Without knowing a make or model, your guess is as good as ours. It could be a really low end manufacturer, or a really high end one - Germany has been home to both kinds.
For a Smith and Wesson revolver in stainless steel that shoots short bullets, you might need a 380 caliber pistol or a S&W 32 caliber revolver.
No, i asume you dont have see .380 pistol and a revolver 38 spl, the .380 and 38 spl ammo share de same diameter boot no the longer, the 38 is for a 38 special revolver tipe and the .380 is for an automatic pistol tipe some people call 9mm short.
i have a rhom pistol, but never heard of a romo, mine #100
The standard caliber is .45 acp. That is a short fat pistol caliber that fires a 230 grain bullet at about 800 feet per second velocity. Lighter bullets down to about 185 grains are available, and they travel faster, possibly as high as 1100 f.p.s. The model 1911 pistol is a semi-automatic, not to be confused with an equally famous revolver made by Colt, often chambered in what is also called .45 caliber, but that model 1873 revolver would use the .45 Colt or .45 Long Colt cartridge, which is a rimmed revolver round, much longer in size that the .45 acp, and firing a heaver bullet at similar velocity.
Inexpensive, probably built pre-68
probably a Saturday night special type pistol imported from Germany. there were so many of this pistrols made world wide that they have no history or worth.....
It is a bottlenecked centerfire automatic pistol cartridge. The original Luger pistol was chambered in this caliber, and later in the 9mm Parabellum catridge. The link below will take you to a short article on the cartridge and a photo.
Have it checked by a gunsmith.
$100
only a pistol is an semi-automatic. revolvers are not semi auto. A "pistol" is a generic term to refer to ANY handgun, revolver or Semi-automatic. Wrong! Only some one completely unfamiliar with hand guns nomenclature would call a revolver a pistol. A revolver is commonly referred to as: "revolver, wheel gun or shooter (short for 6 shooter)." A semi automatic is commonly referred to as: "semi auto or pistol."
No, there was never any German model of revolver by this name.
A short-barreled version of the Safety Hammerless revolver manufactured from 1968 to 1975. The Safety HAMMER Revolver.