The easiest way to remember it, is by remembering .50=1/2 inch
Caliber is a term used to describe the diameter of a bullet in SAE units. 100 Caliber = 1 inch a 45 caliber bullet has a diameter of .45 inches.
About 8.38mm (8.4mm). Take .33 (caliber) x 25.4 (mm per inch) = 8.38mm
They measure the width of the gun barrel in fractions of an inch. A 38 caliber will be .38 of an inch. The bullet projectile itself is a little less wide.
1.5 inches. For diameters greater than one inch, inches or millimeters are usually used, not calibers.
You look at the markings on its edge.
Yes. .50 caliber refers to .5 of an inch.
Roughly .275 or .28 caliber. Take MM divided by 25.4 (mm/inch) and you get caliber in hundredths of an inch.
Caliber is the diameter of the bore of a firearm. It's expressed in hundredths or thousandths of an inch, as in .45 caliber or .380 caliber. Curiously, the actual diameter of a .38 caliber slug is 0.357 inch.
about .309 caliber, which is roughly .31 caliber. Assuming that you meant 7.85 millimeter. Since there are 25.4mm / inch, you take 7.85 divided by 25.4 to get caliber (in hundredth of an inch).
9 caliber is 0.09 inch, smaller than any standard ammunition made. 0.09 inch = 2.286 mm. Perhaps you were thinking "What caliber is 9 mm?". 9 mm = 0.354 inch = 35.4 caliber.
30 caliber = .308 of an inch = 7.62mm
`Caliber` is a standard of measure in thousandths of an inch. For example, a .30 caliber bullet would measure 300 thousandths of an inch diameter, or three tenths of an inch. 1 caliber would be 1000 thousandths or 1 inch which equals 25.4 mm.
Caliber is a term used to describe the diameter of a bullet in SAE units. 100 Caliber = 1 inch a 45 caliber bullet has a diameter of .45 inches.
Well, it's a .38 caliber, but the actual measurement is .355 of an inch.
.050 inch.050 inch
Shotguns do not have a caliber. However, a 28 bore is 14mm or .55 of an inch.
Noop.A .223 means 22.3/100ths of an inch,A 30-06 means a .30 caliber (30/100ths of an inch), that was introduced/patented in 1906.