this is the Long 9, a 23mm/.90 caliber gas operated revolver converted from a soviet 23mm revolver cannon with a trio of gas mechanisms
to make this the loading and unloading gas systems were removed to leave only the one that rotates the cylinder
the barrel is 14 inches long and mostly obscured inside a wooden foregrip but is aligned with the bottom chamber of the cylinder with the gas system, a piston type, running along top of the barrel inside the foregrip
to load the brass slide is moved forward which disengaged the cylinder gearing, allowing it to be removed and a new cylinder to be place inside
keep in mind that this weapon is made for a near-macro who would have no real trouble handling it's recoil than a normal person would have using a .44 magnum
to make this the loading and unloading gas systems were removed to leave only the one that rotates the cylinder
the barrel is 14 inches long and mostly obscured inside a wooden foregrip but is aligned with the bottom chamber of the cylinder with the gas system, a piston type, running along top of the barrel inside the foregrip
to load the brass slide is moved forward which disengaged the cylinder gearing, allowing it to be removed and a new cylinder to be place inside
keep in mind that this weapon is made for a near-macro who would have no real trouble handling it's recoil than a normal person would have using a .44 magnum
Category All / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1916 x 1040px
File Size 454.9 kB
No: Gmax is more typical of industry-standard 3d programs (Sketchup is a joke to the industry): You create basic shapes (and a teapot), and, if you're clever enough, you convert them into editable objects and then transform them with extrusions, moving vertices...etc. Sketchup is good for a beginer.
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