By A Mystery Man Writer
A couple of neat head stamps that are new to me, some standard cartridges, and a few questions. 1914 H, steel bullet: .287"/7.2mm, brass case length: 2.230"/56.66mm Who is this ‘H’? 1914 EΠK [Greek EPK?] EΣ [Greek ES?], steel bullet .265"/6.65mm, brass case2.095"/53.21mm 1918 D, non-magnetic, bullet .323"/8.21mm, case length 2.494"/63.34mm Who is this D? 1918, not sure which one should be at 12 o’clock, and what do they all mean? Steel bullet, .323"/8.21mm, steel case length, 2.2
5.56×45mm NATO - Wikipedia
Last Weekend Gun Show, Part 4: Rimless Rifle Cartridges Part 1 - General Ammunition Discussion - International Ammunition Association Web Forum
Chamber « Daily Bulletin
Comprehensive Handout On Forensic Ballistics by Dr. Jezreel Vicente at University of Baguio (Mobile No. 0917-8799-515, PDF, Caliber
PDF) 'The bullets buzzed like bees': Gunshot wounds in skeletons from the Battle of the Little Bighorn
What's the rarest gun you own?
Chamber « Daily Bulletin
5.56×45mm NATO - Wikiwand
Why did Glock not make products in 7.62x25mm Tokarev or FN 5.7x28mm? - Quora
Standard Catalog of Smith & Wesson [4 ed.] 1440245630, 9781440245633