Loading The Single Action Sixgun
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- JimT
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Loading The Single Action Sixgun
I understand that most everyone knows the "Load One ... Skip One" loading method. I have a confession to make. I did not learn to load a single action that way. And what's even stranger, I never heard of it before I started shooting CAS.
The way my Daddy taught me, there is never a live cartridge under the hammer during loading. Loading one, skipping one, loading four puts a live round under the hammer which is at half cock. Now we all should keep our fingers out of the trigger guard until we are on target. But fecal matter occurs. I have seen single actions with a broken half-cock notch that were fairly easily fired from half cock.
I learned to load by keeping the gun pointed in a safe direction, open the loading gate and pull the hammer to half cock. Load the cartridges 1-2-3-4-5 Pull the hammer back very slightly, just enough to clear the half cock notch, pull the trigger to the rear and let the hammer down, all the while holding the trigger back With the hammer all the way down, note that the cylinder is slightly out of battery. Roll the cylinder back slightly. You will hear the bolt drop into the notch. At no time was there a live round under the hammer.
And the neat thing about the Colt is you can look at the side of the cylinder and tell where it's at. I milled off the back of the cylinders in my Ruger .45 Colt and my Freedom Arms so I could see the cartridges. I am NOT saying that this is THE WAY to do it! Whatever method you use, practice it until you can do it without thinking about it. That every part of it is in your memory banks. Especially the safety parts!
The way my Daddy taught me, there is never a live cartridge under the hammer during loading. Loading one, skipping one, loading four puts a live round under the hammer which is at half cock. Now we all should keep our fingers out of the trigger guard until we are on target. But fecal matter occurs. I have seen single actions with a broken half-cock notch that were fairly easily fired from half cock.
I learned to load by keeping the gun pointed in a safe direction, open the loading gate and pull the hammer to half cock. Load the cartridges 1-2-3-4-5 Pull the hammer back very slightly, just enough to clear the half cock notch, pull the trigger to the rear and let the hammer down, all the while holding the trigger back With the hammer all the way down, note that the cylinder is slightly out of battery. Roll the cylinder back slightly. You will hear the bolt drop into the notch. At no time was there a live round under the hammer.
And the neat thing about the Colt is you can look at the side of the cylinder and tell where it's at. I milled off the back of the cylinders in my Ruger .45 Colt and my Freedom Arms so I could see the cartridges. I am NOT saying that this is THE WAY to do it! Whatever method you use, practice it until you can do it without thinking about it. That every part of it is in your memory banks. Especially the safety parts!
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Lastmohecken
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
You need to be careful about that doing that, because you can throw the Colt out of time and mark your cylinder . INHO, never roll it backwards. load one, skip one, load four, while you gun is on half cock, then, do not, I mean do not let the hammer back down from half cock. Go ahead and roll onto full cock, then let the hammer down, and it will be on the empty chamber. And then like you said it's easy to visually check it at that point.
But I repeat never half cock the hammer and then let back down on a real Colt, or Colt copy. A colt can be very old and shot to death, and never show a ring around the cylinder if this rule is followed. Unlike a Ruger which will ring the cylinder in one cylinder full or ammo, and most definitely by the time you shot your first box of shell out of it, because the timing is different.
Now, you might be getting away with doing it your way, but lots of people will end eventually getting a nice Colt messed up, by doing it that way.
But I repeat never half cock the hammer and then let back down on a real Colt, or Colt copy. A colt can be very old and shot to death, and never show a ring around the cylinder if this rule is followed. Unlike a Ruger which will ring the cylinder in one cylinder full or ammo, and most definitely by the time you shot your first box of shell out of it, because the timing is different.
Now, you might be getting away with doing it your way, but lots of people will end eventually getting a nice Colt messed up, by doing it that way.
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- JimT
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
I have only been doing that for 65 years or so. Never have hurt a Colt or a Ruger. You don't see a ring around the cylinder on that gun. I have been shooting it like that for more than 20 years. That particular gun is perfectly timed. There is no way it could be put out of time by what I do. I don't force anything.
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Lastmohecken
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
I noticed that Jim, I guess it fine. Actually, where you mess one up is rolling it to the second notch then letting it back down. I will stay with the old skip one method, because I find it better for me.JimT wrote: ↑Wed Feb 11, 2026 2:51 pm I have only been doing that for 65 years or so. Never have hurt a Colt or a Ruger. You don't see a ring around the cylinder on that gun. I have been shooting it like that for more than 20 years. That particular gun is perfectly timed. There is no way it could be put out of time by what I do. I don't force anything.
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- JimT
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
YESSIR. I agree with you. I am not saying this method is better or that others should do it. I just learned this way from oldtimers. If you use the skip one method you will not mark the gun! That is for sure.Lastmohecken wrote: ↑Wed Feb 11, 2026 3:02 pm I noticed that Jim, I guess it fine. Actually, where you mess one up is rolling it to the second notch then letting it back down. I will stay with the old skip one method, because I find it better for me.
The New Model Ruger will do it because the bolt drops as soon as you close the loading gate.
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
Thanks for sharing.
I personally don't care if a gun has a ring around the cylinder or not, to me, it's a moot point. Take that from someone that loves New Model Rugers though!
I personally don't care if a gun has a ring around the cylinder or not, to me, it's a moot point. Take that from someone that loves New Model Rugers though!
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
Thought I was the only one loaded that way. Never had an issue either. Don't recall where I learned it, but it goes back to my first single action, a German built 22 with a weird "safety" that was a hammer block one could manually push down to keep the hammer from contacting the firing pin. Cock the hammer and it'd automatically push the block out of the way. Can't for the life of me remember who built the thing. Sold it to a friend and always kind of regretted it.
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
Funny thing is, all this carry only five is a relatively modern idea.
From what I have read the USA carried with six. Lawmen carried six. Seems most westerners carried six.
The logic seemed simple. If one needs a handgun, why start by handicapping yourself.
Paranoia and civil litigation seem to be the motivating forces behind the "new" way to load a traditional six gun.
Oh, and the BS about gunfighters keeping burial money in the empty chamber is pure Hollywood.
Seriously do you think guys like the Earps or the Billy the Kid would have an empty chamber?
From what I have read the USA carried with six. Lawmen carried six. Seems most westerners carried six.
The logic seemed simple. If one needs a handgun, why start by handicapping yourself.
Paranoia and civil litigation seem to be the motivating forces behind the "new" way to load a traditional six gun.
Oh, and the BS about gunfighters keeping burial money in the empty chamber is pure Hollywood.
Seriously do you think guys like the Earps or the Billy the Kid would have an empty chamber?
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"Go low, go slow and preferably in the dark" The old Sarge (he was maybe 24.
"Freedom is never more that a generation from extinction" Ronald Reagan
"Every man should have at least one good rifle and know how to use it" Dad
Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
My Dad taught me the load and skip method. I sold my only Colt 35 years ago in a moment of stupidity. And while it was shot plenty it looked good. But my new model Vaquero has that ring and looks awful to me.
- JimT
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
I always load 6 when I am going into something where I think I might appreciate one more ...jeepnik wrote: ↑Wed Feb 11, 2026 4:28 pm Funny thing is, all this carry only five is a relatively modern idea.
From what I have read the USA carried with six. Lawmen carried six. Seems most westerners carried six.
The logic seemed simple. If one needs a handgun, why start by handicapping yourself.
Paranoia and civil litigation seem to be the motivating forces behind the "new" way to load a traditional six gun.
Oh, and the BS about gunfighters keeping burial money in the empty chamber is pure Hollywood.
Seriously do you think guys like the Earps or the Billy the Kid would have an empty chamber?
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Bruce Scott
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
JimT wrote: ↑Wed Feb 11, 2026 5:11 pmI always load 6 when I am going into something where I think I might appreciate one more ...jeepnik wrote: ↑Wed Feb 11, 2026 4:28 pm Funny thing is, all this carry only five is a relatively modern idea.
From what I have read the USA carried with six. Lawmen carried six. Seems most westerners carried six.
The logic seemed simple. If one needs a handgun, why start by handicapping yourself.
Paranoia and civil litigation seem to be the motivating forces behind the "new" way to load a traditional six gun.
Oh, and the BS about gunfighters keeping burial money in the empty chamber is pure Hollywood.
Seriously do you think guys like the Earps or the Billy the Kid would have an empty chamber?
Copied from a discussion here: https://www.cascity.com/forumhall/index ... ic=69294.0
Now consider what was actually said during the period:
From the 1887 edition of "Description and Rules for the Management of the Springfield Rifle, Carbine, and Army Revolvers. Caliber 45." Page 57:
"To load the revolver. Hold the revolver in the left hand, muzzle downward. Half-cock it with the right hand and open the gate. Insert the cartridges with the right hand. Close the gate and bring the hammer to the safety-notch. Keep it there until the revolver is to be fired."
Another reference is in "The Modern American Pistol and Revolver" by A.C. Gould in 1888, which states, on page 50:
"To LOAD THE ARM.—1st motion: holding the revolver in the left hand, muzzle downwards, half-cock it with the right hand and open the gate. 2d motion: insert the cartridges in succession with the right hand, close the gate, cock and fire it (taking it in the right hand), or bring the hammer to the safety-notch, as may be desired."
- JimT
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
Yessir. That was common. Just like the percussion guns, you always loaded every chamber. No argument about that at all.
Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
When you load one , skip one, then load four more. You pull the hammer all the way back and de-cock it. This places the hammer on empty chamber.
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Lastmohecken
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
Yes, that is true on the Ruger.JimT wrote: ↑Wed Feb 11, 2026 3:14 pmYESSIR. I agree with you. I am not saying this method is better or that others should do it. I just learned this way from oldtimers. If you use the skip one method you will not mark the gun! That is for sure.Lastmohecken wrote: ↑Wed Feb 11, 2026 3:02 pm I noticed that Jim, I guess it fine. Actually, where you mess one up is rolling it to the second notch then letting it back down. I will stay with the old skip one method, because I find it better for me.
The New Model Ruger will do it because the bolt drops as soon as you close the loading gate.
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Lastmohecken
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
Yep, that is the way, I learned to do it. Then I will always verify visually afterwards, but that always works for me.
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- Scott Tschirhart
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
Once a man gets used to doing it one way and it works, a man ought to keep things simple and keep doing the same.
I learned to load one, skip one, and load four more. Full cock and let the hammer down on an empty chamber. I can do it blindfolded, drunk or in my sleep. No point in me changing now.
I learned to load one, skip one, and load four more. Full cock and let the hammer down on an empty chamber. I can do it blindfolded, drunk or in my sleep. No point in me changing now.
Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
I always did it as Jim described, I also never heard of the load-skip, full cock to down thing until fairly recently. So far havent had any problems with the guns.
The empty chamber is by no means modern or recent, unless 1870s would be considered recent. there are several period accounts of dropped guns firing, then the practice became to generally carry 5 unless one expected trouble. This seems to have occurred in various places all by itself, proving humans are capable of learning independently. Keith wrote of it in the 1930s, and he said pretty much all the old timers told him that was the common practice. He knew of a few instances where people carried them full up and had various things happen that caused the gun to fire, like dropped, a stirrup falling over the saddle when tightening the cinch, etc. I knew a guy that shot himself in the leg with an old model ruger 22 when out building fence alone in a remote area and ended up losing the leg.
I thought I was pretty clever setting the firing pin between rims of the shells, but even in the well fitted half flap holster I found it sitting on a primer several times, I gave up on being so clever and just carried 5 most of the time.
There was a short video clip of an aircrewman in a WWII bomber loading an SAA, it appeared he loaded 5, let the hammer down and set the empty chamber to locked position. I think it may have been the Colt forum that i saw it.
Edit: My mistake, Korea. https://www.coltforum.com/threads/b-29- ... 50.419010/
The empty chamber is by no means modern or recent, unless 1870s would be considered recent. there are several period accounts of dropped guns firing, then the practice became to generally carry 5 unless one expected trouble. This seems to have occurred in various places all by itself, proving humans are capable of learning independently. Keith wrote of it in the 1930s, and he said pretty much all the old timers told him that was the common practice. He knew of a few instances where people carried them full up and had various things happen that caused the gun to fire, like dropped, a stirrup falling over the saddle when tightening the cinch, etc. I knew a guy that shot himself in the leg with an old model ruger 22 when out building fence alone in a remote area and ended up losing the leg.
I thought I was pretty clever setting the firing pin between rims of the shells, but even in the well fitted half flap holster I found it sitting on a primer several times, I gave up on being so clever and just carried 5 most of the time.
There was a short video clip of an aircrewman in a WWII bomber loading an SAA, it appeared he loaded 5, let the hammer down and set the empty chamber to locked position. I think it may have been the Colt forum that i saw it.
Edit: My mistake, Korea. https://www.coltforum.com/threads/b-29- ... 50.419010/
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Isnt it amazing how many people post without reading the thread?
Isnt it amazing how many people post without reading the thread?
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Lastmohecken
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
I remember hunting with a man who carried 6 in an old model Ruger, with it on half cock. I mentioned it to him but he wasn't having any of it. He always carried that way.
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
1970, insert loaded magazine, pull slide all the way to the rear, release the slide holding down the mechanical slide release, with the slide fully forward, engage the thumb safety, drop the magazine and load one more, reinsert magazine. Oh, wait... wrong single action! About a year later, I bought a lightly used 2nd Gen SAA from a gun shop in CA while I was on leave. When I picked it up, the store owner showed me the load one, skip one, load 4 method. Having no prior exposure, I took it as gospel. I simply can't recall who introduced me to "top it off if you expect trouble." I cap my percussion revolvers the same way, although I always charge all 6 chambers. Well... except the Patersons! 
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- JimT
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
Scott is correct. However you learn to run a gun safely, practice it until you can do it in the dark, without looking at it. Remember the KISS Principle.Scott Tschirhart wrote: ↑Wed Feb 11, 2026 9:59 pm Once a man gets used to doing it one way and it works, a man ought to keep things simple and keep doing the same.
I learned to load one, skip one, and load four more. Full cock and let the hammer down on an empty chamber. I can do it blindfolded, drunk or in my sleep. No point in me changing now.
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
On a whim I went looking last night and saw so many commenters who insisted that old timers carried the SAA with 6 live rounds and with the gun on the half cock notch.
Some commentators seem to be emotionally attached to this idea.
I like to think my decision to carry five and lower the hammer on an empty chamber is not an emotional decision. Frankly, I’ve decided and see no reason to do things differently.
But the apparent furor over this issue seems to be way out of proportion to the issue itself.
Does it really matter what folks commonly did in the late 1870s? Not to me. I’m driving a pickup with technology that I don’t understand. What kind of effect would such a device have on someone from the 1870s?
Some commentators seem to be emotionally attached to this idea.
I like to think my decision to carry five and lower the hammer on an empty chamber is not an emotional decision. Frankly, I’ve decided and see no reason to do things differently.
But the apparent furor over this issue seems to be way out of proportion to the issue itself.
Does it really matter what folks commonly did in the late 1870s? Not to me. I’m driving a pickup with technology that I don’t understand. What kind of effect would such a device have on someone from the 1870s?
Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
The original Colt SAA manual says its ok if gun is as new no modifications to carry 6 live rounds but never on Half cock .
That's what the Safety notch is for.
Half cock is for loading only and a drop from this position will almost definatly discharge the SAA.
Per the Colt Manual :
That's what the Safety notch is for.
Half cock is for loading only and a drop from this position will almost definatly discharge the SAA.
Per the Colt Manual :
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
I grew up in the load six and use the safety notch camp, fortunately I don't recall any accidents. I converted to loading 5 after a slip-up with a New Model which probably would have resulted in a crippling wound had it been a traditional action - I rethought things. I do use the load one, skip one method.
I don't recall where, Ruger Forum possibly, where someone asked if it was ok to carry their Blackhawk at full cock. They reasoned that it would be much faster to get into action that way(!), and I recall that they weren't dissuaded by the unanimous uproar against the idea. One of those cases where you wonder why they bothered with the question when their mind's already made up...
I don't recall where, Ruger Forum possibly, where someone asked if it was ok to carry their Blackhawk at full cock. They reasoned that it would be much faster to get into action that way(!), and I recall that they weren't dissuaded by the unanimous uproar against the idea. One of those cases where you wonder why they bothered with the question when their mind's already made up...
Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
Colt stated that the safety notch or half cock notch could be sheared off with a mere 35 ft lbs of force. Post 1956 SAA have much better hammer material .Through hardened medium carbon alloy steel.
The old 1st Gen SAA were relatively soft mild steel with thin color cased shell. Easy bent/broken if abused.
Many of the 1st returned cavalry SAA were in various forms of disrepair . Those old troopers were known to smash their coffee beans with butt of SAA.
The old 1st Gen SAA were relatively soft mild steel with thin color cased shell. Easy bent/broken if abused.
Many of the 1st returned cavalry SAA were in various forms of disrepair . Those old troopers were known to smash their coffee beans with butt of SAA.
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Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
Well .. this thread about loading a single action sixgun has kept things lively. I appreciate folks not getting angry or violent about their point of view. Again I wish to emphasize I am NOT saying what I do is THE WAY to do it or that others are wrong. If I came across that way I did not mean to.
I do a lot of things differently than others ... in many areas. I often got into trouble with other pastors and I found out early on that there were two types: Those who would say sh-t and those who wouldn't.

I do a lot of things differently than others ... in many areas. I often got into trouble with other pastors and I found out early on that there were two types: Those who would say sh-t and those who wouldn't.
Re: Loading The Single Action Sixgun
Jim, threads like this always bring up different points of view. A person's point of view is correct for that person.
And yea, we have had this conversation before. And will again but we constantly have new gun handlers joining the forum. So rehashing things put the information back where they might see it.
And yea, we have had this conversation before. And will again but we constantly have new gun handlers joining the forum. So rehashing things put the information back where they might see it.
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"Every man should have at least one good rifle and know how to use it" Dad
"Go low, go slow and preferably in the dark" The old Sarge (he was maybe 24.
"Freedom is never more that a generation from extinction" Ronald Reagan
"Every man should have at least one good rifle and know how to use it" Dad