The nominal bore of a .410 shotgun is.410 inch. Which is why it is properly called the .410 bore instead of the .410 gauge. In Europe it is sometimes called the 12mm, which is an inaccurate designation as a .410 bore has an actual diameter of approximately 10.4mm by metric measure. If the .410 had been named in the traditional fashion, by the number of lead balls .41 inch in diameter needed to make one pound, it would be about a 67-68 gauge.
THE GUN IS A .44 CALIBER SHOTGUN, NOT A .410 CALIBER. I HAVE BEEN TOLD THAT IT MAY HANDLE VERY SHORT .410 CALIBER SHOT SHELLS OF LOW POWER BUT, IT COULD RISKY.
A "410" is the smallest gauge of shotgun.
The 410 Shotgun is really .410 Caliber. Unlike all other sizes of shotgun, (10,12,16,20,28gauge), the 410 is measured in caliber. I believe it works out to something like 36 gauge. So the 410 shotgun is .41 Caliber
the 12 guage is a caliber not a gun
WHAT IS THE VALUE OF A TAURUS NEW IN THE BOX JUDGE WITH A 6 INCH BARREL, STAINLESS STEEL. .410 GAUGE CALIBER?
Hell no. .410 is not a gauge it is a caliber. True gauge is a measurement of the number of lead balls of bore diameter that constitute a pound. The .243 bullet is a lot smaller than the diameter of a .410 barrel. There are some .410's that can shoot 45 colts but not all can.
If you are referring to the over and under gun that has a .22 caliber rifle on top, and the .410 gauge shotgun on the bottom, it's a Model 24; the one I have is made by Stevens.
There have been several handguns made that fire .410 shotgun shells- most recently the Taurus Judge. By the way, .410 is actually a caliber of shotgun, not a gauge. A .410 shotshell is about 67 gauge- but no one uses that designation.
How much is a 60 year old Harrington & Richardson Handy Gun, 410 gauge worth?
Shotguns aren't usually measured by caliber, except the 410 and some uncommon ones that use birdshot in a pistol cartridge. No one can tell you from just a serial number (which may be only a manufacturer's assembly number) what size it is. But you can measure the bore. A 12 gauge is .729 inch, 16 gauge .662 inch, 20 gauge .615 inch, and the 410 is .41 inch.
Not unless you want to destroy the barrel and perhaps hurt yourself.
Yes, the Model 37 Featherlight was made in .410 and 28 gauge