Pretty much what they are made of today. The term you want, though, is probably cartridge. That consists of a brass cartridge case. That holds the primer at the rear center, and is filled with gunpowder. The bullet (the projectile that comes out of the barrel) is made of lead, covered in a layer of copper/nickel jacketing metal.
by reference to 'luger' ammo, one believes it to be a 9mm cartridge, which is the cartrige for the German luger. however, there are many other pistol that were made to fire the 9mm luger cartridge. in addition, the luger was also made in the '30 cal luger' which is a smaller bullet in a necked down cartridge.
Georg Luger, in 1901.
The P229 pistol is made in 3 different calibers- one of which is the 9mm Parabellum, also known as 9mm Luger.
any weapon that can fire the 9mm cartridge................
A single 9mm bullet is about 3-6 cents. A 9mm Parabellum (Luger) CARTRIDGE is about .30-.55.
The .30 caliber Luger cartridge goes by several names which makes searching for it somewhat confusing. Originally it was named 7.65 Luger Winchester markets it under the name .30 Luger with a 93 grain bullet. Sako of Finland also markets the round with a 92 grain bullet. While not usually available in a WalMart one can find the round in a larger dedicated gunshop in the United States.
a K date luger was made in 1934 and a G date luger was made in 1935.....
The .380 is a 9mm bullet. But, going with the assuming that you're comparing the .380 ACP (9x17mm) against the 9mm Luger/9mm Parabellum (9x19mm), the answer would be no.
it is the code name for a Mauser made luger
value depends on condition. and, lugers were made only in 30 cal luger and 9 mm luger.
They were originally made in 7.65mm Luger (.30 Luger) but many were rebarreled to 9mm Parabellum (9mm Luger). Have a gunsmith check it.
luger were made to fire a 9mm cartridge or the 30 luger cartridge. a 9mm cartridge will not chamber in a 30 cal luger pistol............