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The cartridge for this pistol was manufactured in Europe until the beginning of WWII. The cartridge has a bullet weighing approx. 85 grains (5.5 g) which may be steel or cupro-nickel jacketed. The powder charge varies with the type of powder used, the European standard being about 3.5 grains (227 mg) of DWM standard powder, producing a muzzle ...
When the Model 1900 was originally produced, it was chambered in an 8mm cartridge; however, in 1901, Mannlicher reintroduced it with the 7.65 × 21 mm Mannlicher cartridge to make it more powerful. In order to distinguish this round from the 7.63×25 mm Mauser round, it was referred to in Germany as the 7.65 round, or the 7.63 × 21. [ 5 ]
In 1900, with the adoption of the Luger Parabellum Model 1900 pistol, the 7.65mm Luger became the standard pistol cartridge of the Swiss Army. The Swiss Modell 06/29 pistol served the Swiss Army until well after the adoption of a SIG P210 in 1949, and remained in limited service until the late 1960s. The SIG P210 was also manufactured in this ...
Cartridge: 6.5×54mm Mannlicher–Schönauer (military and Model 1903) 8×56mm Mannlicher–Schönauer (Model 1908) 9×56mm Mannlicher–Schönauer (Model 1905) 9.5×57mm Mannlicher–Schönauer (Model 1910).30-06 Springfield, .243 Winchester and .270 Winchester (Model 72) Action: bolt action: Muzzle velocity: 678 m/s (2,223 ft/s) Effective ...
Year entered service: 1887 Type: Bolt-action service rifle Country of origin: France Action: Bolt-action lever Caliber & feed: 8mm Lebel & 8-round tube magazine 67. Mannlicher Model 1888
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. Data values are the highest found for the cartridge, and might not occur in the same load ...
In 1896 [7] or 1897 [8] Browning also scaled the .38 blowback pistol down to .32 caliber to use as a pocket pistol. US patent for the Browning .32 pistol, issued in 1899 According to a widespread legend, [ 2 ] in April 1897 [ 9 ] FN sent their sales manager Hart O. Berg to Hartford , where he had previously worked, to investigate advances in ...
Source(s): Textbook of Automatic Pistols [1] Note: There is also another 7.63/7.65 mm Mannlicher cartridge, 7.63 mm Mannlicher M.1903 / 7.65 mm Mannlicher M.1896, similar to 7.65 mm Borchardt while 7.63 mm Mannlicher M.1900 / 7.65 mm Mannlicher M.1901 is a straight-case cartridge. The above diameters do not seem to refer to either of them.