A 22 WMR cartridge should be a bit too fat for a 22 LR chamber. If the magnum shells will go into the cylinder but it is NOT marked 22 WMR, I wouldn't shoot it at all! If it IS marked as a magnum, don't use standard 22s.
They are not endangered. I mean, come on! They are awesome enough to take care of themselves. Duh!
Anything is possible with enough money and a good gunsmith. Not recommended.
"Cylinder" is the safest choice, no question. "Improved Cylinder" is just big enough to allow the slug through, but the slight restriction might produce enough overpressure to cause cycling trouble.
Well that depends, if you have substance within the cylinder, then the substance will begin to heat up due to the transfer of heat. But if you don't have anything within the cylinder then the cylinder will heat up on its own and might melt if you apply enough heat.
No. A snake's tongue is not strong enough to pick a lock. Additionally, snakes aren't smart enough to even know what a lock is, let alone pick one.
Flashing engine light on virually any vehicle almost always points to at least 1 cylinder misfiring. It usually is a P0300 - multiple random cylinder misfire code...but I've seen cases with a P0301 through P0308 (cylinder 1-8 misfire...or through 12 if you're lucky enough to have 12 cylinders lol).
Sounds like the cylinder isn't lined up to the key way.
Fast Enough
That would be that there isn't enough gas getting to them
No. If it minor pitting, honing the cylinder may be enough. If it is deep, it will need to be bored and an oversize piston used or the cylinder can be sleeved.
This question is not really specific enough.
The diameter, alone, is not enough to find the volume of a cylinder. You need the height as well. > Where pi = 3.1416, and d = cylinder diameter cylinder volume = pi * (d/2)2 * length of cylinder