The 8 mm Roth-Steyr is a military centerfire pistol cartridge adopted by the Austro-Hungarian cavalry in 1907 for the Repetierpistole M7—the first self-loading pistol adopted by a major military power. The cartridge headspaces on the mouth of the case. Ammunition was typically packaged in a unique ten-round charger. Austrian military production contained greased un-plated steel jacketed bullets. A few private firms in Austria manufactured ammunition with cupro-nickel jacketed bullets. Reloadable cartridge cases can be produced by resizing and trimming .30" M-1 carbine brass.
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| - The 8 mm Roth-Steyr is a military centerfire pistol cartridge adopted by the Austro-Hungarian cavalry in 1907 for the Repetierpistole M7—the first self-loading pistol adopted by a major military power. The cartridge headspaces on the mouth of the case. Ammunition was typically packaged in a unique ten-round charger. Austrian military production contained greased un-plated steel jacketed bullets. A few private firms in Austria manufactured ammunition with cupro-nickel jacketed bullets. Reloadable cartridge cases can be produced by resizing and trimming .30" M-1 carbine brass.
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| dbkwik:military/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
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| BW
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- 116(xsd:integer)
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| balsrc
| - "Textbook of Automatic Pistols"
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| abstract
| - The 8 mm Roth-Steyr is a military centerfire pistol cartridge adopted by the Austro-Hungarian cavalry in 1907 for the Repetierpistole M7—the first self-loading pistol adopted by a major military power. The cartridge headspaces on the mouth of the case. Ammunition was typically packaged in a unique ten-round charger. Austrian military production contained greased un-plated steel jacketed bullets. A few private firms in Austria manufactured ammunition with cupro-nickel jacketed bullets. Reloadable cartridge cases can be produced by resizing and trimming .30" M-1 carbine brass.
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