The L1A1 SLR used by the British military is in caliber 7.62 NATO, and has a muzzle velocity of about 2800 fps.
potato did
One possibility is Self Loading.
L1A1 Self Loading Rifle. It's a variation of the FN FAL.
I think you mean 'Birmingham Small Arms - Self Loading Rifle'.
Semi automatic. The rest are manual loading.
Because a self loading rifle relies on the power of the explosion expelling the bullet to push back the bolt and load another bullet. With a pump action air rifle there is not enough power to both shoot the pellet and push back the bolt, therefore it uses all the pressure to expell the pellet.
M-16 ak 47 bar 1911-a1 ar-15 38 L1A1 Self Loading Rifle (SLR)
I heard a few rifles from 1917 and 1915 that sold for about $1,000
The Stevens 59A is a shotgun, not a rifle. It fires .410 ammo, both 2 1/2 and 3 inch shells.
Assuming the question is in reference to the M110 Semi Automatic Sniper System (SASS), and not the M110 self propelled howitzer, the answer would be 783 meters per second, which translates to something like 2570 feet per second, using the military issue 7.62x51 'special ball' M118LR cartridge. Different cartridges and loads will produce different performance results, and these will affect the muzzle velocity of the weapon.
No. The L1A1 Self Loading rifle in in caliber 7.62 x51 mm (7.62 NATO) fires a rimless cartridge with a .308 bullet. The .303 Enfield cartridge is a different shape, has a rim, and fires a .311 bullet. If you compare the two cartridges, totally different in shape.
Muzzle loading black powder rifles. The percussion cap was in use to replace he flintlock and the first self contained cartridge firearms were starting to see limited use. If you look up Springfield Model 1842, that is the SMOOTHBORE musket used by the US military until the model 1861 went into use. The 1861 was a rifled firearm. If you look up Hawken rifle, that was used by civilian hunters in that time period,