22 shorts can be fired in a pump or bolt action rifle chambered for long rifle cartridges but not in most automatics.
.22 Short cartridges may be fired in most firearms chambered for .22 LR- However, with most they will need to be hand fed one cartridge at a time. Most automatic firearms chambered for 22 LR will not cycle as a semi auto with Shorts.
200 USD
Not sure of your question, but a firearm chambered for .22 shorts will not chamber .22 Longs, nor .22 Long rifle cartridges.
NO. The case is too large to enter a 22LR chamber. If chambered in a .22 magnum, you will be firing a .17 caliber bullet out of a .223 barrel, with no accuracy at all, and splitting the cartridge case.
I assume you mean Smith and Wesson. If it is a .22 caliber S&W revolver, yes.
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No. The WRF (Winchester Rim Fire) is a larger diameter cartridge. It is the same diameter are the 22 WMR (Winchester Magnum Rimfire) but is shorter than the magnum, It may be safety fired in a .22 magnum rifle, but not in a 22 LR. 22 LR ammo should NOT be fired in a rifle chambered for 22 WRF.
50-100 or so
10-125 USD depending on specifics
Maybe. Depends on the firearm. If chambered for shorts, then only shorts. If chambered for Long Rifle, can safely shoot S. L. or LR, BUT- shorts or longs may not cycle thru the action. Some firearms, such as the Remington 550, were made to handle them interchangeably- as a semi auto. Most revolvers in LR will handle shorts just fine. The LONG is pretty much as obsolete round, and not often found today. IF you use Shorts in a Long Rifle firearm, be sure to scrub the chamber well after shooting- they tend to build up a ring of carbon at the case mouth that can make it hard to chamber LR ammo later.
Many convicted criminals have thought so, with varying degrees of success.