<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0"><channel><title><![CDATA[Machine Gun: The Weapon That Remade Modern Warfare]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p dir="auto">Long article, so there's a lot to pull from here. This is the kind of history that actually explains why the firearms and tactics we take for granted exist in the first place — worth understanding if you spend any time thinking seriously about how guns work and why they're designed the way they are.</p>
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<p dir="auto">The key insight was using recoil energy — the same rearward force that kicks a rifle back into a shooter's shoulder — to do the mechanical work of cycling the action.</p>
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<p dir="auto">Every time you run a semi-auto pistol or rifle, you're shooting Maxim's idea. He looked at wasted energy and turned it into a mechanical solution — that's the same principle in your Glock, your AR, your M1A. Most shooters just never connect the dots back to a guy in a London workshop in 1883.</p>
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<p dir="auto">Whatever happens, we have got / The Maxim gun, and they have not. — Hilaire Belloc</p>
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<p dir="auto">Belloc meant it as satire, but the military establishments of the day read it as policy. The same arrogance that sent 60,000 British soldiers into German MG 08 fire on July 1, 1916, had been building for twenty years while the lessons from Africa were being filed and ignored.</p>
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<p dir="auto">By 1917, 90 percent of German small arms ammunition was going into machine guns — the weapon had restructured the entire logi</p>
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<p dir="auto">That's the tactical reality hiding inside a logistics number. The rifle became a secondary weapon. Everything — supply chains, unit organization, assault doctrine — reorganized itself around one weapon system. When a single platform reshapes how an entire military thinks about movement and fire, you're looking at something that mattered.</p>
<p dir="auto">The article mentions that the Maxim's early air-cooled variant overheated after about 400 rounds and was a commercial failure — only 135 built — while Browning's gas-operated M1895 was moving in a more practical direction at the same time. Two different engineers, two different solutions, and the gas-operated approach is what we're still running in most modern rifles.</p>
<p dir="auto">That design fork between recoil-operated and gas-operated systems is still very much alive. You feel it every time you compare how a Browning Hi-Power cycles versus how your AR runs.</p>
<p dir="auto"><strong>Discussion question:</strong> If you've fired a water-cooled or crew-served weapon at a shoot — even just an old Vickers or M1919 at a machine gun event — how did sustained fire change how you thought about heat management compared to your semi-auto range guns?</p>
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<p dir="auto"><strong><a href="https://boisegunclub.com/handbook/machine-gun-history-development-impact" rel="nofollow ugc">Read the full article in The Handbook →</a></strong> | By The Boise Gun Club Team</p>
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