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It is a an automatic pistol cartridge fired by some guns. A gun that shoots that cartridge may be called a .38 Super.
When a spent cartridge fails to fully eject from a semi-automatic pistol; its primary characteristic is that it's trapped in the ejection port in an upright position, which resembles a stovepipe. The cause is usually from riding the slide versus allowing the slide to engage under its own spring loaded force.
Yes. The US calls it a .25 ACP (automatic Colt pistol) and Europe called it the 6.35 mm.
No.
Cartridge
Gunpowder, primer, bullet (the projectile) and the cartridge case.
A pistol by loading ammunition into the chamber. The firing the pin then strikes the cartridge, which causes the pistol to discharge.
No. The .45 Automatic Colt Pistol (ACP) cartridge is longer the the .45 Glock Automatic Pistol (GAP) cartridge. Since they headspace on the MOUTH of the cartridge case, they cannot be interchanged.
It is the named of the cartridge it shoots- the .45 Automatic Colt Pistol cartridge.
the ACP in any gun cartridge means Colt Auto Pistol
It's a French pistol, which uses a proprietary cartridge known as the 7.65 Longue (also known as the 7.65x20mm and 7.65 MAS). It DOES NOT have any compatibility with the 7.65x17SR/.32 ACP cartridge, and you should not attempt to fire the .32 ammo in that pistol.
It won't fit in the pistol.