Various Tokarev cartridges achieve muzzle velocities around the range of 1,300 to 1,800 fps. A common velocity is around with about of energy. Given the wide disparity in ammunition manufactured in many different nations, ammunition is encountered that yields higher and lower velocities. Some newly manufactured ammunition intended for commercial use has a velocity of approximately . This cartridge has excellent penetration and can easily defeat lighter
ballistic vests (NIJ level I and IIA) as well as some
kevlar helmets, such as the American
PASGT helmet. Ian McCollum was able to penetrate NIJ level IIIA soft body armor using Polish surplus FMJ ammo and a TT pistol with 4 out of 5 shots. (Level IIIA is an advanced version of the Level II that can stop faster bullets than Level II, but does not meet the Level III standard. NIJ standards factor in up to 1,400 fps of bullet velocity; higher-velocity rounds can eventually penetrate them, but by definition, level III must be able to stop any 7.65 mm bullet ). There is a common misconception that military surplus 7.62 Tokarev ammunition uses copper-coated mild steel bullets, and that this increases the chance of dangerous ricochets when fired at hard targets and can damage
bullet traps often used on shooting ranges. While steel-core ammunition in 7.62×25 is available internationally, in the United States the importation of 7.62×25 cartridges loaded with copper-coated steel bullets is illegal; federal law defines these as armor-piercing pistol ammunition. So-called "steel bullets" sold are generally lead-core bullets with copper-washed steel jackets, and these do not present a significantly greater risk of ricochet than a standard copper-jacketed projectile.
Military variants Soviet and Russian, by projectile type: • P (П): standard FMJ lead-cored bullet. Comes in gl (brass case, 57-N-132), gs (steel case, wartime), gzh (steel case with tombac, 57-N-134) variants. • P-41 (П-41), gl: 74 grain, steel-cored,
incendiary variant. Not officially accepted for service but produced and used during
World War II in the
PPSh-41 and
PPS-43. This ammunition would achieve a velocity of when fired from these firearms. • PT (ПТ): tracer variant. gl (57-T-132) and gzh (57-T-133). • Pst (Пст): steel-cored bullet. gl (57-N-132s) and gzh (57-N-134s). Notable variants from other militaries: • Type 64 / Type P: subsonic, heavy, pointed (spitzer) loading of the cartridge, designed specifically for use in
suppressed firearms. Designed for the
Type 64 submachine gun, also used by
Type 85 submachine gun.
Civilian variants Wolf Gold FMJ tops out at with of energy, as does
PPU ammunition. Some of this ammunition, such as the Wolf Gold and
Sellier & Bellot, use boxer primed brass cases that are reloadable. .223 Timbs is a wildcat cartridge resulting from replacing the projectile with a
sabot containing a
.223 Remington projectile, specifically a commercial 50gr jacketed soft point. This ammunition is intended to be used with an unmodified
CZ-52 pistol. It achieves when fired from a CZ-52's barrel.
Reloading If reloadable cartridge cases are not available they can be produced by resizing and trimming
9mm Winchester Magnum brass, or alternately by reforming
5.56×45mm NATO or 223 Remington cases. The cartridge case is inserted into a forming die, which produces a shoulder in the correct position, and the portion of the case projecting through the top is sawn off. Afterward, a reamer is used to ream out the new case neck to an acceptable thickness. This can also be accomplished by turning the neck to the correct thickness. This is necessary because a powerful rifle cartridge has been cut back to where the brass is relatively thick. If the brass is left too thick it may prevent chambering of the cartridge. Using this thicker brass may reduce the internal capacity of the cartridge and may cause excessive chamber pressures. Use appropriate caution when reloading converted rifle brass. Alternately, reloaders can purchase proper, new cases from Starline Mfg. Use .308" or .309" bullets for reloading for the
Tokarev TT-33 and Czech
CZ-52.
Mauser C96 and C30 "Broomhandle" pistols typically have oversized bores, and .311" bullets may be needed to produce acceptable accuracy. Hornady makes an 85-grain .309" "XTP" bullet that functions well in all these pistols. On the Starline website, information is given about using the slightly less powerful, but otherwise nearly identical ammunition designed for the
Mauser C96 pistol (
7.63×25mm Mauser) from which the Tokarev cartridge was derived, in pistols chambered for the Tokarev round. This was common practice by Finnish and German forces in WWII. However, firing the 7.62×25 out of a
Mauser C96 is not recommended, as it is too powerful and it may damage the pistol. Firearms that use the 7.62×25 cartridge can reliably fire 7.63×25mm rounds. ==Firearms and service use==