Legally, in NY ?Moreover, what do you believe is a loaded firearm legally?
Opinions obviously, not seeking legal advice.
Share your reasoning if you can.
What about a gun with a manual safety on then ?Loaded implies ready to fire, to me. A gun without a round chambered is effectively inert without further action, namely chambering a round. It cannot be used as anything other than a bludgeon without said action. Ergo, unloaded chamber is unloaded.
To my way of thinking, the presence or absence of a safety, engaged or not, does not alter the fact that there is (loaded) or is not (unloaded) a round in front of the firing pin. Loaded is the status of the chamber, not any ancillary feeding mechanism whatever that may consist of.What about a gun with a manual safety on then ?
What's the qualitative difference between racking a slide and flipping off a safety ?
The only one I can think of is "2 hands vs 1", but that seems to be a bit minor for such a significant change.
I think the answer is "it depends on context". The context that the question "is it loaded" is asked in will affect the answer.
The gun in your nightstand is loaded if there is a loaded mag inserted, regardless of the condition of the chamber.
The one holstered on your hip needs one in the pipe.
Loaded if there is a live round in any chamber. Unloaded if all chambers are empty or contain spent casings.What about revolvers?
for revolvers, a live round in at least one cylinder
so if you have a firearm in your home in Buffalo, and ammo in Pennsylvania, you have a loaded firearm ?????In NY, your gun is loaded if it is on your dresser in your bedroom and you have ammo in the basement somewhere. Just ask any politician.
With NY scumbag politicians... nothing would surprise me anymore.so if you have a firearm in your home in Buffalo, and ammo in Pennsylvania, you have a loaded firearm ?????
Certainly part of the standard rules for safety, but which is it? Chambered or unchambered round?Any firearm that I have not personally safety checked.
I agree with you about that.To my way of thinking, the presence or absence of a safety, engaged or not, does not alter the fact that there is (loaded) or is not (unloaded) a round in front of the firing pin. Loaded is the status of the chamber, not any ancillary feeding mechanism whatever that may consist of.
I’m sure my view is simplistic and may or may not reflect legal definition, but it is what makes sense to me.
I'd suggest the unintended flick of a safety or crossbolt is a bit different from the unintentional racking of a slide or cycle of a bolt.I was just pointing out that if it's loaded with the safety on, the it's probably loaded with a round in the mag as well, even if the chamber is empty.