40mm: the diameter of the round, in this case a 40mm cannon shell.
L70: the weapon the ammunition is meant to be used, in this case the L70 Bofors AA gun
Lot 04-RA-96: The lot would be the " batch" of this ammunition. I think that 96 might be the year 1996, and that the RA would mean Royal Armory.
One round of .50 caliber ammunition is 0.93 inches center-to-center, so nine yards works out to 302 rounds. The belts on the P-38 and the B-29 were up to 500 rounds. The Mustang was up to 400. The Spitfire was 350 rpg, but that was smaller ammunition. No one measured belt length in terms of yards, so this whole story is quite unlikely.
One of the blades will have a series of round dots and X's. A year ending in 0 will have 5 x's and 5 dots. Each year after that will lose one dot or x. Other markings indicate the proper decade to determine the production year.
The Three contests were an Archey round, Swordsmanship round, and a horse round
round
"Round" is a noun and the direct object of the verb "playing".
Copper Plated Round Nose
Lead, Round Nosed
Can't be answered without knowing EXACTLY what type of 7.62 round yoou are referring to. Then will depend on if its just the ammunition, ammunition in a drum, ammunition in a 20 or 30 or 40 round magazine. ammunition in a cloth belt, metal belt, etc...
A round of ammunition for ANY firearm is one cartridge.
A land mine with white markings or brozone circle is a training round.
25 cents a round.
20-50 cents a round
That depends on the caliber of the round of ammunition.
It fires a 4.6x30mm cartridge.
C. A round lead ball.
A round is one shot, or cartridge. The term 'round', for the projectile fired from a gun, comes from the days of the musket when the ammunition was round. The projectiles are no longer roung but the name stuck.
The m1a1 carbine is manufactered by Inland which is a division of General Motors. It is equipped with a 15-round magazine and takes .30 caliber ammunition.