Приклади вживання Winchester magnum Англійська мовою та їх переклад на Українською
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
Winchester Magnum.
Belted .375 H&H Magnum(Left) .338 Winchester Magnum(Right) US Quarter for scale.
Winchester Magnum.
Reloadable Boxer-primed cartridgecases can be formed from 9mm Winchester Magnum by simply resizing and trimming.
In 1960, a .22 Winchester Magnum Rimfire version the Model 51 was introduced.
Soon game wardens, wildlife managers,and professional hunters switched to the .458 Winchester Magnum as their duty rifle.
However, the .458 Winchester Magnum remained the standard of measure for dangerous game cartridges.
Mauser variants, the best known of these being the LK M70 and M85 series,in various popular calibers ranging from .22-250 to .458 Winchester Magnum.
Though more expensive than deer hunting ammunition, the .458 Winchester Magnum is significantly less expensive than its competitors.
Since the .458 Winchester Magnum was intended as a dangerous game hunting cartridge, almost all ammunition manufactured for the cartridge is manufactured for these game species.
Reloadable cartridge cases can be produced byresizing and trimming 9mm Winchester Magnum brass, or alternately by reforming 5.56×45mm NATO.
There are also a 6-shot .22 Winchester Magnum Rimfire and a .327 Federal Magnum version, as well as 5-shot a clip-fed 9mm Luger version.
When British ammunition companies, including Kynoch, began closing in the 1960s,Winchester and the .458 Winchester Magnum filled the gap left behind.[8].
The 9mm Winchester Magnum, which is also known as the 9×29mm, was developed to duplicate the performance of the .357 Magnum in a semi-automatic pistol,[15] as was the 357 SIG cartridge.
Zastava Arms manufactures several 98 Mauser variants, the best known of these being the LK M70 and M85 series, in various popular calibers ranging from .22-250 to .458 Winchester Magnum.
Frank Barnes found that the .458 Winchester Magnum and the .460 Weatherby Magnum too powerful for North American big game and believed that a cartridge of lesser power would be ample for the task.[1].
The cartridge remains the largest of the standard length magnum cartridge family released by Winchester, which includes the somewhat obsolete .264 Winchester Magnum and the popular .338 Winchester Magnum.
There was a Kit Gun Airweight(Model 43) and a Kit Gun chambered in .22 Winchester Magnum Rimfire( .22 WMR, the Model 51), the Target version with 6" barrel(Model 35), as well as the standard Kit Gun.
While the .458 Winchester Magnum is considered over powered for North American game species, the cartridge has found use for the hunting of large bears such as the polar and Alaskan brown bear and American bison.
The .450 Marlin was developed from the wildcat .458×2" American,which was based on the .458 Winchester Magnum.[5] This places the .450 Marlin in the .458Winchester family of cartridges, though it is more easily understood as a"modernized" .45-70.
The .458 Winchester Magnum has had critics in its over 50 years of existence. By the late 1960s, professional hunters such as Jack Lott and others,suspected performance issues with .458 Winchester Magnum ammunition, particularly as produced by Winchester.[11].
This gives it more downrange energy at that distance than traditional .30 caliber rounds suchas the .308 Winchester and .300 Winchester Magnum.[3] SAKO TRG-S test rifles have achieved MOA and better accuracy with this cartridge at 600 yards.[2].
A new ammunition chambering option, the .22 Winchester Magnum Rimfire, also became available for the first time.[3][3][4] The MK III series incorporated a number of models, several of which were updates of existing designs.
Other than specialized competition cartridges like the 9×25mm Dillon(1988), which necked a 10mm Auto case down to a 9mm bullet, the .357 SIG(1994) was the first modern bottleneck commercial handgun cartridge since the early 1960s, whenWinchester introduced a .257 caliber round based on the .357 Magnum, the now obsolete .256 Winchester Magnum(1960).
It was introduced commercially in 1956 by Winchester and first chambered in the Winchester Model 70 African rifle.[2] It was designed to compete against the .450 Nitro Express and the .470 Nitro Express cartridges foundin big bore British double rifles. The .458 Winchester Magnum remains to this day one of the most popular dangerous game cartridges.
Visually, the case resembles that of the .458 Winchester Magnum with a wider belt.[8] The cartridge is most useful for hunting big game at short ranges, being accurate at ranges of 150 to 175 yards(137 to 160 m).[5] The cartridge is capable of taking any large game animal in North America including large elk, brown bear and moose.
Unlike the more powerful .460 Weatherby Magnum the .458 Winchester Magnum is not considered overly powerful for the larger felids such as lion or leopard in Africa. However, bullet selection is important for these felids as they are not considered thick skinned species with the largest of the lions weighing under 500 lb(230 kg).
The 270 Winchester Short Magnum or 270 WSM is a short, unbelted, magnum cartridge created by necking down the .300 Winchester Short Magnum and fitting it with a .277 caliber bullet. The correct name for the cartridge, as listed by the Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers' Institute(SAAMI), is 270 WSM, without a decimal point.[3].
Winchester introduced the .357 Magnum, which was dimensionally identical to the .38 Special except for a .125 inch longer case, and the first revolvers(referred to as" .357 Magnum Models") were completed by S&W on April 8, 1935.[1].