Unsure if you are using Alpine as the name of the ammo or of the firearm. In early 1960s, firm maufactured M1 Carbines in California under the Alpine name. These used standard M1 Carbine ammo (aka 30 Carbine). Am not familiar with ammo maker by that name.
You can only use .30 carbine ammo or the European designation 7.62X33 ammo
Ball, blank, tracer are a few.
60-200 USD or so
With a loaded 30-round STANAG magazine, the M4 carbine weighs 3.1 kilograms (6.9 pounds).
I don't know the value,but a local shop has one for sale for $450.00,whitch i think is too much. Dick
.30 Carbine
A carbine is generally a rifle with a shorter barrel to make it easy to carry or to use indoors or from inside vehicles. (Example: M16 rifle; M4 carbine. Same basic weapon except one barrel is several inches shorter. Sometimes a "carbine" will also mean a weapon that looks like a rifle but shoots pistol-caliber ammunition or other weaker ammo. Example: M1 Garand .30 rifle; M1 .30 carbine (the carbine is several inches shorter, a few pounds lighter, and fires a much smaller weaker round, intended for close-range use only).
The basic 30-30 cartridge- my personal choice is the 30-30 Leverlution ammo by Hornady.
30 ammo per clip and maximum ammo is 210 (including 30 inside the clip)
No
no! the ammo is not interchangeable!
your question is not specific enough, .30 cal carbine can be anything, as for 1944 can also mean a very wide range of firearms. for the two I know of: M1 Carbine, .30 carbine caliber, semiautomatic carbine Inland - around $800 Mosin Nagant M44 carbine, manuf 1944 in very good condition (like if you bought "new" from a store) around $90. there are hundreds of ".30 cal carbine" that are also manufactured in "1944".