Any bolt action .22 rifle will shoot .22 shorts and will likely feed them acceptably. Pump action rifles usually will work acceptably. In the early/middle 20th century, Browning/Remington manufactured a model of the .22 Browning Automatic (Remington Mod 24, if memory serves) which was chambered for .22 short only.
It may not feed well, and will not operate a semi-auto.
DO NOT SHOOT AMMUNITION IN A WEAPON NOT CHAMBERED FOR IT. If you do, bad things will happen.
No
You can only shoot what is printed on the barrel. Mag and short mag are not the same.
Yes - both rifles are chambered for the 30.06 cartridge.
The correct ammunition is 30-06 Springfield.
yes. the 5.56 is the 223 caliber ammo.
Most .22 BOLT action, pump and LEVER action rifles that are fed from a tube magazine will handle shorts, longs, and long rifles. Remington produced several auto loaders that wil handle mixed ammo- the Remington 550 may be the best known.
Those that are marked for 9mm ammunition. Shotguns, rifles, handguns all have been or are chambered for 9mm
Depends on markings on upper.
No. You will have to have a Model 1895
HI; THE GUN SHOULD HAVE THE SIZE OF THE AMMO THAT IT WILL SHOOT ON THE BBL. DO NOT USE LONG RIFLES UNLESS IT STATES IT AS YOU CAN CAUSE DAAGE TO IT. AND IT CAN ALSO BE DANGEROUS TO THE SHOOTER I learned to shoot with a Remington Model 12 and put thousands of rounds of .22 LR through one. I would recommend using standard (target) velocity ammo, because after years of the high-velocity .22, the old Model 12 developed a barrel bulge and had to be retired.