Categories
All About Guns Ammo

What Are Heeled Bullets? By McKenzie Hanson

There are many bullet types, like the full metal jacket and jacketed hollow point, but a lesser known type is the heeled bullet. Because ammo terminology can be a little confusing, today we explain what a heeled bullet is and where it originated.

What are Heeled Bullets?

A non-heeled bullet sits in the case, while a heeled bullet sits flush with the case walls and has a “heel” at the base of the bullet that sits in the case.

A heeled bullet, also called a heel-base bullet, is a type of bullet that’s body diameter is the same as the outside diameter of the case, while its base has a step, or “heel,”  that allows it to sit in the casing. This is opposed to a conventional or non-heeled bullet design. With non-heeled bullets, the projectile sits entirely in the casing. Sometimes, the diameter of the bullet is also the same as the internal diameter of the barrel.

The .22LR is the most popular modern round that uses a heeled bullet.

When it comes to the basic parts of ammunition, we know that the bullet is the projectile that sits in the case or casing. With most modern cartridges, the bullet diameter is slightly less than the diameter of the casing. This is so that the bullet sits in the casing. Because a heeled bullet has the same diameter as the casing, it would not fit inside it without the heel.

Cartridges like the .44S&W American and the original .38S&W used heeled bullets, though they’re rare to find today. The most popular cartridge that still uses heeled bullets is the .22LR.

Bullet Lubrication

A major difference between heeled bullets and non-heeled bullets is how they are lubricated. Lead bullets need lubrication to prevent buildup in the bore of the gun. The lubrication sits on the outside of heeled bullets. Outside lubricated bullets have exposed grease grooves and the lubricant is applied on the outside of the bullet. The lubricant sits inside non-heeled lead bullets. Inside-lubricated bullets have grease grooves that are located beneath the mouth of the casing.

If you’ve ever handled .22LR ammo and noticed that your hands were slightly greasy or waxy after, that’s because they are outside-lubricated. It’s one of the disadvantages of outside-lubricated bullets — they pick up dirt and grit much easier. This has the potential to damage the gun’s bore. That’s why why engineers make most modern cartridges inside-lubricated.

History of Heeled Bullets

A design from George R. Stetson’s patent on heeled bullets.

Heeled bullets originated in the blackpowder days, with an early example being the .44 Rimfire. Gunsmith Benjamin Tyler Henry invented the cartridge for use in his lever-action Henry rifle. The .44 rimfire cartridge’s bullet has a diameter of 0.445” which is also the same diameter of the outside of the cartridge case. The bullet’s base has a smaller diameter that allows it to fit inside the case.

In 1871, Goerge R. Stetson with Winchester Repeating Arms Company was granted what is likely the first patent of a heeled bullet. His design improved upon the original .44 Rimfire cartridge, specifically in regards to the lubing and crimping of the bullet.

Caliber Confusion

Over time, cartridge designers converted many bullets with heeled designs to non-heeled. In order to do this, they had to either increase the case diameter, or shrink the bullet and bore diameter. This conversion is the cause of much confusion among caliber designations.

For example, many .38 caliber firearms don’t shoot bullets that are .380 inches as their name would imply. This is because older .38 caliber cartridges used heeled bullets. When bullet designers shrunk the bullet diameter to create non-heeled bullets, they kept the .38 designation. That’s why the .38 Special has a bullet diameter of .357 inches and the .38 Super has a bullet diameter of .356 inches.

So, the next time you have to explain why the .38 Special and .357 Magnum have the same bullet diameter, you can thank heeled bullets for the confusion!

Categories
All About Guns Our Great Kids This great Nation & Its People

Impressive!

Categories
War

America’s Rapid Dragon Cargo Missile Goes Hard

Categories
All About Guns

Winchester 71 Metalwork: Anvil 0136

Categories
Art Soldiering War

Some art of some great Warriors

Categories
All About Guns

The Guns of 1873 – With Annette Evans

Categories
All About Guns Allies

Will This Really Keep You Safe?

Categories
All About Guns

Is This The Best Non Semi Automatic Rifle?

Categories
All About Guns Allies

What’s in a Name? By Will Dabbs, MD

I kind of like being me. Apparently there are some other folks who do as well.

I like my name. Will is just a wee bit unusual without being outright weird. My given name is Willis. That’s also my Dad’s name. I have no idea where it came from. I would have chosen William, but I didn’t pick it. I did, however, turn right around and name my oldest son the same thing.

A pair of Dabbs brothers came down to Mississippi from Virginia somewhere around 1900. They split up and went to two different parts of the state, eventually producing a whole pile of Dabbses.

One of our brood perished in a riot many years ago. I like to think he was killed saving some little kid from being trampled. Heck, he probably started the thing and got what he deserved. The details have been lost to time.

Reputation

Your name is forever associated with your character. Kevin Spacey was an amazingly gifted actor right up until he was exposed as a pervert. Harvey Weinstein was an incredibly successful movie producer until he came out as a sexual predator. Jeffrey Epstein was … well, you get my point.

On Christmas Eve 2022, 48-year-old Jennifer Heath Box sat shivering in a cold jail cell in the Broward County Jail in South Florida. Her son was a U.S. Marine scheduled to ship out for a three-year tour in Okinawa on the 27th.

Earlier in the day, Jennifer and her husband had returned from a six-day cruise. As she processed back into the country, Customs and Border Protection officers arrested her for having somehow endangered a child. Before being placed in confinement, she was strip-searched and fitted for a prison uniform.

It seems that Jennifer Delcarmen Heath, a 25-year-old mother of two, did indeed have an active warrant out for child endangerment. The cops had grabbed the wrong Jennifer Heath despite literally no physical similarities between the two women.

The perp was 23 years younger, Hispanic, and 5 inches shorter than the incarcerated Jennifer. It took three days of intense effort on the part of her family to get the innocent Jennifer out of jail. She missed her son’s deployment because she sort of had the same name as some deadbeat mom whom she had never met.

This deep into the Information Age, license plate readers routinely keep track of where you’re driving and scan for warrants. Interlinked computers notify law enforcement officials when wanted people come up on the grid.

That Leviathan system is a legitimately great way to help protect the public from evil-doers. However, garbage in — garbage out. That system is only as good as whoever inputs the data or how it is utilized. In the case of Jennifer Heath Box, somebody just made a mistake.

Closer to Home

If you’ve never Googled yourself, I’d recommend you do so. Just get ready for a potential shock. In my case, it seemed I had killed somebody.

This was news to me. I have Jesus in my heart and strive ever to treat others the way I’d like to be treated. I also do a pretty decent job of controlling my emotions. Being calm in a crisis is kind of my superpower.

If I ever shoot anybody, I want it to be while saving the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders from some evil super villain, not because somebody cut me off in traffic. However, apparently, my doppelganger in Boynton Beach, Florida, did not share that worldview.

The Florida Will Dabbs did not sound like a terribly nice person. The details were disputed, as is always the case. However, the gist seems to be that this Will Dabbs and his boss, Larry Modena, had a rocky relationship.

Modena helped Dabbs’ wife, Susan, secure a restraining order against him. Dabbs then claimed that Modena became angry because he would share his oxycodone pills. This all came to a head in a Home Depot parking lot.

What is not disputed is that this Will Dabbs shot and killed Larry Modena with a .38-caliber revolver. He then abandoned the dying man in his Lexus before taking flight. He pointed the gun at pursuing police officers, who promptly shot him for his trouble. Dabbs survived the shooting and was eventually sentenced to life plus 30 years in prison.

Dabbs’ conviction was appealed and overturned on a technicality. During his retrial, he was convicted of manslaughter. I couldn’t determine what happened after that.

No offense to the other Will Dabbs who apparently goes about murdering people, but this is not the tool I would have chosen were it me.

Wow, It’s a Trend…

Back in 1971, one William F. Dabbs of Colorado was convicted of first-degree murder in the killing of his wife, Sarah A. Dabbs, and some guy named Ernest E. Love. He pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity but later changed his plea to guilty. That got him out of the death penalty, but I couldn’t determine what ultimately became of him.

It’s sobering to find two murderers sharing your own kind of unusual name. I just hope there is never any confusion while I’m coming off a cruise ship. I think I’d sooner stand on my own merits. Those other two guys sound like jerks.

Categories
Manly Stuff Soldiering The Green Machine This great Nation & Its People War

The Rangers of WWII: Leading the way for future generations By Suzanne S. Harrison,

Officers from the U.S. Rangers Training Battalion pose in front of their quarters in Britain in July 1942. Lt. Col. William O. Darby, sits in front middle.
1 / 10SHOW CAPTION +
Soldiers from the 1st Ranger Battalion conduct a road march in Arzew, Algeria, Dec. 5, 1942.
2 / 10SHOW CAPTION +
The 1st Ranger Battalion practices a beach landing in Algeria, on Dec. 20, 1942.
3 / 10SHOW CAPTION +
Rangers conduct amphibious training in the United Kingdom in August 1942.
4 / 10SHOW CAPTION +
Under cover of smoke, a Ranger officer coordinates maneuvers via radio on the beach in Algeria on Dec. 20, 1942.
5 / 10SHOW CAPTION +
A rifle squad from 3rd Ranger Battalion passes a shelled-out dwelling in the Santa Maria sector of Italy on the route to the front line on Nov. 10, 1943.
6 / 10SHOW CAPTION +
Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt pins the silver Star on a captain from the 1st Ranger Battalion on January 4, 1944.
7 / 10SHOW CAPTION +
Soldiers from the 5307th Composite Unit (Provisional), popularly known as Merrill’s Maurauders, cross a bridge over the Chindwin River in Northern Burma on March 17, 1944.
8 / 10SHOW CAPTION +
Lt. Col. Charles N. Hunter, acting commander, addressses troops during the activation of the 5307th Composite Unit (Provisional) on Jan. 1, 1944.
9 / 10SHOW CAPTION +
The 5307th Composite Unit (Provisional) was nicked-named Merrill’s Maurauders for Brig. Gen. Frank D. Merrill, pictured here in the Burma Theater in 1944.
10 / 10SHOW CAPTION +

FORT BRAGG, N.C. – From Europe to North Africa to the Pacific, U.S. Army Rangers played a crucial role in many of World War II’s most pivotal moments, laying down roots for today’s 75th Ranger Regiment. At the onset of the war, the Army had no units capable of performing specialized commando missions. By the end of the war, the Army had fielded seven Ranger battalions, beginning with the activation of the 1st Ranger Battalion in Northern Ireland on June 19, 1942.  

Major William O. Darby, an artillery officer, was hand-picked to recruit volunteers for the battalion, designed to replicate the capability of British commandos. The volunteers underwent a strenuous selection program to identify and train the best candidates. On Aug. 19, 1942, 50 of these specially selected soldiers participated in Operation Jubilee, a Canadian-led amphibious assault on the English Channel port of Dieppe, France. The Rangers helped destroy one of the enemy batteries, at the cost of three of their own. Following the raid, the 1st Ranger Battalion participated in the U.S.-led invasion of North Africa.

In the early morning hours of Nov. 8, 1942, Operation Torch commenced with attacks on the Algerian port in Arzew. As two Ranger companies led by Maj. Herman Dammer assaulted the port, three others led by Darby assaulted enemy cannons overlooking the harbor, capturing them within 15 minutes. Two Rangers died and eight were wounded during the action, but the Rangers’ success helped the Allies secure a foothold on the continent.

The 29th Ranger Battalion (Provisional) was formed on Dec. 20, 1942 in England. The volunteers came from the 29th Infantry Division. Attached to British commandos for additional training, several of the Rangers from the 29th participated in combat raids and reconnaissance missions into Norway before being disbanded on Oct. 15, 1943.

The 1st Ranger Battalion’s encouraging performance in Africa led the Army in 1943 to activate four more Ranger Battalions – the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th. Attached to the 1st Infantry Division of Lt. Gen. George S. Patton’s U.S. Seventh Army, Darby led a Ranger Force consisting of the 1st, 3rd, and 4th Ranger battalions that spearheaded Operation Husky, the American landings in Sicily on July 10, 1943.

With Sicily secured, the Rangers turned their attention to mainland Italy and Operation Avalanche. Before daylight on Sept. 9, 1943, the Ranger Force hit the beach west of Salerno on the far-left flank of the Allied landing. The 4th Battalion, led by Maj. Roy Murray, quickly secured the beach, and cleared the way for the 1st and 3rd battalions to move inland. The Rangers rapidly gained their objectives by midmorning of the first day. The Ranger Force later participated in the Anzio operation, where they conducted a daring but ill-fated raid into the Italian town of Cisterna on January 30, 1944.

The 2nd and 5th entered the war on June 6, 1944, on the beaches of Normandy, France, during Operation Overlord. Three companies of 2nd Battalion Rangers, led by Lt. Col. James E. Rudder, daringly scaled the cliffs of Pointe du Hoc, overlooking Omaha Beach, to destroy German gun emplacements targeting troops landing on the beachhead. Meanwhile, the remainder of 2nd Battalion and the entirety of 5th Ranger Battalion fought their way ashore Omaha Beach alongside the 1st and 29th Infantry Division. The D-Day missions earned the Rangers their motto, “Rangers, lead the way!” The 2nd and 5th Rangers fought in the Allied campaign in western Europe until the end of the war.

In the China-Burma-India Theater of Operations, another legendary Ranger lineage unit was organized on Oct. 3, 1943: the 5307th Composite Unit (Provisional). Better known as “Merrill’s Marauders” after its commander, Brig. Gen. Frank D. Merrill, the 5307th, a Long-Range Penetration Group, fought a grueling campaign in the mountainous jungles of Burma that lasted until mid-1944. Following the capture of Myitkyina, Burma, the remnants of the 5307th were consolidated with the 475th Infantry Regiment on Aug. 10, 1944. The 475th was part the second Long Range Penetration Group formed for service in Burma, the 5332nd Brigade (Provisional). Better known as the MARS Task Force, the 5332nd helped secure the last stretches of the Burma Road remaining in Japanese hands, before moving on to service in China.

In mid-1944, one more Ranger Battalion was activated, with the mission of supporting U.S. Sixth Army operations in the Southwest Pacific. Lieutenant Colonel Henry A. Mucci was selected to organize, train, and command the 6th Ranger Battalion, which was formed out of the 98th Field Artillery Battalion, the 6th Rangers played a prominent role in the recapture of the Philippines, starting with the amphibious assault on Leyte in October 1944. On neighboring Luzon, in January 1945, Company A, 6th Rangers, supported by the Sixth Army Special Reconnaissance Unit, also known as the “Alamo Scouts,” and Philippine guerrillas, executed its most famous action when it raided a Japanese Prisoner-of-War camp near Cabanatuan, Philippines. Against overwhelming odds, the operation freed more than five hundred Allied prisoners.

It’s for these and many other actions that the Ranger units of World War II would go on to earn multiple unit citations prior to being disbanded in 1945. Their legacy endured long beyond the war, with their courage and audacity setting the example for future generations of U.S. Army Rangers.

To learn more about the U.S. Army Rangers of World War II, go to arsof-history.org.