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Don't forget the most important US measurements of them all: 5.56, 7.62, 9, etc.
79 2 Reply.308
Oh wait....
22 0 Reply.308 is 7.62, civilian measurement vs military (there's actually implications related to pressures, sidewall thicknesses, machining tolerances, but yeah same same)
28 0 ReplyYeah, it's generally safe to shoot 7.62 from a 308-chambered gun, but not the other way around.
13 0 ReplySame for 5.56 and .223.
14 0 Reply
pls explain 🙂
5 0 Reply.308 is caliber in inches thus not metric.
10 0 Replywhy do they use decimal for imperial units?
7 0 ReplyBecause even people who worked in imperial recognized that dealing with stupid fractions is stupid.
17 0 ReplyI have a 77/250 rifle at home because I’m a real American.
8 0 Reply🫡🇺🇲
3 0 Reply
It means the round fired by the gun is .308 inches in diameter, or 7.62mm. Gun caliber is measured in inches for Imperial.
4 0 ReplyBecause they couldn't rationalize using fractions.
4 0 ReplyMachining is often done in thousandths of an inch.
2 0 Replyso why don't they write 1/1000 in then?
1 1 ReplyBecause, unlike internet pendants, machinists have shit to do.
2 0 Reply