you use to transfer ammunition to range personnel or other unit personnel?
you use to transfer ammunition to range personnel or other unit personnel?
you use to transfer ammunition to range personnel or other unit personnel?
Ammunition is gunpowder and other artillery used in combat including naval mines, warheads, missiles, bombs, landmines, and anti-personnel mines.
No, the .357 and .38 Special ammunition are not interchangeable with other types of ammunition.
No
No. They have matching dimensions, but differ in other areas, such as neck angles. .223 ammunition can be safely fired in a 5.56x45mm chamber; 5.56x45 ammunition is not recommended to be used in a .223 Remington chamber.
Usually you train within the medical technology facility or unit in a hospital or clinic. There may also be other private institutions that have this kind of training for medical personnels.
It can fire .32 Smith & Wesson and .32 Smith & Wesson long ammunition. These are the only ammunition types it is designed for, and is NOT compatible with other types of .32 calibre/7.65mm ammunition.
Trains are still used for moving tanks, personnel carriors, self-propelled artillary, and other oversize equipment, but rail transit times are generally too long for troop deployment, and the military has its own vehicles for moving supplies and ammunition.
Ammunition that uses a metal case. other than brass
M855 has a green tip painted on the bullet.
The Germans had been experimenting with a machinegun that fired caseless ammunition. Caseless cartridges would reduce the weight, allowing military personnel to carry more ammo OR carry other equipment in addition to their alloted issue of ammo. In war, weight is an issue. The caseless ammunition would also free up the massive use of valuable brass & copper...these two metals are the favored material of the Western nations in the production of small arms ammunition. The former communist block countries favored plain in-expensive iron/steel (tin can material) for their cartridge cases.