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They worked pretty darn well from what I've read.
#Mac 10 9mm high capacity mac#
The suppressors you mention I think are the original style Sionics type 2 stage units, originally sold with the MAC guns. If you mean it is shaped like a golf ball on the end of the suppressor tube, it could be done, but I've not seen one. If you mean no larger than a golf ball in total, you might not find one, as I don't know there would be enough volume inside the ball shape to allow the hot gasses to expand and cool before exiting to make it an effective suppressor. If you also are aware of any manufacturer that produces a suppressor that looks like a "golf ball" at the muzzle, then if you could point me in the right direction (the ones I have seen look cylindrical and of two thicknesses). I did that one time, and then rolled my own as well while living there! I think I paid something like 3 quid for a 10-pack, which was about $6US. Smokes are so expensive there, they sell Marlboros in 10-packs. *edit* - Yes, it sure looks like he is burning a hooter while blasting away, but not so! It is a plain cigarette, but he rolls his own, as many over there do that is Old Holborn (old hob) tobacco rolled in a Rizla blue. Here is a vid (3MB) of a mate of mine (the fellow from Hammersmith) from last summer shooting and it shows the MAC running out of ammo. The C reg plate you'll spot was brought back in 2003 from Hammersmith/Fulham, pulled from a RHD MK2 Jetta while I was there
#Mac 10 9mm high capacity full#
The video starts with full selected, and I switch it between semi and full and also cock and dry fire the gun to show what an empty bolt sounds like and the way the click is louder in semi. It is an original Military Armament Corp (MAC). Here, I made this video (8MB avi) to show the kinds of noises the trigger makes in each mode. If there is any video or audio showing how loud this click would be then if you know of it I'd be grateful.
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Oh and there would be no rate change for the sound whether semi or auto.Ĭurious: What are you doing the research for? Are you a game designer perhaps? Looking at some diagrams of how this works would simplify all this greatly. released the bolt on an empty magazine the sound would be different, and generally louder as you are releasing the stored energy from the spring(s) on the bolt and or hammer, compared to simply pulling the trigger of a gun not in a cocked or charged state. It's not like there's a flywheel or electrical motor to continue to make a clicking sound if one were to hold the trigger down on a firearm that has been emptied (auto or semi).īut it should also be noted that the first time you either 1. Look at it this way: Guns have springs and mechanical trip mechanisms that hold energy to be released with the trigger. This sound would not be continuous (and at the same rate as when on auto), but only each time you pulled the trigger, it would produce a "click". If I understand what you are all all saying, if it is set to semi-automatic or automatic, it will only keep clicking if you keep pulling the trigger.
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