Jamison 44-40 Win 200Gr Lead RNFP 20 Rounds Ammunition
Jamison Brass And Ammunition Currently Has a Full Quality Control And Quality Assurance Laboratory In House. Our Lab consists Of All The Gauges And Tests Needed To Meet All Caliber tolerances. We Follow All specifications According To SAAMI And CIP standards. The Tests And measurements We Perform On Our Products Assure That We Produce The highest Quality Possible. Testing And Analysis Of Our Products Begin From The Moment We Receive Our Raw materials All The Way To The Finished Product as It Is Being Packaged For Sale.
Ammunition Is constructed In Close conjunction With American Powder companies To Ensure Safe operating pressures And Performance. Ammo Assembly Is Handled With The Same Care as Loading at Home. Using Tight tolerances On Charge Variation, Seating, And crimping. Loaders Check Often To Safe Guard Quality And Consistency
Manufacturer: Jamison
Mfg Number: 4440W200LEGSeries: .44-40 WCF
Specification |
|
Value |
Caliber |
|
44-40 Winchester |
Weight |
|
200 Grain |
Bullet Type |
|
Lead |
|
|
|
MFG NO |
|
4440W200LEG |
SKU |
|
2851402 |
UPC |
|
854591005476 |
The Below Information Has Been Provided From Our Gun Caliber Dictionary And Is Meant For Informational Purposes Only. It Is Not Intended to Describe The Unique Specifications For This Ammunition.
The 44-40 Winchester (44 WCF) was introduced by Winchester in 1873 in their Model 1873 lever action. The '73, "the gun that won the West," was the first truly successful repeater, and its 44-40 cartridge was quickly adopted by other manufacturers, including both Colt and Smith & Wesson in revolvers. Using a .427-inch bullet, the standard load features a 200-grain bullet at about 1100 feet per second, producing 588 foot-pounds of energy. This is not a lot of power, but the 44-40 was probaby the most popular sporting cartridge of the 19th Century, accounting for untold amounts of game. It remained the most popular chambering in the 1892 Winchester, and was a common chambering in both rifles and handguns at least through the 1940s. The growth in Cowboy Action shooting has revived it; the 44-40 has less recoil than the 45 Colt, and serves as a common chambering for rifles and revolvers. Ammo is readily available and it is chambered to numerous reissues and reproductions. —
Craig Boddington
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