10 clips
For .50 BMG, ammo is about $4.50 to $5 per cartridge for ordinary ball ammo. Some specialty ammo is MUCH more expensive.
Ball ammo for the .50 BMG on the civilian market sells for about $3.50- 4.25 per cartridge. I have no idea what the military pays per cartridge, but it would be less than that.
20-200 depending on specifics
Each soldier carried a different amount depending on job and size of unit. Personal ammo was around 200rounds for rifle, 2-4 grenades, maybe a couple of morter shells, a claymore mine, and extra heavy machine gun ammo. Some soldiers had LAWs which is a rocket launcher and would also carry the rockets for the weapon. Its was more about how much weight a man could carry rather than how much individual ammo.
30/06 has a slight edge because of powder capacity If you are looking to buy a deer rifle you should probably go for the 30-06. The .308 is a 250 yard cartridge, while the 30-06 is a 275 yard cartridge, I don't know much about ammo but I know my rifles well.
Depends on which ammo you buy. I am shooting military surplus at about 15 cents per cartridge, but brass cased Remington will run $1 per cartridge.
I think there are 200 bullets in a uzi ammo clip
It depends on what kind of ammo.
Depends on the shell. Let's use the right name, they are "cartridge casings". A fired .22 LR casing may weigh only a couple of grams- about 300 to make one pound. A .50 BMG has a very large cartridge case, and about 6 of those would be a pound.
You have to be more specific. Looking at the "Magazine" or "clip" can give you a good idea on how much ammo a weapon can hold. Also the caliber size of the ammo is a factor to how much ammo is in a "Magazine/clip".
The 16 cartridge is considered the high capacity cartridge and the 17 gives you less ink
NO! The .32 ACP is loaded to much higher energies than the .32 S&W Revolver cartridge, and cannot be safely fired in a revolver- especially one that old. You will also have problems extracting the fired cartridge case.