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The .38 Super pistol cartridge is the child of the famous firearms company Colt. It fires the same .355 inch diameter bullet as the 9 mm Luger. A Browning 9 millimeter semiautomatic pistol Ordnance pistol of the French Navy, 19th century A pistol or handgun is a usually small firearm that can be used with one hand. ...
Rimmed, centerfire . ...
A firearm is a kinetic energy weapon that fires either a single or multiple projectiles propelled at high velocity by the gases produced by action of the rapid confined burning of a propellant. ...
Rampant Colt - The original logo of Colts Firearms Colts Manufacturing Company was founded in Hartford, Connecticut in 1847 by Samuel Colt in order to produce revolvers, which Colt held the patent on, during the Mexican-American War. ...
.357 Magnum cartridges, containing bullets. ...
Ball and hollowpoint 9mm Luger rounds The 9 mm Luger pistol cartridge (9 x 19 mm Parabellum, 9 x 19 mm NATO) was designed by firearms designer Georg Luger. ...
Design
The .38 Super is based upon the older .38 ACP and is identical dimensionally but loaded to higher pressures. It was intended that the cartridge would headspace however all new .38 Super pistols headspace on the case mouth as with other cartridges in this class. Semi-rimmed case can cause some feeding trouble in magazine, this problem has been solved in later rimless variants of .38 Super like .38 Supercomp or .38 Super Lapua. In firearms terms, headspace refers to the distance between the bolt face and chamber necessary for reliable functioning of the weapon, or as a verb, the mechanism by which the correct positioning is achieved. ...
The cartridge was designed for use in a modified 1911 pistol, and was capable of piercing the bulletproof vests and automobile bodies of the time.[1] The M1911 is a single action, semi-automatic handgun, chambered for the . ...
Bullet resistant vest (in tan) A bullet-resistant vest (body armor) - is an article of protective clothing that works as a form of armour to minimize injury from projectiles fired from handguns, shotguns and rifles . ...
Performance An IPSC shooter using a modified .38 super pistol with compensator and red dot sight The .38 Super offers higher bullet velocities than the 9 mm Luger, and it is better suited for hot-rodding as it has a longer casing which allows for larger powder charges. Ball and hollowpoint 9mm Luger rounds The 9 mm Luger pistol cartridge (9 x 19 mm Parabellum, 9 x 19 mm NATO) was designed by firearms designer Georg Luger. ...
The .38 Super has made a huge comeback in IPSC sports shooting, particularly when equipped with a compensator, because it meets the minimum power level to be considered as a Major charge, while having more manageable recoil than .45 ACP. IPSC can mean: International Practical Shooting Confederation Inhibitory Post-Synaptic Current, in neurobiology iPSC, any of several high-performance computers manufactured by Intel This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
The muzzle brake of an AMX 10 RC. Muzzle brake of the Sig 550 rifle The S&W Model 500 is among the rare handguns to feature a muzzle brake. ...
The . ...
Muzzle velocity - 7.5 g (115 Gr) Full Metal Jacket: 425 m/s : 1395 ft/s
- 8.0 g (124 Gr) Full Metal Jacket: 410 m/s : 1346 ft/s
Notes Due to Mexican laws which have restricted the civilian use or possession of ammunition classified as "military caliber," such as 9 mm, this is a popular round in Mexico, and to some extent in the adjacent U.S. states. For other uses, see United States (disambiguation) and US (disambiguation). ...
Synonyms - .38 Super Auto
- .38 Super ACP
References - ^ Ayoob, Massad, ".38 Super", Guns Magazine, 2001-03. URL accessed on 2006-04-01.
2006 (MMVI) is a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
April 1 is the 91st day of the year (92nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar, with 274 days remaining. ...
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