You can find diagrams for the AMT 380 9mm Kurz backup by checking the manufacturer's website or contacting their customer service for technical documents. Additionally, online forums and websites dedicated to firearms, such as GunBroker or The High Road, may have user-shared diagrams. You can also try searching for manuals or schematics on sites like eBay or Amazon, where sellers might offer PDF downloads or physical copies.
Who cares? It's such a pathetic caliber anyways.
Yes. 9mm Kurz (or Cortos) is the European designation for .380 ACP. also called .380 Auto.
380 ACP, 9mm Kurz
A double action pistol that chambers a .380 ACP round. AKA 9mm Kurz
.380 ACP, also known as 9x17mm, 9mm Short, and 9mm Kurz.
Amt 380 backup #70100
Follow instructions in the owner's manual. If you don't have one, I suggest you find a gunsmith and ask for help.
9mm Corto is another name for .380 ACP (also called 9mm Kurz and .380 Auto) Corto and Kurz both mean "short"
.380 ACP is simply another name for the 9x17 cartridge, also known as the 9mm Short or 9mm Kurz.
Want ads, gun shows, gun shops, e-gunparts.com
Yes. .380 ACP is ONE of the full names for the cartridge- stands for Automatic Colt Pistol. You may also see it as 9mm Kurz, or 9mm Corto (means 9mm Short),
They are the same round. In the "metric world" outside the US it's called 9mm Kurz (German for "short") and in the US it's called the .380 ACP. Other names, depending on the country and manufacturer, include .380 Auto, 9mm Browning, 9mm Corto, 9mm Short and 9x17mm, and there are even some others. The confusion is caused by the fact that US ammo named .38 or .380 is the diameter of the brass cartridge while the bullet is actually .35" (9mm) diameter.