380 Auto - 75 Grain LFB - Carbon City - 50 Rounds vs Beretta 90-TWO

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Handguns 380 Auto - 75 Grain LFB - Carbon City - 50 Rounds Beretta 90-TWO
Summary
Rating
Firearms Review Rating Not Rated
Firearms Review Rating Not Rated
Rank
#93621
#21316
Bullet Weight 75 Grain
Bullet Type Lead Free
Ammo Casing Unknown
Quantity 50
Muzzle Velocity (fps) TBD
Muzzle Energy (ft lbs) TBD
Attracts Magnet No
Action Double Action
Caliber 9x19mm Parabellum
Capacity 17+1
Sights Night Sights
Barrel Length 4.9"
Finish Black
Gun Type Pistol
Details
Brand Carbon City Beretta
Reviews See 4 Reviews See 20 Reviews
Prices
MSRP $33.00 $413.85
Used Price $23.10 $289.70
Sale Price $29.70 $372.47

Handguns Descriptions

380 Auto - 75 Grain LFB - Carbon City - 50 Rounds

Calling all plinkers! Calling all plinkers! This Carbon City 380 is the perfect answer to your quest for an economical target practicing session. This is a mixed lot batch that mostly contains traditional brass casings, but has some steel and nickel plated casings mixed in. This cartridge’s 75 grain lead free ball projectile is not actually spherical. It’s shaped like a traditional bullet, but unlike a standard FMJ it lacks a lead core and gilding metal jacket. This bullet is made of 100% copper, which means it’s incapable of depositing lead residue inside your barrel’s rifling where it would have gradually worsened your handgun’s accuracy. More importantly, the LFB projectile contains no lead for hot propellant gasses to convert into airborne toxic vapor during ignition! You can breathe easy while you’re firing this ammo, and you can even put its monolithic bullets in the recycling bin when you’re all done.

Beretta 90-TWO

The newly designed frame of 90two pistol ensures trouble-free insertion and holster extraction, thanks to its rounded and truly snag-free surfaces. Inside the frame, near the disassembly lever, a metallic recoil buffer reduces the impact of the slide assembly against the frame during the shooting cycle. By redistributing the stresses, the recoil buffer increases the service life of the firearm. Trigger guard is also rounded to ensure, when firing with two hands, the correct positioning of the supporting hand.

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