It was introduced in 1943.
Which 5.56 cartridge are you referring to? The American 5.56 cartridge is the 55 grain M193, which has been phased out of military service, although a handful of countries may still use it (such as South Africa, which is now going to the 62 grain NATO cartridge). The 62 grain 5.56 NATO cartridge is Belgian in origin.The 62 grain SS109/M855 outperforms the 5.45x39 cartridge, but the best performing one of all is the 77 grain Mk 262 cartridge, which is used for Special Purpose variants of the M16, and may eventually replace the 5.56 NATO cartridge.
German Luger pistols before 1902 used a proprietary 7.65mm bottleneck cartridge, sometimes referred to as .30 Luger in US. After 1902 Lugers used the 9mm round, also commonly known as 9mm Para (Parabellum) and 9mm Luger.
the 30 cal luger cartridge has a bottle neck case. a mauser 32 cal cartridge has a straight case...........
The Thompson is classified as a submachine gun because it fires a pistol cartridge (.45mm) not a rifle cartridge. Another example would be the German MP-40 which used a 9mm cartridge or the M3 "Grease Gun" which fired either .45 or 9mm.
What was the slave trade referred to as? Well it was referred to as a Middle Passage.
condo and sons monticello, in 47960 they have a m43 ambulance parts, i know they have or had the front and rear drive shaft for one also.,
AK-47 and AKM:fires the 7.62x39 M43 cartridgeSelective fire (semi or full auto)Long stroke actionDragunov PSD:fires the 7.62x54R cartridge, with export models made in 7.62x51Semi auto onlyShort stroke action
240 kilometres taking this route:Take A1 MELBOURNE, from Sale, to M1. Continue on M1 (toll) to M43 CITYLINK to the AIRPORT, in MELBOURNE.Take M43 CITYLINK to the AIRPORT.
If it's a M43 engine it has a chain.
.355 Also referred to a 9mm cartridge............
None. Unless it has been rebored to another caliber. Most unlikely.
It has a M43B18 engine from 1993-1998
This term often refers to a bullet cartridge inside of a magazine (or commonly referred to as a "clip").
There have been a few. The most common is likely the Spanish Mauser.
Yes it is- 7.62mm is also called 30 calibre and is 3/5ths the diameter of the Browning 50 cal. 7.62 is the older NATO standard round diameter, from 30-40 Krag, 30 Springfield , 30:06, 30M1, 308, and now 300 WinMag. Also the commie blok SKS,AK47 and Dragonoff. Currently replaced in NATO close combat arms by the 223- 5.56mm. Actually, the 12.7x99 cartridge (also known as .50 Browning Machine Gun) is a much older cartridge than the 7.62x51 NATO cartridge and the 7.62x39 M43 cartridge used by the Soviet Bloc and client states. The .50 BMG cartridge was introduced in the early 1930s, whereas the 7.62x51 NATO cartridge was introduced in the late 1950s. It is essentially a shortened .30-06 (7.62x63) cartridge. Not all 7.62 ammo has the same diameter - 7.62x63 and 7.62x51 has a projectile diameter of .308 inches (7.82mm); 7.62x39 ad 7.62x54R have a cartridge diameter of .312 inches (7.92mm), etc.
Here you go: CJ-= N0W2 N16Y #M43 SS#3 T@#R
The Lexmark 1200 takes a black cartridge and a color cartridge. The black cartridge that the Lexmark 1200 uses is or 16 and 17 cartridge, with the 17 cartridge being the moderate use cartridge. The color cartridge required by the printer is the 26 or 27 cartridge, with the 27 cartridge being a moderate use cartridge as well.