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  2. How to store guns safely to prevent unintentional shootings - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/store-guns-safely-prevent...

    Lock boxes can be used to store firearms, secured with a key, combination or biometric access. They are generally smaller and have thinner, less secure walls than safes. They are also more ...

  3. Snaplock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snaplock

    Swedish snaplock gun from the early 16th century. The origin of this proto-flintlock is unclear. The earliest source which could be speaking of a snaplock is an account from 1515 where a young man in Konstanz, Germany accidentally shot a girl with a pistol, thinking it could not go off due to the lack of a lit match.

  4. M-LOK - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-LOK

    M-LOK, for Modular Lock, is a firearm rail interface system developed and patented by Magpul Industries. The license is free-of-charge, but subject to an approval process. The license is free-of-charge, but subject to an approval process.

  5. Gun safe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_safe

    An example (open and closed) of a typical gun safe. A gun safe is a safe designed for storing one or more firearms and/or ammunitions.Gun safes are primarily used to prevent access by unauthorized or unqualified persons (such as children), for burglary protection and, in more capable safes, to protect the contents from damage by flood, fire or other natural disasters.

  6. Flapper locking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flapper_locking

    As the bolt is forced backwards after the firing of a cartridge, the flappers recede back into the bolt, therefore unlocking and sending the bolt backwards to cycle the gun. The design was patented in 1870 by Lieutenant Friberg of the Swedish Army, but the first actual example of a firearm that used this was made by another Swedish man named ...

  7. Flintlock mechanism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flintlock_mechanism

    The key element apparently added by Marin le Bourgeoys was the vertically acting sear. The sear is a "catch" or "latch" which holds the mechanism in a position ready to fire; the trigger acts upon, or is part of, the sear, releasing it and allowing a strong spring to act on the mechanism to fire the gun.