mljdeckard
Member
As I learn about cartridges and their origins, I am sometimes surprised that it takes as long as it does to invent new ones. As the 10mm is shortened to the .40, the .40 is necked-down to the .357 SIG, and the .45 is necked down to a .400 Corbon,
.....why hasn't anyone necked a 10mm down to a .355 cal bullet? Is it that it's just too high-pressure and the components can't handle it, or has somebody done it and it was too wild for any practical purpose? I mean, it seems like while a reason to experiment with these things is always good, it's hardly REQUIRED.
Call it the .357 "are you kidding me?" magnum or something.
.....why hasn't anyone necked a 10mm down to a .355 cal bullet? Is it that it's just too high-pressure and the components can't handle it, or has somebody done it and it was too wild for any practical purpose? I mean, it seems like while a reason to experiment with these things is always good, it's hardly REQUIRED.
Call it the .357 "are you kidding me?" magnum or something.