To say a bullet is shot out of a gun with an acceleration of 1000 g's is pretty well meaningless. The bullet is accelerated while IN the barrel and begins decelerating shortly after leaving he barrel. While in the barrel, the acceleration will vary along the length of the barrel. So at some point in time, perhaps the acceleration would be 1000 g's, but knowing that tidbit won't give you any velocities or trajectories. Knowing the average accleration in the barrel gives you some workable numbers, though.
Some quick approximate math:
Assume uniform acceleration = a
V=at+Vo
S=1/2at^2+Vot+So
Assuming Vo and So are zero:
S=0.5at^2
Substitute t=v/a, and S = 0.5a(v/a)^2 = 0.5v^2/a
or a = 0.5v^2/S
Say, for 38 special, you might get 750 fps out of a 4" barrel:
a = 0.5 x (750 fps)^2/(0.333 ft) = 844,000 ft/s^2 or 26,000 g's...and this is a low-powered round. (This is the average acceleration, assuming acceleration is uniform in the barrel.)