The range varies but for new 38 Special revolvers the cheapest are around $225 to upwards of several hundred dollars for high quality 38 Specials. There are very expensive collector's editions that can cost $1000+.
There are several good quality revolvers between the $225-$300 made by Rossi, Comanche, Ruger, etc.
Depending on who made it and its condition; 100-1000 USD
38 special is only a revolver caliber. that's like saying a 44 magnum revolver or a 500 special revolver. a revolver is a revolver
Shooting .38 Special ammunition in a .357 revolver offers advantages such as reduced recoil, lower cost, and versatility in ammunition options.
It depends on what you mean. A .38 revolver may be a .38 special, but there are other types of .38 besides just the special round.
20-60
Yes, you can shoot .38 Special ammunition in a .357 revolver.
Yes, you can shoot a .38 Special cartridge in a .357 Magnum revolver because the .357 Magnum revolver is designed to also accommodate the .38 Special cartridge.
Depends on what the special edition is, but an armscor .38 Spl is worth about $215 to $220 New
Yes, you can shoot .38 Special ammunition out of a .357 Magnum revolver. The .357 Magnum revolver is designed to also shoot .38 Special ammunition, as the .38 Special cartridge is shorter than the .357 Magnum cartridge.
Your Rossi revolver fires the .38 special cartridge.
A .38 Special round is compatible with a .357 revolver because the .357 revolver is designed to shoot both .357 Magnum and .38 Special ammunition. The .38 Special round is slightly shorter than the .357 Magnum round, but it can be safely fired in a .357 revolver without any issues.
A ".38 +P revolver" is simply a .38 Special revolver which is rated to fire +P loads. It's still a .38 Special, and the +P doesn't change the dimensions of the round itself.