However, the German Army was interested in a tank gun which could fire conventional ammunition.
However, many active shotgun users consider this to be overstated, and view bolo shells as being less effective than conventional ammunition.
In 1977, a major change occurred with the designation of the United States Army as the single-service manager of conventional ammunition.
They must have been manufactured before 1898 and may not use conventional ammunition.
In German service, in addition to conventional high explosive ammunition, the weapon fired two anti-tank rounds.
From 1990 to 1994 the facility reorganized in preparation for eventual closure, shipping all conventional ammunition and supplies to other installations.
The primary mission is receipt, storage, surveillance and shipment of missiles and conventional ammunition.
Its mission is to produce and renovate conventional ammunition and ammunition related components.
These included dumps for conventional ammunition and explosive ordnance of all kinds, from bullets to thousand-pound bombs.
Its lethality is similar to conventional ammunition.