Like, could you make a smaller version of a 1911 that fires 22lr instead of .45 by just scaling all the parts to the 22lr?

  • @[email protected]
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    421 day ago

    Short answer no, not everything scales linearly.

    You’d have 1/8th the powder charge in a chamber with 1/8th the volume, encased by a barrel 1/2 as thick to contain the same pressure as the full size one.

  • partial_accumen
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    241 day ago

    If you’re talking about actually scaling, like a CAD drawing, then no.

    If you’re talking most of the appearance and function, then yes! There is a scale model of a Browning M2 machine gun (which normally fires 50 cal ammo) that fires 22lr instead. It will set you back about $20,000.

    • @Postmortal_PopOP
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      41 day ago

      I’m mostly thinking appearance and function, I recognize that rim fire 22lr is absolutely not going to work in a center fire without some sort of conversion.

      • partial_accumen
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        51 day ago

        There is a whole youtube rabbit hole you can go down showing videos of miniature versions of larger (larger caliber) guns. The smallest I saw was “replica” Civil War Navy revolver that the whole gun was about 6cm long. It was a functional gun that had a powder charge with a projectile.

  • @NeoNachtwaechter
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    81 day ago

    all the parts

    Your finger remains the same. Do you really want a half size trigger?

    • @Postmortal_PopOP
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      424 hours ago

      I’ll have you know I have the daintiest hands. Lol

  • @[email protected]
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    131 day ago

    More changes would be needed than direct uniform scaling - .22lr is rimfire, whereas .45acp is centerfire, for example, and their aspect ratios are different. The mass and strength of uniformly scaled-down parts also might not match the recoil and pressure provided by the smaller round, and might result in failure to reliably cycle the action or the gun bursting if the mismatch is too much.

    • @shalafi
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      81 day ago

      I have an easily swapable bolt that let’s my AR-15 shoot .22LR. Pretty nifty, though not quite as accurate since the bullet is .003 thinner.

      • RandomStickman
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        31 day ago

        I have never considered shooting a .22 out of a .223 barrel as a possibility. Very nifty!

        • @shalafi
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          21 day ago

          Got this one. Only one on the market I know of.

          https://cmmg.com/22lr-ar-conversion-kit-bravo-w-3-magazines-blk

          Same bolt came in my Han Solo pistol.

          It’s worked surprisingly well in the past, but I just put a heavy (H3) weight in to reduce recoil, probably won’t cycle .22LR any longer. And BTW, that heavy weight is a dream! My wife’s friend brought his stock AR to our camp and I was shocked how much harder it kicked.

          • @[email protected]
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            3 hours ago

            The cmmg kits don’t actually move the buffer at all, the bolt cycles entirely in the chamber, so your H3 buffer shouldn’t effect it. I actually have a dedicated .22 pistol upper on a lower without any buffer tube at all for compact plinking and it works great. I might have to print up a han solo lower though, that looks amazing.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 day ago

      To clarify for the OP, these don’t generally scale down the whole gun. Caliber conversions can be as simple as swapping the bolt.

      You can also sometimes swap to a larger caliber. They make ‘conversion kits’ for the AR-15 that are functionally just most of a new gun. You can get those for a variety of calibers from 7.62x39 to .50 Beowulf.

  • Snailpope
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    51 day ago

    Browning makes a 1911 in .380, it’s an 80% scale of a .45 1911.

    • @Postmortal_PopOP
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      21 day ago

      I am aware of conversion kits and the like, I’m more interested in the idea of using mechanisms and designs for something else.