Recoil

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According to all the reading and research my wife's done. They say eat straight meat, carnivore diet.
Cholesterol medicine screws your brain up too.
Its not really that bad. I'm 71 and its just little things that I forget. And I actually intake more meat than veggies. Which I know I should eat more often. Doc gave me cholesterol meds but I never took them.
 
According to all the reading and research my wife's done. They say eat straight meat, carnivore diet.
Cholesterol medicine screws your brain up too.
Yes, and moderate amounts of fish with the skin. Cartilage and connective tissue, which normally we discard, is good too. I have been grinding my venison as it comes from the animal for a few years now. Anywho, since the most primitive firearms were basically barrels, would that make the stock an attachment TO the barrel, and not viceversa? Just curious 👀
 
Anyway, reason I posted this question is I was pondering the physics of muzzleloaders. I've been shooting them over 10 years and just took them for granted. Just the basics. Loading, shooting, disassembly, cleaning and oiling. Minor repairs if needed.
Then I started thinking and curious George got into my head. Especially the upwards motion upon firing. What does that do to the wedge? Actually the upwards motion is caused by the body and/or hand and arm. Right ?
 
I don't notice the recoil in a MLer. Probably because I'm focused on the target.
Shooting offhand vs bench ,bench I'll notice some recoil because I'm in more of a fixed position.
Recoil doesn't bother me.
I have a 06 Ackley , bench shooting if not set up correctly then the recoil bites a bit.
 
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