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Ammunition tungsten bullets

Under federal law, silencers are treated in the same category as automatic weapons. Armor-piercing ammunition (popularly called cop-killer bullets) were banned in 1986, with an expanded definition of banned bullets in the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 that includes bullets made of tungsten, beryllium, depleted uranium, and other exotic materials. Other accessories can also cause a weapon to be banned (see Assault Weapons above). [Pg.39]

Armor-piercing (AP) ammunition has a projectile or projectile core constructed entirely from a combination of tungsten alloys, steel, iron, brass, bronze, beryllium copper, or depleted uranium. The most effective AP bullets are usually confined to rifle bullets, as velocity and range are important factors in AP requirements. Some revolver and pistol ammunition is described as metal piercing but, although it would be effective against vehicle bodywork and some body armor, it would be ineffective against heavy armor plate. AP bullets are, with very few exceptions, jacketed. [Pg.71]

Manufacturers of copper and tungsten-compound bullets have received a great deal of resistance from the shooting sports establishment. In spite of this, performance of non-ieaded cartridges and clean primers Is now equal to and in some cases exceeds traditional ammunition. [Pg.128]

The West-Mullins invention relates to lead-free frangible ammunition [generally practice ammo] wherein the bullets are made of from 85% to 93% by weight of powders of copper, tungsten, ceramic, bismuth, stainless steel or bronze, or blends/alloys of the identified materials, the powder present in a polyester matrix with a small amount of ionomer. [Pg.158]


See other pages where Ammunition tungsten bullets is mentioned: [Pg.620]    [Pg.123]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.221]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.39 ]




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