUT THE ACTION ARE THOSE PARTS THAT OPERATE TO FEED AMMUNITION

BREECH: Rear portion of the barrel which includes the chamber. NOT ALL FIREARM BARRELS INCLUDE THE CHAMBER (E.G. REVOLVERS)

INSTINCT COMBAT SHOOTING: The act of operating a HANDGUN by focusing on the target and instinctively coordinating the hand and mind to cause the HANDGUN to discharge at a time and point that ensures interception of the target with the projectile. Method developed by and term coined by Police Firearms Instructor CHUCK KLEIN. (WHO HAPPENS TO BE THE AUTHOR OF THIS PIECE, AND WHO COINED THE TERM, AND TITLED A BOOK AFTER IT. IT HAS NOT BEEN ADOPTED BY ANYONE ELSE, BASED ON A QUICK GOOGLE SEARCH)

MAGAZINE: Removable part of a pistol (OR RIFLE) which holds cartridges in such a way as to facilitate the chambering of these cartridges during operational functioning.

PISTOL: aka: Autoloader, auto pistol, semi-auto. Any self-loading handgun that is not a revolver. Usually incorporates the chamber as part of the barrel. Requires the manually pulling and releasing of the trigger for each shot. After each shot the recoil “automatically” pushes the slide rearward, ejecting the spent cartridge, cocking the hammer/firing pin and, on the return forward movement, striping a fresh cartridge from the magazine for insertion into the chamber. This action/reaction does not disengage the sear, which can only be done by releasing the trigger. MANY EXCEPTIONS TO CERTAIN ASPETS. NOT ALL PISTOLS ARE SEMI, AND NOT ALL HAVE SLIDES.

POINT BLANK RANGE: Distance so close that appreciable projectile deviation of line of flight is negligible. NO, BECAUSE MANY CARTRIDGES DEVIATE (BULLET DROP) ONLY MINIMALLY OVER HUNDREDS OF FEET OF TRAVEL. POINT BLANK REFERS TO DISTANCES WHERE PRECISE AIMING OF THE GUN IS NOT NEEDED.

RIFLING: Parallel spiral groves cut into the bore to impart spin on the projectile. This spin aids in stabilizing the bullet in flight which greatly improves accuracy. This rifling so marks the bullet as it passes through the bore. These engravings (fingerprints) are unique to that particular bore and bullet. NO, THE RIFLEING IS UNIFORM FROM ONE BARREL TO THE NEXT MADE FROM THE SAME TYPE OF TOOL. ONLY THE TOOL MARKS ARE ARGUABLY UNIQUE.

SLIDE: On semi-automatic or automatic weapons, the movable mechanical device which functions to extract spent cases and insert loaded cartridges. MANY SUCH ARMS HAVE NO SLIDE, BUT INSTEAD AN INTERNAL BOLT THAT RECOPROCATES.

TRAJECTORY: The parabolical path of a projectile in flight from muzzle to impact. IT IS PARABOLIC (NOT “PARABOLICAL”) ONLY IN A VACCUUM. AIR RESISTANCE PLAYS A LARGE PART IN MANY IMPORTANT INSTANCES BEYIND SHORT RANGE, AND YEILD A NON-PARABOLIC FLIGHT PATH.


16 posted on 05/15/2007 2:51:41 PM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Your FRiendly FReeper Patent Attorney (...and another "Constitution-bot"))
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To: harpseal; TexasCowboy; AAABEST; Travis McGee; Squantos; Shooter 2.5; wku man; SLB; ...
Click the Gadsden flag for pro-gun resources!
17 posted on 05/15/2007 2:52:13 PM PDT by Joe Brower (Sheep have three speeds: "graze", "stampede" and "cower".)
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To: litehaus

Those would be the 8 smallest calibres/guages listed, right?


18 posted on 05/15/2007 2:54:18 PM PDT by Mr. Lucky
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To: neverdem

19 posted on 05/15/2007 2:55:57 PM PDT by Gritty (Drastic gun proliferation means no control, accountability, or responsibility-J Vince,fmr ATF Chief)
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To: 38special; Lazamataz

Laz was the owner of that pic, but I see he has been banned. I wonder how he got banned?


20 posted on 05/15/2007 3:04:50 PM PDT by ßuddaßudd (7 days - 7 ways Guero >>> with a floating, shifting, ever changing persona....)
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