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7mm BR Remington
Rifle cartridge
Rifle cartridge
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 7 mm BR Remington |
| origin | United States |
| type | Rifle |
| designer | Mike Walker |
| design_date | 1978 |
| manufacturer | Remington |
| production_date | 1978–1998 |
| parent | [6mm BR Remington](6mm-br-remington) |
| case_type | Rimless, Bottleneck |
| bullet | 0.284 |
| neck | 0.315 |
| shoulder | .4598 |
| base | .473 |
| case_length | 1.520 |
| primer | small rifle |
| max_cup | 52,000 |
The 7mm BR Remington / 7.2x38mm, commonly called the 7mm BR or the 7mm Benchrest Remington in long form, was an intermediate cartridge developed by Remington for the Remington XP-100 single-shot bolt-action handgun. The cartridge was developed for the Unlimited Class in the sport of Metallic silhouette shooting. Later it was introduced in the Remington Model XB-40 single-shot bolt-action rifle, which was specifically designed for the benchrest shooting community.
The 7mm BR is based on previous Remington benchrest cartridges 6mm BR Remington and the .22 BR Remington cartridges. These cartridges in turn trace their origin to .308 Winchester via the .308×1.5-inch Barnes cartridge. The 7mm BR was designed by merely necking up the pre-existing 6mm BR Remington to accept a .28 caliber (7 mm) bullet. The cartridge is capable of developing 2200 ft/s with a 139 gr bullet or 2100 ft/s with a 154 gr bullet in a 15 in barrel.
As a hunting cartridge it is adequate for smaller deer species and ranges under 150 yd. With lighter bullets, this cartridge makes an excellent varmint or predator cartridge. The 7mm BR Remington, however, was conceived as a competitive handgun cartridge for Metallic Shooting.
At one time Remington produced ammunition and cases for this cartridge. They continued to supply the 7mm BR Remington case through to the early 1990s. Today the cartridge is considered obsolete and no one produces loaded ammunition and Remington no longer manufactures firearms chambered for this cartridge. In April 2020 Peterson's began producing properly headstamped brass.
Footnotes
References
- (1991). "Hornady Handbook of Cartridge Reloading 4th Edition Vol I". Hornady Manufacturing Company.
- Simpson, Layne. (24 February 2005). "Layne Simpson's Shooter's Handbook: 600 Questions Answered". Krause Publications.
- Marcot, Roy. (1 June 2005). "History of Remington Firearms: The History Of One Of The World's Most Famous Gun Makers". Lyons Press.
- Fjestad, S. P.. (10 April 2017). "Blue Book of Gun Values". Blue Book Publications, Incorporated.
- Woodard, W. Todd. (24 October 2016). "Cartridges of the World: A Complete and Illustrated Reference for Over 1500 Cartridges". F+W Media.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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