Fired from a rifle, there is almost no "kick" or recoil. Generally considered the least recoil of any widely manufactured firearm. My Granddaughter began shooting a .22 rifle with me at the age of 10. She has been shooting for the past 4 years, and competes at 25, 50, and 100 yards. No complaints about recoil.
No. The case of a 22 WMR is longer than that of a 22 lr, so the cartridge won't fit in a rifle that is chambered for 22 lr.
Bullet weight is immaterial. If it is chambered for 22 LR, then any 22 LR load is fine.
The weapon can fire 22 short, long or long rifle.
The mini-mag should still be .22 LR.
Let's get the names straight- there are .22 Long Rifle (LR) cartridges, and there are .22 Magnum (.22 WMR) They DO NOT interchange (although there are a few revolvers with 2 cylinders that can CONVERT from one to the other). The.22 Magnum is not only more powerful, and longer, but it is larger in diameter than the .22 LR. SOME .22 LR firearms can safely short .22 Shorts, but LR and Magnum do not swap.
50-100 USD
No
Properly placed, a 22 lr will do the job.
10-100 usd
NO. .22 Magnum has a larger diameter case than .22 LR. The LR case will split.
No. The .22 LR is a straight sided RIMFIRE cartridge. The Hornet is a bottlenecked CENTERFIRE cartridge. The chamber of a Hornet is MUCH bigger- you could not get a Hornet into a .22 LR chamber- and the firing pin would hit in the wrong place.
Impossible to answer without knowing who made it.