It depends on several factors. From rifles, it varies from 2500 to about 4000 feet per second. From a 6 inch barrel handgun, the .50AE averages about 1300 FPS.
2500 fps give or take
A single round of ammuntion? An M2? A Barrett rifle?
No. A 14.5 mm round is about .57 caliber. The .50 BMG cartridge is a 12.7x 99mm round.
Yes, a .50 caliber round can cause harm without making physical contact with a person through its shockwave and blast effects.
A typical .50 caliber round, such as the .50 BMG (Browning Machine Gun) cartridge, has an approximate mass of around 45-52 grams, depending on the specific type and composition of the bullet and casing.
Yes, a .50 caliber round has the potential to rip off a person's arm due to its high velocity and impact force.
No. The Luger was a 9mm gun and the 50 Desert Eage is a 50 caliber gun. The 9mm round would fall out of the barrel, and if you did manager to get it to fire, you could damage the gun and/or hurt yourself.
853 meters per second (which translates to approximately 2800 feet per second). There'll be some variation based on barrel length, charge used in the round, etc.
It depends on several factors, but it ranges from about 830 feet per second to about 1180 FPS.
Yes. For every caliber of ammunition, there is a hollow point round that goes with it, except for .50 caliber machine gun and sniper rounds.
No. A typical belt is four ball rounds, one tracer round.
This is the approximate size of a .45 caliber round, the conversion being .443 inches.