Originally posted by: OUCaptain
I say if it's to be pointed at people, it's a gun. If it's to be pointed at objects, it's a cannon.
Originally posted by: destrekor
Originally posted by: OUCaptain
I say if it's to be pointed at people, it's a gun. If it's to be pointed at objects, it's a cannon.
Many cannons can use a variety of shells, and some are destined for groups of people, such as shells that contain copious quantities of shot.
edit: then again, a cannon is a gun, but a gun isn't necessarily a cannon.Although in military terms, saying 'gun' is referencing a cannon of some sort, be it on a tank, towed artillery, or naval ship. Typically, hand-held firearms aren't referred to as guns, but rather, as the type of firearm it is, be it rifle, pistol, machine gun, etc etc. At least, around the types I've been around that's how it is.
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Originally posted by: Spartan Niner
They all do what they're meant to do. Does it matter what you call death?
Originally posted by: SagaLore
I thought the difference is that a gun uses bullets with have the explosive material attached to them, where as a cannon uses projectiles with the means of firing them managed by the cannon?
Originally posted by: keird
capable of 'splodey bullets = cannon?
Originally posted by: uclaLabrat
Originally posted by: keird
capable of 'splodey bullets = cannon?
This. Cannon shells blow up, normal bullets don't. Major difference between machine guns and cannon on aircraft, anyway.
And then there are mortars.Originally posted by: EarthwormJim
Originally posted by: uclaLabrat
Originally posted by: keird
capable of 'splodey bullets = cannon?
This. Cannon shells blow up, normal bullets don't. Major difference between machine guns and cannon on aircraft, anyway.
Not all canon shells blow up.
Originally posted by: Gibsons
And then there are mortars.Originally posted by: EarthwormJim
Originally posted by: uclaLabrat
Originally posted by: keird
capable of 'splodey bullets = cannon?
This. Cannon shells blow up, normal bullets don't. Major difference between machine guns and cannon on aircraft, anyway.
Not all canon shells blow up.
Originally posted by: TehMac
Its the side of the caliber: for example, a 50 .Cal machine gun is 12.7mm--thats a machine gun. Cannons become cannons I'd say when its around 17mm or higher, because thats when you can put incendiary and explosive rounds in them that really perk up a firefight.
The most common caliber for a cannon (a modern autocannon) is around 20mm. After that its 20mm, 25mm, 30mm, 37mm. There could be a variety of calibers in between these, but those are the more common ones.
