Many cartridge designers in the 1920s were creating various 6.35 mm (.25 in) caliber cartridges. Due to the availability of inexpensive Mauser actions, the
7×57mm Mauser case was a common choice, having near ideal volume capacity for the "quarter-bore" (0.25 in; 6.35 mm) using
powders available at that time.
Ned Roberts is usually credited with being the designer for this cartridge. Eventually, in 1934,
Remington Arms chose to introduce their own commercial version of such a cartridge, and although it was not the exact dimensions of the
wildcat made by Roberts, they called it the ".257 Roberts". From its introduction until the appearance of 6 mm cartridges such as
.243 Winchester and
6mm Remington, it was a very popular general purpose cartridge. Today, although surpassed in popularity by other cartridges, it lives on with
bolt-action rifles being available from some major manufacturers. ==Conversion of war-souvenir Japanese Arisaka rifles==