The first one is a nagant rifle cartridge with the bullet severely set back as in pushed deep into the case. Unsafe to fire.
Manglesphoto wrote:
This time Im asking for a proper Name/title and "used in" remember the image can be deceiving as to size
Camera : D810 Nikon
Lens: Nikkor 200mm f4 macro
I'm guessing the first one is a 7.62x38mmR cartridge
The second one i think is a7MM Rimfire Orange Paper Shot Schell Acorn
Manglesphoto wrote:
This time Im asking for a proper Name/title and "used in" remember the image can be deceiving as to size
Camera : D810 Nikon
Lens: Nikkor 200mm f4 macro
I believe there were two people who identified the Nagant
The first image
7.72 R for a Nagant revolver, the projectile was set back past the end of the case and crimped in, upon firing the cylinder came forward with the end of the case entering the barrel, this was so there would be no loss in pressure and no flash between the cylinder and barrel. Era: 1895 to 1945.
the second: is a 9mm rimfire shotgun charged with 1/4oz # 8 shot
The gun was Flobert Garden gun
www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2021/07/26/rimfire-report-9mm-flobert/
Very nice close-ups of cartridge casings Frank.
Thanks for the fun challenge.
Could they be line throwing cartridges? That brass one reminds me of the old 45/70 sharps line thrower.
Juan Dinero wrote:
Could they be line throwing cartridges? That brass one reminds me of the old 45/70 sharps line thrower.
Not even close
The answer was posted Saturday evening
the first is a WWII Japanese Mosin-Nagant rifle cartridge, 7.62mm x 54 or thereabouts. The second, I don't know.
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