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History of Weapons: Hiram Maxim’s Self-Loading Rifle Came Before his Machine Gun

Posted on 3 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

HR PAT

In 1883 Hiram Maxim designed a unique system that harnessed the recoil of a rifle. Maxim filed a patent for this system which, when the U.S. government granted it in April 1884, became his first firearm design patent — a year before his now-famous machine-gun concept patent.

To prove his ideas about using recoil to operate a firearm, Maxim modified a Winchester 1866 lever action rifle. He removed the rifle’s lever and installed a floating butt plate attached to a spring buffer system that in turn linked to a proprietary trigger guard and operating rod, which then operated the action through a series of jointed levers in the receiver.

 

Maxim explained that he meant for the system to feature in “heavy-loaded rifles such as are used for military purposes” that “rebound with great force and often do injury to the shoulder of the person firing.”

When the rifle fired, it would recoil back into the butt plate, compressing the two springs in the stock that act on the trigger guard, pushing it forward and acting on a lever that then worked the rifle’s bolt. This extracted the spent case and loaded another, readying the rifle to fire again.

Maxim believed that his system would allow rifles to be “fired with great accuracy and rapidity.” In his patent, Maxim also hinted at the possibility of rapid automatic fire, which would become a reality with his later machine-gun designs. If the shooter presses “steadily upon the trigger,” Maxim wrote, “the full contents of the magazine will be rapidly discharged.”

Maxim’s “Mechanism for Operating Gun-locks by Recoil” was little more than a proof-of-concept and the design he included in his patent — although ingenious — was far from practical or ergonomic.

Still, Maxim had high hopes for recoil operation, proclaiming in the patent that the system could “operate equally well on any arm of the kind, or upon a revolver.” This proved to be prophetic, as over the next decade other designers would harness the power of recoil to cycle the actions of both rifles and pistols.

In the meantime Maxim continued work on the design that would soon make him famous — the Maxim machine gun.

This story originally appeared at Historical Firearms.

Read the Story as it Appears Here at War is Boring

7 thoughts on “History of Weapons: Hiram Maxim’s Self-Loading Rifle Came Before his Machine Gun”

  1. Grandtrines says:
    4 March 2016 at 00:15

    Reblogged this on Debatable News: Mainstream to Tinfoil Hat and more.

  2. Pingback: History of Weapons: Hiram Maxim’s Self-Loading Rifle Came Before his Machine Gun | Rifleman III Journal
  3. Lisa the Infidel says:
    4 March 2016 at 06:00

    Reblogged this on The way I see things … and commented:
    Weapons history — not boring at all!

  4. Hammerhead says:
    4 March 2016 at 06:08

    Again Lisa, you prove that not all 21st Century women are feminist, left-wing snobs! Keep up the good work!!

  5. Lisa the Infidel says:
    4 March 2016 at 06:15

    🙂 I know a lot of women like me – we are well-armed, loving mothers (grand-mothers), physically able and need a good strong man – and certainly want HIM to take the trash out he he

  6. Hammerhead says:
    4 March 2016 at 06:20

    🙂 AWESOME. Teach the Next generation these same values!!

  7. Lisa the Infidel says:
    4 March 2016 at 06:38

    Yes sir my daughter is a Conservative Woman and my grandson is – MJP III #POTUS2052 I am proud that my boys have grown to be MEN – frugal preppers at that he he

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