1-5 as a general rule.
500 rds
Any bullet that has a diameter of one half inch is a .50 caliber bullet. There are different .50 caliber bullets- my Hawken muzzle loading rifle shoots a .50 caliber lead bullet, but different from the .50 Browning Machine Gun (that is also used in the .50 Barret sniper rifle)
Yes. The .50 caliber machine gun was developed for use on armored vehicles. A lighter version was designed for use in aircraft.
Yes. For every caliber of ammunition, there is a hollow point round that goes with it, except for .50 caliber machine gun and sniper rounds.
A 50 caliber gun, or more properly, a .50 caliber gun is a firearm having an internal bore diameter of 1/2 or .50 of an inch.
For .50 BMG, ammo is about $4.50 to $5 per cartridge for ordinary ball ammo. Some specialty ammo is MUCH more expensive.
The Barrett sniper rifle typically uses .50 caliber bullets.
American Heavy Machine Guns in WW2 fired .30 caliber rounds. The .50 caliber machine gun was 0.50 caliber which is 1/2-inch diameter and about 2 inches long. The shell before firing is about 6 inches in length.
50. caliber machine gun....period
45 caliber Machine Gun and 50 caliber machine gun
No. They will be too large to fit in the gun or be fired out of the barrel.
The term "squirrel gun" was used with muzzle loading rifles that were smaller caliber than deer rifles. There was no one set caliber, but many were in .32 caliber, where a deer rifle would be .50, .54 or larger.