Can't be answered without knowing ALL markings, type of action and who made it. The caliber will be marked on it somewhere. Might be worn off.
All rifles or reasonable caliber are going to have recoil, I would look at your mounts or scope. tighten up your scope rail
shooting pointed bullets in tube magazine , pointed bullets can set off the ammo in the rifles recoil.
all winchester model 1894 rifles are marked on the barrel with the caliber they are chambered in.If yours is old enough then the chambering could be worn off through use and time.You will then need to measure the diameter of the barrel,buy measuring the lands and then the grooves.This is best left to a gunsmith.He may also take a casting of the chamber and determine the cartridge that your rifle was chambered for.
stuck? how is it stuck? if you have removed all (4) bolts then it should slide off.. if not push hard on the caliber to depress the cylinder making it easier to slide off
There were sixteen cases of rifles stolen from off the train . Fifteen went to the Mexican General and one went to Angel's village .
You have a Japanese WWII bolt action rifle built in 1939 (M-1939, the '99 is a Japanese year). It's 7.7mm (the same caliber as the British .303 Lee-Enfield bolt action rifle...BULLET diameter only; not the cartridge). If the rifle still has the "MUM" on it (MUM is short for CHRYSANTHEMUM, which was the Emperor's Symbol), then it's most likely a "war souvenir" (Battle field pick up). If the MUM's filed off/ground off, it was a surrendered weapon. Most riflemen like the Arisaka which still has the MUM on it. These were the strongest WWII rifles constructed during the war; according to blow up tests conducted by the NRA in the 1960's. Only about 64 pages, but recommend purchasing: "Japanese Rifles of World War II". 1996. By Duncan O. McCollum; ISBN 1-880677-113. Also the websites have markings information. Japanese rifles during the Russian-Japanese War of 1904-1905 were 6.5mm. Type 30 & 38 Arisakas.
Yes, it's possible, however unlikely, and if you shoot a deer with a .22 caliber, the deer will (almost certainly) run off and you won't find it.
Yes the difference in size is minimal you can cut off excess matirial after you start the ball in the bore if you want.
Unfortunately off-hand I can think of at least 12 different bolt action 22 caliber rifles made by Remington, without a model it's impossible to even give ballparks without writing a book, if you revise this question with a model, also put in CONDITION.
Crosman airgun Co owns Benjamin. They off a service to locate repair shops that repair older guns and rifles. See the link below.
These guns were never drilled/tapped for scope mounts. Like most inexpensive .22 rifles, the top of the receiver is grooved for tip-off mounts. The mounts and rings are typically one piece, and sold virtually everywhere - even WalMart.