No, but you will lose your hand. See the Related Link.
No. Do not try this under any circumstances! The bullet will likely take your finger off.
The end of the barrel where the projectile leaves the barrel on firing.
Firing lead shot through a slug barrel will not damage the barrel. The rifling will distort the shot pattern and you will get less than desireable results.
Frame, barrel, trigger, bushing, firing pin, firing pin spring, barrel bushing, hanmmer, strut, backstrap to name a few.
Nope. You would still have only one firing pin- but now it would not be in line with EITHER barrel.
Contact Browning.
Start by taking the gun to a gunsmith. There are different firing pins for different guns.
You can select which barrel fires first.
go to gun smith
It was easier for the manufactures to balance the engine, to prevent vibrations, if the firing order was 1342.
A heavier (bull) barrel is stiffer than a light barrel. It does not vibrate during firing as a light barrel will. Combined with a steadier aim due to the increased weight, the combination produces greater accuracy.
Consult your user's manual, as every firearm has unique firing conditions and specs.