Help me identify this brass.

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If you can't read the headstamp - "IVI" "circle with a plus sign in it" and various numbers - 68, 69, 74, 78.... It is boxer primed.
brass pic .jpg
 

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It's Canadian Military 7.62x51 brass that a handloader has formed into a wildcat calibre. It's difficult to scale from the photo, but it could be one of the high pressure wildcats for a Colt 1911, or it could be for one of the Automags. Or I could be wrong. I expect one of the trolls will stop by any minute and tear me a new one.
 
If the cases are 33mm long and take an 8mm bullet, then the Canadian 7.62x51 brass has been formed for 7.92x33 German service, as used in the MP44/STG44.

Or, they could be for a wildcat. There was a .30 version of the 7.92x33.
 
IVI 5.56 converted. If head stamp has dated 74 and 78. 5.56 came into service in early 90s.

The 106 recoilless (105mm) I believe had a .50 cal for sighting.
 
It's reformed military 7.62x51mm brass. IVI is the monogram for the Industries Valcartier Inc now owned by GDOTS, the double digit number is the year the brass cartridge case was manufactured and the circle with a cross is the NATO interchangeability symbol.

Can't be anything but a NATO calibre (ie: 5.56mm, 7.62mm or 9mm Luger) because it has the NATO interchangeability symbol, meaning Linked 7.62mm manufactured in Canada for Canadian Army specs can be used in a German MG3 for example, without damaging the weapon system.
 
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It's reformed military 7.62x51mm brass. IVI is the monogram for the Industries Valcartier Inc now owned by GDOTS, the double digit number is the year the brass cartridge case was manufactured and the circle with a cross is the NATO interchangeability symbol.

Can't be anything but a NATO calibre (ie: 5.56mm, 7.62mm or 9mm Luger) because it has the NATO interchangeability symbol, meaning Linked 7.62mm manufactured in Canada for Canadian Army specs can be used in a German MG3 for example, without damaging the weapon system.

What he said. The circle with a cross means it's suppose to be interchangeable. With that said, I have seen German ammo fed through the C6 and it had a few hiccups. It still worked but seemed to have more stoppages that the guns running our ammo. Now it could have been those specific guns as some are getting pretty old but that's just what I observed.

It definitely started life as a nato standard cal and reworked into whatever it is now. Take some measurements and you'll get a more accurate answer of what it is now.
 
IVI 5.56 converted. If head stamp has dated 74 and 78. 5.56 came into service in early 90s.

The 106 recoilless (105mm) I believe had a .50 cal for sighting.

5.56 came into CDN service in 1988, deployed to Iraq with black rifle, tumbling round
 
5.56 came into CDN service in 1988, deployed to Iraq with black rifle, tumbling round

I have IVI 86 5.56 brass and rounds. 62 gr bullet C77 (SS109)
Sure looks like 8mm kurz with that little short neck. Hard to believe somebody left them behind, after forming them and it looks like the necks were turned too.
 
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I saw this in Beverly Hills Cop II! :p

This was a plot device, some odd casings were found that could not be classified...investigation concluded that they were custom-made handloads, a .308Win case cut down and sized to hold a .44 bullet as ammunition for a .44 AutoMag pistol, ammunition for which was hard to find and/or expensive.

From Wikipedia: "The .44 Auto Mag Pistol (AMP) cartridge was introduced in 1971. Its rimless, straight wall case was originally formed by trimming the .308 Winchester or .30-06 case to 1.30 inches (33 mm)."

This would be the only reason I could think of to cut down a casing from a military caliber that was produced by IVI.
 
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