compared to the height of a US$1 bill.
Small arms The standard weapon of a modern soldier is an
assault rifle, which, like other small arms, uses cartridge ammunition sized for the weapon. Ammunition is carried on the person in box magazines specific to the weapon, ammunition boxes, pouches, or bandoliers. The amount of ammunition carried depends on the soldier's strength, the expected action required, and the ammunition's ability to move through the logistical chain to replenish the supply. A soldier may also carry a smaller amount of specialized ammunition for heavier weapons, such as machine guns and mortars, thereby spreading the burden of squad weapons among many people. Too little ammunition threatens the mission, while too much limits the soldier's mobility and also threatens the mission.
Shells A shell is a payload-carrying
projectile which, as opposed to a
shot, contains explosives or other fillings, in use since the 19th century.
Artillery shells Artillery shells are ammunition that is designed to be fired from
artillery, which has an effect over long distances, usually indirectly (i.e., out of sight of the target). There are many different types of artillery ammunition, but they are usually high-explosive and designed to shatter into
fragments on impact to maximize damage. The fuze on an artillery shell can alter how it explodes or behaves, giving it a more specialized effect. Common types of artillery ammunition include high explosive, smoke, illumination, and practice rounds. Some artillery rounds are designed as
cluster munitions. Artillery ammunition will almost always include a projectile (the only exception being demonstration or blank rounds), fuze, and propellant of some form. When a cartridge case is not used, another method of containing the
propellant bags is used, usually in a breech-loading weapon; see
Breechloader.
Tank Tank ammunition was developed in World War I as tanks first appeared on the battlefield. However, as tank-on-tank warfare developed (including the development of
anti-tank warfare artillery), more specialized forms of ammunition were developed, such as
high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) warheads and
armour-piercing discarding sabot (APDS), including
armour-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot (APFSDS) rounds. The development of
shaped charges has had a significant impact on anti-tank ammunition design, now common in both tank-fired ammunition and in anti-tank missiles, including
anti-tank guided missiles.
Naval Naval weapons were originally the same as many land-based weapons, but the ammunition was designed for specific use, such as a solid shot designed to hole an enemy ship and
chain-shot to cut rigging and sails. Modern naval engagements have occurred over far longer distances than historic battles, so as ship armor has increased in strength and thickness, the ammunition to defeat it has also changed. Naval ammunition is now designed to reach very high velocities (to improve its armor-piercing abilities) and may have specialized fuzes to defeat specific types of vessels. However, due to the extended ranges at which modern naval combat may occur, guided missiles have largely supplanted guns and shells.
Aircraft and anti-aircraft ==Logistics==