The diameter of a 9mm round is 9 millimeters, which is approximately 0.354 inches. This measurement refers to the bullet's diameter, commonly associated with the 9mm Parabellum cartridge. The "9mm" designation indicates that the bullet has a nominal diameter of 9mm.
A bullet with a diameter of approximately 9mm. Not all 9mm projectiles are exactly 9mm in diameter - the 9x19 Parabellum/Luger has a diameter of 9mm, while the 9x18 Makarov has a diameter of 9.27mm, the 9x23 Steyr has a diameter of 9.03mm, etc.
The main difference between a 9mm and a .45 caliber bullet is the diameter. A 9mm bullet has a diameter of 9 millimeters, while a .45 caliber bullet has a diameter of .45 inches. The .45 caliber bullet is larger and generally heavier than the 9mm bullet, resulting in differences in recoil, speed, and stopping power.
About .36 caliber. The 9mm family of calibers normally uses a bullet that is .356 diameter. This is the same as the .380 and nearly the same as the .38 Special, whose "nominal" calibers are quite different from their actual bullet diameter when measured.
The 9mm round in loaded with a bullet diameter of .356"in.
They use bullets of the same diameter, but with different weight ranges, which happen to overlap. The .380 uses a 9mm diameter bullet in a 17mm long case. The 9mm uses a 9mm diameter bullet in a 19mm long case.
The 9mm means that the bore is 9mm inside diameter . The bullet will be roughly 9mm or a little more in diameter. The 45 means basically the same, the bore of the barrel is .45 caliber. but the bullet will be anywhere from .451 to .452 in diameter depending on manufacture and on type of metal the bullet is made out of. So basically yes.
Bullet diameter of a 9mm is .355; for a 38 it is .357. 38 case is longer. Additionally, a 9mm is designed to be used in a semi-automatic pistol, and a .38 is designed to be used in a revolver, although, there are a couple of revolvers that will chamber 9mm.
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.
The diamater of a 9mm parabellum bullet is 9.03 millimeters, or .356 of an inch.
As far as diameter, there is very little difference. A .357 is .358 in diameter and a 9mm is .356 in diameter.
I think you mean .32 caliber, not mm. It means that the gun fires a bullet that is about 32/100ths of an inch in diameter. A 9mm fires a bullet 9mm in diameter- or about .35 inches in diameter. A 32 mm bullet would be about the size of big (D cell) flashlight battery!