List of handgun cartridges
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From left to right: .50 Action Express, .44 Magnum, .357 Magnum, .45 ACP, .40 S&W, 9 mm Luger Parabellum, .22 Long Rifle.
The following is a flat list of handgun cartridges, loosely in order of increasing caliber:
- - rimfire round used in MTH's .
- 2.7mm Kolibri - the smallest commercially available centerfire cartridge ever made
- .17 Mach 2
- .17 Hornady Magnum Rimfire
- .17-357 RG
- 4.6x30mm
- .22 BB
- .22 CB
- .22 Short
- .22 Long
- .22 Long Rifle
- .22 WMR (.22 Magnum)
- .22 Reed Express
- .22 Remington Jet (.22 Jet, .22 Centerfire Magnum)
- .221 Remington Fireball
- (5.45mm PSM)
- 5.7x28mm
- (5.8mm Chinese pistol)
- .25 ACP (6.35 mm Browning)
- .25 NAA
- .256 Winchester Magnum
- (7mm BR)
- 7.62x25mm Tokarev
- 7.62x38mmR (7.62x38mm Nagant)
- (a Russian cartridge with an internal piston for silent operation)
- 7.63x25mm Mauser
- 7.65x25mm Borchardt
- (7.65mm Frommer)
- 7.65x22mm Parabellum (7.65x22mm Luger, .30 Luger)
- 7.65mm Longue (7.65mm MAS, 7.65mm Long)
- (7.63mm Mannlicher in Austria, 7.65x21mm in the United States)
- (.30 Wildey Magnum)
- .32 ACP (7.65x17mm Browning SR)
- (7.62x17mm, 7.62x17mm Chinese)
- .32 NAA
- .32 S&W
- .32 S&W Long (.32 Colt New Police)
- .32 Long Colt
- .32 H&R Magnum
- .327 Federal Magnum
- .32-20 Winchester (.32 WCF, .32-20 Marlin, .32 Colt Lightning)
- (8mm Lebel Revolver)
- 8x22mm Nambu
- (.35 Automatic)
- .38 Short Colt
- .38 Long Colt
- .38 S&W (.38 Colt New Police, .38 Super Police)
- .38 Calibre
- .380 Revolver
- .38 Special (9x29mmR)
- .357 Magnum (9x31mmR, .353 Casull [hunting load by CorBon for Freedom Arms revolver, 180 gr @ 1650 fps[1]])
- .357 Remington Maximum
- (.360 Dan Wesson)
- (.357 Wildey Magnum)
- 9x18mm Makarov
- (9mm Ultra)
- (9x20mm Browning SR)
- 9x19mm Parabellum (9mm Luger, 9x19mm NATO)
- 9x21mm IMI
- 9x21mm Gyurza (9x21mm SP-10)
- (9mm AE)
- (9mm Bergmann-Bayard, 9x23mm Largo)
- (9x22mm Super Cooper)
- 9x23mm Winchester
- (Export caliber for C96)
- 9mm Winchester Magnum
- 9x25mm Dillon
- (9mm Dillon Magnum)
- .380 ACP (9x17mm Browning Short)
- (rimless .38 Special)
- .38 Auto (.38 ACP)
- .38 Super Auto
- (a rimless .38 Super development)
- .38/.45 Clerke (wildcat developed in the 1970s by )
- .357 SIG
- 9.8 mm Auto Colt
- .38-40 Winchester (.38 WCF)
- .400 Corbon
- (.40 Guns & Ammo, a cut-down .30 Remington with .40" bullets)
- .40 Smith & Wesson (.40 Auto, 10 x 21 mm)
- (.401 Winchester Self-Loading trimmed to 1.218" with .38-40 WCF bullets)[2]
- 10mm Auto
- .41 Action Express
- (.41 Jurras, .41 AutoMag)
- .41 Long Colt (.41 Colt, .41 LC)
- (developed by Remington in 1932, 1.26" case, 210 gr, 900 fps)[3]
- (shortened .41 Magnum wildcat, trimmed to .44 Special length, 220 gr, 900-1200 fps)[4]
- .41 Remington Magnum
- (10mm Wildey Magnum)
- see: german Wiki-version: [1]
- (caseless cartridge designed by for their .427 ZMR pistol)
- .44 American (predecessor to the .44 S&W Russian)
- .44 Bulldog
- .44 Colt
- .44 Special
- .44 S&W Russian
- .44 Remington Magnum
- .44 Auto Mag
- .440 Cor-Bon
- (.442 Revolver Centre Fire, 10.5x17mmR, .442 Kurz, 44 Webley, or .442 R.I.C.)
- (11mm Wildey Magnum)
- .44 Henry rimfire (11x23R)
- .44-40 Winchester (.44 WCF)
- (.4295 RIC)
- (11mm Austrian Gasser, 11.25x36Rmm Montenegrin)
- (11.35x18mm)
- .45 Schofield (.45 S&W Schofield, .45 S&W)
- .45 Colt
- (.45 caseless cartridge designed by for their Gun One pistol)
- (wildcat developed in the 1970s by )
- .45 Super
- .450 Revolver (.450 Adams)
- .45 Webley
- .455 Webley (.455 Webley Mk I, .455 Revolver, .455 Colt, .455 Colt Mk I; also identical to the .476 Enfield, .476 Eley, or .476/.455)
- .455 Webley Mk II (.455 Revolver Mk II, .455 Colt Mk II, .455 Eley)
- .455 Webley Automatic
- .45 GAP
- .45 ACP (.45 Auto)
- (.45 Italian, .45 Automatic Short)
- .45 Auto Rim
- .45 S&W
- .45 Winchester Magnum
- (.450 Triton)
- .454 Casull
- (a 1.6" belted cartridge derived from the .458 Winchester)
- .460 S&W Magnum
- .460 Rowland
- .475 Linebaugh
- .475 Wildey Magnum
- .480 Ruger
- .476 Enfield (.476 Enfield Mk3, .476 Eley, or .476/.455)
- (proprietary Russian revolver cartridge, derived from 32-gauge shotshell)
- (.50 Bowen Special, same case length as .44 Special, 300-400 gr @ 700-900 fps [4" bbl.] on Ruger Redhawk frame)[5]
- .50 Action Express
- .500 S&W Special
- .500 S&W Magnum
- .50 Remington (M71 Army)
- .50 GI
- .500 Wyoming Express (.500 WE)
- (.577 Eley, .577 Webley)
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Other cartridges used in repeating handguns
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, and the Magnum Research BFR. These include:
- .218 Bee
- .22 Hornet
- .30 Carbine
- .30-30 Winchester
- .410 bore
- .444 Marlin
- .45-70 Government
- .50-70 Government
See also
- Firearms
- List of rifle cartridges
- Table of pistol and rifle cartridges (by year)
- List of cartridges by caliber
References
- ^ Taffin, John. Big-Bore Sixguns. Iola, WI: Krause, 1997, p. 235.
- ^ Taffin, John. Big-Bore Sixguns. Iola, WI: Krause, 1997, p. 91.
- ^ Taffin, John. Big-Bore Sixguns. Iola, WI: Krause, 1997, p. 90.
- ^ Taffin, John. Big-Bore Sixguns. Iola, WI: Krause, 1997, p. 94.
- ^ Taffin, John. Big-Bore Sixguns. Iola, WI: Krause, 1997, p. 302.
External links
- GunDirectory.com: Gun Reviews, Reference Guide, and Classifieds
- Hawks Handgun Cartridges
- Thenumas Cartridge spreadsheet
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