Would like to make this four barrel shotgun,

as a revolver, with each chamber holding

four rounds, with a total of 7-8 chambers

leaving 28-32 rounds per gun.

 

the primer will hit only one shotgun round,

until all four rounds are depleted,

and the gear will be set to rotate to the

next chamber after this.

 

in-between the chambers will be indentations,

to reduce the weight of the cylinder,

as well as, holes to the side of the

cylinder, leaving the rounds visible

in open view.

 

to reduce further weight, primarily,

wooden shell as foundation and metal layer

will be covered on top of it,

for the components such as the barrel,

cylinder to hold the shape and resistent

to weather, but majority of the weight

focused on the shells... leaving advantages

for accuracy. as with other guns that

may require weight reduction. but

will sacrifice durability. only works

with smaller, but condensed gun such as this.

if applied to an minigun for instance,

not that good for durability. in terms

of costs vs carbon fiber for instance,

advantages. but still smaller components

will need to be fully metal, such as the

trigger that hits the primer, spring, etc.

 

this only works for shotguns, as it

scatters, four barrels side by side,

accuracy isn't sacrificed...

 

and this will be for self-protection...

can i patent this? thinking to make it in my room

as prototype....

 

if one were to ask, what would be the

advantage of this as compared to

single barrel, and single chambers

spread out to 32 rounds...

 

= diameter. smaller the diameter,

higher accuracy, and easy compact carry.

while increasing # of ammunition...

 

XD

 

 

I believe you can give me a firearms development

license based on this design King Charles,

so I can develop my own unique series of guns

and weaponry from my room...