Yes they are. One of the newer guns, in fact, is the .327 Magnum, which will ALSO fire the .32 Magnum, and the .32 S&W cartridge.
Yes. The .327 Magnum is one of the FEW exceptions to the "do not try this rule". It can fire .327 mag, .32 H&R Mag, .32 Long, and .32 S&W.
The diameter of the bullet that is fired, along with the dimensions of the cartridge that the gun will fire. For instance, the barrel may be the size for a bullet that is 32/100ths of an inch- but depending on the chamber dimension, that could be a .32 Auto, 32 S&W, or a 32-20. If the caliber is not known, then materials like Cerro-Safe are used to make a casting of the chamber, and the casting is measured with a micrometer.
DO NOT ATTEMPT THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! NEVER PUT AMMUNITION IN A FIREARM IT WAS NOT DESINGEND FOR !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Danger, danger, danger.
The .327 Federal magnum case is 1/8 inch longer and has a chamber pressure of @45,000 psi. The 32 H&R magnum has a chamber pressure of @ 20,000 psi You can shoot .32 H&R magnums in a gun chambered for .327 Federal magnums - but not vice versa
109/32
3.84375 = 327/32
Depends entirely on which .32 caliber gun. A small .32 Auto might have an effective range of 25 yards, a long barreled 32-20 revolver 80 yards, and a .32 Winchester rifle 200 yards.
No. There is a 20, rarely 28 and 32 g
value depends on overall condition and gun model.........
Colt made the 32 caliber revolver .And depending on the condition of the gun there is no way to tell the worth of your gun with out more information provided.
Also known as the .32 Winchester Center Fire, the 32-20 cartridge was used in revolvers and light rifles. It's name indicates that it fired a .32 caliber bullet, originally loaded over 20 grains of black powder.