Beginning in 2001 Winchester label air guns and rifles were made in Spain & Turkey for Daisy airgun company. The 353 came in .177 and .22 caliber models. It is rated at 378 FPS. 2.75 lbs, blue finish, composite stick.
It all depends on the condition of the pistol. But one in EXCELLENT shape (NO Dings, rust, scratches or use.) is worth around $200
Beeman makes the single pump pneumatic .177 pellet pistol called a P3 there are several variations of this German pistol like the "Marksman 2004" made in China and a few other less valuable and less quality.
It usually says right on the barrel. Single shot / single load pistols are pellet pistols. Most BB guns have a reservoir for the BB's. There are a few that shoot either a BB or a pellet. You will have to look at the instructions or the display box to see what it says. Pellet pistols are more accurate than BB pistols. Most BB pistols will say .177 BB. Pellet pistols will say .177 Cal and not say BB.
this particular item is a .22 cal. pellet gun
Without more information about the condition of the pistol it is not possible to answer you. BUT I can tell you this. In poor condition it is worth $50 in "NEW IN BOX" condition it is worth $250. "Model 805 Sportster Single Shot"
320 in a pellet gun is average. there are a few that have a higher FPS, but anything that fires between 300 - 400 FPS is normal for a C02 pistol. Rifles on the other hand currently are made to fire above 1000 FPS. The Crosman 1377C fires above 600 FPS but you have to pump it 10 times and it is a single shot pistol
I bought my Winchester model 310 22 cal. in 1974. What information do you want? Write me to macchia.nicola@virgilio.it Nicola Macchia, Italy
No, if it was designed to be a single shot, it's a single shot. It needs to be reloaded after each shot.
A pistol is a single hand firearm with a short barrel.
no, its a single action pistol what uses blanks
AFAIK, Colt never made a single shot pistol
The Sea Lion pistols and rifles come from China. Most of them are single shot. They usually are of the "break barrel" design. This means you push the barrel all the way down to cock it. While the barrel is open you load in a pellet. Usually a .177 size pellet. Pull the barrel back up and it is ready to fire.