.284" Diameter Bullet does NOT equal 7mm

DMP25-06

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Oct 6, 2010
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Haslet , Texas , 76052
I have some questions about the measured diameter of bullets .


Why is a .284" diameter bullet referred to as being "7 millimeter" , when 7 millimeters = .275590"

1 Meter = 39.37007874..." , divided by 1000 (each Meter = 1000 Millimeters) = .039370" (rounding back to 6 decimal places)

Therefore , converting Millimeters to inches :
7mm = .275590" ----- But , bullets labeled as 7mm are actually .284" diameter
6.5mm = .255905" ---- bullets labeled as 6.5mm are actually .264" diameter
6mm = .236220" ----- bullets labeled as 6mm are actually .243" diameter
8mm = .314960" ----- bullets labeled as 8mm are actually .323" diameter
10mm = .393700" ----- bullets labeled as 10mm are actually .400" diameter

When a barrel is drilled , the diameter of the drilling is always smaller than the final diameter of the bore after the rifling grooves have been cut , and that distance across the grooves is equal to the bullets's diameter , whether it is .284" , .264" , .243" , .323" , or .400" , and others .
The raised surfaces of the barrel lands is the diameter of the drilling before the rifling grooves are formed , whether by button-cut , single point-cut , or other methods .

My question is : How did we arrive at these Metric designations when the bullet's actual diameter , measured in inches , does NOT convert to those metric values ????

I am curious as to what the answer might be .


DMP25-06
 

See JE's comment which we will ALWAYS miss his input.
 
Thank you Muddyboots for that link. That helped alot and another reason JECustom was such a resource here! My next question to all that would be, in my cloudy mind lol, does this mean that theoretically that some calibers may have a "tighter" fit and potentially higher performance because of said "fit"? Or am I just crazy and not seeing this correctly.
 
This is where the confusion starts.
Bore size is the diameter of the bore, ie, in a "308" as everyone calls it, the bore is .300" and the rifling grooves are .308".
In a .270", the bore is .270" and the grooves are .277"……see the confusion?!
This all started way back when, for instance, a 44 Special or Magnum is not .440", it is actually .429".
This must have started when the 44-40 was given it's name. Why this occurred I have no clue, but it is what it is.
My cast lead Bullets for my 44-40 Model '92 measure .432" as cast, then I swage them to either .430" or .431" depending on hardness.

The Pommy's were even worse describing their cartridges.

Cheers.
 
Most of the early metric cartridges were European Military based and they tended to use the bore diameter rather than the land diameter. For example the 6.5x55 has a bore diameter of 6.5mm or .2559". The same is true for the 7x57 Mauser.

Remington continued this practice with their 6mm Rem and 7mm Rem Mag.
 
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