The 7.57mm caliber does not correspond to a widely recognized or standard cartridge. However, if you're referring to the 7.5mm caliber, the 7.5x55mm Swiss cartridge is often compared in terms of performance and usage to other military calibers like the 7.62x51mm NATO and the .308 Winchester. If you meant the 7.62mm caliber, it is commonly used in various rifles and machine guns. Clarification on the specific cartridge might help provide a more accurate comparison.
It is: 757+9 = 766
757
yes. 757 is a prime number!
757 ___ 1000 You can probably simplify that to.
yes
No But the Caliber is the same but theres more powder in the 223
757 equals 757.No other number equals 757.
No! 9mm = .35 caliber - .354 caliber!
A 5.56mm is the same thing as a .225 caliber. If you do the math, a 30 caliber is MUCH bigger!
It's the same. The caliber of a bullet is its diameter.
.68 caliber. same as the rest of paintball
They are both the same aircraft - The 757 has 2 main variants: the 757-200 (752) and the 757-300 (753). The 757-200 is the more common variant, with around 1000 built. The 757-300 is longer and is used primarily for charter flights. Only around 50 were built. The ICAO (Internation Civil Aviation Organisation) uses the codes '752' and '753' to shorten the name to use on radar etc.
9mm IS the caliber. If you mean what is it equivalent to, it is approximately the same as a .38.
1 and 757
Surprising though it may sound, yes.
The 757 is out of production but its prices in 2002 were: US$65 Million for the 757-200 and US$80 Million for the 757-300.
757