No,it is non-corrosive.it was made by Winchester in 1957.most American made ammo from 53 up was non-corrosive.
WRA 66 is a headstamp that identifies the ammunition being made by Winchester Repeating Arms in 1966. Impossible to know what weapon it goes to without a DETAILED DESCRIPTION TO INCLUDE MEASUREMENTS.
You can contact Winchester, but as they are made to fire only BLANK ammo, they are not a firearm, and records may not be available. Contact Customer Service thru the Winchester website.
A cartridge that is marked WRA 52 is a round of ammunition loaded for the US military (Winchester Repeating Arms, 1952) It is POSSIBLY a 30-06 rifle cartridge.
XO XX Pretty biitch ♥ YV WrA Dare##
Well the key to tackleing is getting low. wra[[ing your arms around there waist and slamming them to ground
War Relocation Authority, an authority responsible for interning and relocating Japanese Americans throughout World War II.
During the civil war the vice president was Andrew Johnson. Then after President Lincoln was assassinated Johnson became president.
Dorothea Lange was a photographer. She worked for various government agencies, such as the Farm Security Adminstration (FSA) and the War Relocation Authority (WRA), documenting historical events in the early and mid-1900s.
Lane Ryo Hirabayashi has written: 'Hikaru Iwasaki and the WRA's Photographic Section, 1943-1945' -- subject(s): Japanese Americans, Photography, Evacuation and relocation, 1942-1945, World War, 1939-1945
they can be also known as the "three phantom gods" 1.The winged dragon of wra 2.Obelisk the tormenter 3.Slifer the sky dragon The red one is no.2 The gold one is no.1 The blue one is no.3
Your rifle was made late in 1951 at the Winchester Repeating Arms Company in New Haven, CT. It would have been one of the last guns made by WRA, as the name was changed to Winchester-Western Division in January 1952.
That depends on the mix, there are hundreds of different mixes of concrete. A basic mix of concrete (say a blended RC25 mix) has 1000kg of sand, 1000kg of stone, 150kg of OPC cement, 125kg of GGBS slag, 1.3lt of WRA and 75lt of waters PER CUBIC METER. Regards Colin, a Tarmac concrete batcher.