7.65 x 53.5 mm
7.65 x 53.5 mm | |
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general information | |
caliber | 7.65 x 53.5 mm |
Sleeve shape | Bottle neck sleeve, rimless with pull-out groove |
Dimensions | |
Sleeve shoulder ⌀ | 10.90 mm |
Sleeve neck ⌀ | 8.78 mm |
Floor ⌀ | 7.94 mm |
Cartridge bottom ⌀ | 12.05 mm |
Sleeve length | 53.50 mm |
Cartridge length | 74.90 mm |
Weights | |
Bullet weight | 10 g |
Powder weight | 3 g |
total weight | 24 g |
Technical specifications | |
Speed v 0 | 820 m / s |
Max. Gas pressure | 3900 bar |
Bullet energy E 0 | 3362 J. |
Lists on the subject |
The 7.65 × 53.5 mm cartridge is also known as the 7.65 mm Mauser M 89/10, 7.65 × 53 Belgian or 7.65 Argentina. It was developed as the first cartridge with nitro powder loading by Mauser in 1889 and sold to Belgium together with the manufacturing rights.
variants
The original version of the cartridge had a 14.1 g round head bullet that reached a v 0 of 600 m / s with a 2.4 g charge . In 1909 the cartridge was switched to a 10 g pointed bullet which, with 3 g of powder, reached a muzzle velocity of up to 820 m / s. In this form, the cartridge was introduced to the Belgian army as M 89/10 in 1910 and used in their rifles, carbines and machine guns.
User states
- Belgium (1889)
- Turkey (1890)
- Argentina (1891)
- Bolivia (1891)
- Ecuador (1891)
- Colombia (1891)
- Peru (?)
literature
- Günter Wollert, Reiner Lidschun: Infantry weapons yesterday . (1918-1945). In: Illustrated encyclopedia of infantry weapons from around the world . 3. Edition. tape 1 + 2 . Brandenburgisches Verlagshaus, Berlin 1998, ISBN 3-89488-036-8 , cartridges, p. 79 .
Web links
Commons : 7.65 × 53.5mm - collection of images, videos, and audio files