Faun
Diamond Member
- Nov 14, 2011
- 125,906
- 90,844
- 3,635
What a pity you just can’t stop lying. <smh>Presumably, you’re just as capable of using a dictionary as I am. You don’t need me to look up words for you. The rest of your deflection is irrelevant since you already admitted that a bump stock increases rate of fire.45 is the effective rate of fire. It’s not a limit.Why specify any number?Great, now show me where the word, “limit,” appears.....
If the rate of fire of an automatic rifle was listed as 800 rounds per minute do you think it could fire faster?
There is no set rate of fire for any semiautomatic weapon the rate of fire is simple one shot per trigger pull or IOW as fast as the trigger can be pulled.
and I'll say it again
BUMP STOCKS DO NOT INCREASE THE RATE OF FIRE BECAUSE ANY SEMIAUTOMATIC RIFLE CAN BE BUMP FIRED WITHOUT THE USE OF A BUMP STOCK
Backpedal harder!
Effective?
Define effective?
and just keep ignoring the fact that
BUMP STOCKS DO NOT INCREASE THE RATE OF FIRE BECAUSE ANY SEMIAUTOMATIC RIFLE CAN BE BUMP FIRED WITHOUT THE USE OF A BUMP STOCK
No I said it increases the rate of the trigger pull. But it does not increase it so as to make the gun an automatic weapon.
I already said the bump stock didn’t make it an automatic weapon, so that’s a non point. And since it increases the speed of a trigger pull, that increases how quickly rounds can be discharged, i.e., increasing the rate of fire.