A drum magazine is a type of high-capacity magazine for firearms. Cylindrical in shape, drum magazines store rounds in a spiral around the center of the magazine, facing the direction of the barrel. Drum magazines are contrasted with more common box-type magazines, which have a lower capacity and store rounds flat. The capacity of drum magazines varies, but is generally between 50 and 100 rounds.
History and usage
1800s
The first drum magazine was patented in 1853 by Charles N. Tyler.
1900s
Pistols and rifles
A drum magazine was built for the Luger ; although the Luger usually used an 8-cartridge box magazine, the optional 32-cartridge Schneckenmagazine was also sometimes used. Moubray G. Farquhar and Arthur H. Hill, applied for a British patent for "A New or Improved Cartridge Magazine for Small Arms and Machine Guns" in 1915 for their Farquhar–Hill rifle, and it was accepted in 1919.
Submachine guns
In 1915, the Standschütze Hellriegel M1915, an Austro-Hungarianwater-cooledsubmachine gun, was produced during World War I in very limited prototype numbers. soldier armed with a drum-equipped PPSh-41 marches a German soldier into captivity after the Battle of Stalingrad, 1943. The SovietPPD submachine gun originally designed in 1934 by Vasily Degtyaryov could use either a 35-round box magazine or a 71-round drum magazine, and the latter was most common. The Soviet PPSh-41 submachine gun which replaced the PPD was cheaper and more reliable weapon designed in 1941. It used 7.62×25mm Tokarev ammunition, could use either a 35-round box magazine or a 71-round drum magazine, and the latter was most common. The Thompson submachine gun used a drum magazine in its classic form, but the drum magazines for this weapon were abandoned on the World War II models. The M1921 Thompsons could accommodate either 20-round box magazines or 50-round cylindrical drum magazines; the latter were known as "L drums" because "L" is the Latin numeral for 50. An 100-round "C drum" magazine was available, but weighed more than eight pounds and pushed the total weight of the gun to almost. The M1928 Navy and M1928A1 variants, used by the US Navy and US Marine Corps, could also accept drum magazines, but standard box magazines were more popular due to the drum magazines' weight and tendency to jam.
Machine guns
An example of a machine gun with an optional drum magazine is the MG 42, a 7.92×57mm Mauser general-purpose machine gun designed in Nazi Germany and used extensively by the Wehrmacht and the Waffen-SS during the second half of World War II. Designed to be low-cost and easy to build, the MG 42 proved to be highly reliable and easy to operate. It is most notable for its very high cyclic rate for a gun using full power service cartridges, averaging about 1,200 rounds per minute compared to around 850 for the MG 34, and perhaps 450 to 600 for other common machine guns like the M1919 Browning or Bren.
In the 2010s, drum magazines are manufactured for a variety of firearm platforms, including, among others, the Ruger Mini-14 in.223 caliber; the Kalashnikov rifle and its variants; firearms using STANAG magazines, and the H&K MP-5. Drum magazines once had a reputation for unreliability issues such as feed jams, but technological improvements resulted in better performance, while also reducing their cost. As a result, drum magazines became more common in the civilian market in the United States, although they are far less common than standard, lower-capacity box magazines. As of 2019, about six manufacturers produced drum magazine in the United States, retailing for about $100 each. Manufacturers include KCI USA and Magpul Industries; the latter produces the same drum magazines for both civilian and military use.
Regulation in the United States
Drum magazines have been used in a number of high-profile mass shootings in the United States, fueling calls to ban drum magazines and other high-capacity magazines from civilian use. Drum magazines were used in the shooting massacres in Aurora, Colorado, in 2012; Las Vegas, Nevada in 2017 ; and Dayton, Ohio, in 2019, allowing gunmen to fire dozens of rounds in very short periods of time, without the need to stop to reload. Experts have identified restrictions on high-capacity magazines as a factor that could make mass shooting attacks less deadly. Between 1994 and 2004, the Federal Assault Weapons Ban prohibited new magazines over 10 rounds in the United States. After the expiration of the ban, there is no nationwide prohibition against the possession of drum magazines, which are considered a regulated firearm accessory. However, as of 2019, ten states set a maximum limit on the capacity of magazines, including California, New York, and Colorado, plus the District of Columbia.