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Join Date: Jun 2002
Posts: 757
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NATO is primarily a political organization and only secondarily a military alliance. Each NATO signatory is free to ignore any and all NATO agreements (including all the STANAG) if the signatory finds those agreements to be counter to the national security of the signatory. Net result of that is each NATO signatory fields whatever equipment (including ammunition) that meets the needs of the signatory, STANAG be damned. Re the marking on boxes of Winchester commercial ammunition, take them all with a grain of salt. Not too long ago Winchester began marketing 7.62x25 Tokarev ammunition in boxes marked "Winchester", cartridges head stamped "Winchester", with performance data for "Winchester 7.62x25 Tokarev" on the Winchester web site. Nowhere did Winchester acknowledge that ammunition was produced by S&B, in the Czech republic, and marked and packaged by S&B as Winchester ammunition. It was, in reality, Czech S&B 7.62x25 Tokarev ammunition and it's only relation to Winchester was Winchester's check book (pun intended). In terms of US Army 9x19 ammunition, somewhere I have a US Army ammunition TM that gives data on commercial 9x19 and US Army 9x19. The TM sez US commercial 9x19 has an average max chamber pressure of 36,000 psi, and US Army NATO 9x19 has an average maximum chamber pressure of 27,000 psi. That same TM sez the use of commercial 9x19 ammunition in the M9 pistol is not authorized. What's the truth here? The truth is there isn't a single truth. There are a number of truths, and they all conflict in some way. |
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