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  2. Expanding bullet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expanding_bullet

    Expanding bullets are designed to expand on impact, sometimes as much as twice the diameter. [3] This will slow the bullet down and more of its kinetic energy will be transferred to the target, creating a larger wound channel. For this reason, expanding bullets are often used in hunting because their stopping power increases the chance of a ...

  3. Nessler ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nessler_ball

    The Nessler ball, or balle Nessler, is a type of muzzle-loading musket bullet. It was developed to increase the accuracy and range of smoothbore muskets and was used in the Crimean War. [1] It featured a short conical-cylindrical soft lead bullet, with a conical hollow in its base. [2] The bullet was designed with a lead skirting.

  4. Minié ball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minié_ball

    The Minié ball is a cylindro-conoidal bullet with grease-filled cannelures on its exterior and a cone-shaped hollow in its base.Minié designed the bullet with a small iron plug, and lead skirting that would expand under the pressure of gunpowder deflagration causing the bullet to obturate, and grip the rifling grooves.

  5. Exploding ammunition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exploding_ammunition

    In 2013 it was reportedly used by Bashar al-Assad led Syrian government forces during the Syrian civil war in order to target Free Syrian Army fighters in the eastern district of Damascus. [1] [3] [4] The bullets' explosives were replaced by more potent primary explosives. Not every round was repurposed however. [4]

  6. Saint Petersburg Declaration of 1868 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Petersburg...

    The distinction between "explosive" and "fulminating" bullets is academic but important. An "explosive" bullet contains an explosive filler that detonates on impact. A "fulminating" bullet contains a small unstable high explosive charge and is designed to shatter into fragments after impact or inside the wound. They also have the added ...

  7. Obturation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obturation

    Obturation in firearms and air guns is the result of a bullet or pellet expanding or upsetting to fit the bore, or, in the case of a firearm, of a brass case expanding to seal against the chamber at the moment of firing. In the first case, this both seals the bullet in the bore, and causes the bullet to engage the barrel's rifling. In the ...

  8. Full metal jacket (ammunition) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full_metal_jacket_(ammunition)

    Examples of FMJ bullets in their usual shapes: pointed ("spitzer") loaded in the 7.62×39mm rifle and round-nosed loaded in the 7.62×25mm pistol cartridges A full metal jacket ( FMJ ) bullet is a small-arms projectile consisting of a soft core (often lead ) encased in an outer shell ("jacket") of harder metal, such as gilding metal ...

  9. Explosive weapon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explosive_weapon

    Several grenades and land mines on display in Hanoi. An explosive weapon is a weapon that uses an explosive to project blast and/or fragmentation from a point of detonation.. In the common practice of states, explosive weapons are generally the preserve of the military, for use in situations of armed conflict, and are rarely used for purposes of domestic policing.