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Sauer 80 was designed in 1970 [1] and introduced to the market in 1972. [3] [4] Sauer 90 was released in 1982. [1] Sauer 90 and 92 were produced until 2006. [5] After the Swedish rifle company Husquarna/Carl Gustaf for a while stopped producing civilian rifles, they decided to import finished and semi-finished rifles from Sauer.
The .45-90 Express is a modern adaptation of .45-90 Sharps which uses the same 2.4 inch case, but uses smokeless powder loaded to pressures up to 45,000 psi. With a 26-inch barrel the .45-90 Express is capable of over 4,200 ft-lbs (5694 J) muzzle energy.
SIG Sauer: 5.6mm Gw Pat 90: Long-stroke piston (select-fire) Switzerland: 1970s–1980s SIG Sauer SSG 2000: SIG Sauer: 7.62×51mm NATO.300 Winchester Magnum 7.5×55mm Swiss: Bolt-action West Germany Switzerland: 1989 SIG Sauer SSG 3000: SIG Sauer: 7.62×51mm NATO: Bolt-action Germany Switzerland: 1992 Siyavash: 7.62×51mm NATO: Bolt-action Iran ...
Sauer 90 (discontinued in 2008) Sauer 100 S 100 Classic; S 100 Classic XT; S 100 Stainless XTA; S 100 Fieldshoot; Bolt-action rifles, mid-range: Sauer 101 S 101 Classic; S 101 Classic XT; S 101 Classic XTA; S 101 Highland XTC; S 101 GTI; S 101 Select; S 101 Artemis; Sauer 202 (discontinued in 2015) Bolt-action rifles, upper-range: Sauer 404 S ...
The 9.3×74mmR is of a rimmed, bottleneck design and uses a .366-inch (9.3 mm) diameter bullet, usually weighing 286-grain (18.5 g). According to Hornady, at this weight the velocity is 2,362.20 ft/s (720.00 m/s) and energy is 3,536 ft⋅lbf (4,794 J). This cartridge is used for hunting medium to large game animals and is very popular in Europe ...
The .357 SIG (designated as the 357 Sig by the SAAMI [2] and 357 SIG by the C.I.P. [1] or 9×22 mm in official metric notation) is a bottlenecked rimless centerfire handgun cartridge developed by the Swiss-German firearms manufacturer SIG Sauer, in cooperation with ammunition manufacturer Federal Premium.
The .50-90 Sharps is similar to the .50-100 Sharps and .50-110 Sharps cartridges. All three use the same 2.5-inch (64 mm) case, the latter two being loaded with more grains of black powder. All rifles made for the .50-90 Sharps should be able to use the .50-110 and .50-100 cartridges due to the case dimensions being nearly identical.
He went on to write "With the 90 grain load, the 244 is a good deer cartridge and certainly effective on antelope and any lighter game." [9] Ultimately 90 grain hunting bullets such as the soft pointed Spitzer used by Remington are known to be well suited to medium-sized big game and the 722 to be an inherently accurate rifle.