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kalibers

Caliber, or calibre, is a measure of the internal diameter of a gun's bore, and by extension the diameter of the bullet that the gun fires. It is a core concept in firearms design and ballistics. Caliber is usually expressed in either inches or millimeters. In the United States, pistol and rifle calibers are commonly written as a decimal inch value (for example, .45, .22, .30) or as a full cartridge designation that includes the caliber, such as .30-06 Springfield or .308 Winchester. In many parts of the world, calibers are stated in millimeters (for example, 9 mm, 7.62 mm, 5.56 mm). The nominal diameter typically refers to the bore, while the actual bullet diameter is usually a few thousandths of an inch smaller to ensure proper seating and accuracy.

Cartridges are often named to reflect caliber, but the naming conventions are varied: some names indicate bullet

In practice, caliber affects recoil, velocity, expansion behavior, and penetration, and it interacts with bullet weight,

diameter,
others
reflect
case
length
or
historical
factors.
The
same
caliber
can
support
multiple
cartridges
with
different
case
designs,
pressures,
and
performance.
The
term
also
crosses
into
shotguns,
where
gauges,
rather
than
calibers,
describe
bore
size;
a
smaller
gauge
means
a
larger
bore.
powder
charge,
barrel
length,
and
rifling.
Caliber
choice
influences
firearm
selection,
ammunition
availability,
and
regulatory
considerations.