Want this question answered?
The L1A1 SLR used by the British military is in caliber 7.62 NATO, and has a muzzle velocity of about 2800 fps.
National Muzzle Loading Rifle Association was created in 1933.
Any bullet that has a diameter of one half inch is a .50 caliber bullet. There are different .50 caliber bullets- my Hawken muzzle loading rifle shoots a .50 caliber lead bullet, but different from the .50 Browning Machine Gun (that is also used in the .50 Barret sniper rifle)
The Springfield rifled Musket, Model 1855 had a caliber of 0.58-inch and was a single shot, muzzle-loading weapon.
50-500 USD depending on specifics
The term "squirrel gun" was used with muzzle loading rifles that were smaller caliber than deer rifles. There was no one set caliber, but many were in .32 caliber, where a deer rifle would be .50, .54 or larger.
Depends on the skill of the user.
The .45 caliber bullet is not used in a sniper rifle.
in the U.S 1 minute old!
As with most of the battles of the Civil War, the artillery used muzzle loading rifled cannon. The infantry soldiers used a muzzle loading percussion cap rifle, with a socket bayonet, firing a .54 caliber minié ball, such as the Springfield. Officers carried a revolver and a sword. Cavalry troopers used a breech loading Sharps carbine, a percussion cap revolver, usually .44 caliber, and a sabre.
you will have to define if you mean commercial or wildcat.
The standard infantry weapon was a muzzle loading Springfield percussion cap rifle. The cavalry fired a breach loading Sharps carbine. Most artillery field pieces were also rifled and muzzle loading.