Bullets do not usually have numbers on them- but cartridges do. A number 35 by itself on a cartridge case head would usually indicate a military cartridge, and the date of manufacture- 1935. Additional markings, such as 35 REM, would indicate the caliber- .35 Remington, a good hunting cartridge for deer and bear.
I think you mean .32 caliber, not mm. It means that the gun fires a bullet that is about 32/100ths of an inch in diameter. A 9mm fires a bullet 9mm in diameter- or about .35 inches in diameter. A 32 mm bullet would be about the size of big (D cell) flashlight battery!
Roughly .35--.36 caliber.
35 feet =D
The reference to grains means the weight of the bullet.
If you mean Video Copilot's 'The Bullet', then no, it is sold separately.
No way to answer. Find a good gunsmith and have him examine it.
35-45 bullet
Grain refers to the weight of the bullet when measured on a powder scale.
Slug could be a snail like animal. It could also mean one heavy bullet.
Grain refers to the weight of the bullet when measured on a powder scale.
You have asked a question that can't be answered. There is no such thing as an "average" bullet. Define what you mean by "average bullet" and maybe someone can help you.
35-40 mph with 2s lipo battery