"Rounds of bullets" refers to individual cartridges that contain a bullet, gunpowder, and a primer, which are assembled into a single unit for use in firearms. Each round is capable of being fired from a gun, and the term often describes the quantity of ammunition available or used in a shooting context. In discussions about firearms, "rounds" can also refer to the number of shots fired or the capacity of a magazine.
Tank bullets are commonly referred to as tank ammunition or rounds. The primary types include armor-piercing rounds, high-explosive rounds, and canister rounds, each designed for specific combat scenarios. The most recognized type of armor-piercing round is the APFSDS (Armor-Piercing Fin-Stabilized Discarding Sabot) round, which is designed to penetrate armored targets effectively.
My guess is they carried extra ammo in their pockets. ??? or perhaps in saddle bags. Rifles carried more ammo anyways like 8 or more rounds depending on the cartridge used.
Bullets identify new procedures and services added to CPT.
not exactly, but bullets do crush
No, unless you want there to be rounds because you are playing the same game rounds or no rounds it doesn't matter how you play it.
Rubber Bullets= Baton rounds
shots bullets rounds
Six rounds.
30 rounds
ROUNDS
15 rounds
The minigun shoots 6000 rounds per minute, that is 100 bullets a second, so it does have about 1000-10000 bullets
30 rounds = stick mags, 45-70 rounds = drum mags
Belt Fed machine gun average holds 250 rounds. Mag Fed holds 50 rounds. Vickers canvas belt holds 300 rounds, while Maxim holds 150 rounds. Lead bullets are most often used.
bullets missles rockets bombs
65 is an integer. If you meant 6.5, then it rounds to 7. If you meant 0.65, it rounds to 1.
It depends on the make and model of .25 caliber handgun, but, generally the magazine would hold at least 5 rounds with one in the chamber for a total of 6 rounds. The correct terms for "bullets" are "rounds" or "cartridges", a bullet is the projectile that exits the firearm.