Recoilis minimal in a rifle, so the 44 specials are very enjoyable to file. My friends 9 year old, slightly built sin shoots these out of a Super Blackhawk (handgun), and I have a hard time making him stop. The only real problem you could experience is a potential double feed, which would tie up the gun. I experience this in my rifle if I use bullets with a short nose. Round nose factory loads feed great. Be sure to clean the chamber well to avoid sticky extraction with the magnum loads.
Yes.
the ammunition would be the 25-20 Winchester center fire (25-20 WCF). ammunition is still manufactured by Winchester for this rifle.
A pistol rated to fire .38 +P ammunition is still going to be a .38 Special pistol, and can use regular .38 Special ammunition. .357 Magnum revolvers are also capable of chambering and firing .38 Special loads - regular, +P, and +P+ included.
If your barrel is marked .300 Savage then you can shoot .300 Savage ammunition by any manufacturer. I do not know of a "300 Savage Winchester Magnum".
Yes. The 44 magnum can fire 44 special ammo in the same way a .357 magnum can use .38 Special.
Yes. All .357 S&W Magnum firearms are capable of firing .38 Special ammunition. The case of the .357 is just slightly longer.
The chambering will be stamped right into the barrel.Since it's a 94, it will probably be stamped 30 WCF (Winchester Center Fire) which today is called 30-30 Winchester
It uses the 22 Magnum cartridge. MRF stands for "magnum rim fire". It uses the 22 Magnum cartridge. MRF stands for "magnum rim fire".
It can use either 44 magnum or 44 special
As long as both the rifle and the revolver are chambered in .44 magnum you can use the same ammunition for both. I have a Henry rifle in .44 mag and a Ruger redhawk .44 mag and I use the same ammo for both. That's one of the nice things about that caliber.
Anything labeled 22 magnum, such as a Henry Golden Boy.
Yes that's why these Winchester short magnum family of cartridges were designed.