.255 Jeffery Rook

{{Short description|Firearm cartridge}}

{{Notability|Product|date=February 2023}}

{{Infobox Firearm Cartridge

|name= .255 Jeffery Rook

|image= 260px

|caption=

|origin=United Kingdom

|type= Rifle

|designer= W.J. Jeffery & Co

|design_date=

|manufacturer=

|production_date=

|number=

|variants=

|is_SI_specs=

|parent=

|case_type=Rimmed, bottleneck

|bullet=.255

|neck=

|shoulder=.274

|base=.344

|rim_dia=.401

|rim_thick=

|case_length=1.15

|length=1.43

|rifling=

|primer=

|is_SI_ballistics=

|bw1=65

|btype1=

|vel1=1200

|en1=208

|bw2=

|btype2=

|vel2=

|en2=

|bw3=

|btype3=

|vel3=

|en3=

|test_barrel_length=

|balsrc=Cartridges of the World.

}}

The .255 Jeffery Rook / 6.5x29mmR, also known as the .255 Jeffery Rook Rifle, is an obsolete small bore intermediate firearm cartridge.

Overview

The .255 Jeffery Rook is a rimmed centerfire cartridge. It was loaded with both black powder and smokeless powders, usually with a {{convert|65|gr|g|abbr=on}} lead solid or hollowpoint bullet at a standard muzzle velocity of {{convert|1200|ft/s|m/s|abbr=on}}.

The .255 Jeffery Rook was developed by W.J. Jeffery & Co and originally designed for use in rook rifles for hunting small game and target shooting. It gained an excellent reputation for accuracy and was widely used for target shooting before being superseded by the .22 Long Rifle as a miniature target round, and it was also chambered in some single-shot pistols.

Major Percy Powell-Cotton carried a W.J. Jeffery & Co rook rifle chambered in .255 Jeffery Rook on a number of his expeditions stating it "is often better than the shot-gun for collecting specimens and providing for the pot."

Dimensions

See also

References

{{Reflist|refs=

Frank C. Barnes, Cartridges of the World, 15th ed, Gun Digest Books, Iola, 2016, {{ISBN|978-1-4402-4642-5}}.

[http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/30026130 Imperial War Museums, ".255 Jeffery rook rifle", iwm.org.uk], retrieved 18 April 2017.

Major P.H.G. Powell-Cotton, In unknown Africa: a narrative of twenty months' travel and sport in unknown lands and among new tribes, Hurst & Blackett, London, 1904.

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