The 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser (designated as the 8mm Mauser or 8ÃÂ57mm by the SAAMI and 8 à57 IS by the C.I.P.) is a rimless bottlenecked rifle cartridge. The 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser cartridge was adopted by the German Empire in 1903âÂÂ1905, and was the German service cartridge in both World Wars. In the first half of the 20th century, the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser cartridge was one of the world's most popular military cartridges. In the 21st century, it is a popular civilian sport and hunting cartridge in the West.
The parent cartridge, upon which the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser is based, was adopted by Germany in 1888 as the Patrone 88 (cartridge 88) or M/88 (along with the Gewehr 1888 service rifle). It was a first-generation smokeless propellant cartridge designed by the German (, abbreviated to G.P.K.), as the new smokeless propellant introduced as Poudre B in the 1886 pattern 8mm Lebel had started a military rifle ammunition revolution. The M/88 cartridge was loaded with of single-base (based on nitrocellulose) smokeless powder and a relatively heavy, , round-nosed ball bullet with a diameter of . The M/88 bore originally had lands diameter and grooves diameter. The M/88 barrel bore specification was changed by 1894âÂÂ1895 to lands diameter and grooves diameter to improve accuracy and reduce barrel wear in M/88 chambered arms.
German government driven efforts to further improve on the performance of the military M/88 ammunition and the service arms in which the M/88 was used after several development steps eventually resulted in the official adoption on 3 April 1903 by the G.P.K. of the dimensionally redesigned 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser chambering. Besides the chambering, the bore (designated as "S-bore") was also dimensionally redesigned because the new bullet with a shorter cylindrical part had reduced bearing surface, which necessitated increasing its diameter and deepening barrel grooves (as a result the new cartridge was not fully interchangeable with the old one).
The 1903 pattern S Patrone (S ball cartridge) was loaded with a lighter , pointed of diameter and more powerful double-base (based on nitrocellulose and nitroglycerin) smokeless powder resulting in nearly 38% higher muzzle velocity and 27% more muzzle energy. The operating pressure was . With the improved ballistic coefficient â (G1 BC) of approximately 0.321 to 0.337 (ballistic coefficients are somewhat debatable)of the new bullet, the 1903 pattern cartridge had an improved maximum effective range and a flatter trajectory, and was therefore less critical of range estimation compared to the M/88 cartridge.
In the German military service the Patrone 88 was replaced in 1904 and 1905 by the S Patrone. Many arms originally chambered for the Patrone 88 could be and were adapted for chambering the S Patrone by reaming out metal from the chamber as it required a wider chamber throat to take the differently shaped and thicker brass of the new S Patrone. Other military arms chambered for different 8 mm cartridges were also converted to the S-Patrone.
The rimless cartridge case has been used as the parent case for several other necked-down and necked-up cartridges, and as the 8x57IS, has produced a rimmed variant, the 8x57IRS, which has also been used as a parent case for other cartridges with varying necked up or down diameters.
Due to restrictions imposed by the Treaty of Versailles, the Germans were not able to develop or sell any military equipment after World War I. In the post-war years, 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser chambered Gewehr 98 pattern rifles were produced in Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Mexico, Austria and China. This, and the cartridge's high performance and versatility, led to the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser being adopted by the armed forces of various governments. These included: Spain, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Iran, Turkey, China, Egypt, Yugoslavia, former German African colonies. This made the round the most widely used military rifle cartridge in the world during the inter-war years.
During World War II it was one of the few cartridges used by both the Axis and Allied powers, a distinction that it shared with the 9ÃÂ19mm Parabellum pistol round. Apart from being the standard rifle cartridge of the German and Polish armed forces, it was also used by the armed forces of the United Kingdom in the Besa machine gun, which was mounted in some of their tanks and other armoured vehicles, as well as being extensively used by the Chinese, especially early in the war. After World War II, it was used by the early Bundeswehr of West Germany. It saw limited uses by the various (police and paramilitary) units in East Germany before being completely phased out of service in the 1960s. Later, when Egypt decided to manufacture the Hakim rifle, a licensed copy of the Swedish Ag m/42, they redesigned the breech to accept the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser cartridge rather than use the original 6.5ÃÂ55mm Ag m/42 cartridge. Its military use continues today (2012) in some former Yugoslavia republics. The Zastava M76 sniper rifle, M48 bolt-action rifle and the license-built copy of the MG 42, the M53 Ã Â arac machine gun use this cartridge.
Rifles formerly manufactured for the Wehrmacht, captured by the Allies and acquired by Israel were important in the 1948 ArabâÂÂIsraeli War. Israel did not have a domestic arms industry and could not manufacture rifles but it could produce replacement parts and refurbish weapons. Israel only used its Mauser rifles in their original configuration for a short period; when NATO countries adopted a standard rifle cartridge, the 7.62ÃÂ51mm NATO, Israel replaced all of the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser barrels on its Mauser rifles with barrels chambered for the new 7.62ÃÂ51mm NATO cartridge.
After World War I the Treaty of Versailles imposed comprehensive and complex restrictions upon the post-war German armed forces (the Reichswehr). According to the treaty the Reichswehr could, on a limited scale, continue using the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser as their service cartridge. The Treaty of Versailles however effectively ended the civilian use of 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser chambered rifles by German hunters and sport shooters. During the mid-1930s Germany stopped obeying the restrictions imposed by the Treaty of Versailles and gradually the civilian use of 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser chambered rifles by German hunters and sport shooters was resumed. In 1939 the Normalisierungsverordnung (Normalization regulation) effectively prohibited the production of non S-bore/7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser chambered arms in Nazi Germany. In post-World War 2 Germany, the production of the various preceding chamberings is allowed again, but these chamberings have become rare in post-1939 produced arms.
The 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser is a common chambering offering in rifles marketed for European and North American sportsmen, alongside broadly similar cartridges such as the 5.6ÃÂ57mm, 6.5ÃÂ55mm, 6.5ÃÂ57mm, and the 6.5ÃÂ68mm and 8ÃÂ68mm S magnum hunting cartridges. Major European manufacturers like Zastava Arms, Blaser, ÃÂeská Zbrojovka firearms, Heym, Mauser Jagdwaffen GmbH and Steyr Mannlicher produce factory new 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser hunting rifles and European ammunition manufacturers like Blaser, Lapua, RUAG Ammotec/RWS, Prvi Partizan, Sako and Sellier & Bellot produce factory new ammunition. In 2004 Remington Arms offered a limited-edition Model 700 Classic bolt action hunting rifle chambered for the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser.
The 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser cartridge's performance makes it suitable for hunting all medium-sized game such as the deer family, chamois, mouflon, bighorn sheep, wild boar and bear. The 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser can offer very good penetrating ability due to a fast twist rate that enables it to fire long, heavy bullets with a high sectional density.
The 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser cannot be used in countries that ban civil use of former or current military rifle cartridges, though since 2013 is no longer restricted in France.
The rimmed variant of the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser, the 8ÃÂ57mm IRS, was developed later for break-barrel rifles and combination guns. The 8ÃÂ57mm IRS is commercially offered as a chambering option in European break-action rifles.
The naming of this cartridge is cultural and epoch dependent and hence not uniform around the world.
The 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser cartridge is also known by the following designations:
This list is not conclusive and other nomenclature or designation variations might be encountered.
The 7.92 naming convention is often used by English speaking sources for the military issued 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser and 7.92ÃÂ33mm Kurz cartridges. Remarkably, both the 7.92 and 7,9 used in these and alike designations do not exactly comply to the actual C.I.P. or SAAMI cartridge, chamber and bore dimensions. All other non-military issued rimless and rimmed rifle cartridges originating from Germany having approximately 8 mm bullet diameter are connected to 8 mm namings.
The widespread use in German military Gewehr 98 and Karabiner 98k service rifles designed and manufactured by Mauser caused the "Mauser" tag, though the Mauser company had nothing to do with the development of this cartridge.
The letter "J" often mentioned by English speaking sources is actually an "I" for Infanterie (German for "infantry"). A stamped "I" at the cartridge bottom in writing styles used in the past in Germany could be easily mistaken for a "J". Even in the 21st century the "I" is often substituted by a "J" in English speaking communities and German ammunition manufacturers often write "JS" instead of "IS" to avoid confusing customers. The letter "S" stands for SpitzgeschoÃÂ ("pointed bullet"), and the English designation "spitzer" for that style of bullet is derived from this German term.
The mainly European arms standards body Commission Internationale Permanente pour l'Epreuve des Armes àFeu Portatives (Permanent International Commission for portable firearms testing) (C.I.P.)âÂÂan organisation for standards in ammunition for civilian useâÂÂcurrently (2012) designates the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser as the 8 à57 IS. This designation has the power of law for civil use in C.I.P. member states like the United Kingdom.
The United States standardizing body for sporting cartridges Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers' Institute (SAAMI) currently (2012) designates the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser cartridge as the 8mm Mauser, also known as 8ÃÂ57mm.
The German military used 7,9mm as designation or omitted any diameter reference and only printed the exact type of loading on ammunition boxes during World War II.
In Sweden the cartridge was designated "8mm patron m/39"
The Polish military used 7,9mm or 7,92mm designations (mostly 7,9mm). The Norwegian military used the designation 7,92ÃÂ57 mm, sometimes "7,92 Lett" ("lett" meaning light) to differentiate it from the similar but not interchangeable 7,92ÃÂ61 Tung (heavy). Ammunition produced by Raufoss after the war was designated 7,92ÃÂ57.
The British military's Besa machine gun was chambered for the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser, and was used in armoured vehicles during World War II. The British referred to this ammunition as Cartridge SA, 7.92.
United States intelligence documents from World War II refer to the cartridge as 7.92 or 7.92 mm or 7.92-mm.
The 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser cartridge has a cartridge case capacity of 4.09 ml (63 grains) H<sub>2</sub>O. The exterior shape of the case was designed to promote reliable case feeding and extraction in bolt-action rifles and machine guns alike, under extreme conditions.
7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser maximum C.I.P. cartridge dimensions. All sizes in millimeters.
Americans would define the shoulder angle at alpha/2 â 19.1 degrees. The common rifling twist rate for this cartridge is 240 mm (1 in 9.45 in), 4 grooves, àof the lands = , àgrooves = , land width = and the primer type is large rifle.
According to the official C.I.P. (Commission Internationale Permanente pour l'Epreuve des Armes ÃÂ Feu Portatives) rulings the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser can handle up to P<sub>max</sub> piezo pressure. In C.I.P. regulated countries every rifle cartridge combo has to be proofed at 125% of this maximum C.I.P. pressure to certify for sale to consumers. This means that 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser chambered arms in C.I.P. regulated countries are currently (2013) proof tested at PE piezo pressure.
The SAAMI (voluntary) Maximum Average Pressure (MAP) for this cartridge is piezo pressure or (37,000 CUP). This is considerably lower than the C.I.P. pressure limit and is done for liability reasons, in case a 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser "S-bore" cartridge is fired in an "I-bore" rifle that has a narrower throat and barrel diameter. Most European ammunition manufacturers load to a lower C.I.P. pressure limit - P<sub>max</sub> piezo pressure for the 8ÃÂ57mm I civilian Patrone 88 offspring - for I-bore cartridges and use diameter projectiles; while the US based manufacturer Hornady followed their lead in their (now discontinued) EuroSpec brand 8ÃÂ57 JS load.
Germany produced many military versions of the cartridge, and continued the development of different variations until the end of World War II. The bullet lengths substantially varied between the different cartridge types, but all were loaded to an overall length of . The Germans had started using steel cases in World War I, and by the end of 1943, most German ammunition had that type of case. The weights and case capacities of the World War II military cartridge cases varied somewhat. The German military ammunition manufacturer Polte produced brass cartridge cases weighing 10.32 g (159 gr) with 4.03 ml (62 gr) H<sub>2</sub>O case capacity and steel cartridge cases weighing 10.90 g (168 gr) with 3.95 ml (61 gr) H<sub>2</sub>O case capacity. The steel cartridge cases were produced in copper plated and lacquered executions. Some military cartridge cases were made with the aim to use less material and their ammunition boxes were marked Für Gewehr ("for rifle") use. Other military cartridge cases were made extra sturdy and their ammunition boxes were marked Für MG ("for machine gun") use.
The German standard s.S. Patrone ("s.S. ball cartridge") was originally designed for long range machine gun use. It was loaded with a long, boat-tailed, s.S. - schweres Spitzgeschoà("heavy pointed or spitzer bullet") full metal jacket bullet and very well made. It was lead filled, had a gilding-metal-plated jacket, and weighed . The s.S. Patrone had a muzzle velocity of fired from a long barrel and an operating pressure of . From a long barrel the muzzle velocity increased to . From its 1914 introduction the s.S. Patrone was mainly issued for aerial combat and as of 1918 in the later stages of World War I to infantry machine gunners. The desire for adopting new shorter barreled rifles and the introduction of the Karabiner 98k were reasons for changing the standard German service ball rifle cartridge. The 1903 pattern 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser S Patrone produced excessive muzzle flash when fired from arms that did not have a long barrel like the Gewehr 98. It was found that the s.S. Patrone, originally designed for long range machine gun use, produced less muzzle flash out of rifles that had a shorter barrel and also provided better accuracy. Because of this the S Patrone was phased out in 1933 and the s.S. Patrone became the standard German service ball cartridge in the 1930s when the German rearmament program started. The s.S. ball projectile with a long 6ð 25â² 51â³ boat tail was designed for long range use and offered the best aerodynamic efficiency and external ballistic performance of any standard rifle bullet used during World War II, with a G1 ballistic coefficient between 0.593 and 0.557 (ballistic coefficients are somewhat debatable) or a ballistic coefficient of approximately 0.295 (G7). When fired at the typical muzzle velocity of out of a barrel the s.S. bullet retained supersonic velocity up to and past (V<sub>1000</sub> â Mach 1.07) under International Standard Atmosphere conditions at sea level (air density à= 1.225 kg/m<sup>3</sup>). Mounted to a Lafette tripod and aimed through the MG Z 34 or MG Z 40 telescopic sight, the effective range of the MG 34 and MG 42 general-purpose machine guns in long-range indirect fire support roles could be extended out to , though plunging fire or indirect fire methods were not as commonly used by machine gunners during World War II as they were during World War I. This indirect firing method exploits the s.S. Patrone useful maximum range, that is defined by the maximum range of a small-arms projectile while still maintaining the minimum kinetic energy required to put unprotected personnel out of action, which is generally believed to be 15 kilogram-meters (147 J / 108 ftâ lbf). The s.S. Patrone had a maximum range of approximately . Even by contemporary (2012) standards 1000<sup>+</sup> m (1,094<sup>+</sup> yards) effective supersonic range is quite remarkable for a standard military rifle round. For recognition the primer sealant was green, and it had a yellow-tip marked bullet.
According to the book âÂÂDu und dein Heer"(1943) the regular s.S. projectile had the following penetration performance: of dry pine wood at , at , at and at , of iron at , at , of steel at and at .The penetration in wood is higher at 400 m because of the tendency of the projectile to yaw at closer range.
During World War II German snipers were issued with purpose-manufactured sniping ammunition, known as the 'effect-firing' s.S. round. The 'effect-firing' s.S. round featured an extra carefully measured propellant charge and seated an sS full-metal-jacketed boat-tail projectile of match-grade build quality, lacking usual features such as a cannelure, to further improve the already high G1 ballistic coefficient to approximately 0.595 (G1) or 0.300 (G7). The 'effect-firing' s.S. projectile had a form factor (G7 i) of 0.869, which indicates good aerodynamic efficiency and external ballistic performance for the bullet diameter.
In 1940 Germany introduced ("spitzer with iron core") â mild steel cored projectile ammunition. The S.m.E. ammunition was developed to replace the s.S. ammunition to save on lead and other metals that became scarce in Germany during World War II. The projectile core was covered by a relatively thin layer of lead. Muzzle velocity was and the operating pressure was . For recognition the primer annulus or whole primers were colored blue. S.m.E. bullets were long, boat-tailed, and weighed . The mild steel core weights varied between the four production sub-executions from . From 1942 onwards S.m.E. ammunition practically replaced the s.S. ammunition. In 1943 the lead content of the S.m.E. bullet was further reduced. To compensate for the lead reduction the mild steel core was redesigned resulting in a projectile lengthened to to retain the original S.m.E. bullet weight of . This ammunition was designated ("spitzer with iron core long") and lacked recognition marks. The S.m.E. lg external ballistic characteristics were practically identical to s.S. ammunition up to and the lengthened S.m.E. lg projectile was more accurate compared to the shorter S.m.E. projectile.
Special ammunition included:
British cartridges included "ball", "armour-piercing", "tracer", and "incendiary". Blanks and a drill round were also available for instruction purposes. The drill round was an aluminium bullet fixed in a chromium-plated case which had three deep lengthwise recesses painted red to identify it. Ammunition was supplied in belted form with 225 rounds per belt.
The ball case was filled with a charge of around 45 grains (3 g) of nitro-cellulose.
The British cartridge was used in the Besa machine gun. This was a Czechoslovak ZB-53 design adopted shortly before the war as a move towards rimless ammunition across the armed service. However the move was disrupted by the lead up to war. The BESA was installed in most tanks and armoured cars of British design of that period. The original Czech design was also produced for German use following the occupation of Czechoslovakia and captured German ammunition could be used and vice versa.
The cartridges manufactured in Poland during the interwar period were mainly copies or modifications of the corresponding original German cartridge designs. The standard rifle cartridge was loaded with the S bullet (Spiczasty, "Pointed [Ball]"), a copy of the 1905 pattern German S Patrone. For machine guns a cartridge variant loaded with the heavier SC bullet (Spiczasty CiÃÂà ¼ki, "Pointed, Heavy [Ball]") â a copy of the German 1934 pattern s.S. cartridge â was used. The variant loaded with the armor-piercing P bullet (przeciwpancerny) was a copy of the German SmK cartridge. The armor-piercing-with-tracer PS (przeciwpancerny smugowy) and incendiary Z (zapalajàcy) cartridges were Polish modifications of the original German counterpart designs. The Polish designed a machine gun cartridge loaded with the long-range D bullet (dalekosiÃÂà ¼ny), which offered a maximum plunging fire range of to .
The Romanian military used the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser cartridge as standard issue from its independence. It gradually converted over in the 1950s and 1960s to using Warsaw Pact standard calibers.
The 7.92 LPS gs MD71 (7.92ÃÂ56mm) cartridge was manufactured in Romania by their Factory 22 (UM Sadu) from 1972 to 1978. It had a Semi-Armor-Piercing bullet with a copper jacket and mild steel core, corrosive VT stick propellant, and a Berdan-primed steel case with a green lacquer coating. The case mouth and primer pocket were sealed with a red sealant. It is unusual in that it has a uniform 56mm-long case, perhaps for cleaner extraction when used in belt-fed 8mm machine guns. Since it is from the portion after the neck, it chambers and feeds safely and extracts positively. It has sometimes been confused with the rather different Hungarian 8ÃÂ56mmR Mannlicher cartridge. Some experts mistakenly believed it to be an experimental rimless pointed-bullet Hungarian "sniper rifle cartridge" developed by Hungary's Factory 22 (Andezit Muvek) until it became available as surplus.
It is not clear why the cartridge was manufactured, as the Romanian military used the standard Communist-Bloc 7.62mm M91 Mosin-Nagant rifle round. Some believe it may have been for an experimental self-loading rifle or for a Communist Bloc client. It was most likely for use in the obsolete 8mm vz 24 rifles and MG 42 machine guns used by the Romanian Garzile Patriotice ("Patriotic Guards") from 1968 to the early 1980s.
After World War II the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia used the 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser as a military service round. The Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) designated their 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser ammunition as 7.9 mm. At the end of the 1940s the Yugoslav People's Army adopted a 7.9 mm cartridge, ball M49 variant, designated M49, as infantry ammunition for use in Mauser-type bolt-action rifles and MG 42 general-purpose machinegun clones like the M53. Yugoslavian state arms manufacturers like Prvi Partizan started making 7.92ÃÂ57mm Mauser ammunition for export to the Middle East in the 1950s and 1960s. In the 1970s the JNA started to develop a new more accurate 7.9 mm ammunition, sniper universal ball M75, variant, designated M75. This was done to support the new Zastava M76 sniper/designated marksman rifle for the JNA. Other adoption of the ammunition where tracer round 7.9 mm cartridge, ball with tracer, designated M70. The M70 tracer round burns out to . For training and ceremonial use a 7.9 mm cartridge, blank was adopted. By the mid-1980s the JNA started to push toward adopting Soviet / Warsaw Pact 7.62ÃÂ54mm R ammunition. This process was interrupted by the fall of Yugoslavia and brought the 7.9 mm back into military service with the onset of the Yugoslav wars.
This was the parent case for many other later cartridges, such as: