During World War I, reloading a bolt-action rifle typically took about 15 to 30 seconds for a trained soldier. The process involved ejecting the spent cartridge, chambering a new round, and ensuring the rifle was ready to fire again. Factors such as the rifle model, the soldier's training, and battlefield conditions could affect this time. Semi-automatic rifles, which were introduced later in the war, allowed for faster firing and reloading compared to traditional bolt-action models.
The Mouser was a a great rifle, in its time one of the best. This revolutionary rifle offered a marksman great accuracy, fast reload, great distance, and altogether comfterable and easy to operate.
Depended on the rifle. $5-$500
non
This gun is a Rifle
kark98 is a kind of weapon that the germanny use in ww1 and ww2 like a rifle gun.
The Mouser was a a great rifle, in its time one of the best. This revolutionary rifle offered a marksman great accuracy, fast reload, great distance, and altogether comfterable and easy to operate.
For WHO?
long enough
Depended on the rifle. $5-$500
non
This gun is a Rifle
The first anti-tank came out when the first tank was fielded, in WW1. It was a bolt action rifle.
The Ross Rifle was used by Canadians in world war one. WW1 was mainly trench warfare and were not good conditions for the Ross rifle it would jam fairly easily and Canadian soldiers were forced to pick up dead Germans guns the Lee-Enfield
The US did not begin WW1. It had been under way a long time before the US finally decided to take part.
ww1 french mle m16 was 8mmx50mm lebel.
likely from a Swiss 7.5 mm x 55 for a Schmidt Rubin rifle
Rifle, machine gun, gas, Zeppelin, tank, planes and torpedoes.