THIS DEPENDS ON TYPE OF WOOD AND HOW DRY IT IS, A 2 INCH THICK TREE( WET) WOULD PROBABLY STOP THE BULLET
No. The bullet is 5 thousandths of an inch too wide.
The bullet is 22/100ths of an inch in diameter.
The only way to find out is to shoot as many different brands and loads as you can afford.
Absolutely not. IMPROVING ANSWER: It won't even fit, although you can't tell the right ammo to use in a gun by trying it to see if it fits. A .32 caliber gun fires a bullet that is about 32/100 of an inch wide. A .38 special handgun uses bullets that are about 36/100 inch. So the bigger bullets will not fit through the smaller holes in the chamber and barrel on the smaller-caliber gun.
Both terms describe the diameter of the bullet in decimal parts of an inch. For example, a .357 bullet is 357 thousands of an inch in diameter and the .45 bullet is 45 hundredths of an inch in diameter. These labels of bullets are most common in the United States. Much of the world refers to bullet sizes in metric terms, i.e. 9mm means a bullet that is 9 millimeters in diameter.
yes it will. the rating shotguns are chambered for is the maximum size shell you can shoot. i have a 1100 LT chambered for 3 inch and i shoot 2 3/4 inch shells out of it mostly.
the shell shouldn't fit. there's way too much interference
it is about one inch long
Yes you can you can shoot 3 or 2 and a half in
The diamater of a 9mm parabellum bullet is 9.03 millimeters, or .356 of an inch.
Like a inch
sure - clean it afterward