@@mrmelon115 An AR-15-style rifle is any lightweight semi-automatic rifle based on or similar to the Colt AR-15 design. The original ArmaLite AR-15, its predecessor, was a scaled-down derivative of Eugene Stoner's ArmaLite AR-10 design and featured selective fire. ArmaLite sold the patent and trademarks to Colt's Manufacturing Company in 1959, resulting in the Colt AR-15, which removed the selective fire feature. After most of the patents for the Colt AR-15 expired in 1977, many firearm manufacturers began to produce copies of the Colt AR-15 under various names. While the patents are expired, Colt retained the trademark of the AR-15 name and is the sole manufacturer able to label their firearms as AR-15.[1] The Federal Assault Weapons Ban restricted the sale of the Colt AR-15 and some derivatives in the United States from 1994 to 2004, although it did not affect rifles with fewer listed features.[2][3] After the term modern sporting rifles was coined in 2009 by the US National Shooting Sports Foundation, a firearms trade association, it was quickly adopted by much of the industry.[4][5] In the 2010s, AR-15-style rifles became one of the "most beloved and most vilified rifles" in the United States, according to The New York Times; the rifles have gained infamy due in part to their use in high-profile mass shootings.[6] Promoted as "America's rifle" by the National Rifle Association, their popularity is partially attributable to active restrictions, or proposals to ban or restrict them.[7][8][9] Terminology[edit] A common misconception is that "AR" is an acronym for "assault rifle" or "automatic rifle",[10][11][12] perhaps because of the weapon's inclusion in the Federal Assault Weapons Ban in 1994, or because the ArmaLite AR-15 was originally designed to replace the M14 rifle in the Vietnam War.[13] The "AR" in AR-15 actually stands for "ArmaLite Rifle",[14] and "AR-15" is most-commonly used to refer only to the civilian semi-automatic variants of the rifle which lack the fully automatic function.[15] 1973 Colt AR-15 SP1 rifle with 'slab side' lower receiver (lacking raised boss around magazine release button) and original Colt 20-round box magazine The AR-15 is closely related to the military M16 and M4 Carbine rifles, which all share the same core design. Invented by infantry rifle designer Eugene Stoner in 1956 for use in the 7.62 NATO caliber ArmaLite AR-10 battle rifle, the design features a gas-operated, rotating bolt combined with an integral piston (instead of a conventional direct impingement, operating system), and was patented under U.S. Patent 2,951,424.[16][17] A lighter weight selective fire variant of the AR-10 was designed in 1958 for military use and designated the ArmaLite model 15, or AR-15.[18][13] Due to financial problems and limitations in terms of manpower and production capacity, ArmaLite sold the AR-15 and AR-10 designs and trademarks to Colt in 1959.[19] In 1964, Colt began selling its own version with an improved semi-automatic design known as the Colt AR-15.[20] After Colt's patents expired in 1977, an active marketplace emerged for other manufacturers to produce and sell their own semi-automatic AR-15 style rifles.[1] Some versions of the AR-15 were classified as "assault weapons" and banned under the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act in 1994 within the United States. This act expired in 2004.[2][21] In 2009, the term "modern sporting rifle" was coined by the National Shooting Sports Foundation for its survey that year as a marketing term used by the firearms industry to describe modular semi-automatic rifles including AR-15s.[22][4][23][15] Today, nearly every major firearm manufacturer produces its own generic AR-15 style rifle.[24][23] As Colt continues to own and use the AR-15 trademark for its line of AR-15 variants, other manufacturers must use their own model numbers and names to market their AR-15 style rifles for commercial sale.[25] Under US law, when manufactured with a barrel length less than 16 inches (41 cm) and without a shoulder stock, it is legally considered a pistol as opposed to being a short-barreled rifle,[26] and is described as an AR-15 style pistol. The lower receiver alone is legally defined as a firearm under United States federal law. However, this definition may be questionable due to several court rulings (or government dismissals to avoid rulings) that the AR-15 lower receiver does not match the legal definition in 27 CFR § 479.11,[27][28][29] though a 2021 case from the Eighth Circuit found otherwise.[30] Modularity and customization[edit] While most earlier breech-loading rifles had a single receiver housing both the trigger and reloading mechanism, an innovative feature of the AR-15 was modular construction to simplify substitution of parts and avoid need for arsenal facilities for most repairs of malfunctioning military rifles.[31] A distinctive two-part receiver is used by both military and sporting AR-15 style rifles. As civilian ownership of AR-15 style rifles became sufficient to create a market for improvements, numerous manufacturers began producing aftermarket parts-including parts with features not found on basic AR-15 rifles, and individuals with basic mechanical aptitude can often substitute these pieces for original equipment without needing a gunsmith. Due to the vast assortment of aftermarket parts and accessories available, AR-15 style rifles have also been referred to as "the Swiss Army knife of rifles",[32] "Barbie Dolls for Guys",[33][34] or "LEGOs for adults".[35][36][37] These more or less interchangeable modules are a defining characteristic of AR-15 style rifles.[38] A stripped lower receiver, one that is lacking the additional parts included in a completed lower receiver, is the only part of an AR-15 style rifle that needs to be transferred through a federally licensed firearms dealer under United States federal law.[39] Lower receivers may be bought "stripped"-a single solid part and legally a firearm in the United States, albeit nonfunctional, with no fire control group or lower parts kit installed. End users may install their own choice of fire control group and lower parts kit. A completed lower receiver, compared to a stripped lower receiver, may be visually distinguished by the trigger guard ahead of the detachable pistol grip, and behind the magazine well capable of holding detachable magazines. The lower receiver holds the trigger assembly including the hammer, and is the attachment point for the buttstock. The lower receiver is attached to the upper receiver by two removable pins. Disassembly for cleaning or repair of malfunctions requires disengaging these pins from the upper receiver. Releasing the rear take-down pin allows the receiver to be opened by rotation around the forward pivot pin as a hinge.[31] The upper receiver contains the bolt carrier assembly and is attached to the barrel assembly. Sights may be attached to the upper receiver or the barrel assembly. A handguard usually encloses the barrel and is attached to the upper receiver, and depending on the handguard, also attached to the barrel's gas block.[31] Folding stocks[edit] AR-15 style rifles may have folding or collapsible stocks which reduce the overall length of the rifle when folded, although some designs of the stock folding device may not allow the firearm to be fired until unfolded, or only fire once until unfolded.[40] A few manufacturers have made full upper receivers,[41] or even "bufferless" bolt carrier systems where the buffer system is wholly contained in the upper receiver, and therefore does not use the buffer tube, which allows for firing while the stock is in the folded position, or removal of the stock altogether.[42] Gas systems[edit] The standard design includes a gas block and tube to vent burnt powder gas back into the bolt carrier assembly where it expands in a variable volume chamber forcing the bolt open to eject the spent cartridge case. The buffer spring in the buttstock then pushes the bolt closed after picking up a new cartridge from the magazine. This Stoner bolt and carrier piston system has the disadvantage of venting un-burned smokeless powder residue into the receiver where it may ultimately accumulate in quantities causing malfunctions. Some AR-15 style rifles use an alternative short-stroke gas piston design borrowed from the ArmaLite AR-18, where a metal rod pushes against the bolt carrier, driven by a piston located just behind the barrel gas port. This piston design keeps the rifle cleaner by not exhausting in to the receiver.[43] Other AR-15 style rifles feature redesigned gas systems so the rifle is "over-the-beach capable", allowing it fire safely as quickly as possible after being submerged in water.[44][45] The original design features a free-floating firing pin. To theoretically reduce the risk of slam-firing, the HK416 and its civilian variant MR556 feature a proprietary firing pin safety in the bolt. Such firing pin safeties may obstruct the upper from working with standard AR-15-type full height hammers located in the fire control group of the lower. Wow you actually read this good job
same i have jeff shop theundeadboxer zombie2 jeff arms just jeff no shop fire melbot goofy ahh green zombie1 toy sword toy knife doorsbob scp in container scp 096 banban arm with melon fireskeleton 2 people stuck together pool and last one is zolphius from garten of banban 2
I got: Tank Armored car Cartoon cat Gigachad (a mod) Chainsaw man (a mod to) M1A2 Abrams (mod) House (it’s pretty bad and small) Screech (he’s from doors) Seek (from doors) Figure (he’s from doors to) T-Rox (he’s from my singing monsters) Normal car Ultimate spinner (just a wheel resized into big and with thrusters) BANG! (Just a melon shooting a melon with a pistol and the pistol also has auto shoot on)
I love The saves😅😅😅
those are cool.
btw do you hate meowbahh?
1:53 "don't worry guys he doesn't bite"
Can i copi some saves so they are cool?
Lol poppy you're look's like best boy 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Even though the boat is kinda bad you can still build a better one then me💀💀💀
3:51 wtf 💀
1:09 U mean Gun devil?
Bruh my video of my saves is 28 min long
My ears ಥ_ಥ
So I accidentally clicked on coco melon on accident
Screech van *lol*
9:53 cool
0:16 huh!?!?!?!
Look at chica's name :1.21
Why is is it so, loud?
Bro named chica into cica💀
Ye 💀💀💀
0:17 be like O_O
Make a tutorial of your pet pls
Bro u can screen shot the pet and copy it
AYO YOU KINDA REAL SUSSY MAN 3:50
The sound in vid is like rush coming lol
My favorite saves:
Figure rebuild
Rush
Ambush
Seek
Figure
Crucifix
Old crucifix
Torture room
Beatbox fnf
how do i make gozilla?
Just get the present and smash it until u get the dino
Rexy
Tutorial how to make robot melon
Thats not rush thats a wooden guy
1:52 literally sounded like a cop that came on scene and was shooting at a man armed with an AR-15, literally sounded like that...
What's an ar-15?
@@mrmelon115 An AR-15-style rifle is any lightweight semi-automatic rifle based on or similar to the Colt AR-15 design. The original ArmaLite AR-15, its predecessor, was a scaled-down derivative of Eugene Stoner's ArmaLite AR-10 design and featured selective fire. ArmaLite sold the patent and trademarks to Colt's Manufacturing Company in 1959, resulting in the Colt AR-15, which removed the selective fire feature. After most of the patents for the Colt AR-15 expired in 1977, many firearm manufacturers began to produce copies of the Colt AR-15 under various names. While the patents are expired, Colt retained the trademark of the AR-15 name and is the sole manufacturer able to label their firearms as AR-15.[1]
The Federal Assault Weapons Ban restricted the sale of the Colt AR-15 and some derivatives in the United States from 1994 to 2004, although it did not affect rifles with fewer listed features.[2][3] After the term modern sporting rifles was coined in 2009 by the US National Shooting Sports Foundation, a firearms trade association, it was quickly adopted by much of the industry.[4][5]
In the 2010s, AR-15-style rifles became one of the "most beloved and most vilified rifles" in the United States, according to The New York Times; the rifles have gained infamy due in part to their use in high-profile mass shootings.[6] Promoted as "America's rifle" by the National Rifle Association, their popularity is partially attributable to active restrictions, or proposals to ban or restrict them.[7][8][9]
Terminology[edit]
A common misconception is that "AR" is an acronym for "assault rifle" or "automatic rifle",[10][11][12] perhaps because of the weapon's inclusion in the Federal Assault Weapons Ban in 1994, or because the ArmaLite AR-15 was originally designed to replace the M14 rifle in the Vietnam War.[13] The "AR" in AR-15 actually stands for "ArmaLite Rifle",[14] and "AR-15" is most-commonly used to refer only to the civilian semi-automatic variants of the rifle which lack the fully automatic function.[15]
1973 Colt AR-15 SP1 rifle with 'slab side' lower receiver (lacking raised boss around magazine release button) and original Colt 20-round box magazine
The AR-15 is closely related to the military M16 and M4 Carbine rifles, which all share the same core design. Invented by infantry rifle designer Eugene Stoner in 1956 for use in the 7.62 NATO caliber ArmaLite AR-10 battle rifle, the design features a gas-operated, rotating bolt combined with an integral piston (instead of a conventional direct impingement, operating system), and was patented under U.S. Patent 2,951,424.[16][17] A lighter weight selective fire variant of the AR-10 was designed in 1958 for military use and designated the ArmaLite model 15, or AR-15.[18][13] Due to financial problems and limitations in terms of manpower and production capacity, ArmaLite sold the AR-15 and AR-10 designs and trademarks to Colt in 1959.[19] In 1964, Colt began selling its own version with an improved semi-automatic design known as the Colt AR-15.[20] After Colt's patents expired in 1977, an active marketplace emerged for other manufacturers to produce and sell their own semi-automatic AR-15 style rifles.[1] Some versions of the AR-15 were classified as "assault weapons" and banned under the Public Safety and Recreational Firearms Use Protection Act in 1994 within the United States. This act expired in 2004.[2][21]
In 2009, the term "modern sporting rifle" was coined by the National Shooting Sports Foundation for its survey that year as a marketing term used by the firearms industry to describe modular semi-automatic rifles including AR-15s.[22][4][23][15] Today, nearly every major firearm manufacturer produces its own generic AR-15 style rifle.[24][23] As Colt continues to own and use the AR-15 trademark for its line of AR-15 variants, other manufacturers must use their own model numbers and names to market their AR-15 style rifles for commercial sale.[25]
Under US law, when manufactured with a barrel length less than 16 inches (41 cm) and without a shoulder stock, it is legally considered a pistol as opposed to being a short-barreled rifle,[26] and is described as an AR-15 style pistol.
The lower receiver alone is legally defined as a firearm under United States federal law. However, this definition may be questionable due to several court rulings (or government dismissals to avoid rulings) that the AR-15 lower receiver does not match the legal definition in 27 CFR § 479.11,[27][28][29] though a 2021 case from the Eighth Circuit found otherwise.[30]
Modularity and customization[edit]
While most earlier breech-loading rifles had a single receiver housing both the trigger and reloading mechanism, an innovative feature of the AR-15 was modular construction to simplify substitution of parts and avoid need for arsenal facilities for most repairs of malfunctioning military rifles.[31] A distinctive two-part receiver is used by both military and sporting AR-15 style rifles.
As civilian ownership of AR-15 style rifles became sufficient to create a market for improvements, numerous manufacturers began producing aftermarket parts-including parts with features not found on basic AR-15 rifles, and individuals with basic mechanical aptitude can often substitute these pieces for original equipment without needing a gunsmith. Due to the vast assortment of aftermarket parts and accessories available, AR-15 style rifles have also been referred to as "the Swiss Army knife of rifles",[32] "Barbie Dolls for Guys",[33][34] or "LEGOs for adults".[35][36][37] These more or less interchangeable modules are a defining characteristic of AR-15 style rifles.[38]
A stripped lower receiver, one that is lacking the additional parts included in a completed lower receiver, is the only part of an AR-15 style rifle that needs to be transferred through a federally licensed firearms dealer under United States federal law.[39]
Lower receivers may be bought "stripped"-a single solid part and legally a firearm in the United States, albeit nonfunctional, with no fire control group or lower parts kit installed. End users may install their own choice of fire control group and lower parts kit. A completed lower receiver, compared to a stripped lower receiver, may be visually distinguished by the trigger guard ahead of the detachable pistol grip, and behind the magazine well capable of holding detachable magazines. The lower receiver holds the trigger assembly including the hammer, and is the attachment point for the buttstock. The lower receiver is attached to the upper receiver by two removable pins. Disassembly for cleaning or repair of malfunctions requires disengaging these pins from the upper receiver. Releasing the rear take-down pin allows the receiver to be opened by rotation around the forward pivot pin as a hinge.[31]
The upper receiver contains the bolt carrier assembly and is attached to the barrel assembly. Sights may be attached to the upper receiver or the barrel assembly. A handguard usually encloses the barrel and is attached to the upper receiver, and depending on the handguard, also attached to the barrel's gas block.[31]
Folding stocks[edit]
AR-15 style rifles may have folding or collapsible stocks which reduce the overall length of the rifle when folded, although some designs of the stock folding device may not allow the firearm to be fired until unfolded, or only fire once until unfolded.[40] A few manufacturers have made full upper receivers,[41] or even "bufferless" bolt carrier systems where the buffer system is wholly contained in the upper receiver, and therefore does not use the buffer tube, which allows for firing while the stock is in the folded position, or removal of the stock altogether.[42]
Gas systems[edit]
The standard design includes a gas block and tube to vent burnt powder gas back into the bolt carrier assembly where it expands in a variable volume chamber forcing the bolt open to eject the spent cartridge case. The buffer spring in the buttstock then pushes the bolt closed after picking up a new cartridge from the magazine. This Stoner bolt and carrier piston system has the disadvantage of venting un-burned smokeless powder residue into the receiver where it may ultimately accumulate in quantities causing malfunctions. Some AR-15 style rifles use an alternative short-stroke gas piston design borrowed from the ArmaLite AR-18, where a metal rod pushes against the bolt carrier, driven by a piston located just behind the barrel gas port. This piston design keeps the rifle cleaner by not exhausting in to the receiver.[43] Other AR-15 style rifles feature redesigned gas systems so the rifle is "over-the-beach capable", allowing it fire safely as quickly as possible after being submerged in water.[44][45] The original design features a free-floating firing pin. To theoretically reduce the risk of slam-firing, the HK416 and its civilian variant MR556 feature a proprietary firing pin safety in the bolt. Such firing pin safeties may obstruct the upper from working with standard AR-15-type full height hammers located in the fire control group of the lower.
Wow you actually read this good job
@@mrmelon115a gun
@@mrmelon115its basically a gun
Add a gyroscope to ur robot so it Can Stand
My saves are
Stone (living)
Strawberry (living)
Baller (living)
Banana (living)
Greap (living)
Chocolate (living)
Tomato (living)
Nut (living)
Blueberry (living)
Lemon (living)
Eggplant (living)
Cookie (living)
Peach (living)
Injection?
Icey lemon
My old saves (goofy names)
Mi loller stick
Cybop
Rocket to the moon
Thin stick
Bababababbabab
My newer older saves
Ultiment ubrellaq
Me too I have
Torture
Zombies(enfectors)
Spy guy
837167253962826(numbers of monsters)
Tame67(car)
Container
Container truck
Monster
same i have
jeff shop
theundeadboxer
zombie2
jeff arms
just jeff no shop
fire
melbot
goofy ahh green
zombie1
toy sword
toy knife
doorsbob
scp in container
scp 096
banban arm with melon
fireskeleton
2 people stuck together
pool
and last one is
zolphius from garten of banban 2
@@MentallyGoingInsaneToday wow
@@MentallyGoingInsaneToday but I have 100 saves
I got:
Tank
Armored car
Cartoon cat
Gigachad (a mod)
Chainsaw man (a mod to)
M1A2 Abrams (mod)
House (it’s pretty bad and small)
Screech (he’s from doors)
Seek (from doors)
Figure (he’s from doors to)
T-Rox (he’s from my singing monsters)
Normal car
Ultimate spinner (just a wheel resized into big and with thrusters)
BANG! (Just a melon shooting a melon with a pistol and the pistol also has auto shoot on)
bro the rush is b9x rush
It's was a joke
Did you know if you add a intro and a name tag the video will be better or if you can’t make an intro its okay I’m not judging
Why? You don’t do it
I do it but on my iPad bc I don’t have capcut on my mother’s Phone and I’m not judging
@@maigamil1128 I didn’t say you were
@@frozenchiller then why did you say to me?
Why
Papet💀
Cool
Bonny, cica💀💀
My saves is more then any one can count
AYO wtf he's doing 3:53
😁😁😁😁😁😁
WTH MY NAME IS ARONN WTF WTF WTF WTF?
What the he'll what that doctor doing to the corpse melon
U copy my picture
Bro what was the doctor doing to the dead patient
Sus bro
18+ moment
He kill bruh
his pet kills melon rip melon
That aint rush
0:09 THATS MEE!!!!!!!
e
I made boxy boo
Your safe is easy noober master
Don’t be rude!
I HAVE 45 SAVES
Yes I have 100 saves
@Heather Hockman wow
@Jose Cacait maybe it's brititanic
F
Hahaha I hate your saves
Nah I'm srry
It's was a joke
Thats not rush i downloaded a mode form doors in melon playground
Bad save
That no rush he ugly
Nah jit begging for robux 💀