I don't have a good sense of scale with this model but if the barrels are any indication it seems 'VERY' small (the price seems to reflect this - it's more of a microgun than a minigun). You also lose fire-rate with a side crank (which is why they were removed around 1877 to the back - less gearing, less jams, and more dependable with all the recoil shaking components like a jackhammer).
A drum magazine might work but that one depicted would be emptied in .25 seconds or less - not even remotely continuous fire for at least 4 seconds. It'd have to be drum or feed-belt for a reasonable throw.
Another issue (for all the models) is aiming while cranking. I 'may' have a solution to that. Manual-fireing didn't specify whether it was hand or foot powered. A pedal would allow the hands free for aiming. Granted you have to screw with gearing or a flywheel extending from the back to the floor as a separate module - but the foot should make up the fire rate. Instead of 'sewing' machine it'd be a 'mowing' machine.
One last thing I noticed - 90 days notice for ordering. Those are fabricated on a per-order basis. I'd be worried about their spare parts stock. I do like the ammo type tho.
I don't have a good sense of scale with this model but if the barrels are any indication it seems 'VERY' small (the price seems to reflect this - it's more of a microgun than a minigun). You also lose fire-rate with a side crank (which is why they were removed around 1877 to the back - less gearing, less jams, and more dependable with all the recoil shaking components like a jackhammer).
A drum magazine might work but that one depicted would be emptied in .25 seconds or less - not even remotely continuous fire for at least 4 seconds. It'd have to be drum or feed-belt for a reasonable throw.
Another issue is aiming while cranking. I 'may' have a solution to that. Manual-fireing didn't specify whether it was hand or foot powered. A pedal would allow the hands free for aiming. Granted you have to screw with gearing or a flywheel extending from the back to the floor as a separate module - but the foot should make up the fire rate. Instead of 'sewing' machine it'd be a 'mowing' machine.
One last thing I noticed - 90 days notice for ordering. Those are fabricated on a per-order basis. I'd be worried about their spare parts stock. I do like the ammo type tho.
I don't have a good sense of scale with this model but if the barrels are any indication it seems 'VERY' small (the price seems to reflect this - it's more of a microgun than a minigun). You also lose fire-rate with a side crank (which is why they were removed around 1877 to the back - less gearing, less jams, and more dependable with all the recoil shaking components like a jackhammer).
A drum magazine might work but that one depicted would be emptied in .25 seconds or less - not even remotely continuous fire for at least 4 seconds. It'd have to be drum or feed-belt for a reasonable throw.
Another issue is aiming while cranking. I 'may' have a solution to that. Manual-fireing didn't specify whether it was hand or foot powered. A pedal would allow the hands free for aiming. Granted you have to screw with gearing or a flywheel extending from the back to the floor as a separate module - but the foot should make up the fire rate. Instead of 'sewing' machine it'd be a 'mowing' machine.
One last thing I noticed - 90 days notice for ordering. Those are fabricated on a per-order basis. I'd be worried about their spare parts stock.
I don't have a good sense of scale with this model but if the barrels are any indication it seems 'VERY' small. You also lose fire-rate with a side crank (which is why they were removed around 1877 to the back - less gearing, less jams, and more dependable with all the recoil shaking components like a jackhammer).
A drum magazine might work but that one depicted would be emptied in .25 seconds. It'd have to be drum or feed-belt.
Another issue is aiming while cranking. I 'may' have a solution to that. Manual-fireing didn't specify whether it was hand or foot powered. A pedal would allow the hands free for aiming. Granted you have to screw with gearing or a flywheel extending from the back to the floor as a separate module - but the foot should make up the fire rate. Instead of 'sewing' machine it'd be a 'mowing' machine.
One last thing I noticed - 90 days notice for ordering. Those are fabricated on a per-order basis. I'd be worried about their spare parts stock.