Less than 100 to over 1000 depending on specifics.
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.
Yes
Can't answer without the serial number.
The .22 Short, was developed for Smith and Wesson's first revolver , in 1857.
There were a few different ones used, including:Smith & Wesson Model 500 (.500 S&W Magnum). Both long and short barreled models were used - Castle's was the long barreled model, heavily modified.Smith & Wesson Model 640 (.357 Magnum). This is the snub nosed revolver carried by Budianski.Smith & Wesson Model 19 (.357 Magnum)Smith & Wesson Model 686 (.357 Magnum)Smith & Wesson Model 442 Centennial (.357 Magnum)Revolver of an unidentified type, used by the mugger who held up Detective Soap
Yes, it did. I happen to own one from that time period. The .22 Short was created in 1857, the .22 Long in 1871, and the .22 Long Rifle cartridge in 1887. Smith & Wesson produced the first .22 revolver in 1857.
No. The Owl's head was the logo of the Iver Johnson company. You MAY see a marking such as .38 S&W CTG- but that marking is the caliber- the revolver shoots a .38 Smith & Wesson cartridge (not a .38 Special). ALL guns that shot THAT cartridge were marked .38 S&W, no matter who made the gun. Smith & Wesson owned the name of the cartridge- they invented it.
Needs to be checked by a gunsmith.
Needs to be examined by a competent gunsmith
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."
2
100 USD