A Daisy Red Rider does not compress air. The BB is directly pushed out of the barrel by the spring. OTOH a spring piston gun uses the spring to push a piston to compress the air which fires the projectile. Much like a bicycle pump or an air compressor used to charge a PCP compresses the air, you are using a piston to compress air. The difference is your PCP has an on board storage tank.The "hypothetical interpretation" is they were talking about a PCP when they wrote "compressed air rifle" in the rules.
They didn't say any "airgun". They say "compressed air rifle". I'm sure you can see how a bunch of bigwigs on the State Game Comission may not have their airgun vocabulary down correctly. It's not a stretch to imagine by "compressed air rifle" they meant a PCP.
By your interpretation a Daisy Red Ryder is a "compressed air rifle" that fires a .177 projectile. Would it be legal to hunt mountain lion or audad in New Mexico with that? What would your "hypothetical interpretation" of our law be in that case?
I'm fairly certain a springer is fine to hunt squirrel and grouse. But I'm going to ask anyway....
Both fire compressed air. i.e. both are airguns.
By the rules in NM, you can't use a Co2 powered gun nor that Red Ryder.
ETA- Don't knock my old Red Ryder. In my youth, I knocked a Right to Left crossing goose out of the air with one steel BB to the noggin. One of the most memorable shots I've ever made and my first real success at wingshooting.
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