Firearmshandout 1
Firearmshandout 1
Firearmshandout 1
Action: The part of a firearm that loads fires, and ejects a cartridge. Includes
lever action, pump action, bolt action, and semi-automatic. The first three are
found in weapons that fire a single shot. Firearms that can shoot multiple
rounds ("repeaters") include all these types of actions, but only the semi-
automatic does not require manual operation between rounds. A truly
"automatic" action is found on a machine gun.
Barrel: The metal tube through which a projectile or shot charge is fired. May
be rifled or smooth.
Base: 1. That portion of a cartridge case which contains the primer, usually
called the head. 2. The rear portion of the bullet.
Black Powder: The old form of gunpowder invented over a thousand years
ago and consisting of nitrate, charcoal, and sulfur.
Bolt: The locking and cartridge head supporting mechanism of some firearm
designs that contains the firing pin, extractor, and sometimes the ejector.
Breech face: The area around the firing pin, which is against the head of the
cartridge or shotshell during firing.
Buckshot: Lead or steel pellets ranging in size from .20” to .36” diameter
normally loaded in shotshells.
Bullet: The projectile. They are shaped or composed differently for a variety
of purposes.
Bullet wipe: The discolored area on the immediate periphery of a bullet hole,
caused by bullet lubricant, lead, smoke, bore debris, or possibly jacket
material.
Caliber: In Firearms, the diameter of the bore measured from land to land,
usually expressed in hundredths of an inch (.22 cal) or in millimeters (9mm).
In ammunition, a naming system that indicates cartridge dimensions as well
as bore diameters, and can be the same as the Firearm caliber.
Cartridge case: The container for all the other components that comprise a
cartridge. Sometimes incorrectly called a shell, shell casing, brass, or a hull.
Centerfire: The cartridge contains the primer in the center of the case head
or base, where it can be struck by the firing pin of the action.
Chamber: The portion of the "action" that holds the cartridge ready for firing.
Cock: Place a firing mechanism (i.e. hammer, or firing pin) under spring
tension prior to firing
Double-action: Pulling the trigger both cocks the hammer and fires the
firearm.
Double barrel: Two barrels side by side or one on top of the other, usually on
a shotgun.
Firing Pin: That part of a firearm mechanism that strikes the primer of a
cartridge to initiate ignition. Also called a striker.
Grip: The handle of a handgun, the portion of the stock to the rear of the
trigger on a long gun.
Gunpowder: Any of various powders used in ammunition as a propellant
charge.
Hammer: A device that strikes the firing pin or cartridge primer to detonate
the powder.
Hammer block: A safety device on some firearms which separates the firing
pin from the hammer except when the trigger is pulled.
Ignition: The way in which powder is ignited. Modern guns use "primers" that
are "rimfire" or "centerfire".
Lands and grooves: Rifling. Lands are the raised portions between the
grooves inside the barrel after the spiral grooves are cut to produce the rifling.
Muzzle: The end of the barrel out of which the bullet comes.
Pyrodex: The trade name of a black powder substitute with similar burning
characteristics, but safer and designed to produce less fouling in the firearm.
Receiver: The basic unit of a firearm which houses the firing and breech
mechanism and to which the barrel and stock are assembled.
Revolver: Handgun that has a cylinder with holes to contain the cartridges.
The cylinder revolves to bring the cartridge into position to be fired. This is
"single-action" when the hammer must be cocked before the trigger can fire
the weapon. It is "double-action" when pulling the trigger both cocks and fires
the gun.
Rifle: A firearm having rifling in the bore and designed to be fired from the
shoulder. Also called a long gun.
Rifling: The spiral grooves cut or swaged inside a gun barrel that gives the
bullet a spinning motion. The metal between the grooves is called a "land".
The spiral can have either a left or right twist.
Rimfire: The cartridge has the primer distributed around the periphery of the
base.
Sights: The device(s) on top of a barrel that allow the gun to be aimed.
Silencer: A device that fits over the muzzle of the barrel to muffle the sound
of a gunshot. Most work by baffling the escape of gases.
Single-action: The hammer must be manually cocked before the trigger can
be pulled to fire the gun.
Stock: A wood, metal, or plastic frame that holds the barrel and action and
allows the gun to be held firmly.
Toolmark, Striated: A tool is placed against an object softer than itself and
with pressure applied the tool is moved across the object producing a scrape
or series of scratches. The parallel surface irregularities produced by this
scraping action are known as a striations.