5mm Bergmann
Appearance
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5mm Bergmann | ||||||||
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Type | Pistol | |||||||
Place of origin | German Empire | |||||||
Production history | ||||||||
Designer | Bergmann | |||||||
Designed | 1894 | |||||||
Produced | 1896–1900 | |||||||
Specifications | ||||||||
Bullet diameter | .2 in (5.1 mm) | |||||||
Ballistic performance | ||||||||
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Source(s): "Textbook of Automatic Pistols" [1] |
The 5mm Bergmann is an unusual centerfire cartridge produced for very early self-loading pocket pistols. The case is steeply conical and headspaces on the conical case walls. Early versions (sometimes called the 5 mm Bergmann Rimless) were made without any rim or extraction groove; and relied upon blow-back for expulsion of the fired case from the chamber. Later Bergmann pistols provided an extractor requiring a groove which produced a semi-rimmed case. The long bullet was inadequately stabilized and tended to tumble in flight.[1]
References
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