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Thread: Caliber names

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  1. #1
    Member mattdw's Avatar
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    Question Caliber names

    So, the .303 caliber is actually .311" in size. But the .308 caliber is actually .308" in size. However, .308 is also called "7.62 NATO" despite .308" being 7.8mm. Also, "7.62x39" (which may pre-date 7.62 NATO?) is actually .311". 7.62mm is 0.300".



    The .223 caliber is actually .224", or 5.68mm, but it's also called the "5.56 NATO". .224 and .220 are also .224", as is anything called ".22", but .222 (which used to be .222") is .223". 5.56mm is actually around .219", so who knows where that came from.



    The 6.5mm caliber is .264", despite 6.5mm being .255" (While the ".25" family clock in at .257".)

    7mm is actually .284" which is somewhere around 7.2mm, but maybe that's just lazy rounding.

    I'm aware that this is mostly a series of historical accidents and "near enoughs", but did nobody ever stop and think "this is getting a bit out of hand, perhaps we need to rethink our naming system"?
    PerazziSC3 likes this.

  2. #2
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    Now that's heavy! The .45 cal I size to .41 and the .577 I size to .571 and the .55 I use a .53 ball wrapped in onion paper, so it all started long long ago
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  3. #3
    By Popular Demand gimp's Avatar
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    7.62mm groove, 7.8mm land = .308.

    Etc.

    It's to do with land/groove diameters for most of these

  4. #4
    Member Eion's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by gimp View Post
    7.62mm groove, 7.8mm land = .308.

    Etc.

    It's to do with land/groove diameters for most of these
    Sums it up. Don't forget about the old designation of caliber over grains of powder like the 30/30 = (caliber)/(grains of powder) = .30 cal (.308/.309) pill backed by 30 grains of smokeless powder.

  5. #5
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    And using lead as I do it bumps up and fits the bore

  6. #6
    308
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    Talk to women about clothes sizing - now there's a completely inconsistent nightmare
    Wirehunt and Maca49 like this.

  7. #7
    Member Malhunting's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by 308 View Post
    Talk to women about clothes sizing - now there's a completely inconsistent nightmare
    Why the fuck would anyone want to do that!
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  8. #8
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    When talking about NATO rounds (both Com Bloc and NATO) ,using 5.56x45 as an example .The 5.56 refers to the size of the bore 9distance between the lands) ,then the 45 refers to the lenght of the case.
    When it comes to Civillian rounds then the sky is your limit and any and every fruit loop method ( an example is the american abhorence of the metric system) is used to designate calibre such as ;
    7mmx57 mauser is a 275 rigby . A 30/06 can be called a 7.62x63mm .A 307 is actually a 308 with a rim.

  9. #9
    P38
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    Quote Originally Posted by Malhunting View Post
    Why the fuck would anyone want to do that!
    Mal

    All I can say is ...... A man would only be asking for it if he did do such a thing and It would serve himself right.

    Cheers
    Pete

  10. #10
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    I thought most modern calibers came after the 30/06 named because it was 30cal designed in 1906... 30/06. The 308 was a shortened version of the 30/06 I cannot remeber how the 08 came into it but I thaught it was a measurement thing. Most names came from the designers/wildcatters looking for a catchy name and have little to do with exact bore size. This was my understanding which may be partly right or not at all. Wheres flintlock when you need him.

    Sent from my GT-I9300 using Tapatalk 2

  11. #11
    By Popular Demand gimp's Avatar
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    .308" is the groove diameter, 7.82mm. .300 or 7.62mm is the land diameter.

  12. #12
    Member mattdw's Avatar
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    So e.g. .223: 5.56mm = .219", .224" diameter = .005" groove depth.

    .308 vs .300 = .008" groove depth. (.303 vs .311 = also .008" groove depth? But it's named for the smaller not the larger.)

    6.5mm = .255", so .264 - .255 = .009" groove depth.

    And so on, I guess. So, interestingly, where there's a mm-united caliber name (5.56, 6.5, 7, 7.62), that usually seems to refer to the smaller dimension, and the corresponding imperial measure (.223, .284, .308) seems to refer to the outer dimension. Is that just accidental, or something the euros and americans do differently?

  13. #13
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    With the older rifles you need to slug the barrel to get the dimensions, an difficult to measure uneven number of rifling grooves. Older barrel can vary

  14. #14
    Terminator Products Kiwi Greg's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Maca49 View Post
    With the older rifles you need to slug the barrel to get the dimensions, an difficult to measure uneven number of rifling grooves. Older barrel can vary
    Also on new ones that don't have the calibre/chamber designation engraved on the barrel......
    BRADS likes this.
    Contact me for reloading components, brass, projectiles, powder, primers, etc

    http://terminatorproducts.co.nz/

    http://www.youtube.com/user/Terminat...?feature=guide

  15. #15
    Member mattdw's Avatar
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    Huh, interesting. It is something I like about guns (my day job is computers) is just how lo-fi the tech really is. Sure, my 25-06 may not be the "best" caliber, but hell, a 1906 cartridge design is still doing pretty well, that's quite something.

    My 6-year old laptop is obsolete, my 106-year old cartridge still has off-the-shelf ammo and rifles for it, and apart from the noise, barrel length, short barrel life, and poor projectile selection , competes reasonably well.

 

 

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