Jump to content

.510 DTC EUROP

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 189.6.238.23 (talk) at 23:30, 2 January 2022. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

.510 DTC EUROP
TypeRifle
Place of originFrance
Production history
DesignerEric Danis
Designed2000
Specifications
Parent case.50 BMG
Bullet diameter12.95 mm (0.510 in)
Neck diameter14.3 mm (0.56 in)
Shoulder diameter19.3 mm (0.76 in)
Base diameter20.4 mm (0.80 in)
Case length96.8 mm (3.81 in)
Overall length125.3 mm (4.93 in)
Case capacity19.175 cm3 (295.92 gr H2O)
Primer typeCCI#35 (BMG)
Ballistic performance
Bullet mass/type Velocity Energy
41.9 g (647 gr) 910 m/s (3,000 ft/s) 17,306 J (12,764 ft⋅lbf)

The .510 DTC EUROP is a French rifle cartridge developed by Eric Danis in order to comply with firearms legislation of .50 BMG rifles in Europe. In response to the .50 Caliber BMG Regulation Act of 2004, which banned future sales of .50 BMG shoulder-fired rifles in California, long-range shooters in that state have begun to adopt this cartridge as a manner of following the new legislation.

The .510 DTC EUROP uses the same bullet as the .50 BMG, but has slightly different case dimensions. The case is 0.100 inches (2.5 mm) shorter and uses a steeper shoulder than standard .50 BMG ammunition. .510 DTC cases can be made by shortening and then fire-forming .50 BMG cases. The new round has almost identical ballistics, but because of the different dimensions, rifles chambered for the .50 BMG cannot safely fire the .510 DTC, and vice versa, and therefore do not fall under the same legal prohibitions. .510 DTC rifles, like .50 BMG rifles outside California, are simply standard modern rifles and can be purchased as such.