Military Rifle Cartridges Used By The Great Powers

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Plate from Hamilton's "Cartridge Manufacture", 1916.

Hamiltonpage.jpg
 
Developed in 1886 for the new Lebel Rifle. The first smokeless powder cartridge adopted by a major power (France was a major power then). Overnight, it made all the existing black powder cartridges obsolete. Germans responded with the 8mm J mauser round. Very wide case, makes it difficult for using a box magazine. ~200 grain, .323 diameter bullet moving at about 2100 fps.
 
Google. It's tapered because it was used in a tube magazine with pointed bullets. The taper is designed so the point isn't resting on the primer of the next bullet
 
That taper also made it next to useless for any sort of box magazine-fed rifle or MG; it's one of the reasons the Chauchat was so bad, and why they replaced it with the 7.5x54 in the late 20s. However, some of the ammunition was known for being extremely long-ranged and penetrative; the Balle D was made from solid bronze.
 
The French ammo was made so that you could trade sides during the war, and still shoot(if you wanted), you could change sides, drop the gun and pick it up again next time you switched allegiances.
 
whitbyman said:
The 8 x 50R Lebel looks interesting, does anyone have more info about this cartridge?
There is alot of info out there on the 8X50R, in Hamiltons book he actually has an entire chapter on making the round, with very detailed information on bullet and case measurements.
 
Interesting that the obsolescent .303" MkVI is illustrated rather than the then current MkVII.
 
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