It will fly straight unless affected by other forces. Gravity will cause it to drop and wind may make it move as well.
9 mm. = 0.354331 inch. Direct Conversion Formula9 mm*1 in 25.4 mm=0.3543307087 in
1/4 or .25 Direct Conversion Formula 9 mm* 1 in 25.4 mm = 0.3543307087 in
The difference is in the measurement system. Just as with miles vs. kilometers, pints vs. liters, etc, the United States continues to cling to the imperial measurement system, and cartridge calibers that were developed in the United States still bear the imperial measurements. When decimal numbers are used to describe the caliber of a firearm, for example .45, .380, .22, etc. These are quoted as fractional inches. The barrel bore of a .45 caliber firearm is .45 inches across. European-designed cartridges are quoted using the metric system, as in 9mm, 5.56mm, 7.62mm, etc. The measurement still refers to the internal barrel diameter. This likely will never change. Once the cartridges get their names, the names stick.
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.
A single 9mm bullet is about 3-6 cents. A 9mm Parabellum (Luger) CARTRIDGE is about .30-.55.
Generally speaking, the .45 caliber bullet is larger in diameter and heavier than a 9mm bullet.
There are SEVERAL 9mm cartridges- the most common is probably the 9mm Parabellum (9mm Luger). A 9mm Parabellum BULLET (not cartridge) is typically slightly smaller than a .38 Special bullet- .356 instead of .357. The 9mm is frequently (not always) lighter- and shorter. Other 9mm cartridges (such as the 9mm Makarov) will have different bullets.
No
380 and 9mm ammunition IS NOT INTERCHANGEABLE.
No, the bullet will not seat.
the range of a 9x19mm would be 2500 yards but with such a short barrel, slow bullet speed and others, the chances of accurate hits is 0%
The 9mm round in loaded with a bullet diameter of .356"in.
The .22 bullet is smaller than the 9mm in size, (about 6mm) and is lighter in weight.
The 380 ACP, also known as the 9mm Short, 9x17, 9mm Browning, 9mm Kurz and 9mm Corto uses a .355 diameter bullet. The 38 special uses a .357 diameter bullet. Additionally, the 380 ACP is designed for a semi-automatic and the .38 special is designed for a revolver.
any weapon that can fire the 9mm cartridge................