Table of pistol and rifle cartridges by year
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Table of selected pistol, sub-machine gun, rifle and machine gun cartridges by year.
Name | Date | Nation | Size Metric |
Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
.22 Short | 1857 | USA | Oldest commercial cartridge being loaded today | |
.50 Remington (M71 Army) | 1867 | USA | 12.7 mm | .508 |
.450 Boxer/.450 Revolver/.450 Adams | 1868 | Britain | - | .455 |
.44 S&W (Smith & Wesson) | 1869 | USA | - | - |
.50-90 Sharps | 1872 | USA | - | The mainstay of the American Bison (Buffalo) Hunter |
.45-70 Government | 1873 | USA | - | One of the oldest centerfire cartridges still in existence |
.32 S&W (Smith & Wesson) | 1870 | USA | - | - |
.44-40 Winchester | 1873 | USA | - | .427 |
.45 Colt | 1873 | USA | 11.58 × 32 mm | Used in both pistol and rifle, sometimes referred to as .45 Long Colt. |
.476 Enfield | 1880 | United Kingdom | ||
.32-20 Winchester | 1882 | USA | - | - |
.38-55 Winchester | 1884 | USA | - | - |
.30-40 Krag | 1892 | USA | .308 7.82mm |
- |
.38 Long Colt | 1892 | USA | 9.65 mm | - |
7.92 x 57 mm Mauser | 1888 | Germany | 7.92 x 57 mm | AKA 8 x 57 mm Mauser |
.455 Webley | 1889 | United Kingdom | year of approval | |
7.5 x 55 Schmidt Rubin | 1889 | Switzerland | 7.5 x 55 mm | AKA GP-11 |
7.62 x 54R | 1891 | Russia | 7.62 x 54 mm | Oldest cartridge still in official military use, used in SVD Dragunov with Russia and the PSL rifles with many other countries. |
.303 British | 1889 | Britain | 7.7 x 56 mm | |
9 x 57 Mauser | 1890s | Germany | 9.06 x 56.8 mm | - |
7 x 57 mm Mauser | 1892 | Germany | 7 × 57 mm | - |
6.5 x 55 mm | 1895 | Union of Sweden and Norway | 6.5 × 55 mm | - |
.30-30 Winchester | 1895 | USA | - | First smokeless cartridge designed for big game hunting |
.450 Nitro Express | 1895 | United Kingdom | by J. Rigby smokeless cartridge based upon .450 Black Powder Express | |
6.5 mm Arisaka | 1897 | Japan | 6.5 × 50 mm | - |
7.65 mm Browning | 1899 | Belgium | - | .32 ACP |
7.65 mm Parabellum | 1900 | Germany | - | Also .30 Luger |
.450 | circa 1900 | United Kingdom | bottle necked cartridge for the Webley-Mars Automatic Pistol | |
.32 S&W Long (Smith & Wesson | 1901 | USA | - | long .32 S&W |
9 mm Luger | 1902 | Germany | 9 × 19 mm | AKA 9 mm Parabellum |
.38 Special | 1902 | USA | - | - |
.600 Nitro Express | 1903 | United Kingdom | Jeffrey, 900-grain (58 g) bullet 1,950 ft/s (590 m/s) at muzzle | |
.45 ACP | 1905 | USA | - | Automatic Colt Pistol |
.32 Winchester | 1905 | USA | - | - |
.35 Remington | 1906 | USA | - | - |
.25 ACP | 1906 | USA | 6.35 mm | - |
.30-06 Springfield | 1906 | USA | 7.62 x 63 | - |
.470 Nitro Express | 1907 | Britain | - | Joseph Lang |
.44 Special | 1908 | USA | - | - |
9 mm Browning Short | 1912 | Belgium | - | also called .380 Automatic |
250-3000 | 1915 | USA | - | 3000 ft/s (910 m/s) |
.300 Savage | 1920 | USA | - | - |
.50 BMG | 1921 | USA | 12.7 x 99 mm | used in Heavy Machine Guns and anti-materiel rifles |
.270 Winchester | 1925 | USA | - | - |
.38 Super Auto | 1929 | USA | - | - |
.22 Hornet | 1930 | USA | - | First centerfire cartridge widely adapted for varminting |
7.92 DS | 1934 | Poland | 7,92 x 107 mm | Used for kbk ppanc wz.35 anti-tank rifle |
.357 Magnum | 1935 | USA | - | Long .38 Special |
.220 Swift | 1935 | USA | - | - |
.348 Winchester | 1936 | USA | - | - |
7.9 mm Kurz | 1938 | Germany | - | - |
6.5 x 68 | 1939 | Germany | - | - |
8 x 68 S | 1939 | Germany | - | - |
.218 Bee | 1938 | USA | - | - |
7.7mm Arisaka | 1939 | Japan | - | - |
.30 Carbine | 1940 | USA | 7.62 × 33 mm | - |
7.62 x 39 mm | 1943 | USSR | - | .311 from 7.9 mm Kurz |
.280 British | 1948 | United Kingdom | 7 mm | also known as 7 mm FN Short, intermediate round adopted in 1951 |
.222 Remington | 1950 | USA | - | - |
7.62 x 51 mm | 1950 | Belgium/USA | - | NATO (1953), T65 .308 |
.454 Casull | 1954 | USA | - | Long .45 Colt |
.308 Winchester | 1955 | USA | - | Civilian 7.62 mm NATO |
.44 Remington Magnum | 1955 | USA | - | Long .44 Special |
.223 Remington | 1955 | USA | - | Long .222 Remington |
.243 Winchester | 1955 | USA | 6 mm x 51 mm | 6 mm, from .308 |
.458 Winchester Magnum | 1956 | USA | - | - |
.280 Remington | 1957 | USA | - | from .30-06 |
.460 Weatherby | 1958 | USA | .458 11.63 mm |
- |
.454 Casull | 1959 | USA | - | - |
5.56 × 45 mm NATO | 1960 | USA | - | - |
.256 Magnum | 1962 | USA | - | formed from .357 Magnum |
7 mm Remington Magnum | 1962 | USA | - | - |
.300 Winchester Magnum | 1963 | USA | - | - |
.41 Magnum | 1964 | USA | - | - |
.444 Marlin | 1964 | USA | - | long .44 Magnum, .429 |
.22-250 Remington | 1965 | USA | - | Varminter |
5 mm Remington Rimfire Magnum | 1970 | USA | 5mm (.2045) | Obsolete rimfire |
.44 AMP | 1971 | USA | - | .429 |
.30 Herrett | 1973 | USA | - | short .30-30 Winchester |
5.45 x 39 mm M74 | 1974 | USSR | - | AK-74, .215 |
.22 PPC | 1974 | USA | - | - |
6 mm PPC | 1975 | USA | - | from .22 PPC, .243 |
6.5 mm JDJ | 1978 | USA | - | From .225 case |
.45 Winchester Magnum | 1979 | USA | - | long .45 ACP |
5.56 mm SS–109 | 1979 | Belgium | - | NATO (1980), 2nd gen. |
7 mm-08 Remington | 1980 | USA | - | 308 Winchester case necked down to 7 mm (.284") |
10 mm Auto | 1983 | Sweden | - | - |
.338 Lapua Magnum | 1983 | Finland | 8.6 x 70 mm | Designed for military long-range sniper rifles |
.32 Harrington & Richardson | 1984 | USA | - | long .32 S&W Long |
.41 AE | 1986 | USA | - | Action Express |
5.6 mm GP 90 | 1987 | Switzerland | 5.6 × 45 mm | for Sig Sauer 550, 551, and 552 |
.416 Remington Magnum | 1988 | USA | - | - |
.50 AE | 1988 | USA | - | for IMI Desert Eagle |
.40 S&W | 1990 | USA | - | - |
5.7 x 28 mm | 1990 | Belgium | 5.7 x 28 mm | PDW — Defeats Class IIIA body armour |
.307 Winchester | 1982 | USA | - | Rimmed version of the 308 Winchester, for use in lever-action rifles |
.224-BOZ | - | Britain | - | 5.56 × 23 mm, in 10 mm case |
357 SIG | 1994 | Germany/USA | - | |
.400 Corbon | 1997 | USA | - | .45ACP necked down to .40 caliber |
450 Marlin | 2000 | USA | - | Derived from 45–70 Govt. |
4.6 x 30 mm | 2000 | Germany | - | 4.6 mm proprietary |
.480 Ruger | 2001 | USA | - | Derived from 475 Linebaugh |
.300 WSM | 2001 | USA | - | Winchester Short Magnum |
.408 Chey Tac | 2001 | USA | - | Used in Cheyanne Tactical's M200 Intervention, and M310 rifles |
.270 WSM | 2002 | USA | - | Winchester Short Magnum |
7 mm WSM | 2002 | USA | - | Winchester Short Magnum |
6.5 Grendel | 2003 | USA | 6.5 x 39 mm | Developed by Alexander Arms as a "low recoil, high accuracy, long-range cartridge for the AR-15 platform." |
6.8 mm Remington SPC | 2003 | USA | 6.8x43mm | Developed by Remington with members of 5th Special Forces Group |
.223 WSSM | 2003 | USA | - | Winchester Super Short Magnum |
.243 WSSM | 2003 | USA | - | Winchester Super Short Magnum |
.45 GAP | 2003 | Austria | - | Glock Automatic Pistol |
.500 S&W Magnum | 2003 | USA | - | One of the most powerful handgun-specific cartridges. |
.204 Ruger | 2004 | USA | 5.18 mm | |
.25 WSSM | 2004 | USA | 6.35 mm | Winchester Super Short Magnum |
.325 WSM | 2005 | USA | 8 x 53 mm | Winchester Short Magnum |
.416 Barrett | 2006 | USA | 10.3 mm | Designed as a better alternative to the .50BMG for sniper rifles. |
.17 Remington Fireball | 2007 | USA | 4.368 | high-performance approx 4,000 ft/s (1,200 m/s) in a small case |