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Lazy Dog projectiles could be dropped from almost any kind of flying vehicle. They could be hurled from buckets, dropped by hand, thrown in their small paper shipping bags, or placed in a Mark 44 cluster adaptor—a simple hinged casing with bins built in to hold the projectiles, opened by a mechanical time delay fuze. The adaptors themselves ...
Morocco: On December 20, 2024, the United States approved a possible sale of 500 GBU-39Bs and related equipment to Morocco for an estimated $86 million. [76] NATO: In 2022, a request by NATO to purchase precision precision-guided munitions, including 279 GBU-39/B (SDB 1) was approved by the US Government. [77]
This ammunition became known as the "CCI Stinger." [7] In early 2020, CCI introduced 14 new products. [8] CCI/Speer sells the Gold Dot line, component bullets, and handgun ammunition using a bonded copper-plated hollow point bullet. Plated bullets were originally sold only for handloading as a cheap substitute for jacketed bullets. [9] [10]
Proper Shipping Name UN 0301: 1.4G: Ammunition, tear-producing with burster, expelling charge, or propelling charge UN 0302? (UN No. no longer in use) UN 0303: 1.4G: Ammunition, smoke, with or without burster, expelling charge, or propelling charge UN 0304? (UN No. no longer in use) UN 0305: 1.3G: Flash powder: UN 0306: 1.4G: Tracers for ...
Idaho has state preemption of firearms laws: local units of government cannot regulate the ownership, possession, use, transportation, or carry of firearms, firearm components or ammunition. The state constitution states that "No law shall impose licensure, registration or special taxation on the ownership or possession of firearms or ammunition.
Proper Shipping Name UN 0201 to 0202? (UN No.s no longer in use) ... Ammunition, incendiary liquid or gel, with burster, expelling charge, or propelling charge
A proposed law hoped to start a chain of appeals up to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Unexploded ordnance (UXO, sometimes abbreviated as UO) and unexploded bombs (UXBs) are explosive weapons (bombs, shells, grenades, land mines, naval mines, cluster munition, and other munitions) that did not explode when they were deployed and remain at detonative risk, sometimes many decades after they were used or discarded.