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© 1994, 2000 Blount INC. All rights reserved. Reproduced with
permission of
Blount Sporting Equipment Group, CCI-Speer Operations. www.speer-bullets.com
A
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| E | F | G
| H | I | J
| K | L | M
| N | O | P
| Q | R | S
| T | U | V
| W | X | Y
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A
Accuracy:
The measure of precision in consistently obtaining a desired result.
In shooting, the measure of a bullet’s or gun’s ability to place all shots
close to the same point.
Action:
The mechanism of a firearm by which it is loaded, locked, fired and unloaded.
Air
Resistance: The slowing effect of air on a projectile in flight.
Annealing:
In advanced handloading, the heating of brass after work-hardening to
relieve internal stresses and prevent it from becoming too brittle. Only
the neck should be annealed and great care should be taken not to overheat
and thus soften the head and rear portion of the case. See work-harden.
Antimony:
A metallic element used as a hardening agent in lead alloys.
Anvil:
In the priming system, a fixed metallic point against which the priming
mixture is crushed and thereby detonated by the action of the firing pin.
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B
Ball:Early
term for "bullet." Still used in military nomenclature, usually to describe
a full-metal jacketed bullet.
Ball
Powder: Trademarked name for a double base smokeless propellant
powder developed by Olin, Inc. Either spherical or flattened spherical
shape.
Ballistics:
The science of projectiles in motion. Divided into three categories: interior
ballistics- covering the time between the start of primer ignition and
the bullet's exit from the barrel; exterior ballistics- the bullet's movement
from barrel exit to target impact; and terminal ballistics- the bullet's
behavior from the moment it enters its target until it stops moving.
Ballistic
Coefficient (BC): Ratio of the sectional density of a bullet
to its coefficient of form. Represents the projectile's ability to overcome
the resistance of the air in flight; a bullet with a high BC will overcome
air resistance better than one with a low BC.
Barrel-cylinder
Gap: The clearance between barrel and cylinder in a revolver.
Industry maximum allowable gap is 0.012 inch; larger gaps can result in
a bullet lodged in the bore.
Battery
Cup: Type of primer in which anvil and primer cup are supported
in an outside cup. Shotshell primers are of this type.
Bearing
Surface: That portion of a bullet's surface that touches the
bore in moving through the barrel.
Bedding:
Manner in which the barrel and action of a rifle is fitted to the stock.
Bell:
To expand the mouth of a case slightly in order to seat a bullet more
easily. Also called flare.
Belted
Case: Case head type with raised band or belt at the base ahead
of extractor groove. A variant of the rimless case. Belt acts to control
headspace of the cartridge. See rim
and rimless.
Berdan:
Type of primer common outside the US with no integral anvil. Anvil is
formed in bottom of primer pocket in the case. Named after the inventor,
Col. Hiram Berdan, an American.
Bench
Rest: A solid table or bench used for supporting a gun when
testing for accuracy. Bench Rest target shooting has become an important
shooting sport where the smallest group wins.
Black
Powder: The oldest ballistic propellant for muzzle loaders
and early cartridge arms composed of a mixture of potassium nitrate (saltpeter),
charcoal and sulfur.
Boat
Tail: Name given to a bullet type with tapered base. Also called
"tapered heel," the design reduces aerodynamic drag on the bullet by smooting
the air flow over the base.
Body
(of a case): That section of a cartridge case between the head
and the shoulder that contains the powder.
Bolt:
The locking and cartridge-supporting mechanism of a firearm that operates
in line with the axis of the bore. It contains the firing pin, firing
pin spring, extractor(s) and sometimes the ejector.
Bolt
Thrust: The force on the face of the bolt or breech of a firearm
caused by the pressure of burning powder gases. Bolt thrust acts on an
axis parallel to the bore.
Bore:
The inside of the barrel of a gun of any kind and, in rifled arms, the
diameter of the barrel before the rifling is cut.
Bore
Sight: To roughly align the sights of the firearm with a target
by sighting through the bore.
Boxer:
The standard American type of primer, named after the inventor of this
type of primer, Col. Edward Boxer of the British Army. See Primer.
Brass:
An alloy of copper and zinc of which cartridge cases are usually made.
Typical cartridge brass has a copper/zinc ratio of 70/30. Also a slang
term applied to empty cartridge cases.
Brisance:
The characteristic in an explosive of brusqueness or shattering power.
The more brisant an explosive, the more rapidly it detonates and the greater
its relative power. Usually applied to primer compounds.
Bullet:
The missile only. Becomes a projectile when in flight. Not to be applied
to the term cartridge. See also ball.
Bullet
Path: The track followed by a bullet in flight. It is described
by the location of the projectile above (+) or below (-) the line-of sight
at a given range.
Bullet
Pull: The amount of force needed to extract a bullet from a
loaded cartridge. Used by ammunition manufacturers to measure uniformity
of crimp and/or case neck tension.
Bullet
Puller: A tool for extracting bullets from loaded centerfire
cartridges. The inertial and collet types are most common. Used to correct
loading errors or salvage components from ammunition that is unsuitable
for firing.
Burning
Rate: A relative term used to rank the rapidity with which
a given powder releases energy in comparison with other powders. Typically
based on heat generation in a lab device called a calorimeter bomb. In
a real-world gun system, buring rates may vary depending on factors such
as case size, pressure range, expansion ratio, and others. Burning rates
charts are furnished for reference only and should never be used for developing
loads without the assisatance of industry pressure equipment.
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C
Caliber:
A term derive from Arabic qalib, meaning "mould" or "form," first applied
to the weight of a bullet and then to the diameter. Caliber now refers
specifically to the diameter of either a projectile or the bore of a gun.
It is the approximate diameter expressed (in English) in hundredths of
an inch. A bullet that is 0.451" in diameter is 45 caliber.To write ".30
caliber" is technically incorrect. According to the strict definition,
such a bullet would only be 0.003" in diameter!Also used in naval artillery
as a measure of bore length compared to the diameter (or caliber) of a
specified gun. A "five-inch, fifty-four caliber" naval rifle would have
a barrel 270 inches or 22.5 feet long.
Cannelure:
Circumferential groove(s) around a bullet or cartridge case. Used for
identification, to hold lubricant, or to crimp case into.
Canister
Powder: Since handloaders do not have the laboratory facilities
needed to determine the loading characteristics of a powder, powder manufacturers
have developed a rigid set of specifications for each handloader powder
they sell. Each lot of powder is made or blended to meet these specifications
so the handloader will always have uniform results. Powder made to these
specifications is termed "canister" grade since it is usually packed in
canisters of appropriate size for consumer use.Commercial ammunition manufacturers
that have laboratory facilities can use the "bulk" grades, which may vary
enough from lot to lot to be dangerous to handloaders. Loads are adjusted
for each powder lot as required by test results.
Cap:
See primer.
Cartridge:
A complete unit of assembled ammunition: case, propellant powder, primer,
and bullet. Commonly applied only to rifle and pistol ammunition, but
occasionally to shotshells.
Case:
The paper, metal, or plastic container that holds all the other components
of a cartridge. Sometimes called hull or shell.
Case
Forming: To alter or modify one cartridge case to another of
different shape and or caliber. Also see wildcat.
Case
Hardening: A heat treating process which increases the surface
hardness of iron alloys. Often produces distinctive colors, such as seen
on the frames of Colt Single Action revolvers.
Case
Trimming: Shortening an overly long case by removing metal
at the case mouth.
Cast
Bullet: Bullets for rifles or pistols formed from molten lead
or lead alloy in a mould. See mould
blocks.
Center
Fire (CF): Refers to centrally located primer in base of metallic
cartridges. Also called centerfire. Most center fire cartridges are reloadable.
Chamber:
That part of the bore, at the breech, formed to accept, support, and confine
the cartridge. In a revolver, chambers are located in the cylinder.
Chamber
Cast: A casting, usually of molten sulfur or low melting-point
metal poured in the chamber, to assess chamber shape, dimensions, or condition.
Chamfer:
To bevel or ream a taper on the inside of a case mouth to facilitate bullet
seating.
Charge:
The amount of propellant powder measured into the case in loading. Also
refers to amount of shot measured into shotshell.
Choke:
A constriction at the muzzle of a shotgun barrel designed to control the
spread, or dispersion, of the shot charge.
Chronograph:
An mechanical or electronic device used to measure the velocity of a projectile.
Collimator:
In shooting, an optical device used to align the sights with the bore
of a rifle or handgun.
Combustion:
Burning; in firearms, the chemical process which unites oxygen and other
substances in gun powder to release energy in the form of heat and gas.
Also called deflagration.
Compensator:
A device fitted to the muzzle of a firearm to reduce recoil or muzzle
rotation. Usually applied to such devices when fitted to a handgun. See
muzzle
brake.
Compressed
Charge: A charge of powder which is compressed by the bullet
during seating in the case.
Components:
The parts which go into the making of a cartridge.
Copper
Crusher: Small, solid copper cylinder used in a pressure gun
to measure chamber pressure. See pressure
gun.
Core:
The interior part of a jacketed bullet; usually a lead alloy in sporting
ammunition.
Cordite:
Trade name for a long, tubular-grained, double-base powder used mainly
in Great Britain, and one of the earliest smokeless propellants. The granules
are often as long as the powder space.
Corrosion:
The eating away of the bore because of rusting or the chemical action
of salts deposited in the bore by corrosive primers or powders. See below.
Cartridge cases can also be corroded by salts or acids.
Corrosive
Primer: A primer whose burnt residue is hygroscopic (attracts
moisture) and usually containing slats of chlorine. The residue will rapidly
rust a bore unless removed. All component primers in the US have been
non-corrosive for decades.
Crimp:
The bending inward of the mouth of the case in order to grip the bullet,
or to close the mouth of a shotshell case. Two types are used. A roll
crimp is the bending or folding the mouth of the case into the crimp groove
or cannelure of the bullet. In a taper crimp, the mouth of the case is
pressed into the bullet body without folding the case mouth.
Crimped
Primer: A forcing inward of the brass around the top of the
primer pocket to prevent set-back of primers. This is usually found on
military cartridges intended for use in fully automatic weapons. Unless
the crimp is removed after depriming—either by swaging or reaming—repriming
of the case is very difficult.
Cupro-Nickel:
A copper-nickel alloy once used extensively for bullet jackets. It was
largely replaced by gilding metal because of barrel fouling problems.
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D
Deburr:
To remove burrs or roughness sometimes left on case mouth edge by trimming
operation. See chamfer.
Decap
or Deprime: To remove or eject a primer from its primer pocket.
Usually done by the decapping pin in the sizing or expanding operation.
Deterrent
Coating: A chemical coating applied over powder kernels to
control the burning characteristics of the base powder. Aptly described
as a "temporary fire-proofing" of a powder kernel.
Die:
In handloading, a tool to form or reform cases or bullets, or to seat
bullets.
Double-base
Powder: Nitrocellulose (smokeless) propellant that uses nitroglycerin
as the plastisizer.
Drag:
See air
resistance.
Dram
Equivalent: In shotshells, a term used to indicate that a charge
of smokeless powder produces the same velocity as a given number of drams
of black powder. Thus, a 3 dram equivalent load has a charge of smokeless
powder that gives the same velocity as a similar load charged with 3 drams
of black powder. One dram equals 27.3 grains.
Drift:
In exterior ballistics, the deviation of a projectile from the line of
departure due to its rotation or spin. Also commonly applied to the effects
of wind. See wind
deflection.
Drop:
The distance a projectile falls due to gravity, measured or calculated
from the line of departure. Must be corrected for difference between line
of sight and line of departure. Drop is normally reported assuming a horizontal
barrel.
Duplex
Load: Use of two different powders in loading the same cartridge.
There is little or no advantage to duplex loading in small arms and results
are unpredictable and usually dangerous.
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E
Elevation:
The vertical adjustment of a sight to bring the point of aim into coincidence
with the point of impact.
Energy:
The amount of work capable of being done by a projectile at a given range,
expressed in foot-pounds in the English system. Found by multiplying the
square of the velocity in feet/sec by the weight of the bullet in grains
and dividing by 450,400.
Engraving:
The marks made on the bullet by the rifling.
Erosion:
The wearing away of the bore of a firearm due to friction from the projectile
combined with the action of hot powder gases.
Expander
Ball or Button: The round steel part of a die that expands
the sized neck of a cartridge case to the diameter needed to hold the
bullet firmly.
Expansion
Ratio: Ratio of interior case volume to bore volume.
Extruded
Primer: A primer that, on firing, has the metal of the primer
cup forced back into the firing pin hole in the face of the bolt. Also
known as cratering. Usually a gun problem rather than a pressure sign.
Extrusion:
The shaping process used in the manufacture of bullet jackets and cores.
Extruded
Tubular Powder: Another term for cylindrical powder. Formed
by forcing damp propellant mix through a die during manufacture and cutting
to desired lengths. May have one or more longitudinal holes through the
grains.
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F
FPS:
Feet per second, a measure of velocity in the English system. Also feet/sec,
ft/sec, or fs.
Fireform:
Using the pressure of normal firing to shape a cartridge case to fit a
given chamber.
Firing
Pin: That part of a gun's mechanism that strikes the primer
to start ignition.
Flake
Powder: A smokeless powder characterized by thin, disc-shaped
granules.
Flash
Hole: The hole leading from the primer pocket into the body
of the cartridge case. Also called the vent.
A unit of kinetic energy in the English system defined as the effort required
to vertically lift one pound a distance of one foot against the force
of gravity.
Forcing
Cone: The slope of the forward end of the chamber of a rifle
or shotgun which decreases the chamber diameter to bore diameter. In a
revolver, the bevel in the rear of the barrel just ahead of the cylinder.
Form
Factor: A multiplier which relates the shape of a bullet to
the shape of the standard projectile used to determine the ballistic coefficient.
Freebore:
The distance, if any, that a bullet travels upon firing before it contacts
the rear portion or origin of the rifling.
Frontal
Ignition: Experimental type of cartridge where primer flash
is directed to the forward part of the powder charge through a metal tube.
FMJ:
Full metal jacket. See metal
case.
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G
Galling:
Effect of friction between a cartridge case and sizing die, producing
roughness on the case and case metal deposited on the die surface.
Gas:
In handloading, the vapor produced by burning powder. This heavy gas is
capable of expanding rapidly, creating sufficient energy to propel the
bullet at high speed.
Gas
Check: A copper or brass cup used to prevent hot, high-pressure
powder gases from deforming the base of lead bullets.
Gilding
Metal: A copper-zinc alloy used for bullet jackets, consisting
of 5 parts zinc and 95 parts copper. Commercial bronze (10 parts zinc
to 90 parts copper) is informally referred to as gilding metal when used
for bullet jackets.
Grain:
In English weight measure, 7000 grains equal one pound; 437.5 grains equal
one ounce. Incorrectly used in referring to a particle, or kernel, of
powder. Thus "35 grains of powder" always refers to 35 of the weight-unit
grains, never to 35 individual kernels of powder.
Grand
Slam: An honorary award to a hunter who has collected the four
varieties of North American wild sheep. Also the registered trademark
of the premium hunting bullet made by Speer.
Granulation:
Refers to powder grain size and type. Can apply to either black or smokeless
powder.
Grease
Groove: Lubricating groove. On a lead bullet, a circumferential
groove used to hold lubricant.
Grooves:
Spiral cuts or impressions in the bore of a firearm which cause a bullet
to spin as it moves through the barrel. See rifling.
Group:
The pattern made at the target by a number of shots fired with one aiming
point and usually one sight setting. Usually measured from center to center
of the holes farthest from each other.
Gun
Powder: Propellant explosive used in small arms. Can be either
smokeless or black powder.
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H
Half-jacket:
A short jacket or a bullet swaged with a short jacket, which leaves some
lead in contact with the bore. A three-quarter jacket is similar but longer,
so the bearing surface of the bullet is covered by the jacket material.
Handloading:
The practice of loading or reloading small arms ammunition by hand-powered
equipment and methods.
Hangfire:
Slang term for a delayed firing, which is any detectable delay in the
ignition of a cartridge after pulling the trigger. Can be a chemical delay
caused by the cartridge, or a mechanical delay caused by a defect in the
firearm. Chemical delays are recognized as being less that 0.3 seconds.
The use of modern lead styphnate priming has virtually eliminated the
chemical delay. Chemical delays were more common with the now obsolete
potassium chlorate priming compounds.
Headspace:
The distance from that surface of the barrel or chamber that prevents
the cartridge from moving further forward into the chamber, to the face
of the breech with the action fully closed and locked. This is the most
important dimension governing the safety of the shooter. In handloading,
the combination of cartridge case and gun must be considered when talking
of headspace. To a handloader, few guns need to have excessive headspace,
since he can adjust the cartridge case to fit the chamber, even though
the chamber may have excessive headspace when measured by SAAMI standards.
Heel:
The edge of the bullet base.
Holdover:
The distance above target a shooter must "hold over" to hit at ranges
greater than the gun's "zero." See zero.
Hollow
Point (HP): Bullet design feature; an axial hole at the point
of the bullet.
HOT-COR:
The registered trademark for Speer's exclusive process of manufacturing
flat-base rifle bullets. A molten core is poured into a clinically clean
jacket and then the bullet is immediately swaged to shape, with a resulting
tight bond between core and jacket.
Hydrostatic
Shock: A pressure wave created by a bullet passing through
animal tissue, which is high in water content.
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I
Ignition: The
setting on fire of the propellant powder charge by the primer.
IHMSA: International
Handgun Metallic Silhouette Association.
Improved: Term
used to indicate a standard cartridge case which has been altered by
fireforming to reduce body taper and/or increase shoulder angle. Improved
cases have greater powder capacity than the corresponding standard case.
IMR: Abbreviation for
"Improved Military Rifle," a trademark of DuPont (now IMR Powder Company)
to its line of single-base rifle powders.Ingalls' Tables: Ballistic
tables computed by Col. James M. Ingalls and first published in 1918.
The most widely used ballistic tables in the US.
IPSC: International
Practical Shooting Confederation.
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J
Jacket:
The cover or "skin" of a bullet. Usually made of
gilding metal in the US, but copper-clad steel and mild steel are also
used in other countries. See cupro-nickel
and half-jacket.
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K
K
(used as a prefix): Applied to cartridge case improvements
developed by experimenter Lysle Kilbourn. Example: the 22 K-Hornet.
Keyhole:
The imprint of a bullet on a target that shows that the bullet was not
traveling point-on at the time of impact.
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Lands:
The spiraling raised portion of a bore remaining after the grooves have
been cut or formed.
Lead
Crusher: A pure lead cylinder used in a pressure gun for
obtaining lead units of pressure (L.U.P. or lup). Formerly used to test
low-pressure cartridges such as shotshells, this system is now obsolete
in the US.
Leade:
See throat
or freebore.
Leading:
Lead deposited in the bore from the friction of lead bullets rubbing
against the bore, or from gas-cutting of lead bullets. A form of metal
fouling, some leading is normal; however, excessive leading can destroy
accuracy and raise pressures.
Line
of Departure: The line at which a bullet leaves the muzzle
of a firearm, equivalent to the axis of the bore. The bullet immediately
falls away from this imaginary line.
Line
of Sight (LOS): The straight line through the sights of a
gun to the point of aim.
Loading
Block: A block of material, usually wood or plastic, with
rows of holes to conveniently hold a number of cartridge cases during
the loading operation. Especially useful when charging cases with a
powder measure.
Loading
Density: Ratio of the volume of powder charge to the volume
of the case.
Locking
Lugs: Usually used in reference to rotary bolt-action firearms.
Protrusions on the bolt that engage a mating recess inside the receiver
ring when the bolt is closed. This feature prevents the bolt from moving
rearward when the rifle is fired.
Lock
Time: The period of time between the release of the sear
by trigger movement and the instant the priming mixture detonates after
being hit by the firing pin.
Lubricant:
Case sizing lubricant is used to reduce friction when sizing cartridge
cases. Bullet lubricant is used to help minimize leading when firing
lead alloy bullets.
Lubricator-Sizer:
A tool used to size and lubricate cast lead bullets. Often contracted
to lubrisizer.
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Magnum:
Originally, a large wine bottle holding approximately 2/5 of a gallon.
In shooting, it refers to a cartridge of exceptional size or power.
First applied to large bottleneck cartridge, hence the name. Magnum
is more of a marketing term than a technical one.
Mean
Radius (MR): The average radius of a group of shots from
the center of the group. Another method of recording accuracy, MR is
commonly seen in military contract specifications for accuracy. Extreme
spread is more commonly used to measure accuracy in commercial ammo
manufacturing and hobby shooting.
Meplat:
The diameter of the flat or blunt end of the nose of a bullet.
Mercuric
Primer: A primer in which the primary initiator is mercury
fulminate. These primers have been obsolete since the advent of metallic
cartridge reloading over a century ago. On firing, the compounds release
minute amounts of metallic mercury. Mercury attacks the cartridge case
making it brittle and thus unsuitable for further loading.
Metal
Case (MC): Also Full Patched (FP) or Full Metal Jacketed
(FMJ). A type of bullet in which the core is completely encased in jacket
material, except for an opening on the base. Standard military bullet
type.
Metal
Fouling: Bullet jacket material deposited in bore due to
friction. More common in very high-velocity rifle cartridge, metal fouling
must be removed to prevent corrosion due to the electrolytic action
of the copper against the steel barrel. Metal fouling can also result
from a rough bore at any velocity.
Micrometer:
A measuring instrument with a fine screw adjustment for measuring very
small distances. Usually calibrated to read in increments of 0.001"
or 0.0001".
Mid-range
Trajectory (MRT): Usually refers to the highest vertical
distance of a bullet above the line of sight at a point approximately
halfway from muzzle to target or point of aim. The MRT is varies with
the zero range for a given load. Also called the maximum ordinate.
Minute-of-angle
(MOA): A unit of angular measurement equal to 1/60th of a
degree. Although usually approximated as one inch per 100 yards horizontal
distance, it is actually equal to 1.047" per 100 yards
Misfire:
Complete failure of a cartridge to discharge after the primer is struck
by the firing pin.
Mould
Blocks: Two "mirror twin" pieces of metal having a bullet-shaped
cavity in which lead bullets are formed by the pouring of molten lead.
Mushroom:
The ability or capacity of a bullet to increase its diameter upon impact
with animal tissue. The name comes from the desired shape after expansion.
Muzzle:
The front end of a barrel. The point at which a projectile leaves the
barrel.
Muzzle
Blast: The pressure effect of powder gases jetting from the
muzzle of a firearm.
Muzzle
Brake: A deflector fitted to a gun muzzle to deflect exiting
gases. Usually used to reduce recoil by redirecting the jet effect of
muzzle blast. Also called a recoil compensator, or comp for short. See
compensator.
Muzzle
Energy (ME): The energy of a bullet at the muzzle. At this
point a bullet's energy is highest. See energy.
Muzzle
Pressure: Gas pressure in the barrel at the muzzle at the
instant the bullet leaves the muzzle.
Muzzle
Velocity (MV): See velocity.
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NBRSA:
National Bench Rest Shooters Association.
Neck:
That portion of a cartridge case which grips the bullet. In a bottlenecked
case, that portion of the case in front of the shoulder.
Neck
Down or Up: To change the diameter of the case neck during
case forming to accept a larger or smaller diameter bullet.
Neck
Expansion: The act of expanding a sized case neck by pulling
it over an expander plug or button.
Neck
Ream: Reducing neck wall thickness from the inside with a
reamer. Commonly performed when forming a short case from a much longer
one, such as the 300 H&H to 6.5mm Remington Magnum conversion.
Neck
Size: To resize part or all of the neck only, leaving the
case body unchanged.
Neck
Turn: Reducing neck wall thickness from the outside by cutting
or, more rarely, grinding.
Non-corrosive:
Cartridges or primers with priming mixture that does not contain any
compound capable of causing rusting or corrosion of bore or adjacent
parts. All commercial small arms primers made in the US and most military
ammunition produced since 1954 has non-corrosive primers, although it
is well to clean the bore promptly when in doubt.
Non-mercuric:
A priming mixture containing no mercury compounds.
NRA:
National Rifle Association. If you haven't joined yet, don't put it
off!
NRMA:
National Reloading Manufacturers' Association.
NSSF:
National Shooting Sports Foundation.
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Ogive:
The curved portion of a bullet ahead of the cylindrical, or shank, section.
Also, the radius of this curve, usually expressed in calibers.
Oil
Dent: Dent in cartridge case formed by too much oil or lubricant
when sizing. Usually seen on or near the shoulder.
Overbore
Capacity: A common but unscientific term referring to a cartridge
case that has too much case volume for its bore volume. Technically,
every case can be over its bore capacity with some powder. Generally
used when a case has a volume so large in relation to the bore diameter
that only the very slow burning powders will give satisfactory performance.
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Parallax:
In telescopic sights, the condition that exists when the reticle (crosshairs)
does not lie exactly on the image plane. Excessive parallax makes the
shooter's eye position very critical if repeatable accuracy is to be
obtained. Most lower power scope have the parallax correction pre-set
at 150 yards; high-magnification scopes (10X and up) commonly have an
adjustable objective to correct for various distances.
Patched
or Paper-patched Bullet: A bullet with a wrapped paper "patch"
commonly used in older black powder cartridges. Derived from the even
older cloth patch used to wrap a muzzle-loader ball. The patch helped
seal the powder gases and reduced bore leading, and was an evolutionary
step towards today's metal bullet jackets.
Pattern:
The way a shotgun places its shot load. Generally measured as the percentage
of pellets that strike in a 30" circle at 40 yards. Has been jokingly
used to describe a very poor rifle group.
Pierced
Primer: A primer that has been punctured; caused by a defective
firing pin, a weak firing pin spring or excessive clearance between
the firing pin and breech.
Plinking:
Informal target practice commonly at informal targets. Shooting for
fun where no one keeps score.
Point
of Aim: That point on which a gun's sights are aligned so
as to allow the bullet to strike the desired point of impact.
Port
Pressure: In a gas-operated firearm, the pressure measured
at the gas port leading to the piston assembly.
Powder:
The propellant material used in most gun systems. Divided into two basic
types: smokeless powder and black powder. It is produced in a wide variety
of types, forms and brand names intended for specific applications.
It varies chiefly according to burning speed. The fast-burning types
are used for light bullets in short barrels at low velocities: slower-burning
powders are used in longer barrels and in greater quantities to drive
the bullet at higher velocities. Most powder contains a major percentage
of nitrocellulose, with small traces of other compounds intended to
control burning rate or prevent deterioration; such powder is called
single-base; smokeless powders containing a percentage of nitroglycerin
are called double-base. Powders containing substantial amounts of other
organic nitrates are called mullet-base. Further identified by shape
of individual kernels or granules. See ball powder, flake powder and
extruded tubular powder. Black powder is a mechanical mixture of sulfur,
charcoal, and saltpeter. It is now used primarily in muzzle-loading
guns.
Powder
Bridging: A "log jam" of powder that may occur in the drop
tube of a powder measure. The powder kernels interlock and wedge together
to block free passage. Most common with long, cylindrical powder kernels.
Powder
Measure: A mechanical device to meter powder charges by volume.
Used to speed the charging process, measures must be adjusted initially
with an accurate scale.
Powder
Scale: A sensitive measuring device used to accurately weigh
small charges of powder. Designed expressly for cartridge reloading,
it is usually graduated to permit weighing to units as small as 1/10th
grain.
Powder
Trickler: A mechanical accessory that dribbles a few powder
granules at a time, used with a powder scale.
Pressure:
The pressure exerted by a burning charge of powder in the chamber of
a gun. Expressed normally as the peak pressure in pounds per square
inch (psi) or copper units of pressure (cup) depending on the test equipment.
Pressure
Gun: Device for measuring radial chamber pressure generated
by a cartridge. Usually of the "crusher" type or of the electronic "transducer"
type. Both types were used in the development of the Speer Reloading
Manual.
Pressure-Velocity
Ratio: Numerical comparison of velocity to pressure in a
specific cartridge with given bullet and powder.
Primer:
Also called "cap", deriving from the percussion caps used with some
muzzle-loading arms. In a centerfire cartridge, the small metal cup
contains a detonating mixture which is used to ignite the propellant
powder. The primer is seated in the primer pocket in the base of the
cartridge case. The standard American type of primer, the "Boxer," also
contains an anvil. Electrically fired primers are used in some military
weapons and in some experimental sporting arms. In a rimfire cartridge
the priming mixture is contained within the rim of the case. See anvil,
berdan,
boxer,
and battery
cup.
Primer
Flipper: A two-piece metal or plastic tray for orienting
and turning primers. Facilitates loading of primer tubes in semi-automated
equipment.
Primer
Indent: Depression made in primer by firing pin. Also called
the firing pin impression.
Primer
Leak: High-pressure gas escaping between the primer and primer
pocket wall. Usually indicates a damaged primer pocket.
Primer
Pocket: The vented cavity in the base of a centerfire cartridge
case made to receive and support the primer.
Primer
Pocket Reaming or Swaging: Two methods for removing the primer
pocket crimp from military cases. Reaming removes metal and swaging
moves metal aside.
Primer
Punch: A loading tool part that inserts the primer.
Primer
Tool: A specialized tool which does only the priming operation.
Usually used in reference to off-press priming.
Progressive:
Characteristic of a powder which burns at a predictable rate compared
to black powder, producing a relatively slow pressure build-up.
Projectile:
A bullet or any other object projected by force and continuing in motion
by its own inertia. Note: A bullet is not a projectile until it is in
motion.
Proof
Cartridge: A special cartridge used to test a new or repaired
firearm for strength and safety. Usually about 25% higher pressure than
normal maximum pressure. Not commercially available.
Propellant:
The technically correct term for ballistic chemicals used to propel
a projectile. See powder.
Protruding
Primer: a) A fired primer which partially backs out of the
primer pocket on firing. Usually an indication of low firing pressure.
b) any primer that is not fully seated below the case head.
Pyrodex®:
A recently developed black powder replacement designed primarily for
use in percussion muzzle loading arms, black powder cartridges and muzzle
loading cannon. Manufactured and distributed exclusively by Hodgdon
Powder Company.
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Q
No entries for the letter Q.
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R
Ram:
The
main plunger or shaft of a metallic ammunition reloading tool.
Range: 1.
A place where shooting is conducted. 2. The horizontal distance of travel
of a projectile from gun to target.
Ream: To
remove metal from a cavity with a rotary cutting tool.
Rebated Rim: In
cartridge case design, a case whose rim is smaller than its body. Examples:
284 Winchester and 41 Action Express.
Recoil: The
backward thrust or "kick" of a gun caused by the powder gases pushing
the bullet through the bore and the jet effect of the gases themselves.
Recoil Buffer: A
cushioning device to help reduce action battering; most commonly used
to limit bolt travel in semi-automatic firearms.
Reloading Press: A
tool used in reloading ammunition. Usually has some form of mechanical
advantage to reduce effort in resizing or reforming cases. Hold components
in precise alignment. Available in several basic types known by the shape
of letters of the alphabet; "O" types are most common today, but "H" and
"C" types have also been used.
Remaining Energy:
The
residual or "down-range" energy of a projectile, measured in foot pounds,
at a given distance from the muzzle.
Remaining Velocity:
The
residual speed of a projectile at a given point on its trajectory.
Reticle: The
aiming indicator at the focus of a telescopic sight. May consist of straight
or tapered lines (crosshairs), dots, posts, or some combination thereof.
Some scopes have auxiliary marks for range estimation.
Rifling: Spiral
grooves cut or impressed into the bore of rifles and pistols in order
to make the bullets spin, insuring stable flight to the target. See grooves
and lands.
Rim: The
feature at the base of most cartridge cases in which the extractor engages
to pull a fired cartridge from the chamber. In England this is called
the flange. See rimless
and rimmed.
Rimfire (RF): Cartridges
which contain the priming mixture within the rim. This type is not reloadable
under any practical conditions.
Rimless: A
case head type; actually a misnomer. Rimless cases have a rim, but it
is the same diameter as the case body so it does not protrude. An undercut
extraction cannelure or groove provide a surface for the extractor to
grip. Example: 30-06 Springfield
Rimmed: A
case head type whose rim protrudes beyond the case body. Example: 30-30
Winchester.
Round: A
military term meaning one complete cartridge.
Round Nose: Bullet
design feature; a blunt, spherical nose shape.
Rupture: Also
separation. In shooting, a failure or break in the wall of a cartridge
case, usually allowing gas to escape.
S
SAAMI:
Small Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers Institute. The organization
which establishes firearms standards in the United States.
Sabot:
From French for "shoe." In modern small arms usage, a light-weight
carrier or "shoe" in which a sub-caliber projectile is centered
to permit firing the bullet in a larger caliber barrel. Sabots are
usually the discarding type; they fall away from the bullet soon
after exiting the gun barrel. Pronounced "say-bo."
Seating
Depth: In a loaded cartridge, the depth to which the
base of the bullet is seated below the case mouth.
Sectional
Density: A bullet's weight in pounds divided by the square
of its diameter in inches.
Shank:
The cylindrical section of a bullet below the ogive. The shank usually
defines the bearing surface, that is, the portion of the bullet
that contacts the barrel.
Shell
Holder: The part of a reloading press that holds the
head of the cartridge case on the ram permitting insertion and withdrawal
of the case from the loading dies.
Shock:
See hydrostatic
shock.
Shock
Wave: The compression wave formed whenever the speed
of a projectile relative to air or other medium exceeds that at
which the medium can transmit sound.
Shot:
Lead alloy spheres, sometimes copper or nickel-plated, used for
the projectiles in shotguns. Chilled shot is hardened. Drop shot
is very soft.
Shoulder:
The sloping or rounded part of a bottleneck cartridge case between
the neck and the body.
Sighting
in: Firing a rifle or pistol to determine its point of
impact at a specified range and adjusting the sights so the point
of impact has the desired location with regard to the point of aim.
Single-base
Powder: Nitrocellulose powder made without the addition
of any other highly nitrated chemical such as nitroglycerin. See
double
base powder.
Sizing:
Also resizing. Reducing a fired cartridge case to dimensions that
allow easy chambering in a firearm of the appropriate caliber. May
be full length, partial, or neck sizing. Cast lead bullets are also
sized or reduced in diameter by forcing through a die.
Slug:
A large, single projectile, often bearing external pre-cut rifling,
intended for adapting shotguns to the hunting of larger game such
as deer. Also a slang term for bullet. As a verb, "to slug" means
forcing a soft lead slug through the bore of a gun and measuring
it to determine barrel dimensions.
Smokeless
Powder: A nitrocellulose-based propellant. Leaves a non-corrosive
residue, but normally produce small amounts of smoke. Named because
smoke production is very small compared to the older black powder.
Soft
point (SP): Bullet design feature in which a portion
of the lead alloy core is exposed at the tip of a jacketed bullet
to permit the bullet to increase its diameter upon impact with tissue.
Spent:
In shooting, a cartridge or component thereof which has been fired.
Spherical
Powder: A registered trademark of Hodgdon Powder Company
use to describe round or semi-round grained powders. See ball
powder.
Spin:
The rapid rotation of the projectile caused by the spiral rifling
of the bore. At the muzzle of a high-velocity rifle, spin can be
in excess of 300,000 revolutions per minute.
Spire
Point: A conical pointed bullet. The line from the shank
to the point is nearly straight.
Spitzer:
Bullet design feature from German for "point". A bullet with a pointed
nose. The line from the shank to the tip is arched. Compare to spire
point above.
Stabilize:
To spin a projectile around its long axis rapidly enough to keep
it point-on in flight.
Swage:
To form by forcing into or through a die. Rhymes with "age."
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T
Throat:
That area of the bore immediately ahead of the chamber tapering
to the point where the rifling starts. See also leade
or freebore.
Time
of Flight (TOF): The elapsed time, in seconds, of a bullet's
flight from muzzle to a given point down-range.
Trajectory:
The path of the projectile in flight relative to the line of sight.
Transducer:
In ammunition research, a piezoelectric device made of quartz which
develops a voltage directly proportional to the pressure applied
to it. Used to measure chamber pressures.
Twist:
The rate or angle of the rifling in relation to the axis of the
bore. Usually measured by the length of barrel required to rotate
a bullet one complete turn. A barrel that fully rotates a bullet
every ten inches is said to have a “1 in 10” twist.
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U
Upset:
1. The tendency for a bullet to become more cylindrical on firing
due to inertia. Also known as slugging. 2. The expansion on impact
of a hunting bullet. See mushroom.
USPSA:
United States Practical Shooting Association
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V
Varmint:
A variation of "vermin." A wild animal or bird considered a pest,
usually not covered by game regulations.
Velocity:
The speed of a projectile. Usually measured in feet per second (fps)
at a given range.
Vernier
Caliper: A simple slide-type precision measuring tool
used by handloaders. "Vernier" refers to the readout mechanism.
The dial-type and electronic digital caliper are becoming more popular
because they permit faster and less error-prone readings
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W
Wad:
A disc of paper, felt, cork, plastic or other material used primarily
in shotshells to separate powder from shot. Can be over-powder,
filler, cushion or a combination of these. Speer shot capsules for
handguns feature a wad to seal the bore.
Wadcutter:
A cylindrical, sharp-shouldered handgun bullet designed to cut a
clean round hole in a paper target for maximum score in competition.
WCF:
Winchester Center Fire. A proprietary name applied to several cartridges
developed by Winchester
Web:
That part of a cartridge case between the bottom of the primer pocket
and the interior of the case. The web is pierced by the flash hole.
Wildcat:
A cartridge formed by altering an existing commercial case to make
a style that is not available from ammunition companies. SAAMI dimensional
and pressure standards do not apply to wildcat cartridges.
Windage:
The amount of sight correction, left or right, applied to compensate
for natural drift and/or wind deflection of a projectile.
Wind
Deflection: Lateral change in the path of a projectile
due to crosswind effects.
Work-hardening:
The change in hardness of metal due to repeated flexing or stress.
In reloading, continued sizing of a case can work-harden the metal
until cracks appear. See annealing.
Working-up:
1. The process of developing a safe maximum load by starting with
a lower powder charge and increasing it in small steps only after
firing and checking for signs of pressure at each point along the
way. 2. Accuracy testing of known safe loads in a step-wise manner.
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X
No entries for the letter X.
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Y
Yaw:
A situation where a bullet “wobbles” on its axis at a small angle
to the line of flight. In yaw, a bullet's tip is normally on the
axis of the path but the base is spiraling around that axis. The
spin of the bullet causes it to settle into stable flight with both
tip and base on the same path axis, usually within 40 to 100 yards
for a rifle.
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Z
Zero:
More correctly, "Zero Sight Adjustment." That adjustment of a gun's
sights that will place a properly aimed shot at the desired point
of impact at some range with a given load, in the absence of wind.
The basis from which subsequent sight adjustments are made.
Zero
Range: The distance at which the bullet path exactly
coincides with the line of sight (LOS). Each gun/load combination
actually has two zero ranges—one near the muzzle as the bullet rises
through the LOS and another at some greater distance where the bullet
descends through the LOS. Normally, it is the second zero range
that most shooters need to know.
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