Yes Rod, I know that, however it doesn't answer the question. Colt did not produce a six shot revolver with the intention to only load 5, that would be ridiculous. The procedure for only loading 5 either came about because the safety didn't work, or people were too dumb to use it and a few folks shot their foot off.
B
Yes, Colt did intend on only loading 5 in a 6 hole cylinder . . the correct procedure is exactly as I said. . rest the hammer on an empty chamber. . The first click is not considered the safety and neither is half ####. . At half #### the cylinder is free to spin around, that's no good. . Original 1st or 2nd gen Colt SA are not to be carried around with all 6 holes charged. . They were never designed to be and I don't doubt some folks did and some wore the scars as a result of.
Another thing with original SA Colts is when you finished loading, don't just allow the hammer to go back down, you must draw the hammer back, the remaining 2 clicks, to full #### and then ease the hammer back down,. . If you don't, you can damage the lock work and hand or sometimes the cylinder will jam on a 1st generation gun that's still tight. . Uberti and Pietta are more forgiving and you can get away with it on them because they pre-load the hand with a small coil spring where the grip frame meets the lower left recoil shield. . The cylinder is somewhat sloppy, on half #### compared to an early Colt, but it does allow forgiveness.
Dropping the gun, bumping it can touch off a round. . In the early years cowboys when they were cinching up their saddle, they'd hook the left stirrup over the horn of the saddle. . Occasionally the stirrup would slip off the horn and hit the hammer spur. . careless enough to have the hammer setting on a charged chamber is asking for trouble. .
If you're in need of charging all 6 holes, buy one of the reproduction copies that use a transfer bar. . Ruger uses quite a different system and Uberti and Pietta, on some models, also use a transfer bar or incorporate a two position cylinder base pin that when pushed all the way back prevents the hammer mounted firing pin from hitting the primer. . .
You asked and I answered but you do what you want.