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Fully powered cartridge

A fully powered cartridge, also called full-power cartridge or full-size cartridge, is an umbrella term describing any rifle cartridge that emphasizes ballistics performance and single-shot accuracy, with little or no concern to its weight or recoil. The term generally refers to traditional cartridges used in machine guns, bolt action and semi-automatic service rifles and select fire battle rifles prior to, during and immediately after the World Wars and into the early Cold War era, and was a retronym originally made to differentiate from intermediate-power rifle cartridges that gained widespread adoption into military service after World War II.

Long-action vs. short-action
In the first half of the 20th century, the practice of civilian sportsmen experimenting and modifying existing cartridges to suit different ballistic needs, known as "wildcatting", really took off, and the result was the number of newly available cartridges exploded from a couple of dozen to well over one hundred. Having dozens of different cartridges all with unique dimensions was a headache for rifle manufacturers, and still wanting to reach the widest consumer market possible, they had to find a way to economically produce rifles that could be adapted to accept every chambering on the market. While barrels could be custom-made affordably, actions required more time, complex machining, and were thus expensive to make, so it made sense to produce the rifle action's dimensions so that a few standardized lengths could reliably use most (if not all) of the cartridges on the market. The so-called "standard length" cartridges are traditional rifle cartridges with a cartridge overall length (COL) between , which is best exemplified by the .30-06 Springfield. Most of today's long-action cartridges had their cases designed around .30-06 Springfield's case dimensions, such as the .270 Winchester, .280 Remington, .35 Whelen, .264 Winchester Magnum, and 7mm Remington Magnum, as well as much newer cartridges like the .26 Nosler and .28 Nosler. The .308 Winchester debuted in 1952 and its militarized version, the 7.62×51mm NATO, was adopted by the U.S. military in 1954 for the new M14 rifle. By the 1960s, it had displaced the .30-06 Springfield as the popular cartridge in both the hunting fields and in the battlefields. With a much shorter COL of and using the improved propellants available in the 1950s, it could do nearly everything traditional military rifle cartridges did, such as the .30-06 Springfield, but was cheaper to make, lighter in weight, more compact in size, and had lower recoil energy. More importantly, while the .30-06 has produced roughly a dozen wildcat cartridges, only the .270 Winchester and the .25-06 Remington enjoyed widespread commercial support; in contrast, the .308 Winchester served as the parent case for the wildcat .243 Winchester, .260 Remington, 7mm-08 Remington, .338 Federal, and .358 Winchester, all five of which are used by hunters to this day. The result was a new series of short-action cartridges, typically with a COL between , that tend to use bullets of different calibers, rather than using a wide variety of the same caliber to achieve the same ballistic effect. == Characteristics ==
Characteristics
Typical full-power cartridges have: • Bottlenecked, rimmed or semi-rimmed in older cartridges, rimless in newer cartridges • According to the official C.I.P. (Commission Internationale Permanente pour l'Epreuve des Armes à Feu Portatives) and NATO EPVAT rulings the maximum service pressures range between Pmax piezo pressure • Muzzle energies ranging between • Muzzle velocities ranging between • High Oratios ranging from 7.00 to 12.00 ==List of full power cartridges==
List of full power cartridges
Service cartridges Service cartridges are cartridges the service rifles and the standard machine guns of armies were or are chambered for. • 7.62×51mm NATO (NATO) • 7.92×57mm Mauser (Germany) • 7.62×54mmR (Russia) • .303 British (United Kingdom) • 7.5×54mm French (France) • 8×50mmR Lebel (France) • 7x57mm Mauser (Spain) • 7.65×53mm Mauser (Turkey) and (Belgium) • .30-40 Krag (United States) • 6mm Lee Navy (United States) • .30-06 Springfield (United States) • 7.5×55mm Swiss (Switzerland) • 6.5×50mmSR Arisaka (Japan) • 7.7×58mm Arisaka (Japan) • 8×50mmR Mannlicher (Austria) and (Hungary) • 8×56mmR (Austria) and (Hungary) • 11×50mm R Comblain (Belgium) • 11.35x52mmR Dutch Beaumont (Netherlands) • 6.5×52mm Carcano (Italy) • 7.35×51mm Carcano (Italy) • 8x58mmRb Breda (Italy) • 6.5×55mm Swedish (Sweden) and (Norway) • 8x63 patron m/32 (Sweden) • 8×58mmR Danish Krag (Denmark) • 6.5×54mm Mannlicher–Schönauer (Greece) • 6.5×53mmR (Netherlands) • 6.5×58mm Vergueiro (Portugal) • 6.8×51mm Common Cartridge (United States) Commercial Cartridges privately sold on the civilian market. • .308 Winchester (civilian version of 7.62x51 NATO) • 6.5 Creedmoor6.5x47mm Lapua.22 Creedmoor (derived from 6.5 Creedmoor) • 6mm Remington.243 Winchester.257 Roberts.260 Remington • .270 Winchester.284 Winchester7x64mm.300 Savage.338 Federal.348 Winchester.376 Steyr9.3x57mm Mauser.45-70 (modern loads) • .510 Whisper == See also ==
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