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I just realized, I omitted an important clarification about the differences between loading a smoothbore versus rifled musket.
When I competed in BAR firelock matches, we did not have a carbine class. We fired either rifles or smoothbore muskets. My Long Land Pattern was an early model with Wooden rammer. I was slower loading with that musket than my team mates with Short Land Pattern guns because they had iron rammers, which were substantially heavier than my wooden rammer.
18th century musketeers using the 1764 manual of arms, would not have rested the musket butt on the ground. In rapid fire competition, we did not rest the musket butt on the ground either, but kept the musket firm in the left hand, beneath the swell. This positioned the bore of my 46" barreled gun at arms length. I would think, on a carbine with 30" barrel, the bore would be opposite the left rib cage and you would have to
reposition your hand on the stock when loading.
In N-SSA carbine, we do not return rammers, but stick them in the ground or rest them against a bayonet stuck in the ground. We place the butt on the left foot or on the ground to re-load. This requires you to crouch to start the minie. When shooting a rifle or musket, the barrel is higher, and it is easier to see and start the bullet. Rules prohibit placing the bullet in the muzzle with anything more than two fingers, and neither your hand or any part of your body may be over the muzzle. This is where the squat or crouch comes in. Bending over exposes your head to the muzzle. Crouching doesn't. Cookoffs in timed fire are not unheard of, thus bending over the barrel puts you at risk whereas Squatting lets you squarely place the bullet with only two fingers.
While loading a carbine in this manner is safe, it is slower than loading a longer barreled musket.
I'd recommend you try loading both arms, and timing the results, or failing that attend a skirmish and time the competitors. Find a shooter who uses a muzzleloading carbine (there's not that many) and compare his loading times to his musket times. I think you'll see that he's slower on carbine than on musket.
When I competed in BAR firelock matches, we did not have a carbine class. We fired either rifles or smoothbore muskets. My Long Land Pattern was an early model with Wooden rammer. I was slower loading with that musket than my team mates with Short Land Pattern guns because they had iron rammers, which were substantially heavier than my wooden rammer.
18th century musketeers using the 1764 manual of arms, would not have rested the musket butt on the ground. In rapid fire competition, we did not rest the musket butt on the ground either, but kept the musket firm in the left hand, beneath the swell. This positioned the bore of my 46" barreled gun at arms length. I would think, on a carbine with 30" barrel, the bore would be opposite the left rib cage and you would have to
reposition your hand on the stock when loading.
In N-SSA carbine, we do not return rammers, but stick them in the ground or rest them against a bayonet stuck in the ground. We place the butt on the left foot or on the ground to re-load. This requires you to crouch to start the minie. When shooting a rifle or musket, the barrel is higher, and it is easier to see and start the bullet. Rules prohibit placing the bullet in the muzzle with anything more than two fingers, and neither your hand or any part of your body may be over the muzzle. This is where the squat or crouch comes in. Bending over exposes your head to the muzzle. Crouching doesn't. Cookoffs in timed fire are not unheard of, thus bending over the barrel puts you at risk whereas Squatting lets you squarely place the bullet with only two fingers.
While loading a carbine in this manner is safe, it is slower than loading a longer barreled musket.
I'd recommend you try loading both arms, and timing the results, or failing that attend a skirmish and time the competitors. Find a shooter who uses a muzzleloading carbine (there's not that many) and compare his loading times to his musket times. I think you'll see that he's slower on carbine than on musket.