Four-Ten, 12 gauge, 16 gauge, and 10-gauge.
It is a shotgun with 20 gauges.
I know that 8 gauges are made, but I'me sure that there are specialty guns that are in even larger gauges.
The differences lie primarily in the diameters.
It's possible to make a shotgun from common steel plumbing parts. It takes four parts and can not be identified as a firearm when disassembled. So you can throw the parts to the four winds and nobody can charge you with possessing a firearm.
guage refers to the size of the shell any particular shotgun will fire.
There is a 4 gauge/bore shotgun, however it is extremely rare. In fact there are even larger gauges. Bigger gauges are 3, 2, 1 1/2, 1, A, 1/2, A 1/2, and AA. The largest gauge, AA, is the equivalent of about 219 grams of lead, about 164 times heaver than a 12 gauges weight of lead.
A shotgun with a 40 mm bore would correspond to a 10-gauge shotgun. The gauge system is inversely related to the diameter of the bore; thus, a 10-gauge shotgun has a bore diameter of approximately 0.775 inches (19.7 mm), while a 40 mm bore exceeds the common shotgun gauges. However, 40 mm is typically associated with larger caliber weapons rather than standard shotguns.
If the vendor code starts with 101 it was made by savage arms a model 94 Stevens shotgun common as dirt but a good old gun
Yes
2,4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 20, 26, 28
there are 4 common types of shotgun gauges 4/10, 10, 12, and 20, there are 10 in all. 4, 8, 10, 4/10, 16, 20, 24, 28, 32, all thoe some are so uncomin that you wont find them any wear................There is also the ultra awesome 2 gauge
The most common string gauges used for guitars are light (0.010-0.046 inches), medium (0.011-0.049 inches), and heavy (0.012-0.054 inches).