.25 Remington | |
Origin: | United States |
Type: | Rifle |
Designer: | Remington Arms |
Case Type: | Rimless |
Bullet: | 0.2575 |
Neck: | 0.286 |
Shoulder: | 0.396 |
Base: | 0.417 |
Rim Dia: | 0.419 |
Case Length: | 2.05 |
Length: | 2.53 |
Rifling: | 1 turn in 8" or 1 turn in 10" |
Max Pressure: | 34000 to 36000 PSI |
Bw1: | 117 |
Btype1: | RNSP |
Vel1: | 2127 |
En1: | 1175 |
Bw2: | 101 |
Btype2: | FMJ |
Vel2: | 2330 |
En2: | 1286 |
Bw3: | 117 |
Btype3: | Express Mushroom |
Vel3: | 2350 |
En3: | 1435 |
Bw4: | 87 |
Btype4: | Express Mushroom |
Vel4: | 2700 |
En4: | 1410 |
Test Barrel Length: | 22 |
Balsrc: | Whelen, Townsend. The American Rifle. The Century Co: 1918, p. 230-1. |
The .25 Remington (also known as the .25 Remington Auto-Loading) is an American rifle cartridge. A rimless, smokeless powder design, this cartridge was considered to be very accurate by period firearm experts and suitable for game up to deer and black bear.[1] It was based on the .30 Remington cartridge.[2]
The .25 Remington cartridge dates to 1906 and its introduction by Remington in the Model 8 rifle.[3] [4] [5] Other rifles chambered for the .25 Remington include the Remington 14 slide-action, Remington 30 bolt action, Stevens 425 lever-action, and Standard Arms rifles. Due to their similar dimensions, the .25 Remington, .30 Remington, and .32 Remington together were known as the Remington Rimless cartridge series.[6] Firearm manufacturers generally offered all three of these cartridges as chamberings in a rifle model rather than just one of the series. The series was competitive with Winchester Repeating Arms Company's contemporary lever action offerings: .25-35 Winchester, .30-30, and .32 Winchester Special.[7]
The .25 Remington case was shortened and necked down to .22 caliber to form Lysle Kilbourn's wildcat .22 Kilbourn Magnum Junior and the rimless version of Leslie Lindahl's wildcat .22 Chucker.[8]