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Is this modern?

Erndog

New member
Dug this one up recently.
It appears to be .36 caliber and 5/8" long.
Is it CW era, or modern? The only thing that has me wondering is the recessed base. Dug up near Sailors Creek Battlefield. There was a Naval contingent involved, and I know some Naval pistols were .36 caliber.
36 cal (1).jpg36 cal (2).jpg36 cal (3).jpg
 
Hollow Base bullets are common, often used for muzzleloaders, handgun and rifle.
 
Can you state actual diameter & weight? Those are the keys.
 
Look too long for .36 percussion revolvers (would lower powder capacity). Until modern times, I think they all used round balls in the percussion revolvers.
 
Percussion revolvers commonly used conical bullets as well as round balls. Factory furnished bullet moulds often were 2 cavity; one RB, one Conical. The found bullet above does look later era to me as there is no grease groove. Looks like a .355" for .380/9mm Corto. Hard to know for sure without verifying weight & diameter.
 
Percussion revolvers commonly used conical bullets as well as round balls. Factory furnished bullet moulds often were 2 cavity; one RB, one Conical. The found bullet above does look later era to me as there is no grease groove. Looks like a .355" for .380/9mm Corto. Hard to know for sure without verifying weight & diameter.


They used conicals, but they were very short conicals, not a long bullet like this one.
 
Diameter is a little difficult. I am pretty sure it is a 36 caliber. It is slightly out of round and varies from .339" to .365".
It is 5/8" long, actual is .603"
Weight is 7 grams, or 108 grains. I can only measure to within a gram.
I hope this helps.
 
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