Bullet case, or simply, case.
A cartridge case holds the gunpowder.
Yes. The bullet is only the projectile. A bullet with case, powder, and primer is a cartridge. A cartridge without powder or primer is called a dummy cartridge because it will fit into a firearm but will not fire. Dummies are used for non firing training with weapons, and for display purposes.
The word is compact.
Yes. The more powder the bigger the bang and the faster the bullet moves. The faster the bullet goes, the more heat energy it will generate because of friction, and the initial blast from the powder.
Gun powder.
BULLETS are the metal projectile- the thing that comes out of the barrel- and contain no powder. The entire round of ammo is a CARTRIDGE (case, primer, powder, bullet). And there is no one answer for a .44 magnum cartridge- powder charge will vary, depending on WHICH powder is used, and which weight of bullet.
When the primer is struck, it ignites. When it does, it ingites the powder charge. The powder charge explosion pushes the bullet down and then out of the barrel.
The only way to be certain is to remove the bullet with a bullet puller, empty out the powder, and weigh it.
It depends on the size of container you buy. The average size baking powder container sold is 8.1 oz (230g) that size has a little more than 47 teaspoons.
The Magic Bullet has a juicer attachment to it's standard Magic Bullet blender, and it also has a separate product called the Magic Bullet Juice Bullet. The Juice bullet with a cover, filter, pulp container, feed tube pusher, bowl, cleaning brush and operating guide.
Grain refers to the weight of the bullet when measured on a powder scale.
There is no powder in the bullet at all. A bullet is just the projectile, typically made from lead and copper. Powder is contained in the cartridge casing. The actual amount depends on the powder used, but on average a .50 BMG cartridge would contain about 220 grains of powder. This is equal to 14.5 grams or 7.76 ounces.