.44 Bull Dog Cartridge | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Type | Revolver | |||||||
Place of origin | United States | |||||||
Production history | ||||||||
Designed | 1880s | |||||||
Produced | 1880s-1930's | |||||||
Specifications | ||||||||
Case type | rimmed straight | |||||||
Bullet diameter | .445 in (11.3 mm) | |||||||
Neck diameter | .447 in (11.4 mm) | |||||||
Base diameter | .454 in (11.5 mm) | |||||||
Rim diameter | .488 in (12.4 mm) | |||||||
Case length | .526 in (13.4 mm) | |||||||
Overall length | .914 in (23.2 mm) | |||||||
Rifling twist | 1:21 in (530 mm) | |||||||
Primer type | Boxer | |||||||
Ballistic performance | ||||||||
| ||||||||
Source(s): Barnes & Amber 1972 |
The .44 Bull Dog was an American centerfire revolver cartridge produced from the 1880s until the 1930s. [1]
No known firearm was chambered exclusively for the .44 Bull Dog cartridge: It was a shorter and less powerful option for use in revolvers chambered for the .44 Webley cartridge (American name of the British .442 Webley revolver round). The .44 Bull Dog cartridge was manufactured in the US and Canada, probably for those bothered by the sharp recoil of the more powerful .44 Webley round in such small guns, or who were particularly cost conscious. (Typically, in the late 19th century U.S., a box of .44 Bull Dog cartridges cost $0.68 for 50 rounds, compared to $0.90 for 50 of the longer .44 Webley round. [2] The .44 Bull Dog and .44 Webley cartridges continued to be commercially offered in the U.S. until 1938 or 1939. [3] ) Also, the Bull Dog was very easy to carry.
Webley's British Bulldog revolver was a popular and widely copied self-defense or "pocket" gun (so named for being designed early 1870s to be carried in a pocket. Today such guns might be a known as a snubnose or carry gun). [4] [5]
A black powder round, the .44 Bull Dog, as manufactured by firms such as Winchester, [6] used a 168–170 grain bullet [7] and 15 grains powder, compared to a 200–230 grain bullet and 17–20 grains powder for the parent .44 Webley round. It proved a great deal better than contemporary rimfire rounds, being in a class with the .41 Short Colt. [8] However, by modern standards, the .44 Bull Dog was an extremely marginal round, not really suitable for anything but close range, which is how it normally would have been defensively used.
The Webley Revolver was, in various designations, a standard issue service revolver for the armed forces of the United Kingdom, and countries of the British Empire and the Commonwealth of Nations, from 1887 to 1970.
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.455 Webley is a British handgun cartridge, most commonly used in the Webley top break revolvers Marks I through VI. It is also known as ".455 Eley" and ".455 Colt".
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The British Bull Dog was a popular type of solid-frame pocket revolver introduced by Philip Webley & Son of Birmingham, England, in 1872, and subsequently copied by gunmakers in continental Europe and the United States. It featured a 2.5-inch (64 mm) barrel and was chambered for .442 Webley or .450 Adams cartridges, with a five-round cylinder. Webley produced smaller scaled .320 Revolver and .380 calibre versions later, but did not mark them with the British Bull Dog name.
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