PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • .440 Cor-bon
rdfs:comment
  • The .50 AE was introduced in the Desert Eagle from Magnum Research 1991, and shortly thereafter shooters began wondering whether there was an alternative to the relatively small selection of factory ammunition, and, for sensitive shooters, the recoil of the .50 round, but still with more substantial stopping power than the .44 Magnum.
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:vietnam-war/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:vietnamwar/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:world-war-two/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:worldwartwo/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
cartridge length
  • 1.590000
BW
  • 260
  • 305
  • 240.0
primer
  • 0.210000
En
  • 1665
  • 1730
  • 1920
Name
  • 0.440000
Type
Caption
  • 0.500000
vel
  • 1420
  • 1600
  • 1900
case length
  • 1.280000
Base
  • 0.538000
Manufacturer
neck
  • 0.461000
case type
  • Rebated Rim, bottlenecked
Parent
  • 0.500000
rim dia
  • 0.510000
rim thick
  • 0.055000
case capacity
  • 50.500000
rifling
  • 1
Bullet
  • 0.429000
production date
  • 1998
max pressure
  • 36000
shoulder
  • 0.529000
design date
  • 1997
abstract
  • The .50 AE was introduced in the Desert Eagle from Magnum Research 1991, and shortly thereafter shooters began wondering whether there was an alternative to the relatively small selection of factory ammunition, and, for sensitive shooters, the recoil of the .50 round, but still with more substantial stopping power than the .44 Magnum. In designing the .440, Cor-bon created a lighter recoiling round than the .50 AE with greater penetrating power than the .50 AE and 44 Magnum. The round has a flatter trajectory, and leaves the barrel considerably faster than either the .50 AE or the .44 Mag. However, the cartridge has never taken off, and has remained fairly expensive. Consequentially, Magnum Research no longer produces a Desert Eagle in .440 Cor-bon.