minigun, separated from mounting and ammunition The basic minigun is a six-barrel, air-cooled, and electrically driven rotary machine gun. The electric drive rotates the weapon within its housing, with a rotating firing pin assembly and rotary chamber. The minigun's multi-barrel design helps prevent overheating, but also serves other functions. Multiple barrels allow for a greater capacity for a high firing rate, since the serial process of firing, extraction, and loading is taking place in all barrels simultaneously. Thus, as one barrel fires, two others are in different stages of shell extraction and another three are being loaded. The minigun is composed of multiple closed-bolt rifle barrels arranged in a circular housing. The barrels are rotated by an external power source, usually electric,
pneumatic, or
hydraulic. Other rotating-barrel cannons are powered by the gas pressure or recoil energy of fired cartridges. A gas-operated variant, designated
XM133, was also developed, but was not put into production. It was to be nearly identical to the M134 but with ports that aligned with the piston drive in the center of the barrel cluster. While the weapon can feed from linked ammunition, it requires a delinking feeder to strip the links as the rounds are fed into the chambers. The original feeder unit was designated MAU-56/A, but has since been replaced by an improved MAU-201/A unit. (SWCC) on a
SOC-R firing a Minigun at
Stennis Space Center in Mississippi, August 2009. The
General Electric minigun is used in several branches of the U.S. military, under a number of designations. The basic fixed armament version was given the designation
M134 by the
United States Army, while the same weapon was designated
GAU-2/A (on a fixed mount) and
GAU-17/A (flexible mount) by the
United States Air Force (USAF) and
United States Navy (USN). The USAF minigun variant has three versions, while the US Army weapon appears to have incorporated several improvements without a change in designation. The M134D is an improved version of the M134 designed and manufactured by
Dillon Aero, while Garwood Industries manufactures the M134G variant. Available sources show a relation between both M134 and GAU-2/A and M134 and GAU-2B/A. A separate variant, designated
XM196, with an added ejection sprocket was developed specifically for the
XM53 Armament Subsystem on the
Lockheed AH-56 Cheyenne helicopter. Another variant was developed by the USAF specifically for flexible installations, beginning primarily with the
Bell UH-1N Twin Huey helicopter, as the GAU-17/A. Produced by
General Dynamics, this version has a slotted flash hider. The primary end users of the GAU-17/A have been the USN and the
United States Marine Corps (USMC), which mount the gun as defensive armament on a number of helicopters and surface ships. GAU-17/As from helicopters were rushed into service for ships on pintle mountings taken from Mk16 20 mm guns for anti-swarm protection in the Gulf ahead of the 2003
Iraq War - 59 systems were installed in 30 days. The GAU-17/A is designated Mk 44 in the machine gun series Marine firing a GAU-17/A minigun
Gun pods and other mounting systems One of the first applications of the weapon was in aircraft armament pods. These
gun pods were used by a wide variety of fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft mainly during the Vietnam War, remaining in inventory for a period afterward. The standard pod, designated
SUU-11/A by the Air Force and
M18 by the U.S. Army, was a relatively simple unit, completely self-contained, with a 1,500-round magazine directly feeding delinked ammunition into the weapon. This means the Minigun fitted to the pod does not require the standard MAU-56/A delinking feeder unit. A number of variants of this pod exist. Initially, on fixed-wing gunships such as the
Douglas AC-47 Spooky and
Fairchild AC-119, the side-firing armament was fitted by combining SUU-11/A aircraft pods, often with their aerodynamic front fairings removed, with a locally fabricated mount. These pods were essentially unmodified, required no external power, and were linked to the aircraft's fire controls. The need for those pods for other missions led to the development and fielding of a purpose-built "Minigun module" for gunship use, designated the
MXU-470/A. These units first arrived in January 1967 with features such as an improved 2,000-round drum and an electric feeder allowing simplified reloading in flight. The initial units were unreliable and were withdrawn almost immediately. By the end of the year, the difficulties had been worked out and the units were again being fitted to AC-47s, AC-119s, and
AC-130s, with a specific ammunition load that replaced every fifth 'ball' round with a tracer round to enable better accuracy by the gunners, and also earning these airborne gunships the nickname 'Puff the Magic Dragon' by the Viet Cong due to their apparent ability of spitting fire and making everything they hit disappear or die. The AC-47 had three side-mounted MXU-470/As (four were mounted on its replacement, the AC-119) and when all firing at once created a devastating image in the eyes of the enemy. The first AC-130A Gunship IIs did away with the MXU-470/A mounts and instead used GAU-2/As, and not only had four 7.62mm GAU-2/A minigun mounts, but added four 20mm
M61 Vulcan 6-barrel rotary cannons; this configuration was upgraded two years later in 1969 by removing two each of the GAU-2/As and M61s and adding two 40 mm (1.58 in)
L/60 Bofors cannons in the aptly named AC-130A 'Surprise Package'. This configuration lasted two more years until, in late 1971, the AC-130E Pave Aegis arrived, which did away with the miniguns altogether and one of the 40mm Bofors and instead went to the configuration of two 20mm M61 Vulcan, one 40mm L/60 Bofors and one 105 mm (4.13 in)
M102 howitzer, a configuration that lasted until the early 2000s when the AC-130Hs (the AC-130Es had had an avionics upgrade and redesignated to H models) underwent a refit and the two M61 Vulcans were removed and replaced with one
General Dynamics 25 mm (0.984 in)
GAU-12/U Equalizer 5-barrel rotary cannon (while still retaining the H suffix). The improved MXU-470/As were even being proposed for lighter aircraft such as the
Cessna O-2 Skymaster used by
Forward Air Controllers but proved too heavy and cumbersome. A fit of two MXU-470/As was also tested on the
Fairchild AU-23A Peacemaker, though the
Royal Thai Air Force later elected to use another configuration with the
M197 20 mm cannon. In September 2013,
Dillon Aero released the DGP2300 gun pod for the M134D-H. It contains 3,000 rounds, enough ammunition to fire the minigun for a full minute. The system is entirely self-contained, so it can be mounted on any aircraft that can handle the weight, rotational torque, and recoil force () of the gun. The pod has its own battery, which can be wired into the aircraft's electrical system to maintain a charge. Various iterations of the minigun have also been used in a number of armament subsystems for helicopters, with most of these subsystems being created by the United States. The first systems utilized the weapon in a forward firing role for a variety of helicopters, some of the most prominent examples being the
M21 armament subsystem for the
UH-1 and the
M27 for the
OH-6. It also formed the primary turret-mounted armament for a number of members of the Bell AH-1 Cobra family. The weapon was also used as a pintle-mounted door gun on a wide variety of transport helicopters, a role it continues to fulfill today. File:SUU-11 in AC-47.jpg|SUU-11/A pod in the cargo door of an AC-47 File:MXU-470.jpg|MXU-470/A modules in an AC-47 File:Douglas AC-47D Spooky M134 miniguns, circa in 1968.jpg|
Douglas AC-47 Spooky with SUU-11/A pods ==Users==