No. some will, but some are Shorts only, some are Long Rifle only.
No. The .22 Long Rifle is not compatible with the .22 Long cartridge. Most .22 Long Rifle revolvers, lever and pump action rifles fed from a tubular magazine, and single shot rifles can accept .22 Long and .22 Short cartridges, but the .22 LR round is too long for a dedicated .22 Long chamber.
Long Action, Short Action
There are sunk cost in the short run but not in long run.
If not marked on the barrel, have a gunsmith check it out.
750,000 of which 127,000 were m/94 carbines, 535,000 m/96 long rifles and 88,000 m/38 short rifles (converted m/38's not included).
The long action simply has a longer receiver, to accommodate longer cartridges such as the .270 or .30-06. The .308 should be a short action. I have seen long action .308 rifles before, but these were typically .30-06 rifles rebarreled for the shorter .308 cartridge.
Luger DID make some really beautiful rifles. Technically they are carbines- short barreled rifles. They have a fixed shoulder stock, and a forearm. They should not be confused with the long barreled pistol with a detachable shoulder stock.
Springfield is the manufacturer. A rifle is a long arm with a rifled barrel. A carbine is a short rifle, generally considered having a barrel length of 20 inches or less. All carbines are rifles but not all rifles are carbines.
The collector value can only be assessed by a visual inspection & evaluation. Old Winchesters are very much like old classic automobiles... the graded condition and factory originality are the key factors in determining what they are truly worth. Bert H.
Rifles and shotguns are both considered long guns.
Yes it will as well as 22 short and long rifle, but the rifle will only shoot the 22 LR shells as a Semi auto and the shorts and longs you will have to manually cycle the gun by hand
It means use only .22 long rifle cartridges and not .22 long or .22 short cartridges. With the shorter shells, the gun may try to move two cartridges from the magazine to the chamber at once and jam. They will probably not have enough energy to operate the autoloading mechanism correctly either.