Collection - PDF .44 Special
Collection - PDF .44 Special
Collection - PDF .44 Special
44 Special
.44 Special
.44 Special
Charter Arms Bulldog with five .44 Special 246 gr LRN cartridges Type Placeoforigin Revolver United States
Production history
Designer Designed Manufacturer Produced Smith & Wesson 1907 Smith & Wesson 1907
Specifications
Parentcase Bulletdiameter Neckdiameter Basediameter Rimdiameter Rimthickness Caselength Overalllength Case capacity Riflingtwist Primertype Maximum pressure .44 Russian .432in (11.0mm) .457in (11.6mm) .457in (11.6mm) .514in (13.1mm) .060in (1.5mm) 1.16in (29mm) 1.615in (41.0mm) 35 gr H2O (2.275 cm) 1 in 20in (510mm) Large pistol 15500psi (107MPa)
Ballistic performance
Bullet weight/type Velocity Energy 200gr (13g) Semi-Wadcutter HP 870ft/s (270m/s) 336ftlbf (456J) 246gr (15.9g) LRN 755ft/s (230m/s) 310ftlbf (420J)
Test barrel length: 4 in (vented) / 6 in [1] [2] Source(s): Federal Cartridge Co. Remington Arms Co.
.44 Special The .44 Special or .44 S&W Special is a smokeless powder center fire metallic cartridge developed by Smith & Wesson in 1907 as the standard chambering for their New Century revolver, introduced in 1908.[3]
Development history
In the late 19th Century American frontier, large .44- and .45-caliber cartridges were considered the epitome of handgun ammunition for self-protection and hunting. Black powder rounds such as the .44 American, .44 Russian, .44-40 Winchester, and .45 Colt enjoyed a well-earned reputation for effective terminal ballistics, accuracy, and reliability.[4] With the dawn of the 20th Century, Smith & Wesson decided to celebrate by introducing a brand new revolver design which they called the New Century.[5] Smith & Wesson wished to pair their new revolver design with a worthy new ammunition chambering.[5] At the time, state of the art in ammunition technology was smokeless powder. Older black powder ammunition was in the process of being converted to smokeless. Smith and Wesson's popular .44 Russian cartridge had established a reputation for superb accuracy and was a renowned target load, and they decided to use an improved smokeless powder version as the basis for the new round. Due to the lower energy density of the early semi-smokeless powders, prior efforts to convert the .44 Russian to smokeless had produced less than stellar ballistic performance. Smith & Wesson addressed this issue by lengthening the .44 Russian cartridge case design by 0.200-inch (5.1mm), increasing the powder capacity by 6 grains (0.39g).[6] The resulting design, which S&W called the .44 Special, had a case length of 1.16-inch (29mm).[5]
Ballistics
Unfortunately the ballistics of the new cartridge merely duplicated the 246-grain (15.9g) bullet @ 755 ft/s statistics of the .44 Russian, when the powder capacity of its case would have supported performance rivaling that of the .45 Colt and close to the .44-40. Nevertheless, the .44 Special retained its progenitor's reputation for accuracy.[3] The picture to the right shows a Smith and Wesson revolver and the ballistics of black powder loads, both original and with the powder replaced with modern Goex FFFg. (Cumpston 2005) The SAAMI maxiumum pressure standard for the 44 SW special is 15,500 PSI.[7]
.44 Special
.44 Special
References
[1] Federal Cartridge Co. website (http:/ / www. federalcartridge. com/ ballistics/ ) - Ballistics page. Accessed February 25, 2008. [2] Remington Arms Co. website (http:/ / www. remington. com/ products/ ammunition/ ballistics/ results/ default. aspx?type=pistol& cal=17) Ballistics page. Accessed February 25, 2008. [3] Hawks, C. "The .44 S&W Special" (http:/ / www. chuckhawks. com/ 44special. htm) Chuck Hawks website. Accessed February 25, 2008. [4] Taffin, J. "Sixguns Beyond The .44 Magnum" (http:/ / www. sixguns. com/ range/ beyondthe44. htm) Sixguns.com Web site. Accessed February 25, 2008. [5] Taffin, J. "The .44 special cartridge of the century? Accurate, powerful and reliable, the .44 special really is special" (http:/ / findarticles. com/ p/ articles/ mi_m0BTT/ is_171_28/ ai_n6123166) American Handgunner, Sept-Oct, 2004. Accessed February 25, 2008. [6] ".44 S&W Russian" (http:/ / www. gmdr. com/ lever/ 44rutext. htm) GMDR website. Accessed February 25, 2008. [7] http:/ / www. lasc. us/ SAAMIMaxPressure. htm [8] Skelton, C. "The .44 Special - A Reappraisal" (http:/ / www. darkcanyon. net/ The_44Special_A_Reappraisal. htm) Shooting Times Magazine August 1966. Accessed February 25, 2008. [9] Keith, E. "The .44 Special" (http:/ / www. darkcanyon. net/ The 44 Special by Elmer Keith. htm) Darkcanyon website. Accessed February 25, 2008. [10] Taffin, J. "Taffin Tests: The .44 Special" (http:/ / www. sixguns. com/ tests/ tt44spec. htm) Sixguns.com website. Accessed February 25, 2008. [11] Boddington, C. "The Fabulous .44 Mag" (http:/ / 72. 14. 205. 104/ search?q=cache:WIc3e01BG9gJ:www. gunsandammomag. com/ ammunition/ fabulous_44_mag/ + "44+ magnum"+ ". 44+ special"& hl=en& ct=clnk& cd=4& gl=us) Guns And Ammo Magazine.com website. Accessed February 25, 2008. [12] Ayoob, M. "Lethal force: Selling Cowboy Action To More Than Cowboys" (http:/ / findarticles. com/ p/ articles/ mi_m3197/ is_6_46/ ai_76782005) Shooting Industry, June, 2001. Accessed February 25, 2008. [13] "Ammo Bank ammunition website" (http:/ / www. ammobank. com/ cgi-bin/ cshop/ store/ gaugeshow. tam?pagenumber. ptx=1& cartridge_gauge. ctx=. 44 S& W ) Accessed February 25, 2008. [14] Cassill, M. "Feeding the Gunblast Bulldog - A Study in Terminal Ballistics" (http:/ / www. gunblast. com/ Cassill_Bulldog. htm) Gunblast website. Accessed February 25, 2008.
15. Cumpston, Mike Early .44 Special Black Powder Factory Loads Leverguns.com 2005 http:/ / www. leverguns. com/articles/44special.htm
External links
Ballistics By The Inch .44 Special results (http://www.ballisticsbytheinch.com/44special.html)
License
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported //creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/