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Rifle cartridge
.17 Ackley Bee |
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Type |
Rifle |
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Place of origin |
United States |
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Designer |
P.O. Ackley |
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Designed | 1940s |
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Parent case |
.218 Bee |
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Case type | Rimmed, bottleneck |
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Bullet diameter | 0.172 in (4.4 mm) |
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Neck diameter | 0.195 in (5.0 mm) |
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Shoulder diameter | 0.334 in (8.5 mm) |
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Base diameter | 0.349 in (8.9 mm) |
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Rim diameter | 0.408 in (10.4 mm) |
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Rim thickness | .065 in (1.7 mm) |
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Case length | 1.35 in (34 mm) |
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Case capacity | 16.89
gr H2O (1.094 cm3) |
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Rifling twist | 1-12 inches |
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Primer type | Small rifle
[1] |
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|
|
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Bullet mass/type |
Velocity |
Energy |
20 gr (1 g) HP |
3,845 ft/s (1,172 m/s) |
657 ft⋅lbf (891 J) |
25 gr (2 g) SP |
3,285 ft/s (1,001 m/s) |
599 ft⋅lbf (812 J) |
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Source(s): Reload Bench
[2] |
The .17 Ackley Bee is a
wildcat
centerfire
rifle
cartridge named after its designer,
P.O. Ackley, and is a
.218 Bee case necked down to .17 caliber with a squarer shoulder and less body taper. Being a rimmed case it was popular in
single shot rifles such as the
Martini Cadet and
Low Wall Winchester.
[2] The caliber is well suited to
varmint hunting particularly where minimal pelt damage is required.[
citation needed]
See also
References
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^ Donnelly, John J., Handloaders Manual of Cartridge Conversions, p82
- ^
a
b
Reload Bench
External links