1 / 108

Chapter 15, Firearms

Chapter 15, Firearms. From left. Chapter 15, Firearms. 50 BMG , 300 Win Mag, .308 Winchester, 7.62x39mm, 5.56x45mm NATO, .22LR. Firearms Demo. http://firearmsid.com/A_featurevideo.htm http://www.barnesbullets.com/information/high-speed-video/

Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 15, Firearms

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 15, Firearms

  2. From left Chapter 15, Firearms 50 BMG, 300 Win Mag, .308 Winchester, 7.62x39mm, 5.56x45mm NATO, .22LR

  3. Firearms Demo http://firearmsid.com/A_featurevideo.htm http://www.barnesbullets.com/information/high-speed-video/ http://www.barnesbullets.com/information/high-speed-video/

  4. Firearms Demo • The rifle is chambered for the .577 Tyrannosaurus Rex.  • According to reloading data, the 13.6 pound rifle • At a velocity approaching 2600 fps for a muzzle energy of over 11000 foot-pounds.  • This energy is comparable to that of the US military's .50 BMG cartridge frequently used as a heavy machinegun and anti-material rifle.

  5. Firearms: DC Sniper case Discussion • What Forensic evidence can be obtained from firearms? • October 2-October 22. 2002 • 14 acts of violence • 10 killed • 3 injured • 1 assault on a Michaels craft store window

  6. Firearms: DC Sniper case • Forensic evidence obtained • October 2-October 22 • 14 acts of violence • DNA, (Multiple Sources) • Casings • Projectile Fragments • Projectiles • Later used to confirm • semiautomatic .223-caliber firearm

  7. John Allen Muhammad, 41 Born John Allen Williams Found guilty, received the death penalty his execution by lethal injection on November 10, 2009. John Lee Malco, 17 Life without parole Firearms: DC Sniper case http://www.biography.com/notorious/index.jsp

  8. John Allen Muhammad, 41 Mildred Muhammad, the sniper's second ex-wife and the mother of three of his children, told CNN on Monday that she last saw him in 2001 at a custody hearing and had not sought to visit him in prison. "I had emotionally detached from John when I asked him for a divorce," she told CNN. "And my emotions were severed when he said that you have become my enemy and as my enemy, I will kill you.“ She has asserted that she was her ex-husband's target, and she blamed the first Gulf War for changing his personality. Firearms: DC Sniper case

  9. Gun Safety Rules • ALWAYS keep the gun pointed in a safe direction. • ALWAYS keep your finger off the trigger until ready to shoot. • ALWAYS keep the gun unloaded until ready to use.

  10. Chapter 15, Firearms http://www.barnesbullets.com/information/high-speed-video/

  11. Firearms Chapter 15 Outline What is Firearm Identification? • Three basic Rules of Firerarm Safety • What is Ballistics • Bullet Comparisons, • Types • Caliber • Anatomy of a bullet • Cartridge Cases • Firearms • Types • Anatomy • Automated Firearms Search System • National Integrated Ballistic Information Network (NIBIN) • Gunpowder residue • Primer residue • Serial Number Restoration

  12. What is Ballistics? • Ballistics: is the study of bullets and firearms • Firearm: a weapon capable of firing a projectile.

  13. What evidence does Firearms Identification provide? • . • . • . • . • . • .

  14. What evidence does Firearms Identification provide? • Comparison of bullets • Identification of varying weapon types • Restoration of obliterated serial numbers • Detection and characterization of gunpowder residues (garments and wounds) • Estimation of muzzle to target distance and angle from target • Powder residues of hands

  15. Types of Bullet Primers • Rim Fire • Center Fire

  16. Comparison of bullets

  17. The Bullet.

  18. Parts of a Bullet Animation http://www.firearmsid.com/vcm/cult3d/sabot_rifle.htm\

  19. The 50 BMG 50 BMG, 22LR

  20. Comparison of bullets http://www2.huntercourse.com/canada/PrinceEdwardIsland/education/?chapter=2&page=4

  21. How a Centerfire Cartridge is Fired http://www2.huntercourse.com/canada/PrinceEdwardIsland/education/?chapter=2&page=5

  22. Types of Bullets • Frangible Bullets • Non-Expanding Bullets • Expanding Bullets History: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMU5p0dkjtA&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E_1dUZJWdbY&feature=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1 Solving the black powered http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEvCRjLHGWA&feature=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1 3/5 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEvCRjLHGWA&feature=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1 4/5 Jacketed rounds: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xb0r9_Jpe3w&feature=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QMU5p0dkjtA&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1

  23. Types of Bullets • Armor Piercing • Blanks: • Blended-Metal: • Frangible: • Incendiary: • Lead: • Less Lethal, or Less than Lethal: Rubber bullets, plastic bullets, and beanbags • Jacketed Lead: • Full metal jacket bullets or Ball bullet • Soft points or hollow point bullets • Steel bullets • Non Toxic: • Practice: • Solid • Tracer:

  24. Frangibles • Frangible bullets break up into very small pieces upon impact with the target or the background. The penetration of this type of bullet is limited and the inflicted damage is typically near the surface of the target. They are the safest type of bullet to use in semi-populated areas, as the risk of ricochet is minimized.

  25. Non-Expanding Bullets • Non-expanding (FMJ) bullets typically retain their general shape as the bullet penetrates and passes through target. • The penetration of this type of bullet is usually much greater than frangible or expanding bullets because the frontal area of a non-expanding bullet does not increase as it penetrates. • Since the wound channel is typically much narrower than that of an expanding bullet, the damage caused by a non-expanding bullet is usually much less, and quick kills on deer size game are rare. • For this reason non-expanding FMJ bullets are illegal for big game hunting almost everywhere in North America. • In round nose form they are favored by some African hunters for use on the largest and toughest game, principally on elephant and rhino, where very deep penetration against heavy hide and bone is required.

  26. Expanding Bullets • Expanding or "controlled expansion" bullets are designed to deform or "mushroom" as the bullet penetrates and passes through the target. • Expanding bullets are the most complex and difficult type of bullet to design, and also the most useful and numerous type of bullet. • Almost all big game hunting bullets are of the expanding type. The penetration of an expanding bullet may be measured in inches or feet, depending (among other things) on the bullet's design, the bullet's sectional density, the expansion medium the bullet hits, and how fast it is traveling when it hits the expansion medium. • Expanding bullets are normally used to humanely kill animals greater than approximately 30 pounds in weight by creating significant tissue damage as the bullet passes through the animal. Expanding bullets are generally constructed to (ideally) mushroom to approximately twice their initial diameter as the bullet passes through soft to firm tissue, such as skin, fat, muscle, small bones, and internal organs. The objective is to cause catastrophic damage to vital organs, especially the heart and lungs, so that the animal dies as quickly as possible.

  27. Terminal ballistics testing of hollow-point bullets is generally performed in ballistic gelatin, or some other medium intended to simulate tissue and cause a hollow-point bullet to expand.

  28. Armor Piercing • An armor-piercing shell must withstand the shock of punching through armor plating. Shells designed for this purpose have a greatly strengthened case with a specially hardened and shaped nose, and a much smaller bursting charge.

  29. is a bullet consisting soft core (usually made of lead) encased in a shell of harder metal, such as gilding metal, cupronickel or less commonly a steel alloy. This shell can extend around all of the bullet, or often just the front and sides with the rear left as exposed lead. (A bullet that is completely enclosed by the shell is termed a total metal jacket round.) The jacket allows for higher muzzle velocities than bare lead without depositing significant amounts of metal in the bore. It also prevents damage to bores from steel or armor-piercing core materials. Full metal jacket (or FMJ)

  30. Caliber vs. Millimeter bore

  31. Understanding Caliber • Caliber is simply a unit of measurement of the diameter of the bullet using inches. .45 caliber means .45 inches wide. On the other hand, mm is the metric system measurement. 9mm means 9 millimeters wide. To convert use 1 inch = 25mm. • ".38 special" measure .356-.357" and a 9mm measures .355" instead of .354".

  32. Always match the data

  33. 38 Caliber and 44 Caliber

  34. Types of firearms • Handguns • Black Powder • Revolvers • Semi/Automatic • Rifles • Black Powder • Bolt Action • Semi Automatic • Fully Automatic • Shotguns

  35. Firearm Anatomy

  36. Rifle Anatomy • Stock • Action • Sight • Magazine • Trigger Guard • Barrel • Muzzle http://www2.huntercourse.com/canada/PrinceEdwardIsland/education/?chapter=1&page=3#1

  37. Shotgun Parts

  38. Semi-auto rifle

  39. Bullets travel far! Always make

  40. Shotguns • Gauge One of the earliest ways to designate the size of the bore of a gun was to figure how many bullets for it could be made from a pound of lead. Since at that time all bullets were roundballs of lead, this made a good standard. • In time this designation of 'balls to the pound' became synonymous with gauge, so that what our forefathers called '28 to the pound', we now call '28 gauge'. • The British commonly used the term 'bore' for 'gauge', so their '28 bore' is the same as '28 gauge' or '28 balls to the pound'. Knowing that there are 7000 grains in a pound, we can simply divide 7000 by 28 and see that 28 gauge balls weigh 250 grains each. • If we measure one of those balls, we see that it is .550 inches in diameter. In modern usage that is the same as '.55 caliber'. The same relationship holds true for any size bore, of course.

  41. Gauge sizing

  42. Shotguns Gauge / Caliber Weight/gr. Balls/lb. 8 . 835 875 10 . 776 700 12 . 730 583 13 . 710 538 14 . 693 500 16 . 663 438 20 . 615 350 24 . 579 292 28 . 550 250

  43. Shotguns vs Rifles The major difference between the two is Barrel rifling. Rifles are, Shotguns are NOT Grooves purposely scribed into the barrel of the rifle to induce spin which increases accuracy

  44. The Barrel rifling

  45. Rifling http://www2.huntercourse.com/canada/PrinceEdwardIsland/education/?chapter=2&page=7

  46. Rifling Terminology: • Bore: the interior of the firearm barrel • Barrel drilling leaves behind irregular marks • Rifling: spiral grooves that are formed in the boring of a barrel, designed to produce projectile spin • Produces • grooves • lands

  47. Striations

  48. Markings on Casing Lands and Grooves Firing Pin Ejector

  49. Firearm IdentificationBullet Comparisons • Lands - In a rifled barrel, the raised spiral ribs left between the grooves in the bore.  This is the part of the barrel that actually engraves the bullet, imparts the spin to the bullet, and ultimately stabilizes the bullet. • Rate Of Twist - In a barrel, the length over which the rifling grooves make one complete twist ( i.e. the length of the bore used to turn the bullet one full revolution ) e.g. 1:10 or one revolution in 10 inches. Differs from caliber to caliber. • Bullet weight must be appropriate to the rate of twist or bullets will not stabilize in flight. The heavier the bullet, thus the longer, the faster the twist rate must be.

  50. Lands and Grooves

More Related