if the bullet you have is crimped at the tip that means its a 308 blank
The Railgun, it fires over double the speed of sound.
If the gun is stationary before the shot, then the momentum of the gun and the momentum of the bullet are equal and opposite after the shot.
the barrel is the part that the bullet travels through once the gun is fired. it is on the inside of the gun.
My CS-6 Recon Gun fires at different ranges sometimes, but it usually fires a dart about 7 metres
because it fires 1 bullet and takes 9 pipes to get the smoke out of the gun because it fires with incredible power
It depends on the type of ammunition.
The Heckler & Koch MP5 submachine gun fires a 9x19mm cartridge, which has an overall length of 19.69 millimeters, and a rim diameter of 9.96 millimeters. The bullet itself has a diameter of 9.01 millimeters, with length depending on the type of bullet (ie jacketed, unjacketed, hollow-point).
Caliber refers to the diameter of the bullet the gun fires. The caliber of a 9mm is 9 millimeters. That is about .356 inches.
The 30-06 ( say thirty ought six) fires a bullet that is 7.62 mm in diameter. The 7mm fires a bullet this is, well...... 7mm. 30-06 has a bigger bullet. The size of the GUN can- and does- vary. BTW- catridges such as the 7mm MAGNUM will have greater energy than a 30-06. So- what is your definition of bigger?
I think you mean .32 caliber, not mm. It means that the gun fires a bullet that is about 32/100ths of an inch in diameter. A 9mm fires a bullet 9mm in diameter- or about .35 inches in diameter. A 32 mm bullet would be about the size of big (D cell) flashlight battery!
Yes, a VERY large one known as the GAU-8. It fires a 30mm diameter bullet.
By Newton's third law of motion, for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. When a gun fires a bullet, the bullet gains momentum in one direction, causing the gun to recoil in the opposite direction with an equal amount of momentum. So the momentum of the bullet is equal in magnitude to the momentum of the gun, but in opposite directions.