It depends... some revolvers are specifically made with two separate cylinders. To give you an example, my 1962 vintage Ruger Single-Six as a cylinder for 22 Magnum and one for 22 Long Rifle. If the revolver you are referring to only has a 22 Magnum cylinder, then No, you can not safely shoot 22 Long Rifle cartridges in it, as the cases will rupture in the cylinder, and result in hi-pressure blow-back gases.
Short answer, NO. It should be marked as .22 s-l-lr (short, long, and long rifle). It will not be marked .22 WRM (Winchester rinfire magnum).
Your rifle should be chambered for .22 Magnum. As such, the chamber is too long and too big for .22 Long Rifle and, if the shell will fire, the case will usually split. Not recommended.
Yes. This single-shot rifle can fire 22 short, long, and long rifle. The long rifle preferred by Savage, because of its increased accuracy. Some rifle owners complained about using short ammunition, because the small shell sometimes jamed.
Sound of an artillery shell exploding is "crump." A rifle shot is "crack."
No. .22mag. bullets are too long, and they aren't heel-type bullets
.22 short, long or Long Rifle. .22 Long Rifle is available just about anywhere and can be shot in your revolver.
1.5 miles or so
Shot from a long distance with a high powered rifle.
No
From a rifle, about 1.5 miles- but they can shoot ACCURATELY about 100-150 yards.
Chipmunk
Which model?