It depends on several factors, but a good estimate would be, about a mile.
You do not mention which 9 mm cartridge you are asking about. As the 9mm Luger (parabellum) is the most popular handgun load in the world, I assume this is the one? The maximum listed range is about 2200 metres. Actual distance will vary depending on the grain weight of the bullet (for the 9mm luger, from 100 to 147), barell length, and other factors.
A 9 mm by a little, because it travels about 13 to 14 hundred feet per second.. And is lighter, And most 40 s&w travel at about 1100 feet per second and are Heavy
Which gun.... of course it could be a toy gun which can barely even fire, in which case it will be like half a metre, or a .50 BMG (12.7 mm) McMillan bolt-action rifle with the longest kill of 2,430 metres (7,972 ft). All depends on power.. (I think he already quanitified the direction when he said 'straight'.... its called horizontal...
2,800 FPS or 1909 MPH at a effective range of 2,624 ft / 875yds...
Usually between 2500 and 3200 feet per second out of a 16" barrel, depending on the weight of the projectile.
A bit over 3,000 yards, depending on the rifle. Please note tat is NOT the effective, usable range, simply the maximum distance the bullet can travel over a relatively flat surface (with no accuracy)
Depends on the bullet, the cartridge and the weapon that fired it, see related link.Some examples:BB/Airsoft (air) gun: 100 m/s9 mm pistol: 340 m/s5.56 mm assault gun: 920 m/s
You do not mention which 9 mm cartridge you are asking about. As the 9mm Luger (parabellum) is the most popular handgun load in the world, I assume this is the one? The maximum listed range is about 2200 metres. Actual distance will vary depending on the grain weight of the bullet (for the 9mm luger, from 100 to 147), barell length, and other factors.
As far as diameter, there is very little difference. A .357 is .358 in diameter and a 9mm is .356 in diameter.
It depends on the bullet weights. The 9 mm (AKA 9x19 mm, 9 mm Luger, or 9 mm Parabellum) is faster than the .380 ACP (AKA 9 mm Kurz) except when you compare the lightest .380 bullets to the heaviest 9 mm bullets. If you compare the same bullet weights in each, the 9 mm is always faster.
11.5 mm bullet diameter
Millimeters, it is the size of the bullet.
No way to answer. What type of steel? What range? What weapon is being fired? What barrel length? Armour piercing at 400 meters
Yes.
Size of the bullet
7.62x39mm
Yes. .38 special is a revolver cartridge and .380 is an auto cartridge. Also, the .38 will almost always have a heavier bullet and more muzzle energy than a .380. The .38 bullet is 0.357 inches in diameter while the .380 is 0.355 inches in diameter. Technically, the .380 cartridge is considered part of the 9 mm class of bullets. [9 mm x 19 mm = 9 mm Luger or 9 mm Parabellum, 9 mm x 18 mm = 9 mm Tokarov, and 9 mm x 17 mm = .380 ACP]