I recently acquired two interesting 48 round boxes of .303 British military ammo. One box has the label written in English and the other is in Greek. The English box has the following written on the label: 48 RDS .303 INCH BALL L1A1 HXP 7-83-8. The writing on the Greek box is beyond my comprehension but probably says the same thing plus HXP-77. The numbers 83 and 77 refer to the year of manufacture. The heads on the cartridges are stamped HXP 83 and HXP 77. There are three stake crimps around each primer.
I googled ".303 L1A1" and found the following description: Round .303" ball L1A1, boxer primed with three stake primer crimps, flat based 174gr (bullet), propellant is 40 gr of nitrocellulose ball powder.
That pretty much describes everything. I'd like to know more before I consider firing them. Are the primers or main propellant corrosive? Since there are three stake crimps around the primer, are the cases reloadable? What does HXP stand for? What type of modern commercial powder uses nitrocellulose ball powder?
I googled ".303 L1A1" and found the following description: Round .303" ball L1A1, boxer primed with three stake primer crimps, flat based 174gr (bullet), propellant is 40 gr of nitrocellulose ball powder.
That pretty much describes everything. I'd like to know more before I consider firing them. Are the primers or main propellant corrosive? Since there are three stake crimps around the primer, are the cases reloadable? What does HXP stand for? What type of modern commercial powder uses nitrocellulose ball powder?


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