1. How tall is the giant using my aforementioned scale? My initial calculation came to about 185ft tall give or take.
That's about what I got, too.
2. How big would the bullets be, i.e. could a human sized person carry one? I already calculated a 7.62x56mm round scaled up to about a foot in diameter and 6 ft long but I don't know how much that would weigh.
The calculations for the size seem about right.
That would amount to about a ton (1000 kilograms) for 1 round. Kind of seems like overkill
The calculation:
m=V*d
m = mass
V = volume
d = density (which for steel is 7.85 g/cm³)
I approximated the form of the bullet as a simple cylinder, which will be enough to ballpark a weight. The volume is then:
V=r²*PI*l
r = radius (1/2 foot in your case)
l = length (6 feet)
3. Physics doesn't scale well against gravity and having 34 times the gunpowder does not mean that 34 times as much force will be imparted. How good would the muzzle velocity actually be assuming gunpowder? If he misses the bullets will rip through things, I'd just like to know how far it'll go until it stops and what will happen tot he ground it hits.
Actually, gravity is part of the whole physics thing. If you can get your ton of bullet up to the speed of a regular bullet, it would be affected by gravity like any normal bullet would. The only thing it would have to deal with would be greater aerodynamic resistance from the increased surface.
The formula here is:
F=m*a
F = Force
m = mass
a = acceleration
or the other way around:
a=F/m
which means, if you have double the mass, you need double the force to get it to an equal speed. I estimated the weight of the small bullet from your numbers above to about 20grams, which would mean you would need 50,000 times the force of a regular load to get the same result.
4. Assuming the scaled up bullets actually work(I don't want to handwave it but I can with Magic), how loud would the shots be? If it's loud enough, the heroes holding onto the giant may not need to worry about getting stepped on after being violently deafened by the sonic boom.
I am not sure how much propellant you need to shoot a normal bullet, if you find out, multiply it by 50,000 and you will have an enormous pile of explosive material lying around. It might or might not be enough, but it is a good estimate, I think. I don't think it would create a sonic boom, because that would only happen if the bullet passed the sound barrier. The explosion would be loud, but manageable, I think.
Hope I could help so far.