| .35 Winchester Self-Loading | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Type | Rifle | |||||||
| Place of origin | United States | |||||||
| Production history | ||||||||
| Designer | Winchester Repeating Arms Company | |||||||
| Specifications | ||||||||
| Case type | Semi-rimmed, straight | |||||||
| Bullet diameter | .351 in (8.9 mm) | |||||||
| Neck diameter | .377 in (9.6 mm) | |||||||
| Base diameter | .381 in (9.7 mm) | |||||||
| Rim diameter | .405 in (10.3 mm) | |||||||
| Rim thickness | 0.05 in (1.3 mm) | |||||||
| Case length | 1.154 in (29.3 mm) | |||||||
| Overall length | 1.65 in (42 mm) | |||||||
| Rifling twist | 1 in 16 | |||||||
| Primer type | Small rifle | |||||||
| Ballistic performance | ||||||||
| ||||||||
| Test barrel length: 22 | ||||||||
The .35 Winchester Self-Loading (also called .35SL, .35SLR, or .35WSL) is an American rifle cartridge.
Overview
Winchester introduced the .32SL and .35SL in the Winchester '05 self-loading rifle as a centerfire cartridge version of the Winchester '03. The .35SL proved popular at first with the general public as a short-range deer and black bear hunting cartridge, but was soon superseded by the introduction of the more powerful .351SL in the Winchester '07.[1]

Many now consider the .35SL inadequate as a deer round, but it may still be suitable for coyote or similar medium-sized game at close ranges. When first introduced however, the notable firearm expert Townsend Whelen noted the .35SL cartridge as displaying similar ballistics as the .38-40 black powder, low-pressure cartridge.[2]
Dimensions

See also
References
External links
- Winchester's .35 WSL Cartridges, not .351 WSL Archived 2016-10-22 at the Wayback Machine
- .35 Winchester Self-Loading (.35 WSL)
- .35 Winchester Self-Loading / .35 WSL
