The .250 Ackley Improved
The .250 Ackley Improved was developed by Parker Otto Ackley, P.O. Ackley, was an American gunsmith, barrel maker, author, columnist, and wildcat cartridge developer. The Ackley Improved family of wildcat cartridges are designed to be easily made by rechambering...
The 6mm PPC
The 6mm PPC (Palmisano & Pindel Cartridge), or 6 PPC as it is more often called, is a centerfire rifle cartridge used almost exclusively for benchrest shooting. It is one ofthe most accurate cartridges available at distances of up to 300 meters. This cartridge's accuracy is...
The 7.7x58mm Arisaka
The 7.7×58mm Arisaka cartridge was the standard military cartridge for the Imperial Japanese Army's and the Imperial Japanese Army Air Service during World War II. The 7.7×58mm cartridge was designed as the successor ofthe 6.5x50mmSR cartridge for rifles and machine guns...
The .220 Swift
The .220 Swift (5.56×56mmSR) is a semi-rimmed rifle cartridge developed by Winchester and introduced in 1935 for small game and varmint hunting. It was the first factory-loaded rifle cartridge with a muzzle velocity of over 4,000 ft/s, just under Mach 4. The velocity ofthe...
The .35 Remington
The .35 Remington (8.9x49mm) is the only remaining cartridge from Remingtons' lineup of medium-power rimless cartridges still in commercial production. It is also known as 9x49mm Browning and 9mm Don Gonzalo.
Remington introduced its .25, .30, .32 and .35 Rem. cartridges in...
The .260 Remington
The .260 Remington started its life as a wildcat cartridge called the 6.5-08, and was eventually released as a commercial cartridge by Remington in 1997. Many wildcat cartridges based on the .308 Winchester case had existed for years before Remington standardized this round...
A super magnum is a longer and/or more powerful version of a "magnum" cartridge. The term "super magnum" typically refers to a handgun cartridge. This was achieved by lengthening the cases to both increase powder capacity and boost operating pressures.
The most widespread ofthese cartridges...
The .375 H&H Magnum
The .375 H&H Magnum also known as .375 Holland & Holland Magnum is a medium-bore rifle cartridge introduced in 1912 by London based gunmaker Holland & Holland. The .375 H&H cartridge featured a belt to ensure the correct headspace, which otherwise might be unreliable, given...
The 6.5mm Grendel
The 6.5mm Grendel (6.5×39mm) is an intermediate cartridge jointly designed by British-American armourer Bill Alexander, competitive shooter Arne Brennan (of Houston, Texas) and Lapua ballistician Janne Pohjoispää, as a low-recoil, high-precision rifle cartridge specifically...
The .218 Bee
The .218 Bee is a .22 caliber centerfire rifle cartridge designed for varmint hunting by Winchester in 1937. Thecartridge was originally chambered in the Winchester Model 65 lever-action rifles, which may have ultimately led to its lack of popularity. Thecartridge is named for...
The .243 Winchester
The .243 Winchester (6×52mm) is a popular sporting rifle cartridge. Initially designed as a target/varmint round, it may be used for animals such as coyotes, blacktail deer, whitetail deer, mule deer, pronghorns, and wild hogs.
The .243 is based on a necked down .308...
The 6.5×47mm Lapua
The 6.5×47mm Lapua is a rimless bottlenecked rifle cartridge that was developed specifically for 328–1,094 yd. (300–1,000 m) competition shooting by ammunition maker Nammo Lapua and the Swiss rifle manufacturer Grünig & Elmiger AG in 2005. The 6.5×47mm Lapua has no direct...
The .32-20 Winchester
he .32-20 Winchester, also known as .32 WCF (Winchester center fire), was the first small-game lever-action cartridge that Winchester produced. It was initially introduced as a black-powder cartridge in 1882 for small-game, varmint hunting, and deer. Colt produced a...
The 9.3×62mm Mauser
The 9.3×62mm (also known as 9.3×62mm Mauser) is a rimless, bottlenecked rifle cartridge designed in 1905 by German gunmaker Otto Bock. It is suitable for hunting medium to large game animals in Africa, Asia, Europe, and North America.
The 9.3×62mm was designed to fit into...
The 7.62 mm Nagant
The 7.62mm Nagant
(also known as 7.62×38mmR) is an ammunition cartridge designed for use in the Russian Nagant M1895 revolver.
A small number of experimental submachine guns (e.g., Tokarev 1927), designed by Fedor Tokarev, were also produced in a 7.62 mm Nagant...
Exactly what I’m finding with my new XDM 45 also like you mentioned I didn’t notice this while shooting the gun last week as I was dropping an empty mag, when I got home and cleaned the gun and then loaded it, one in the chamber and a full mag I couldn’t depress the mag release without pushing...
The .32 H&R Magnum
The .32 H&R Magnum is a rimmed cartridge designed for use in revolvers. It was developed in 1984 as a joint venture between Harrington & Richardson and Federal Premium Ammunition. The .32 H&R Magnum is produced by lengthening the .32 S&W Long case by .155", to 1.075".
The...
The .250-3000 Savage
(also known as the .250 Savage) is a dual-purpose intermediate-range rifle cartridge created by Charles Newton in 1915. It was designed to be used in the Savage Model 99 hammerless lever-action. The name comes from its original manufacturer, Savage Arms and the fact that...
The .460 S&W Magnum
The .460 S&W Magnum round is a powerful revolver cartridge designed for long-range handgun hunting in the Smith & Wesson Model 460 revolver. It is also the most versatile big bore revolver being able to fire four standardized cartridges, as well as lesser known rimmed and...