Nope. 357 magnum cartridge is too long, and too powerful.
No. 38 Special only.
Your gun is a 357 and can shoot both 357 ammo and 38 special ammo. The nice thing about these guns is you can practice at the range with 38S bullets, which are much cheaper, and save the 357 ammo for home defense.
Yes, you can shoot 38 specials through a .357 magnum revolver.
Yes, you can shoot .38 ammo in a .357 firearm. The .357 firearm is designed to also shoot .38 caliber ammunition.
.357 Magnum and .38 Special (to include +P and +P+ loadings).
Yes.
No, you should not fire .357 ammo in a .38 Special gun as the .357 ammo is longer and more powerful, which can be dangerous and damage the gun.
38 Special only, do not try to fire other types of 38 in it
The .357 Magnum cartridge is longer and much more powerful than the .38 Special. While .38 Special ammo CAN be safely fired in a .357 Magnum, the reverse is not true. It is dangerous to try this.
No. However, .38 Special ammo CAN be safely fired in a .357 Magnum firearm. Both cartridges use a bullet that is .357 in diameter- but the .357 magnum is longer, and more powerful.
Only the Coonan Arms .357 and .357 models of the Desert Eagle can do this.
No