yes...............
five.................
Five 30-06 catridges.
Most of them do. As for bullets designed for maximum penetration on impact, hollow point and soft point cartridges are probably what you're referring to. Hollow points are more common for defensive rounds, and soft points are common hunting rounds.
Yes. For every caliber of ammunition, there is a hollow point round that goes with it, except for .50 caliber machine gun and sniper rounds.
the hollow ball of cells is called the Blastocyst. At which point this occurs depends on the particular species.
Yes. of course. Why wouldn't they be? I just received 1000 rounds of 357 hollowpoint slugs for reloading for my Colt Trooper III.
My Springfield model 83 ( J Stevens) is stamped 22 Short, Long and Long Rifle on Barrel. If yours is as well, then yes, it would fire LR rounds.
A very fast, very dexterous American soldier using the M1911A1 .45 could get off about 42 rounds a minute, though at that rate of fire, the accuracy would probably suffer from the barrel overheating.
Hollow Point bullets have a hollow nose or an hole in the nose of the bullet. This causes the bullet to mushroom into a larger diameter when it hits something. A regular bullet is conical or blunt nose in shape. Some can be pure lead or can be jacketed with a bronze or copper coating.
I have a 12 ga 67F, 28" modified that I bought in a pawn shop in 1973. Still shoots great after thousands of rounds. I paid $65 for it then.
Factory and aftermarket magazines are available for nearly all semi-automatic handguns with possible capacities of 30 rounds or more. Glock 9mm models are available with 33 round magazines and even drum mags that hold more than that. For the largest "flush fit" factory magazine capacity, the Springfield XDm 9mm holds 19 rounds in the mag, and the FN 5.7 pistol can hold 20 rounds.
62.6 rounds to 63 and 9.4 rounds to 9.