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.455 Webley

.455 Webley
A variety of .455 Webley cartridges
TypeRevolver
Place of originUnited Kingdom
Production history
ManufacturerRoyal Laboratory Woolwich Arsenal, Birmingham Small Arms Company, Eley Brothers, Kynoch Limited, Grenfell & Accles, Kings Norton Metal Company, Dominion Cartridge Company.
VariantsMk I / Mk II[1]
Specifications
Case typeStraight, rimmed
Bullet diameter0.454 / 0.454 in (11.5 / 11.5 mm)
Neck diameter0.473 / 0.476 in (12.0 / 12.1 mm)
Shoulder diameterna / na
Base diameter0.478 / 0.480 in (12.1 / 12.2 mm)
Rim diameter0.530 / 0.535 in (13.5 / 13.6 mm)
Rim thickness0.039 / 0.045 in (0.99 / 1.14 mm)
Case length0.886 / 0.770 in (22.5 / 19.6 mm)
Overall length1.460 / 1.230 in (37.1 / 31.2 mm)
Case capacity23.23 / 18.30 gr H2O (1.505 / 1.186 cm3)
Primer typeLarge pistol (Small pistol in modern Fiocchi loadings)
Maximum pressure13,000 psi (90 MPa)
Ballistic performance
Bullet mass/type Velocity Energy
265 gr (17 g) FMJ[2] 700 ft/s (210 m/s) 289 ft⋅lbf (392 J)
265 gr (17 g) 600 ft/s (180 m/s) 212 ft⋅lbf (287 J)
265 gr (17 g) 757 ft/s (231 m/s) 337 ft⋅lbf (457 J)
265 gr (17 g) 600 ft/s (180 m/s)[3] 220 ft⋅lbf (300 J)
200 gr (13 g) 900 ft/s (270 m/s) 360 ft⋅lbf (490 J)

.455 Webley is a British handgun cartridge, most commonly used in the Webley top break revolvers Marks I through VI. It is also known as ".455 Eley" and ".455 Colt".

The .455 cartridge was a service revolver cartridge, featuring a rimmed cartridge firing a .455 in (11.5 mm) bullet at the relatively low velocity of 650 ft/s (190 m/s). The result was a cartridge and handgun combination with comparatively mild recoil. The .455 MK III "cupped" cartridge was rated superior to the .45 Colt in stopping power in the disputed United States Thompson-LaGarde Tests of 1904 that resulted in the adoption by the U.S. of the .45 ACP cartridge.

The .455 Webley cartridge remained in service with British and Commonwealth forces until the end of the Second World War.

Variants

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Six main types of .455 ammunition were produced:

In addition to the Webley revolvers, the British and Canadian armies also ordered several thousand Smith & Wesson .44 Hand Ejector revolvers, chambered in .455 Webley,[8] in a rush to equip their troops for the Great War. The urgency was such that the earliest of these were converted from revolvers already completed and chambered for .44 Special. Approximately 60,000 Colt New Service revolvers were also purchased, in .455.

Commercial manufacturers Fiocchi, PPU, Steinel, and Hornady currently produce the .455 Webley cartridge (in Mk II).

.455 Webley Auto

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The .455 Webley Auto Mk I cartridge was produced from 1913 to about the middle of World War II. This is a semi-rimmed cartridge for the Webley & Scott Self Loading pistols.[4]

The early version of the cartridge (c.1904) had a shorter[clarification needed] 21.7 mm (0.85 in) semi-rimmed case with a narrow rim and a pointed bullet. A later improved version of the cartridge (c.1910) was similar except it had a 23.54 mm (0.93 in) long case and a round-nosed bullet. The Mk 1 service round (c.1913) was identical to the 1910 version of the cartridge except it had a thicker rim.

The Mk 1 cartridge's bullet headspaced on the rim. It was loaded with a 224 gr (14.5 g; 0.51 oz) cupro-nickel-jacketed bullet with a muzzle velocity of 700 ft/s (210 m/s).[9]

Various submachine-guns were tested using this cartridge however none were adopted.

World War One use

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The Webley & Scott pistol was sold to the Royal Flying Corps and Royal Navy during World War I. There were also some Colt M1911 pistols chambered in .455 Auto purchased by the Royal Navy. Although not a standard sidearm or a standard service cartridge, a few Colt M1911 "British service models" chambered in .455 Auto were sold commercially to British navy and army officers through outfitters. The service ammunition came packed in seven-round boxes stamped "not for revolvers" to prevent confusion.

.476 Enfield

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Despite the apparent difference in calibre name, .476 Enfield was quite similar to the .455 Webley. The .476 had a 0.05 mm (0.002 in) shorter case than the .455 Mark I and could be fired in weapons regulated and marked as safe for the calibre, such as the Webley "WG Army" model. This had a cylinder that was long enough to accommodate the significantly longer cartridge in which the bullet swelled out to .476" beyond the case. It would not chamber in any government-issue .455 Webley Marks I–VI.[3][10] The .450 Adams (1868), .476 Enfield (1881), and .455 Webley Mk.I (1891) British service cartridges all featured a case diameter of .476 inch [12.09mm].

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Donnelly, John J. and Donnelly, Judy, The Handloader's Manual of Cartridge Conversion, (Skyhorse Publishing, NY/NY, 2011), pp. 371,372.
  2. ^ Mark I factory load, Kynoch black powder. Barnes, Frank C., ed. Amber, John T. Cartridges of the World (DBI, 1972), p. 174, ".455 Revolver MK-1/.455 Colt".
  3. ^ a b c d Barnes, p. 175, ".476 Ely/.476 Enfield Mk-3".
  4. ^ a b Maze, Robert (2012). The Webley Service Revolver. Osprey Publishing. pp. 21, 40. ISBN 9781780968865.
  5. ^ Chamberlain, W.H.J. and Taylerson, A.W.F. Revolvers of the British Services 1854–1954 (Bloomfield, Ont,: Museum Restoration Service, 1989), p. 33.
  6. ^ Harris, Lynn H. Notes on .455 Webley Revolver Cartridges (Wellington, NZ: self-published, 1987), p. 12.
  7. ^ "455 WEBLEY Mk.II – VI". Retrieved 11 January 2025.
  8. ^ Supica, Jim (2016). Standard Catalog of Smith & Wesson. Iola, WI: Gun Digest Books. pp. 195, 500. ISBN 978-1440245633.
  9. ^ Wilson (1943) p.228
  10. ^ Maze, Robert J. Howdah to High Power (Tucson, AZ: Excalibur Publications, 2002), p. 32.

Bibliography

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