- 7.65x22mm Parabellum
Infobox Firearm Cartridge
name=7.65x21mm Parabellum
caption=Swiss made 7.65 mm Parabellum Thun 1973
origin=flagcountry|German Empire
type=Pistol
service=1898-1949
used_by=Germany ,Switzerland ,Finland
wars=
designer=Georg Luger andHugo Borchardt
design_date=1898
manufacturer=Deutsche Waffen und Munitions Fabriken
is_SI_specs=yes
parent=
case_type=Rimless
bullet=7.861
neck=8.433
base=9.906
rim_dia=10.01
case_length=21.59
length=29.84
primer=Small pistol
rifling=
is_SI_ballistics=yes
bwunit=gram
bw1=6
btype1=FMJ
vel1=365
en1=400
bw2=
btype2=
vel2=
en2=
bw3=
btype3=
vel3=
en3=
test_barrel_length=
balsrc=]The 7.65x21mm Parabellum (also known as .30 Luger and 7.65 mm Luger) was a
pistol cartridge introduced in 1898 by German arms manufacturerDeutsche Waffen und Munitions Fabriken (DWM) for their new Pistol Parabellum. The primary designers werefirearms designersGeorg Luger andHugo Borchardt , who developed the round from the earlier7.65x25mm Borchardt while working at DWM.The 7.65 mm Luger should not be confused with the 7.65 mm Browning (.32 ACP) or the 7.65 mm French Longue.
Design
Georg Luger developed the 7.65 mm cartridge from earlier 7.65 mm rounds. As mentioned, it was used in the DWM Pistole-Parabellum ('
Luger pistol '). The 7.65 mm Parabellum cartridge uses a shorter cartridge case than the7.65x25mm Borchardt ,7.63x25mm Mauser , and7.62x25mm Tokarev cartridges, which are the about same length.Performance
The rimless cartridge uses a 6 g (90 gr) full metal jacket bullet with a flat trajectory and moderate recoil, but relatively low stopping power. It is very accurate in the Swiss Parabellum pistol.
Usage
, which was created by removing the bottleneck of the 7.65 mm Luger cartridge to accept a 9 mm bullet. Due to the almost identical case width, rim width, and overall length of the cartridges, any 7.65mm Parabellum firearm can be converted to 9mm Parabellum with only a change of barrel, and vice versa.
With the adoption of the Luger pistol in
1900 , the 7.65 mm Luger became the standard pistol cartridge of the Swiss Army until the late1940s . The later sidearm of the Swiss military, theSIG P210 , was also manufactured in this caliber, but only for civilian use; Swiss military issues of the P210 were chambered in 9x19mm Parabellum.The Luger pistol in 7.65 mm aka Finnish M/23 model was adopted by the Finnish in
1922 . 8000 pistols were delivered, but few survived the war. Most remaining examples were rebarreled in 9mm, and a limited quantity remained in storage until1980 for arming non-combatant personnel.Several handguns have been manufactured in this caliber for commercial sale in countries that restrict civilian ownership of firearms in military calibers. Examples include Benelli B80, the
Browning Hi-Power and theRuger P89.A handful of
submachine gun s have been manufactured in this caliber, notably the SIG Bergmann 1920 (the licensed Swiss version of the Bergmann MP-18/1), the Swiss M/Neuhausen MKMS, the AustrianSteyr MP 34 and the Suomi M-26.Muzzle velocity
* 6 g (90 gr) full metal jacket: 365 m/s (1200 ft/s)
ynonyms
*.30 Luger
*7.65 mm Luger
*7.65x21mm
*7.65x21mm Luger
*7.65 mmParabellum
*7.65 mm Paraee also
*
7 mm caliber Bibliography
Barnes, Frank C "CARTRIDGES OF THE WORLD" 3rd Edition pgs 153, 177 1972 Digest Books, ISBN 0-695-80326-3
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