7.7×58mm Arisaka: Revision history


For any version listed below, click on its date to view it. For more help, see Help:Page history and Help:Edit summary. (cur) = difference from current version, (prev) = difference from preceding version, m = minor edit, → = section edit, ← = automatic edit summary

(newest | oldest) View (newer 50 | ) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)

25 May 2024

30 April 2024

8 April 2024

3 April 2024

19 February 2024

18 February 2024

13 November 2023

1 November 2023

2 August 2023

26 June 2023

18 June 2023

12 April 2023

17 March 2023

16 March 2023

16 June 2022

2 June 2022

15 April 2022

30 March 2022

29 March 2022

24 March 2022

23 March 2022

16 February 2022

6 February 2022

5 February 2022

23 January 2022

18 January 2022

7 December 2021

13 August 2021

25 July 2021

11 July 2021

4 July 2021

3 July 2021

23 March 2021

9 January 2021

14 December 2020

25 October 2020

24 October 2020

7 August 2020

  • curprev 09:1609:16, 7 August 20202406:3400:21f:e230:91a1:d3c6:4209:e3d1 talk 7,533 bytes −132 The 303 British round is approx 15% smaller in case capacity, the only similarity is the bullet diameter and the muzzle velocity. Side by side, the 7.7x58 is far closer to the 30-06. The myth that they are basically the same thing propagates from the fact that Japan in WWII used a metric version of 303 British in a naval capacity and its quoted verbatim for the 7.7x58. A quick google image search will confirm the blatantly obvious differences. undo

7 July 2020

5 June 2020

21 May 2020

(newest | oldest) View (newer 50 | ) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)