Yes.
38 Special and 357 Magnum
50-1000 usd
In my opinion no! The cylinder length of the 38 special would be shorter than the cylinder length of a .357 Magnum.
Yes. If you feed it a steady diet of magnum ammunition, have it inspected by a competent gunsmith.
No. Any manufacturer that adheres to industry standards for ammunition can supply ammunition for Smith and Wesson firearms.
It can fire .32 Smith & Wesson and .32 Smith & Wesson long ammunition. These are the only ammunition types it is designed for, and is NOT compatible with other types of .32 calibre/7.65mm ammunition.
Does not exist as a factory product DO NOT ATTEMPT TO FIRE with 357 ammunition. HAVE IT EXAMINED BY A GOOD GUNSMITH!
It uses the 22 Magnum cartridge. MRF stands for "magnum rim fire". It uses the 22 Magnum cartridge. MRF stands for "magnum rim fire".
100-600 USD or so
You gun takes the .38 Special. Its original (and proper) name was ".38 Smith & Wesson Special" since Smith & Wesson introduced the first gun chambered for this cartridge, which differentiated it from the earlier ".38 Smith & Wesson". The .38 S&W Special will not interhange with the .38 S&W.
yes.
1970