Shortround6
Major General
Nothing inherent in the Gast design itself, but what about longer barrels? The Mk 108 was deficient in muzzle velocity because its high ROF mandated a short barrel to prevent misfires. Since a Gast is basically two guns just linked together, wouldn't two guns at 400 RPM each be able to obtain a higher rate of fire than one Mk 108?
It wasn't misfires they were trying to stop, it was the cartridge case rupturing and letting high pressure gas back into the action of the gun. The short barrel allowed the shell to clear the muzzle sooner and drop the internal pressure as the bolt and case moved to the rear. A longer barrel would still have had the shell inside as the rear cartridge came out of the chamber and the higher pressure could have blown out the side of the case. Yes you could use a stronger spring, heavier breechblock(bolt) to slow down the bolt movement (rate of fire) to get better velocity.
But again, the Gast is almost two complete guns, A Gast firing 30 X 82RB ammunition is going to weigh almost double what a single MK 108 did ( if built of the same materials and to the same standards)
What if there was a way to unlock the link in the instance of a malfunction allowing each gun to operate independently
For that to happen you need a main spring to drive the bolt forward. I don't believe the Gast used mainsprings. You also just cut the weight/mass of the bolt assembly in half meaning the bolt will accelerate much more quickly leading to early opening and the case ruptures mentioned above.
Gas operated and recoil (moving barrel guns) used the gas/recoil system to operate a lock that delayed the opening of the bolt. Because they were not depending on the weight of the bolt and the strength of the main spring for this delay their bolts could be lighter and move faster once they had unlocked.