Check by Sight AND Feel!
Is It Empty?
By Kathy Jackson
When you pick up a handgun, you should always check by both sight and
feel to be sure that it is not loaded.1
Here's how to do this, and why it is necessary.
Semi-automatics: Remove the magazine. Then lock the slide
open and visually look in the chamber. Poke a finger into the magazine
well to be sure it is empty. Then run the tip of your pinky finger into
the chamber to be sure that there's a hole in there rather than a live
round. Look again before you close the slide.
Revolvers: Roll the cylinder open and visually count
the chamber holes. Then run your finger over the holes and count them
again by feel. Visually count the holes again before you close the cylinder.
To a newcomer, using your fingertips as well as your eyeballs to be certain
the gun is unloaded may sound a bit obsessive. But it's really not
obsessive. It is simply a good safety habit.
In the pictures below, I've unloaded a revolver for you to look at. You
should just glance at this first picture. The gun is unloaded, right?
Use the tip of your finger to
count the holes. Eyeballs can lie!
Position your mouse pointer over the image
to double-check.
|
For the record, the photos don't cheat. The gun in the second photo is
in the exact same condition as it was in the first photo -- loaded!
The only difference is that the cylinder was not rolled out all the way
in the first photo, which is a really easy mistake to make if you're just
glancing at it for a quick check when you already "know" it's
unloaded.
This is why we check twice with our eyes, and touch the holes.
When distracted or under stress, it is surprisingly easy to miss seeing
things we really didn't expect to see anyway. And it is just as easy --
or easier -- to do the same with a semi-auto, and miss seeing the round
in the chamber or the magazine in the butt of the gun.
So use your hands as well as your eyeballs to check, and never take anything
for granted.
Next Steps
Previous Steps
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Except where otherwise noted, all articles and images on
this web site © 2006-2008 by Kathy Jackson. For permission to quote, please
contact author.
Disclaimer: The author of this site assumes that you are an adult human being capable of making your own choices and taking
responsibility for same. If you are not an adult, or are not capable of taking
responsibility for your own choices, STOP. Do not read anything else on this
site. The author has made a reasonable, good-faith effort to assure that the
articles herein are accurate and contain good advice, but hereby advises the
reader that the author is a normal human being who makes the normal number of human mistakes. Deal with it.
If it sounds stupid to you, don't do it. The author accepts absolutely no
responsibility whatsoever for anything you might say or do as a result of
reading any material on this site. Live your own life.