Good old General Electric produces everything, and I mean everything from microwaves to miniguns. The subject of today’s article is, of course, the latter. If you want to learn about microwaves, comment below, and I’ll help you out. Is there a more visceral 7.62mm weapon than the M134 Minigun? I saw them here and there when we worked with the Marine Corps helicopters, but it wasn’t until a major training exercise I saw what one could do

Mojave Viper, 2009, was to be our last training exercise before our deployment to Afghanistan. Part of that is a massive combined arms attack that includes tanks, infantry, helicopters, tracks, combat engineers, and more. I was in the prime seat beneath a helicopter as it flew in and lit up a target. The Minigun sounded like the rapture arrived, and I watched as what appeared to be a laser beam of tracers struck the burnt-out hulls that we had designated as targets.

M134 Minigun

In Afghanistan, we’d ride in Vietnam-era Huey’s fitted with M2 50 caliber machine guns on one side and M134 Miniguns on the other. The little dust-off crews were well-armed, but we were not well-armored. The Hueys carried an assload of firepower, but sadly I never got to see it used. To make up for that, I’ve found a cool video of a ridiculously powerful quad M134 Minigun below. Enjoy! If this doesn’t put a smile on your face, nothing will.

The M134 Minigun in Living Color

The M134 Mingun is a multibarrel, rotary machine gun chambered in the 7.62 x 51mm NATO cartridge. The Minigun utilizes an electric motor to power the system, feed the gun, and rotate the barrels.

The term Minigun seems odd for such a big weapon, so where did the Minigun name come from? Well, size is relative, right? The Minigun isn’t the first rotary barrel machine gun, and the name minigun comes from its relatively small size when compared to the 20mm M61 Vulcan rotary machine gun. The 20mm Vulcan is an autocannon and overshadows the M134 enough for it to gain the name Minigun.

firing minigun from plane
Get some!!!

The M134 Minigun utilizes an electric motor that rotates the weapon within its housing. We also have a rotating firing pin assembly and a rotary chamber. The purpose of the six barrels is to drive the firing rate sky-high and help prevent overheating. As a single barrel fires, two other barrels are in the process of shell extraction, with three other barrels being loaded. This allows the gun to continuously fire without overheating.