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・ 6.12.
・ 6.3
・ 6.30 with George Negus
・ 6.45×48mm XPL Swiss
・ 6.5 Metre
・ 6.5-06 A-Square
・ 6.5-284 Norma
・ 6.57 Crew
・ 6.5mm
・ 6.5mm Bergmann
・ 6.5mm Creedmoor
・ 6.5mm Grendel
・ 6.5mm Remington Magnum
・ 6.5×25mm CBJ
・ 6.5×47mm Lapua
6.5×50mmSR Arisaka
・ 6.5×52mm Carcano
・ 6.5×53mmR
・ 6.5×54mm Mannlicher–Schönauer
・ 6.5×55mm
・ 6.5×58mm Vergueiro
・ 6.5×68mm
・ 6.8mm Remington SPC
・ 6/16/00 – Katowice, Poland
・ 6/20/00 – Verona, Italy
・ 6/22/00 – Milan, Italy
・ 6/4
・ 6/6/00 – Cardiff, Wales
・ 6/8/00 – Paris, France
・ 60


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6.5×50mmSR Arisaka : ウィキペディア英語版
6.5×50mmSR Arisaka

The 6.5×50mm Semi-Rimmed (6.5×50mmSR) Japanese cartridge, currently manufactured under the designation ''6.5mm Jap'', was adopted by the Imperial Japanese Army in 1897, along with the Type 30 Arisaka infantry rifle and carbine. The new rifle and cartridge replaced the 8×52mm Murata round used in the Type 22 Murata Rifle. In 1902 the Imperial Japanese Navy chambered its Type 35 rifle for the cartridge as well. In 1905, the round also came to be offered in the Type 38 Arisaka infantry rifle and carbine, both of which rendered the Type 30 obsolete in Imperial Army service. Type 44 cavalry carbines, first adopted in 1911, were also chambered in 6.5×50mm.
==History==
Early 6.5×50mm cartridges had a cupronickel, round-nosed bullet weighing fired with approximately of smokeless powder. This was later changed with the adoption of the Type 38 when Japan, in line with the other great powers around the same time, changed to the pointed or spitzer bullet in the first decade of the twentieth century. The Type 38 spitzer-bullet round fired a bullet with a powder charge of for a muzzle velocity of around .
The round was criticized for being underpowered compared to other, more powerful American and European cartridges such as
the .30-06, .303 British, 7.92×57mm Mauser, and 7.62×54mm Russian. For this reason it was later replaced by the more powerful 7.7×58mm cartridge.
The Type 38 spitzer version of the 6.5×50mm cartridge remained unchanged until after the adoption of the Type 11 light machine gun in 1922. The Type 11 was initially meant to fire standard Type 38 rifle ball ammunition by means of ordinary five-shot Type 38 stripper clips. Subsequent use indicated that the higher pressures generated by the standard rifle ammunition caused parts wear and breakage in machine guns. It was thus decided to reduce the powder charge of the Type 11's 6.5 mm ammunition to overcome the problem. This reduced charge 6.5 mm ammunition can be identified by a letter "G" in a circle stamped on the outside of the ammunition packaging which stands for the first letter of ''genso'' - the Japanese word for "reduced." This special ammunition was also issued to soldiers carrying the Type 96 light machine gun introduced in 1936 and to snipers issued the Type 97 sniper rifle, introduced in 1937. The advantage of the reduced charge ammunition to the sniper was it aided in his concealment as the reduced charge rounds produced less muzzle flash than standard rounds and thus did not give away the sniper's position.
Also produced was 6.5mm gallery ammunition, incorporating a paper or wood bullet; and dummy rounds, which were issued to Japanese forces. These were either all brass rounds or were more commonly red varnished wood with a metal base and rim. Ammunition used in the spigot-type Japanese grenade launchers often has paper bullets and can be identified by the staked primers.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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