According to Hodgdon, it varies from about 2850 fps to about 3600 fps.
The .223 Remington rifle cartridge has a muzzle velocity of approximately 3600 feet per second.
Muzzle velocity of a .270 will vary with the rifle and the loading of that cartridge, but may be as low at 2700 fps, or high as 3400 fps.
muzzle velocity is the velocity of bullet and recoil velocity is the velocity of gun.
the muzzle velocity on the 40gn vmax is 2200fps
Good question. Like many questions, the answer is, "It depends." It depends on how it is loaded, what powders are used, what bullet weight is used, and when the velocity is measured. For example, sitting in the chamber, the velocity is 0 feet per second. Ha ha. But, let's assume you meant "maximum velocity", which occurs just as the projectile exits the muzzle of the gun. A muzzle loading rifle, using a .50 caliber projectile and black powder, will have relatively slower muzzle velocities than .50 caliber modern cartridges. With modern powders and rifles, at the muzzle, the velocity may be as high as almost 3,000 feet per second. Shooters who load their own cartridges can achieve any velocity in between those extremes. Once the projectile leaves the muzzle, it begins slowing down from air friction until it reaches 0 feet per second again, on impact. Funny, but true.
Depends on the load
The L1A1 SLR used by the British military is in caliber 7.62 NATO, and has a muzzle velocity of about 2800 fps.
you will have to define if you mean commercial or wildcat.
800-1000 fps
The .45 caliber bullet is not used in a sniper rifle.
The .223 Remington rifle cartridge has a muzzle velocity of approximately 3600 feet per second.
Muzzle velocity of a .270 will vary with the rifle and the loading of that cartridge, but may be as low at 2700 fps, or high as 3400 fps.
It can vary from 900-1300 FPS depending on the weight and the firearm. Generally a smaller slug can have a greater velocity and a greater energy.
muzzle velocity is the velocity of bullet and recoil velocity is the velocity of gun.
Between 830 and 1300 feet per second, depending on the load and the barrel length.
Can't be answered without knowing the projectile weight and muzzle velocity
No one answer. There are dozens of different .44 caliber cartridges, and hundreds of different loadings of those cartridges. A rifle will have a different velocity than a handgun. This is sort of like "how fast can a V8 car go?"