it is not safe to fire 16 gauge shell in anything but a 16 gauge.No shells will interchange with other gauge guns since a 16 gauge shell would fit in a 12 gauge chamber, I would think you can do this.
It depends on the shell you fire.
The 16-gauge (Note how it's spelled) shotgun shell will hold slightly fewer pellets (small BBs). It will have slightly less recoil, but the difference will be so small that you might not notice it. Some 16 gauge shotguns are built lighter and smaller than the 12-gauge versions, but that is not always true. And you should know that today 16 gauge ammunition is less common than either 12 or 20 gauge. 30 or 50 years ago, 16 gauge was very popular but now it is getting rare.
Actually the shotgun uses 16 gauge shells i have the same shotgun
16
Written as .16 caliber (notice the decimal point?), that would be a VERY tiny bullet- .16 inches in diameter. That is smaller than a metal BB- which is between .17 and .18 inches. Written as 16 caliber (no decimal point) it would refer to the length of a cannon barrel- 16 times longer than it is wide. But you may have caliber confused with gauge- shotgun shell sizes are usually given in gauges. A 16 GAUGE shotgun is about .69 caliber- or .69 inches across the shell. They are smaller than a 12 gauge, bigger than a 20 gauge (with gauge, smaller number means bigger)
Sulphur has 16 electrons. Correction: there is 16 in total, but 6 in the outer (valence) shell.
Browning.com has sn data under customer service.
14 gauge is thicker than 16 gauge.
14 gauge is larger than 16 gauge. 14 gauge is 1.6mm (0.06") and 16 gauge is 1.29mm (0.05").
16 gauge is smaller than a 14 gauge. You can buy a stretcher and stretch the hole.
If it's a 16 gauge shotgun, the shell length is 2 3/4 inches.