In general revolvers do not have 6 barrels, they have 1. Many have 6 chambers, each holding 1 cartridge. .380 is a cartridge used in semi-auto pistols, not revolvers. Now, if you are asking who makes a 6 shot .38 caliber revolver, the answer would be half of the gunmakers in the world have done so at some time. Those companies would include Colt, Smith & Wesson, Ruger, Dan Wesson, Enfield, Taurus, Rossi, Charter Arms, RG, Remington, Adams, Star, Llama, Korth, Iver Johnson, Harrington & Richardson, Hopkins & Allen, and a list that goes on for miles.
No. Shoot only the caliber printed on the barrel.
4 inches including chamber.
No, the calibers and chamberings are completely different. It is not safe to attempt to fire any caliber of ammunition in a gun, other than what is stated on the barrel. actually the 380 caliber is almost equal to the 9mm. the 380 caliber is often refered to as a 9mm short. the difference is the 9mm case is slightly bigger then the 380 case and the 380 bullet might be a little lighter.......................
The barrel on a Bryco Model 59 .380 caliber pistol cannot be replaced with a 9mm barrel because they are different dimensions. The internal components are also slightly different due to a difference in caliber.
If the two calibers are close in size then no. For instance, do not carry .380 and 9mm at the same time. The .380 will fire in a 9mm and could possible plug the barrel. The next shot will blow the barrel.
It is a .380 ACP caliber handgun produced by Colt Arms. It is a .380 ACP caliber handgun produced by Colt Arms.
One can make a pistol much larger than it needs to be, maybe even having an extra-long barrel would make a pistol larger, technically. I'll assume you mean the barrel diameter. Although it would seem that a .380 and .38 would have the same barrel diameter, namely, 38/100th of an inch, that is not usually very accurate. The .380 ACP has an actual barrel diameter of about .35 caliber, or 35/100th of an inch. The .38 Special has a barrel diameter of .357 caliber, or 35.7/100th of an inch. So the .38 Special has an ever so slightly larger diameter.
how far does 380 bullet travel
Not always.
.380 or 32
One would think that .380 ACP and .38 Special would be the same size--namely 38-hundredths of an inch. But there can be some flexibility in stated caliber and actual caliber. Long story short, .380 ACP is the same diameter as a 9mm, roughly .355 caliber. .38 Special is basically .357 caliber.
Well, it's a .38 caliber, but the actual measurement is .355 of an inch.