TT33 ammo

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I know this really don't belong here, but most guys with a red gun also have some red pistols. opened a big green box of CZ ammo today and found it full of these. I have never seen this before its allways been lacquered steel case, not brass cased cupra-nickle bullet on the SMG stripper anyone else seen this stuff? im pretty happy my dominion arms P762 loves it



 
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It's normal. Most is coated steel cased (lacquer, checks have some kind of other material as well) but some in copper washed steel or other materials.

The Czech stuff came on stripper clips for a SMG they fielded, as previously mentioned. This ammo is considered "hot" for 7.62x25mm but I believe that's a myth and some guys have chronographed it.
 
Yea, from all the gurus on here over the years, the tT-33 was meant for these rounds, and they are hot, lots of fun for sure! Can you say where you got the brass cased ones? I would love to have a half crate!
 
cant remember where it came from ive had it quiet some time.

I was thinking way more rare than you guys as ive been through about 20 crates between me and friends and ive never seen this. allwys been lacquered steel
 
Can't say that I've ever seen those projectiles, but there's only so many cases of Tok ammo a guy can buy.

It has the ‘bxn 53’ brass casing that Sellier & Bellot factory produced so much of for Czechoslovakia in 1953, but I am used to seeing those with a copper-plated steel jacket over a lead core, not your shiny bullet heads.

The lacquered steel cases will be marked ‘aym’ (a factory on the Slovak side), and have plated steel jackets with lead and a mild steel core. You can see the differences below:

Tok_rounds_03_zpsabaf5288.jpg


Usually a green Czechoslovak surplus case of ammo can have either bxn, aym, or a mix in it, and you don't know until you crack it open. The cardboard boxes inside are brown with aym, and white with bxn. All on 8-round clips. All corrosive primers. The steel are a bit less desireable, because the core will ricochet (but many ranges won't allow either, because they both have steel jackets).

Now your silver bullets, are they actual nickel jackets like you said, or just un-plated steel? Are they magnetic? Can you cut them with side cutters or a Dremel cut-off wheel, and then is it a pure lead core, or does it have a steel slug inside?

The Cu plating isn't just there for show; it helps cushion and lubricate the projectile as it explodes through the barrel, being a softer metal. Having direct steel on steel (or nickel) contact will wear out the rifling more quickly, will it not?
 
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cupra nickel bullets were also used in some Canadian 303 rounds dureing wartime, and were known to be very good rounds. how much harder they were on the bore is hard to say. ill do some distruction testing tomorrow and see whats inside the jacket
 
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