Yes that's why these Winchester short magnum family of cartridges were designed.
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They are different lengths (and energies) of .22 rimfire cartridges. They are the most commonly sold cartridge in the world.
There are 22 caliber centerfire cartridges such as the .22 Hornet and others, but ordinary 22 cartridges (short, long, long rifle) are rimfire.
Long action will handle longer cartridges, such as 30-06. Short action handles shorter cartridges, such as .308.
22 cartridges fo .22 short
Winchester Short Magnum- refers to a family of cartridges.
30-06 and longer cartridges are long action. .308 is short action.
Different applications for each round.
Short or long action is immaterial, it is the caliber (and energy) of the cartridge that counts. Short action rifles use shorter cartridges, such as the.308 Winchester- an adequate cartridge for elk if the right bullet is used. Long actions use longer cartridges, such as the 30-06- also adequate.
Firearms that use rimfire cartridges, such as the .22 Short or Long rifle, small caliber handguns such as the .25 and .32, rifles that use pistol cartridges, etc. These are cartridges that would not generally be suitable for hunting deer and larger animals, usually grouped as "big game".
No. A .38 Short (I'm assuming .38 Short Colt) is a rimmed cartridge for revolvers. 9mm is a rimless cartridge for pistols (Semi-automatics). The rim is necessary for a revolver's ejector star to reliably remove the cartridges from the cylinder. You'd have to pry 9mm cartridges out with a screwdriver.Only fire ammunition that matches the markings on the gun!.38 Special, .38 Short Colt, .38 Super, etc. are all different cartridges!If you make a habit of this, you won't be able to order ten beers in a noisy bar!