I read somewhere of frontal ignition tests with the 50 BMG cartridge failed due to extreme pressure problems. Possible poor ignition of the grey powder charge. Seems like Elmer Keith was involved during WW-II. Blew up some stuff IIRC and it takes some work to blow anything made for 50 bmg. Suspect poor ignition of the powder.
The Dreyse Needle Gun used frontal ignition of the BP charge successfully, well there were problems but not with the front ignition itself.
Frontal ignition in small arms in not really practical.
The artillery boosters Ogre was discussing is a way to ASSURE reliable ignition of the charge. Poor ignition of smokeless powder is VERY bad can can result in extreme changes in burn rate and pressure developement that can blow parts over a wide radius. Testing some years back with a *reduced* charge of the normal powder that did not properly ignite blew a 250 pound breech piece of a field piece 1/2 a mile according to a reliable report.
BP does not do this, its not capable due to its chemical makeup.
Reduced charges of black, if "loose" may ignite faster and might give more pressure than expected for the weight of charge but the powder will not go out of control and detonate as nitro based smokeless can. Compressing BP heavily can add to "load inertia" and result in smaller velocity variations. But excess compression can produce its own set of problems especially with hard, dense, fast powders like Swiss.
Primers can and will blow projectiles out of the cartridge case before the power really makes pressure. Smokeless primer are pretty hot stuff and can blow a 500 grain 45 caliber bullet an inch or more up the bore with no powder at all. But this is not really applicable to caps and BP shooting. I have never seen BP fail to light off because the primer was too hot and I shot a LOT with the hottest primers we could get at one time.
Back to flint...
I am not sure what the Nock breech actually does or if it does much of anything different. Needs testing...
IF it makes significant pressure in the antechamber it should speed the burn of the powder in the barrel and/or breech chamber. Its not front ignition but it may give something closer to the way percussion performs. IE faster pressure rise than flint.
?
Dan