You might possibly be able to get it to fire, but you should never try to fire any ammo from any gun other than what it's designed to fire or what the manufacturer says it will fire. It might damage the gun or hurt the shooter.
No, not without barrel inserts.
No. They are not designed to fire a 17 cal bullet
Yes.
Any old shotgun stamped "44 Cal." or using the number 44 is chambered for the cartridge which eventually was modified into today's .410 gauge bore. They reportedly fire the .410 ok, but are not as good generally as the true .410 shotgun.
DO NOT DO THIS, you may cause injury to yourself or damage the weapon.
Sounds good but NO. Absolutely not. Shotguns are in no way built to handle the pressure a 44 cal bullet would form in the breech and barrel. The result would be catastrophic and most certainly result in a ruined firearm as well as injury and death. The .45 cal/410 deal was popularized by Taurus in it's "Judge" model which fires a 45long colt and 410 shotgun shell. Here you have a pistol designed to handle the 45 long colt pressure and therefore handle the 410 shotguns lesser pressure. Never is it a good idea to fire any ammunition in any firearm that is not clearly marked for the caliber. Never.
No, never attempt to fire ammunition in a weapon it was not designed for!.
if the shell is 410 but 2 1/2 inches long no problem if you a 3 inch chamber size
Sounds good but NO. Absolutely not. Shotguns are in no way built to handle the pressure a 44 cal bullet would form in the breech and barrel. The result would be catastrophic and most certainly result in a ruined firearm as well as injury and death. The .45 cal/410 deal was popularized by Taurus in it's "Judge" model which fires a 45long colt and 410 shotgun shell. Here you have a pistol designed to handle the 45 long colt pressure and therefore handle the 410 shotguns lesser pressure. Never is it a good idea to fire any ammunition in any firearm that is not clearly marked for the caliber. Never.
What about it?
what type bullet in 50 cal
22 cal 224 dia bullet.