Video & Multimedia
Related: About this forumHow dangerous is a bump stock? Very dangerous! Check this video out...
Last edited Thu Mar 29, 2018, 09:20 PM - Edit history (1)
I am not putting this up to be gun porn, but to show how dangerous a bump stock makes an AR. It is for information.
stonecutter357
(12,697 posts)Last edited Fri Mar 30, 2018, 03:09 PM - Edit history (1)
Ohioboy
(3,244 posts)I put it up to show the truth about how these devices work.
Quixote1818
(28,968 posts)I argued my case that it should not have been hidden and was just pointing out how dangerous bump stocks were but I don't think the admins ever pay any attention. No emails or anything suggesting they had reviewed the post or any others that I thought were wrongfully hidden.
SonofDonald
(2,050 posts)I've owned Mini 14's before, regular and ranch rifle.
I've shot an AR-15 before.
This video is for information not gun porn, for me, a gun owner, it was sobering and all I need to be very scared that they exist and can be purchased.
We don't need any more of these made or sold.
That's very near the cyclic rate of the fully automatic version of the weapon, that's why this was posted, to show you these should be outlawed.
Very effective.
stonecutter357
(12,697 posts)I will edit my post ! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWFKCr40YwOZQx8FHU_ZqqQ
Nitram
(22,879 posts)shooting. This was very informative. I for one don't think sticking my head in the sand like an ostrich is the best way to fight for rational gun control. Our arguments carry a lot more weight when we are informed and know exactly what we are talking about. Censorship is for right wingers, knowledge is for liberals. Calling this "gun porn" suggests that the purpose of the video was to extol the virtues of guns. On the contrary, it calmly and clearly explains what a bump stock is, what it does, and provides some information about AR-15's as well. Knowledge is power. Ignorance is for wingnuts.
ret5hd
(20,518 posts)Response to Ohioboy (Original post)
Post removed
stonecutter357
(12,697 posts)mia
(8,362 posts)I've heard it all from my Republican relatives who own these guns. The video never discussed "should it be legal".
Ohioboy
(3,244 posts)People don't seem to understand. I'm not promoting bump stocks! I'm showing how much fire power they give to an AR, virtually turning them into an automatic weapon, something that is illegal otherwise.
mia
(8,362 posts)Perhaps if the maker of the video had addressed what was promoted by the title it would have been more honest.
Ohioboy
(3,244 posts)I hope that helps.
Wash. state Desk Jet
(3,426 posts)The video demonstrates the severity of the issue. It is after all far better to know than it is to think that you know.
essaynnc
(801 posts)So a bump stock turns a semi-automatic into a fully automatic weapon? And why is there a debate about whether they're legal? WTF, o? I say we send this video to every Congress Critter there is. Why is there a question about whether they should be banned?
Ohioboy
(3,244 posts)Ohioboy
(3,244 posts)Do you think I'm promoting bump stocks?
AdamGG
(1,294 posts)It shows the insane level of fully automatic firepower that the bumpstock provides. It's mainly showing how it works without endorsing or disavowing them. It's illegal to sell fully automatic guns, so it's absurd that this device was allowed.
underpants
(182,879 posts)I simple piece of plastic makes that big of a change.
mr_lebowski
(33,643 posts)It's an important component of the system but only one part of the totality. It's a solid base to 'hold' your finger upon, basically 'barring' the trigger ... the gun + bump stock does all the rest in terms of firing the gun.
Anyways, the stock and handle were also replaced by the $400 'bump stock kit'.
With it, you're basically buying a 'spring mechanism' instead of a solid stock with no 'give' in teh semi-auto version. Allowing you to leverage the motion of the gun 'bouncing back' from your shoulder immediately following the natural recoil. So, along with your stationary finger barring the trigger (which keeps throwing itself at your finger due to the spring + shoulder + recoil) that motion becomes a rate of fire that greatly exceeds how fast you can 'pull the trigger yourself.
underpants
(182,879 posts)As you described, instead the shooter pulling the trigger with their finger the trigger bounces off the finger.
Now my question - how well would it work on a non-pistol grip version?
IronLionZion
(45,528 posts)Learning history must have made some DUers want to invade some countries and enslave some people.
Thanks for sharing this informative video. People should ask why this is legal, not why a video about it gets posted to DU.
tblue37
(65,488 posts)Nitram
(22,879 posts)My conservative mother thought Das Kapaital should be banned because it might "corrupt young minds."
apkhgp
(1,068 posts)I learned that a bump stock turns a semi-automatic AR-15 into what amounts to be a machine gun.
First, thanks for posting the video
Secondly, What are the laws on private citizens owning machine guns?
Ohioboy
(3,244 posts)bpj62
(999 posts)That is the first time I have seen an actual demonstration of the bump stock. The guy was clearly caught off guard by how quickly the weapon fired. To clarify some earlier posters the weapon is still firing as a semiautomatic. However the recoil causes the bump stock to pull the trigger at a quicker rate. That piece of equipment needs to be made illegal and it must be removed from any weapons that it is attached to.
Ohioboy
(3,244 posts)It gets right around the law.
mr_lebowski
(33,643 posts)All the bouncing action is much harder to control ... basically makes it great for spray and pray firing into dispersed crowds like LV ... and not much else.
gyroscope
(1,443 posts)what you need is a high rate of fire not accuracy. as the LV massacre has proven a bump stock weapon can take out just as many people in a crowd as any regular fully automatic weapon and therefore is just as deadly.
mentalslavery
(463 posts)needs banned quick...along with other platform modifications. You notice in the video he said that accuracy is compromised...but a way around that is a downward forward grip...
It is basically a handle at the end of the gun below the barrel and toward the front that helps stabilize the recoil....which increases accuracy.
There are a host of other modifications you can add to make it more accurate and tactical. Don't believe the gunners who tell you all of this is just for looks. Every single piece makes a difference and does something...thats why they are designed and customization can run in the 7000 to 10,000 range.
packman
(16,296 posts)BUT - thanks for the info - now I know what a bump stock is and how it functions.
Ohioboy
(3,244 posts)Even he didn't know what to expect from these devices.
ProudLib72
(17,984 posts)1) The AR-15 was $1500. The bump stock was just under $500. To me that sounds like a lot of money, and we haven't got into bullets yet.
2) He was able to walk in to the store, have a background check, and walk out again with an assault rifle. I think this was actually something he stressed but did not comment on to keep people from arguing.
3) The bump stock made an enormous difference!
I get this dude was trying to keep things informational only. He still seemed really surprised by what the bump stock could do.
tblue37
(65,488 posts)do these people who shoot for fun make sure to collect all those bullets? Or do they leave them lyign around and piling up.
AdamGG
(1,294 posts)Because animals get lead poisoning, I think when they eat carcasses of animals that are shot. That was one of the first regulations that Dump undid, because it destroys freedom in 'Murica for the bullets to be made of a different metal.
IronLionZion
(45,528 posts)and never leave any garbage out in nature. Unfortunately there are many irresponsible shitheads also.
Hassin Bin Sober
(26,339 posts)I've been around guns on and off my whole life. People weren't always so militant about referring to a magazine as a clip or a semi-auto as an "auto" -- the semi was always a given.
Now everyone is a SEAL Team 6 wannabe know it all and they feel the need to regale us all with their superior firearms knowledge.
sandensea
(21,664 posts)How weapons of war and accessories like bump stocks are still legal in this country - especially given our recent history - is beyond me.
Of course, even if it were politically feasible to ban them, the fact remains that many gun humpers (the above gentleman excluded) would become far too violent if we were to enact a UK/Australian-style mandatory buyback - even with generous compensation.
We're basically being held hostage by these people.