I haven't been slapped since my mom finished me off in Jr high.
So, I'm not familiar with 'cheek slap' from
Muzzleloader shooting.
Please explain the phenomenon.
Jim in La Luz
Cheek slap can have a number of possible causes, with most relating to stock fit.
For those who experience cheek slap:
Pitch is the first thing to check.
Pitch is the angle formed by the butt and the barrel -should be close to 90 degrees.
To check it, watch how the butt makes contact with the shoulder as the gun is being mounted.
If the bottom toe of the butt makes contact well before the top of the recoil pad, you have identified at least one cause of cheek slap.
Another possible cause is how the shooter's cheek makes contact with the comb.
Is the shooter's head and neck in an erect and naturally upright posture when shooting ?
If the shooter has to lean the neck forward and tilt the head back to put their cheek on the comb, it encourages cheek slap.
Too much cheek pressure on the comb encourages cheek slap, as can raising the cheek off the comb during shooting.
If the length of the buttstock stock is correct, when the gun is mounted, there should a distance of 1" to 1.25" between the shooter's nose and the second knuckle of the trigger-hand thumb.
If there is much more separation than that, the stock is too long, and should be shortened one-quarter of the excess separation.