The amount of gunpowder in an average bullet varies depending on the type and caliber of the cartridge. Typically, a standard centerfire bullet contains about 3 to 5 grains of smokeless powder, which translates to roughly 0.2 to 0.3 grams. Rimfire cartridges may have slightly less. Overall, the specific amount can differ based on the bullet's design and intended use.
Technically speaking- none. A bullet is the solid metal part of a cartridge that is fired out of the barrel. How much gunpowder is in a 9mm Parabellum CARTRIDGE will depend on the powder used and the bullet weight. I reload with 4.6 grains of Bullseye powder with a 115 gr bullet, but there are dozens of other loads.
When you shoot a bullet the bullet casing pos out through the ejector and that is where the bullet is and gunpowder to fire it.
A grain is a weight. Smaller than an ounce or a gram- its a tiny amount. When talking about guns, grains refers to how much gunpowder is in each bullet. A bullet with more grains of gunpowder has more bang to it than a bullet with less grains of gun powder.
No, A bullet requires gunpowder. A bb is a projectile
That depends entirely on how much of it you have.
gunpowder+metel
gunpowder+ metal= bullet pow and metal + bullet= gun pow pow
A cartridge case holds the gunpowder.
Gunpowder creates it's own oxygen as it burns, so out side air source is not necessary. a bullet would go off in the vacuum of space as well.
A bullet cartridge is made by assembling several key components: the bullet (projectile), casing, primer, and gunpowder. The casing is typically manufactured from brass or steel, shaped and sized to hold the gunpowder and bullet securely. The primer is then inserted into the base of the casing, and gunpowder is added before the bullet is pressed into the top of the casing. Finally, the cartridge undergoes quality control checks before being packaged for sale.
gunpowder+metal to make gunpowder: fire+dust to make dust: earth+air
Easy! gunpowder+metal.. Hope this helps :D (im sure it does)