Small-bore
Small-bore refers to calibers with a diameter of .32 inches or smaller.[1] It may also refer to small-bore rifle competition. The medium-bore refers to calibers with a diameter between .33 inches up to .39 inches and large-bore refers to calibers with a diameter of .40 inches or larger.[2] Miniature bore historically referred to calibers under .22. There is much variance in the use of the term small-bore which over the years has changed considerably with anything under .577 caliber considered small-bore prior to the mid-19th century.[3]
Small-bore competition
Small-bore competition often refers to shooting competitions conducted with .22 Rimfire target rifles.[4][5]
gollark: I don't think it ever got the SPUDNET laser control software installed.
gollark: steamport.
gollark: They were controlled over SPUDNET, so you could feed in targeting data from radars or dynmap.
gollark: Just turtles with lasers which were quite high up, so not very orbital.
gollark: You probably do need to know your actual coordinates to navigate if there's an obstruction or something.
References
- "Medium Bore Musings".
- "Big Bore Rifle Cartridges".
- "Historic small-bore Enfield rifles, training rifles and BSA rifles; plus league competitions".
- "SmallBoreRifle - What is Smallbore Rifle Shooting?".
- http://compete.nra.org/documents/pdf/compete/RuleBooks/SBR/sbr-book.pdf Small-bore rifle NRA rule book
External links
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