Nope. It just won't fire :)
Yes.
they are the whistler darts
i own both of these guns. the vulcan has a lot of power in a war situation, but its quite hard to move fast with it. the stampede is very mobile and has a higher rate of fire. all you have to do is load bullets in a magazine and fire, but with the vulcan you have to load each individual dart into a bandolier. the main downside to the stampede would be the bipod which is a bit flimsy and a bit awkward with the magazine in.
The Stampede with all its accessories attached weighs about 7 pounds, quite a load for a Nerf blaster.
A Cocking Handle.
No idea what so ever.
Just the bullets, or the complete cartridge? You'd be looking at anywhere from $25 - $75 for a box of 50, depending on the load and manufacturer.
Ramrod is when you use a large cylindrical item to shove a dart down a barrel. A breech load is a rectangle cut through a certain piping that is close to the gun, so when you load the dart it retains all of its power, for when the spring/ air powered gun shoots, its power won't decrease as the air travels, giving a more direct push on the dart. Hope this helps. For more information, I would visit a website regaurding these topics (i.e. nerfhaven.com, nerfhq.com, denoffoam.com) or just Google Nerf breech load or Nerf ramrod, and there should be plenty of videos/writeups/explanations of the process.
You can hand load, just no lead unjacketed bullets.
The main difference is that air break switches lack a mechanism for suppression and load break switches do have them. They are both disconnect switches but have different uses.
The Clip that holds the bullets inside and automatic or any clip that holds bullets ready to load. http://www.minutemanreview.com/2008/09/clip-vs-magazine-lesson-in-firearm.html
Put it in your load bearing vest and take it when bullets aren't flying over your head.