| caliber |
The dimensions of the watch. Caliber describes the size and configuration of the movement and can now indicate the shape, origin and constructor as well.
Ãâó: www.orolus.com/watchglossary.shtml
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| caliber |
(a) The diameter of a gun's bore; (b) the nominal length of its bore, expressed in multiples of its diameter. This expresses the length of a piece in proportion to its bore; a gun described as 18 caliber's long would have a bore 18 times as long as its diameter. This term is still used today.
Ãâó: www.history.navy.mil/cannons/cannons55.html
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| caliber |
This is USUALLY the measurement of the bore of a small arm, except a shotgun. New calibers are being invented continuously. One of the most popular new cartridges is the .40 S&W (40-caliber Smith and Wesson, after the gun it appears in). Remember that it is the cartridge, not the gun, that determines how powerful a gun is. Not all calibers indicate bore diameter. The .44 Magnum is not .44 inches in diameter. It is .429 inches in diameter. A .38 Special is not .38 inches. It is .357 inches. ...
Ãâó: www.freep.com/jobspage/academy/guns.htm
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| caliber |
The inside diameter of the gun's bore, usually measured in inches. The decimal point is written but not spoken, eg357 caliber is pronounced "three fifty-seven," not "point three five seven."
Ãâó: captioning.robson.org/reference/language/firearms-...
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| caliber |
A term often used by Swiss watchmakers to denote a particular model type, such as Caliber 48 meaning model 48. More commonly, the term is used to indicate the movement's shape, layout, or size.
Ãâó: www.westime.net/terms.htm
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