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Aproximately 7 lbs
About 63 grains.
Not so much NATO's role in the Berlin Airlift, but the Berlin Airlift in the role of the forming of NATO is more important.
in canada
40$
My .32 cal. mold produces pure lead round ball that weigh about 47 grains or about .107 oz.
up to 3-4 times their own body weight
FPS is an abbreviation for Feet Per Second. This is the velocity of the projectile when it leaves the bore of the gun. The velocity is entirely dependent upon the particular round being fired. For example, the average .45 ACP (pistol) round travels at 830 feet per second. A 7.62mm NATO (Rifle) round averages 2850 feet per second. Velocities vary greatly from round to round.
Pretty much all of them.
The answer depends on the extent to which the number is being rounded.
Based on a round round bale with a maximum diameter of 7 feet, 6 inches, the seed cotton weight can be up to 5,000 pounds and hold 3.8 bales of cotton lint.
5.56x45mm NATO, standardized under STANAG 4172, is a rifle cartridge. It is a standard cartridge for NATO forces, and for several nations not part of NATO. It is derived from, but not entirely interchangeable with, the .223 Remington cartridge. This is due to, among other things, the greater gas pressure of the 5.56 mm military round. What you're asking is impossible to answer here. Firstly, the bullet weights are variable in different loads in the same cartridge. Second, there are powder charge weight variables (different powders, different charge amounts). Thirdly, different brass weights differently. If you have steel cased ammo (for the 5.56x45 and .223) the weight changes yet again. Fourthly, even primers can vary in weight. There are too many variables to answer this...if you really want to know, buy a cheap balance beam scale and start weighin'.