10.6×25mmR German Ordnance | |
Origin: | German Empire |
Type: | Pistol |
Service: | 1879-1945 |
Used By: | German Empire |
Wars: | German colonial conflicts, Boxer Rebellion, World War I, World War II |
Design Date: | Exact date of development is uncertain. Sometime between German unification (following the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71), and formal adoption of the Reichsrevolver in 1879. |
Is Si Specs: | yes |
Parent: | Believed to be a development of the .44 Russian |
Case Type: | Rimmed, straight case |
Bullet: | 10.92 |
Shoulder: | 11.5 |
Base: | 11.53 |
Rim Dia: | 12.94 |
Case Length: | 24.64 |
Length: | 36.82 |
Pressure Method: | C.I.P. |
Bw1: | 262 |
Btype1: | LRN |
Vel1: | 705 |
En1: | 298 |
Balsrc: | "Cartridges of the World" |
The 10.6×25mmR German Ordnance cartridge, also called the 10.6mm Reichsrevolver, the 10.6mm Service Ordnance, or the 10.55mm German cartridge, is a pistol cartridge designed by the then newly formed German Empire for their first two official service revolvers the M1879 & M1883 Reichsrevolvers.
It is believed to have been influenced by, or developed from the .44 Russian cartridge, which had been developed by the American firearms manufacturer Smith & Wesson for the Armies of Imperial Russia.
When they were adopted by Imperial Germany, both the 10.6×25mmR German Ordnance cartridge and the Reichsrevolver had already been surpassed by more advanced developments already in use by other nations and empires of Europe and the Americas. The 10.6×25mm German Ordnance cartridge would be slowly phased out and replaced in German service by the modern 9×19mm Parabellum round with the adoption of the Pistole Parabellum 1908 (more commonly called the Luger pistol) in 1908, and would be used alongside its successor, the 9×19mm Parabellum, in World War I, and would see minimal use through the period of World War II, before finally being completely phased out.[1] [2]