Check the owner's manual. If you don't have one, take it to a gunsmith and ask for help
Yes. Your revolver will fire either one.
No. Ammo designated as .38 or .38 special is different than ammo designated as .380. .380 is designed for semi-auto handguns and .38 ammo is for revolvers.More to the point, the .38 Special has a longer case, and a larger diameter projectile. The .38 special bullet measures .357" diameter, the .380 measures .355" diameter. The .38 special is a 'rimmed' cartridge, and the .380 is 'rimless'. Luckily, .38 Special ammo will not fit in a .380 magazine, otherwise the results could be disastrous, possibly turning your .380 handgun into a hand grenade.
The .380 automatic cannot shoot 9mm Parabellum ammo.
380 auto. Many good brands of ammo out there.
Factory and hand loaded.
Hand grenade harnesses.
Toledo fire arms is an old company that trades in Antique Firearms, hand guns, rifles, shotguns. They also trade in ammo, gun parts, gun safes, holsters, magazines, optics, reloading etc.
you cannot shoot fire from your hand.
Noooop. But most .357 Magnums can safely fire a .38 Special (not vice versa though)
Possible. Not all powders, not all handguns. I use Unique and Green Dot shotgun powders for .38 Special and .45 ACP. The real key is to get a good reloading manual and FOLLOW IT.
Generally speaking, a 357 magnum blue steel revolver with adjustable sights and a 4" barrel. This allows you the ability to shoot everthing from mild 38 special target ammo to heavy 357 magnums.
18 years old to purchase a long barrel weapon in Maine that is not Automatic, Silenced, Suppressed, modified, or has selective fire. Fed. Law states you must be 21 to buy a handgun and hand gun ammo.