theres a man nammed Andy hill hawk bullets . he makes amunition for many applications sell around the world. Pedric town / carnies point NJ
http://hawkbullets.com/
Met him at the Salem county fair
32 Short rimfire ammunition. This ammunition is now obsolete and was only available through Navy Arms. You can usually find some at the local gunshows but expect to pay a good price for it.
It can fire .32 Smith & Wesson and .32 Smith & Wesson long ammunition. These are the only ammunition types it is designed for, and is NOT compatible with other types of .32 calibre/7.65mm ammunition.
.32 long what? That's a cartridge designation, and even at that it could be .32 Long Colt, .32 S&W Long, .32 Long (rimfire), or .32 Long Rifle (Centerfire).
.32 Long Rimfire ammunition is currently available from Old Western Scrounger, a division of Navy Arms. This is new-manufactured ammunition, produced on contract in Brazil by CBC. This is the only source of useable .32 Rimfire and it isn't cheap. This ammunition works well in the Stevens "Favorite" rifle and should work in any other firearm chambered for it. The .32 Short Rimfire is not available. Dixie Gun Works sells adapters to allow use of rifles and pistols in .32 Short and Extra Long Rimfire by using a .22 "acorn" blank as a primer. The Short adapters can be used in rifles chambered for the .32 Long, but the Extra Long adapters cannot. The .25 Rimfire hasn't been loaded since 1941 and all remaining stocks are gone. It is completely un-obtainable except for collector ammunition that is far too expensive and probably too old to shoot.
.32 caliber is not enough infromation. Ammunition marked "7.65 Browning", ".32 auto" and ".32 ACP" for practical purposes, are all the same. Do NOT try to use ammo such as ".32 magnum" or ".32 long" as it would be a different round.
NO NO NO! Only shoot what the rifle is chambered for and so marked.
Not without endangering yourself and anyone else in the area. Stay with ammunition designed for the firearm you are shooting.
Gunshop. .32 RIMFIRE is an obsolete cartridge, and is no longer made.
This ammunition is fast at around 1640 feet per second and is excellent for hunting varmints (small animals such as rats, squirrels and groundhogs that are not usually eaten). It is clean burning and its special 32 grain hollow point bullet has a tear drop cavity for complete disruption.
any gun or sporting store
You probably want to know the value of a rifle, but 32 Winchester Special only identifies the ammunition. If you really do want to know the value of the cartridge, it costs about $25 for a box of 20.
The easiest way is to see what ammunition will chamber in it - there aren't many choices. If it is .22, it will be either .22 short or .22 Long Rifle. It may be a .32 short or .32 Long. If it is .38, it must be .38 Smith & Wesson (NOT .38 Special). If it isn't marked, it's likely a .22 something.