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.303 British is 7.7 x56mm R, or in a sense almost the same to 7.62 x 54mm R.
For those who wonder about the 7.62 x 54mm R (R designated for having a rimmed base) Russian cartridge is what the Dragonov Sniper system uses (although it can be found in 7.92 x 57mm also on, say one of the Yugoslavian versions for example) <AKA 8mm Mauser, the mainstay of WW2 Germany and others>). Along with the Dragonov, this workhorse cartridge is also common for the PK family of GPMGs, Maxims of Soviet service, and the Mosin Nagant family of Com-Bloc rifles and carbines. The 7.62 x 54mm R has been around for a very long time indeed. Confused :-\ ? The US .30 rifle cartridge is 7.62 x 63mm, and all the main cartridges of WW1 to WW2 used by the Allies and Germany were very similar in calibre and cartridge case length, but NONE interchanged.
I am gonna get a headache from all this techo talk ;D
Cheers,
Wes
For those who wonder about the 7.62 x 54mm R (R designated for having a rimmed base) Russian cartridge is what the Dragonov Sniper system uses (although it can be found in 7.92 x 57mm also on, say one of the Yugoslavian versions for example) <AKA 8mm Mauser, the mainstay of WW2 Germany and others>). Along with the Dragonov, this workhorse cartridge is also common for the PK family of GPMGs, Maxims of Soviet service, and the Mosin Nagant family of Com-Bloc rifles and carbines. The 7.62 x 54mm R has been around for a very long time indeed. Confused :-\ ? The US .30 rifle cartridge is 7.62 x 63mm, and all the main cartridges of WW1 to WW2 used by the Allies and Germany were very similar in calibre and cartridge case length, but NONE interchanged.
I am gonna get a headache from all this techo talk ;D
Cheers,
Wes