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  2. Personal Load Carrying Equipment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_Load_Carrying...

    British Royal Bermuda Regiment soldier manipulating a magazine contained in the left-hand ammunition pouch of a Multi-Terrain Pattern PLCE set. Personal load carrying equipment (PLCE) is one of several tactical webbing systems of the British Armed Forces. [ 1 ] Dependent upon the year of design, and the decade of introduction, the webbing ...

  3. Belt (firearms) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belt_(firearms)

    Belt (firearms) An M60 machine gun belt loaded with 7.62×51mm NATO cartridges, aboard a U.S. Navy patrol craft. An ammunition belt is a firearm device used to package and feed cartridges, typically for rapid-firing automatic weapons such as machine guns. Belt-fed systems minimize the proportional weight of the ammunition apparatus to the ...

  4. Bandolier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandolier

    Bandolier. Mexican Revolutionary General Pancho Villa wearing two bandoliers. A bandolier or a bandoleer is a pocketed belt for holding either individual cartridges, belts of ammunition or grenades. It is usually slung sash -style over the shoulder and chest, with the ammunition pockets across the midriff and chest. [1]

  5. .308 Norma Magnum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.308_Norma_Magnum

    The .308 Norma Magnum (7.62×65mmBR) cartridge was created by Nils Kvale at Norma, Sweden. Like the larger .358 Norma Magnum it is based on a shortened 300 H&H magnum. [1][2] It very closely resembled the wildcat .30-338 Magnum cartridge. [3][2] Kvale designed a wildcat cartridge, the 8mm Kvale, in 1949. This gave a magnum power cartridge by ...

  6. .308 Winchester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.308_Winchester

    2,510 ft/s (770 m/s) 2,588 ft⋅lbf (3,509 J) Test barrel length: 24 in (26 in for Lapua) [1] The .308 Winchester is a smokeless powder rimless bottlenecked rifle cartridge widely used for hunting, target shooting, police, military, and personal protection applications globally. It is similar, but not identical, to the 7.62×51mm NATO cartridge.

  7. MAC-11 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MAC-11

    The Military Armament Corporation Model 11, officially abbreviated as " M11 " or " M-11 ", and commonly known as the MAC-11, is a machine pistol / submachine gun developed by American firearm designer Gordon Ingram at the Military Armament Corporation (MAC) during the 1970s in Powder Springs, Georgia, United States. [5][6] The weapon is a sub ...

  8. 1937 pattern web equipment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1937_Pattern_Web_Equipment

    The yoke could be worn over the neck and the pouches across the chest or worn over the shoulder with the pouches across one side. Each pouch could carry either (3) Bren gun magazines, (2) Boys Anti-Tank Rifle magazines, (3) 2-inch O.S.B. mortar shells, a Mark VII water bottle, several grenades, or boxes of small arms ammunition.

  9. Clip (firearms) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clip_(firearms)

    Stripper clip with 8-round internal magazine. Machine pistol variant with 16-round internal magazine. Mosin-Nagant: Bolt-action rifle 7.62×54mmR Russia Stripper clip with permanent 5-round box magazine. Gewehr 98: Bolt-action rifle 7.92×57mm German Empire Stripper clip with 5-round internal box magazine. Karabiner 98k: Carbine 7.92×57mm Germany