.270 British
Cartridge
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The .270 British (or .270 Enfield) is an experimental intermediate rifle cartridge that was developed by the British at the same time as the .280 British as a potential successor to the .303 British cartridge.[1] The rimless cartridge has a base diameter of 11.3 mm (like the Russian 7.62Ã39mm) and a case length of 46 mm.[2] The bullet is a standard .270/.277 caliber bullet with a light 100 gr weight with a muzzle velocity of 840 m/s (2,800 ft/s), similar in performance to the later 6.8mm Remington SPC. It was not good at long range, but its slender case had the potential to fire a heavier bullet at a relatively high velocity. It was optimized for shorter ranges, while the .280 favored long-range performance to try to meet U.S. requirements.
| .270 British | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Rifle | |||||||
| Place of origin | United Kingdom | |||||||
| Production history | ||||||||
| Designed | post-WWII | |||||||
| Specifications | ||||||||
| Case type | Rimless, bottleneck | |||||||
| Bullet diameter | 7.04 mm (0.277 in) | |||||||
| Rim diameter | 11.3 mm (0.44 in) | |||||||
| Case length | 46 mm (1.8 in) | |||||||
| Overall length | 62.3 mm (2.45 in) | |||||||
| Ballistic performance | ||||||||
| ||||||||
The cartridge was not adopted, the British initially focused development on the .270, then ultimately chose the NATO-standard 7.62Ã51mm cartridge.