No such weapon made by Walther.
A 22 LR caliber pistol made by Walther, it is similar in design to the Walther P99.
The P-38 in 22LR is the only 22LR pistol made by Walther that looks like a P38
No
Obviously, it will depend on the caliber of pistol, and the distance between you and the pistol. A person firing a .357 Magnum revolver would be exposed to ABOUT 140 dB.
If you are referring to Dan Wesson Arms, it could be anything from .22 LR to .44 magnum.
The Model 19 is a 357 Magnum
Kel-Tec manufactures a Model PMR-30 Semi-Auto pistol chambered for a .22 Magnum cartridge (.22WMR) with a 30 round clip capacity.
Small Pistol Primers are used for small caliber pistols, any of the various 9mm calibers such as the .380, the 9mm luger, the 9x18 makarov, the .38 special, the .32 acp, the .25acp etc. and even some larger calibers such as the .40 S&W. Large caliber pistol primers are used in .45 caliber and larger. Still other calibers, such as the .357 Magnum for instance, require primers known as magnum primers.
Mostlikely it would of been a Walther. The model is not known because mostlikely a Russian footsoldier fould the gun and kept it or destroyed it. In my opinion, through pictures I have studied, it was a Walther PPK.
22 short, 22 long, 22 long rifle or 22 magnum depending on what it is chambered for.
Depends on the caliber and the magazine. You can have up to 20 in 9mm and up to 12 in 40 S&W with factory magazines.
I'm not entirely sure about the .32 caliber, but the 9mm and .40cal P99QA/P99AS runs for about $740 US