Cartridges

30 Cal. GYROJET

This was one of the .30 Cal Gyrojet designs that utilised empty GMCS jackets by Speer Bullet Company, Lewiston ID. They are found with both pointed and rounded ogive and it is believed that that these rounded ogive versions were taken from the production line prior to...

450 ADAMS Mk.I – III

450 ADAMS  Mk.I The 450 Adams Mk I was approved on the 21st of December 1868. The cartridge had an iron base-disk, with brass case and copper primer inserted in the rivet to hold the base disk to the case and was loaded with 13 gr. black powder. It was replaced...

7.35 X 51 CARCANO

The 7.35 Carcano was developed during 1938 in a move to provide a more powerful solution to the 6,5 Carcano in service at that time. Apparently the 6,5 Carcano proved inadequate in stopping charges of native tribesmen for a number of years, prompting various stop-gap...

7 X 64B FCOTB SNIPER

Made by Federal in 1980 as a training round for snipers/law enforcement/military use. It is actually nothing more than a normal 7mm Remington Magnum loaded with a 168gr. Sierra Match King and a ‘special’ headstamp. FC is the standard headstamp for Federal Cartridge,...

7 X 57 MAUSER

HISTORY The 7x57 was developed by Mauser during 1892 and was based on the 7.9mm necked down. At that stage the Germans had already adopted the 7.9mm in 1888 and because they were already committed to the 7,9 and were happy with its performance, the 7mm was not adopted...

7 X 54 KORTNEK

There is a school of thought that this was an experimental development by FN between 1898-1902. FN at that time was a wholly owned subsidiary of DWM (after a lengthy patent battle which FN lost in 1895-96). Supplies sent to the South Africans were made by both (or...

10mm MARS

This is a Kynamco manufactured cartridge for collectors. Apparently the largest of the metric caliber Mars experimental cartridges for the H.W. Gabbett-Fairfax designed pistols ca. 1900. (Erlmeier, Brandt Ref. 146).    

7 X 51 COMPROMISE

During 1951 to 1953 the BBC (Britian/Belgium/Canada) Committee was formed in one last attempt to develop a new 7mm round acceptable to NATO. One of the cartridges they produced was the 7mm Compromise, also known as the T 65/7 mm. It was comprised of the US FAT1E3 case...

7 X 45 POLTE

This was a development by Polte Magdeburg during the years between WW1 and WW2 when the Germans did research regarding a short cased intermediate cartridge. The Swiss were also doing research in this field and the German experiments might have been done with...

7 X 41 LANTAN

During 1973 to 1975, the Polish Military Technical Academy was working on a project to introduce a new intermediate cartridge with superior ballistics to the standard Warsaw Pact 7.62 x 39 mm, the result of which was the 7x41. Work started during 1976 on the LANTAN...

7 X 36 MADSEN

Experimental military cartridge from late 50’s to early 1960’s from Denmark made by reforming existing 30-06 brass. It was loaded by Dansk Ammunitionsfabrik A/S because it is shown in a loading table made by them sometime after 1955. Not much is known of the rifle...

401 MAGNUM

Herter's Inc. was a shooting/hunting mail-order supply company located in Waseca, MN, that was in business from 1893 until it went bust in the 1980’s as an ultimate result of the Gun Control Act of 1968 that put a serious dent on Herter's mail-order firearms business....