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The 7.63×25mm Mauser (.30 Mauser Automatic) round is a bottleneck, rimless, centerfire cartridge, originally developed for the Mauser C96 service pistol. This cartridge headspaces on the shoulder of the case. [1] It later served as the basis for the 7.62mm Tokarev cartridge commonly used in Soviet and Eastern Bloc weapons.
7×57mm Mauser; 7×64mm Brenneke; 7mm-08 Remington; 7mm PRC; 7mm Remington Magnum; 7mm Remington Short Action Ultra Magnum; 7mm Blaser Magnum; 7mm Remington Ultra Magnum; 7×61mm Sharpe & Hart; 7mm Shooting Times Westerner; 7mm Weatherby Magnum; 7mm Winchester Short Magnum; 7-30 Waters; 7×33mm Sako; 7.35×51mm Carcano; 7.5x27mm; 7.5x27mm Swiss ...
Common rifle cartridges, from the largest .50 BMG to the smallest .22 Long Rifle with a $1 United States dollar bill in the background as a reference point.. This is a table of selected pistol/submachine gun and rifle/machine gun cartridges by common name.
The shoulder angle is the same as the 8×68mm S so fire forming is not necessary and no new headspace gages are needed. The development goal of this cartridge was to get a highly reliable .30-calibre magnum cartridge that fits in the standard Mauser 98 action without any modification of the feeding lips, follower, feeding ramp or magazine length.
A new rifle was designed, using the Mauser as a guide, and a new cartridge was designed for it. Initially the .30-01 cartridge was developed in 1901; also referred to as the .30 ball Model of 1901 - the ".30-01" or "Thick-rim", [3] the .30-01 used a bullet covered by an alloy made from copper and nickel and was the immediate predecessor of the ...
By 1936 improved DuPont process control produced batches conforming to published reloading data rather than requiring different charge specifications for each batch; [11] and those propellants have remained in production. Non-conforming batches were used to load commercial and military cartridges following traditional testing procedures.
Although not originally designed for handguns, several rifle and shotgun cartridges have also been chambered in a number of large handguns, primarily in revolvers like the Phelps Heritage revolver, Century Arms revolver, Thompson/Centre Contender break-open pistol, Magnum Research BFR, and the Pfeifer Zeliska revolvers.
The 8×60mm S is a rimless bottlenecked centerfire cartridge of German origin, dating back to the interbellum period between World War I and World War II.The bore has the same dimensions as the German 7.92×57mm Mauser service cartridge (designated as "S-bore").