There are several DIFFERENT .32 caliber cartridges. The .32 bullet is smaller in diameter than a .380. SOME .32 cartridges are longer, and have more power, such as the .327 magnum. And some .32 pistols are smaller than some .380 pistols, and vice versa. The caliber has nothing to do with the size of the gun.
Less than $100.00
More accurate than 90 percent of the people who will shoot it.
No, he was shot squarely in the head by John Wilkes Booth with a .44 caliber pistol.
For shooting things from a relatively large distance. It is more accurate than a pistol or an automatic weapon.
More than likely a problem with the magazine.
A glock 45 is a .45 caliber pistol, which fires a 45 caliber round. The glock 10mm fires 10mm rounds, which are .3945 caliber. Which is slightly smaller than the .40 caliber. Both of the two calibers, .45 and 10mm, are the 2 mosst expensive caliber weapons of glock. A 10mm is used mainly for law enforcement. You can fire rapidly with a Glock 10mm and be more accurate than you would with a Glock .45 caliber simply because the glock 10mm will have less recoil than the Glock .45 will. The Glock .45 will most likely do more damage though. Please Correct Me If I Am Wrong. Thanks, Bronson.
One can make a pistol much larger than it needs to be, maybe even having an extra-long barrel would make a pistol larger, technically. I'll assume you mean the barrel diameter. Although it would seem that a .380 and .38 would have the same barrel diameter, namely, 38/100th of an inch, that is not usually very accurate. The .380 ACP has an actual barrel diameter of about .35 caliber, or 35/100th of an inch. The .38 Special has a barrel diameter of .357 caliber, or 35.7/100th of an inch. So the .38 Special has an ever so slightly larger diameter.
suggest you check writting on barrel. it should indicate caliber..............
Condition is more important than serial number. That being said the earlier and better condition will be worth more.
The Model 122 is a .22 caliber pellet pistol, not a BB or .177 caliber pistol. Pump up the pistol, Not more than 10 pumps. Open the breech by turning the knob at the rear. Pull it all the way back. Load the .22 pellet in the breech. The skirt faces the rear. Close the breech. Rotate the knob to lock it in place. Aim, release the safety and fire.
No you can not. Rifle rounds are longer than pistol rounds, which is part of the reason they are so accurate.