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Toe Plate on your rifle

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Most every muzzleloader has a toe plate or kick plate along the bottom of your rifle. I have been using these for 40 years to settle the powder at the bottom of the breech. Do you use these ?? Do the new folks even know what these plates are for other than decoration ?? With many rifles having a patent breech like Pedersoli uses, these toe plates come in handy for settling the powder into the breech for better ignition. I have known them as both toe plates and kick plates, where you tap your toe several times against the brass plate so the powder settles into place. I have always tapped that brass toe plate with the toe of my boot when loading. Shooting today, I thought I'd share this tip with the other shooters in case you weren't aware what their purpose was.
Ohio Rusty ><>
 

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The toeplate is never facing me when I load my rifle. The geometry of the buttstock kind of lends itself to be facing the other way.
With modern shoes it seems like a good trick but we get an extra point for traditional footwear during our Woods-Walk, so I don't suppose moccasins would do much, other than hurt my toe.

Palm of the hand would seem to work fine if you felt it was necessary.... but a slow pour down a 44 inch drop tube settles powder fine.
The old flints never had a patent breech. That was mostly a design feature to support the drum on the newfangled cap guns.
 
I prefer a toe plate because I use the butt tap to settle method. That being said, it's "just in case" because I hold the rifle in the crook of my right arm with the top facing away, so if I maintain that alignment, it's the butt plate that meets the ground.
 
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