About 1.5 miles when fired at a very high angle from a rifle.
NO!!
There is no "Remington USA 1906" rifle although there is the Remington Model 8, which was introduced in 1906. This is a semi automatic rifle that was chambered for one of four possible calibers; .25 Remington, .30 Remington, .32 Remington, or .35 Remington. The caliber that your rifle is chambered for should be stamped on the side of the barrel, just forward of the receiver.
I assume you mean .35 Remington rifle ammunition vs. standard 30-30 rifle ammo. If so then they are not the same and although they look similar they are not interchangable. I hope this answers your question.
Probably a Remington Model 12 -? depends on barrel, ammo made in 1914.
.22 WRF or .22 Remington Special
If I recall correctly, 14 and it loads from the stock. This is long rifle ammo.
It was offered in more than one caliber.
this ammo is one of a kind. it will only fit a remington 16 22 caliber autoloading rifle. the model 16 was the very first 22 cal. automatic remington produced. they made this special ammo. because all prior 22 ammo was blackpowder. the model 16 was gas opperated and black powder would plug and corrode the gas tubes. thus the 22 cal. autoloading. this ammo was made to fit this rifle and this rifle only. it was a 45 grain bullet that would average 900 fps. this round fool proofed the model 16.
Absolutely not! They are two totally different cartridges!
Either one. Depends on the rifle, ammo and shooter.
Finding any ammo at this time can be a bit of a challenge but Remington certainly still does make the .270 as does everyone else in addition to the larger reloading companies that also provide it.
Most .22 BOLT action, pump and LEVER action rifles that are fed from a tube magazine will handle shorts, longs, and long rifles. Remington produced several auto loaders that wil handle mixed ammo- the Remington 550 may be the best known.