The .500 Jeffery is a big-game rifle cartridge that first appeared around 1920, and was originally introduced by the August Schuler Company, a German firm, under the European designation "12,7x70 mm Schuler" or ".500 Schuler". When offered by the famed British outfitter Jeffery's Guns, Rifles [sic], it was renamed the .500 Jeffery so as to be more palatable to British hunters and sportsmen following World War One.
| Attributes | Values |
|---|
| rdf:type
| |
| rdfs:label
| |
| rdfs:comment
| - The .500 Jeffery is a big-game rifle cartridge that first appeared around 1920, and was originally introduced by the August Schuler Company, a German firm, under the European designation "12,7x70 mm Schuler" or ".500 Schuler". When offered by the famed British outfitter Jeffery's Guns, Rifles [sic], it was renamed the .500 Jeffery so as to be more palatable to British hunters and sportsmen following World War One.
|
| sameAs
| |
| btype
| - SP
- PP
- Barnes TSX
- Lehigh Solid
- Soft Nose
|
| dcterms:subject
| |
| dbkwik:vietnam-war...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
| dbkwik:vietnamwar/...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
| dbkwik:world-war-t...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
| dbkwik:worldwartwo...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
| BW
| - 465(xsd:integer)
- 535(xsd:integer)
- 570(xsd:integer)
- 600(xsd:integer)
|
| balsrc
| |
| Origin
| |
| En
| - 6127(xsd:integer)
- 6721(xsd:integer)
- 7721(xsd:integer)
- 7957(xsd:integer)
- 8117(xsd:integer)
|
| Name
| |
| Type
| |
| vel
| - 2200(xsd:integer)
- 2468(xsd:integer)
- 2507(xsd:integer)
- 2549(xsd:integer)
- 2551(xsd:integer)
|
| test barrel length
| |
| BC
| |
| case type
| |
| Parent
| |
| rifling
| |
| Bullet
| |
| design date
| |
| Designer
| |
| abstract
| - The .500 Jeffery is a big-game rifle cartridge that first appeared around 1920, and was originally introduced by the August Schuler Company, a German firm, under the European designation "12,7x70 mm Schuler" or ".500 Schuler". When offered by the famed British outfitter Jeffery's Guns, Rifles [sic], it was renamed the .500 Jeffery so as to be more palatable to British hunters and sportsmen following World War One.
|